- The first hypothesis states that the coronavirus is indeed of natural origin, in particular animal. Researchers have confirmed this origin.
- Another hypothesis is that of a P4 biological research laboratory, precisely located in China in Wuhan! The combination of circumstances of this most dangerous virus research laboratory so close to the official epicenter of the epidemic seems so curious that this hypothesis is tenacious
- Some also argue the coincidence of this virus which is causing the economy of the country in which it is spreading to collapse ... with the latest economic conflicts between the USA and China. It is now recognized that the most effective economic wars are those caused by viruses, either computer viruses, which infiltrate digital networks and block them, or biological, which paralyzes the workforce. CQFD! ... The coronavirus would therefore be a kind of biological "missile" addressed to the Chinese in the context of an economic war.
- Some also evoke a military, even bio-terrorist origin ... a virus developed militarily which would have been badly controlled, or deliberately spread within the framework of a biological attack, like the sarin gas attacks a few years ago years.
Also note this analysis by collapsologists who have been announcing for an imminent collapse of our society for months. They expected an economic collapse, but ultimately it was a biological virus that would initiate this economic collapse, followed by a general collapse.
In short, apart from the first hypothesis of natural origin and completely random, the other hypotheses put the human in question.
Did you hear other hypotheses? ... (except that of a celestial sign translating the wrath of God, or an imminent end of the world ...)
In the same vein, here is a return on a frightening epidemic, that of the black plague which ravaged Marseilles and the south of France in 1720 and for which the historians confirm today a human origin based on human greed, in particular that of the mayor of Marseille at the time, Jean-Baptiste Estelle, owner of the cargo of oriental fabrics contaminated by the plague, and whom he had landed on the port of Marseille to sell it: