I heard someone on another site mention a thing where in the Philippines two people who didn't have Covid were recorded as having Covid by the hospital. If you want the smoking gun that it's all fake, that's obviously it, right?
Yeah except it's sort of evidence against it being a thing.
First, if there was statistical evidence we'd be hearing that and not specific anecdotes. Just having exceptionally weak evidence being spread is itself evidence that there's no better evidence in existence, because that's what went viral, and it wouldn't have if they had anything better.
Second, every nurse and doctor in the country would have to be in on the ruse, since they way they prove they didn't have Covid is in fact the Covid tests, so they'd have to be labeling people as Covid-positive and faking the test results but somehow forgot to fake the test results for these specific people. The roughly 150,000 medical workers in the Philippines would have to be in on the ruse, along with millions more worldwide.
Thirdly, the whole story boils down to the fact that two nurses ticked the wrong boxes on a couple of forms. Medical fuck-ups are pretty common, people make mistakes. It would be some sort of miracle if every form ever got filled in perfectly, but this is what this exact conspiracy theory is based on: an anecdote about a couple of forms that go filled out incorrectly by overworked nurses, and this is left hanging as if it provides proof of a global conspiracy. If there weren't occasional fuck-ups with paperwork then that would be weird, you actually have to show it's somehow correlated with Covid-specific stuff. Hospitals do this stuff all the time.