Jeez, LOL, I don't understand pretty much any of that Ron.  I wish I was a bio 
chemist or something.

I have researched this Corona thing to death, (no pun intended), but I need it 
to be explained simpler.  All I can find is that it is 'capsulated' or has a 
'shield' or something, but the thing is, our stuff can, and does, affect 
viruses, so I will have to say because it can affect the common Flu virus, 
which is a Coronavirus, and other viruses, we can knock this out as well.

When it leaves the cell, is it protected still, just as it is/was *before* it 
invades a cell?  This is the question for me.  Is it slightly changed *after* 
it leaves the cell?  Or has that 'shield' changed at all, which will enable it 
to be 'got at'?

N.

________________________________
From: Ron <ron....@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, 6 April 2020 2:58 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Subject: CS>virus envelope.

I don't pretend to understand this stuff but some of you will & can maybe 
elucidate.

My question is: If the virus is enveloped how can any medication get to it that 
cannot penetrate the envelope?

https://microbenotes.com/coronavirus/

Hey Neville, Does this address what you were asking?
Coronavirus genomes are monopartite, single-stranded, positive-sense, 
polyadenylated, and capped RNAs ranging from 27 to 32 kb in length

Ron