Virus Likely To Keep Coming Back Each Year, Say Top Chinese Scientists (bloomberg.com) 187
Chinese scientists say the novel coronavirus will not be eradicated, adding to a growing consensus around the world that the pathogen will likely return in waves like the flu. From a report: It's unlikely the new virus will disappear the way its close cousin SARS did 17 years ago, as it infects some people without causing obvious symptoms like fever. This group of so-called asymptomatic carriers makes it hard to fully contain transmission as they can spread the virus undetected, a group of Chinese viral and medical researchers told reporters in Beijing at a briefing Monday. With SARS, those infected became seriously ill. Once they were quarantined from others, the virus stopped spreading. In contrast, China is still finding dozens of asymptomatic cases of the coronavirus every day despite bringing its epidemic under control. "This is very likely to be an epidemic that co-exists with humans for a long time, becomes seasonal and is sustained within human bodies," said Jin Qi, director of the Institute of Pathogen Biology at China's top.
Can't have it both ways (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Can't have it both ways (Score:5, Insightful)
The reason some pathogens are seasonal is due to the fact that, at least in the higher latitudes, which is where a large portion of humanity lives, fall and winter see most people indoors for a large portion of the time. It has nothing to do with whether a virus can survive at certain temperatures, since usually those temperatures are outside of the range most people can comfortably live.
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That doesn't make any sense. Think about your actual daily life in the winter, and then in the summer. Think about the opportunities you have for being infected by other sick people or infecting others. Are they really that different between summer and winter?
During the summer, I might s
Re:Can't have it both ways (Score:4, Insightful)
A big difference is schools. YOU may spend the same amount of time in the same places, but your kids don't. And when your kids come home from school infected, you will get infected too.
Re:Can't have it both ways (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Can't have it both ways (Score:5, Informative)
The key problem in the winter is that the air is much dryer, so when you exhale, cough or sneeze, the droplets suspend in the air for much longer and get blown around the office by the HVAC system. Summer air has a lot more moisture in it, so the vapour tends to agglomerate around whatever comes out of your face and drop to the ground before it can move around as much.
More and more studies are showing that a good deal of the spread of SARS-CoV-2 is due to indoor airflow that keeps people exposed to the disease for longer, with virtually no cases of outdoor spread.
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The reason some pathogens are seasonal is due to the fact that, at least in the higher latitudes, which is where a large portion of humanity lives, fall and winter see most people indoors for a large portion of the time. It has nothing to do with whether a virus can survive at certain temperatures, since usually those temperatures are outside of the range most people can comfortably live.
Dude, you can't just ignore established science and install your own opinion.
http://sitn.hms.harvard.edu/fl... [harvard.edu]
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"Experimental studies in guinea pigs demonstrated that influenza virus transmission is strongly modulated by temperature and humidity. "
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Colds have three reasons for being seasonal - being inside longer, rhinovirus reproduces better a bit below body temperature so cold noses are good for it, and because of the dry air. I don't think this was his own opinion, but it's easy to find online in many places.
https://weather.com/health/col... [weather.com]
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Dude, you can't just ignore established science and install your own opinion.
Quite right, you have to be The President or a member of Congress to do that.
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Also less humidity helps the spread of some viruses better, as the miniscule water droplets being coughed out evaporate and leave the virus floating in the air longer.
Back in February, one of my coworkers was confident that covid-19 wasn't have much effect in India or parts Africa because it doesn't get that code and the flu is relatively rare. And yet this virus doesn't act the same way. Australia had a big chunk of covid-19 and it was still summer. So if this become seasonal I suspect the reasons will b
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Perhaps if we used a simpler cypher, it would get that code.
Note that autocomplete is NOT your friend....
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Does any of this affect our response ? (Score:2)
Does that change how we proceed near term, mid-term, long-term?
Lockdown forever seems pretty silly - even those that die will probably prefer to see their loved ones at some point in the next year(s) instead of just dying in isolation.
Re:Does any of this affect our response ? (Score:5, Insightful)
I haven't heard anyone advocating permanent lockdown - just long enough to keep it from sweeping through the population all at once. Longer term, there are some fairly promising vaccines in the works, like the Oxford vaccine, and organizations like the Gates Foundation are gearing to ramp up production in record time. So in the mid-term, if we can strike a balance between reasonable social distancing and normalcy, keeping the infection rate under control, then we can give enough breathing room to get that vaccine widely distributed.
Long term, we should really hope the vaccine works, as then we can return to a normal life without too much concern. If it doesn't happen, we're just going to have to suck it up and go with natural herd immunity, I guess.
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Well, neither NY or CA seem to have a functional plan to return from lockdown. Testing isn’t going to get us there, temperature checks aren’t going to do it, and a vaccine is too far away.
The states that could reasonably [begin] reopen[ing] today are Hawaii, Alaska, Montana, West Virginia, Oregon, Maine, and possibly Vermont. Pretty much every other state, despite what their politics might say, is not ready yet. Some counties of some states might be, and some mitigation plans might be possib
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Long term, we should really hope the vaccine works, as then we can return to a normal life without too much concern. If it doesn't happen, we're just going to have to suck it up and go with natural herd immunity, I guess.
Yep. It remains to be seen if it's something we just wrap into the existing MMR vaccines and get on with life, or if it's an annual superflu.
Unfortunately, it's going to be an annual superflu for at least another year or two even if we can make a vaccine that works. Getting that deployed to enough people isn't something that will happen quickly. Especially with the resistance from the anti-vax asshats.
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We have two goals here. (1) Minimize the number of deaths, and (2) minimize economic harm. (1) is accomplished by flattening the curve sufficiently to drop it below our hospit
Re:Does any of this affect our response ? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not that we consider 1% expendable, it's that we recognize that a long term lockdown solution may cause even more deaths than they hope to save. It's also unlikely we'll ever stop the spread of the virus unless everyone can test ourselves every day, and it's probably better to get this over with over the summer than have this still crippling us through the winter.
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For sweden that is allowing it to sweep through its population, it will probably mean no changes near term. The reason is that the most vulnerable will be dead. It will be interesting to see what changes the rest of western society makes.
The good news is that some of the vaccines appear to be working. I have to wonder, how many of the anti-vaxers will choose to NOT take it. In particular, this will likely be the least tested of all recent day vaccines.
Re:Does any of this affect our response ? (Score:4, Informative)
Given the way governments have been handling the pandemic, with forced self isolation, physical distancing etc; and with the damages it's had, especially on economies.... I fully expect in many countries, people will not have a choice. (Although I would be really surprised if something like that happened in the US)
Here where I live in Canada, Police are actively running road stops, requesting ID cards of each person in the car, if two people have different addresses on their ID card, that's a ~$700 - $1000 fine for each person. Same idea if people are found in groups of 5 or more, or found not to be respecting the 6ft. distancing rule, are found in a park, beach, fishing, hiking on trails etc. (Actually at parks, if the police find a parked car, they are impounding and that's an additional financial penalty for the person)
If you are told to self isolate, either because you've tested positive or you have been confirmed to be near somebody else who has tested positive etc, they are handling it the same way..
For repeat offenders, people can face up to 6 months in prison. I haven't heard of this happening yet, I'm sure it would make news. But they've been reporting quite a bit on the number of people fined and for how much.
Anyways, all this to say, if they are enforcing current rules like this, I would not be the least bit surprised if when a vaccine is made available, they end up taking a similar approach.
Re:Does any of this affect our response ? (Score:4, Insightful)
It's kind of funny when I read that back. Because if it weren't wrapped up as something to protect people from themselves, it would sound an awful oppressive. =)
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All tyranny is implemented under the veil of "protecting you". You can't just pull everyone's rights away overnight. People will fight back. You have to convince them it is for their own good, for their safety. They have to be conditioned into accepting it, and then convinced into becoming enforcers themselves, snitching on anyone to dares fall out of line.
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Quite a lot of tyranny is different. I am protecting my tribe at the expense of your tribe, I am making sure my tribe has more rights than your tribe.
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Not to protect people from themselves as much as to protect people from other people. Since people can be asymptomatic, you can't just assume that if you're feeling well that it's perfectly safe to go hang out at the bar and that you're only accepting the risk to yourself.
One reason people were shocked that Pence wasn't wearing a mask and everyone around him was. The person spearheading the effort should know better and not be just another dumb politician. But apparently wearing masks these days is being
Re:Does any of this affect our response ? (Score:4, Insightful)
Those that are vulnerable should look to protect themselves. It isnt up to everyone to stop living for the few.
The numbers are in and the risk factors are so low, they are pretty much on the level with the FLU, except for those above 70 years old and with multiple risk factors.
Same goes for those who are younger with risk factors. You do not oppress 100 000 people to protect 200.
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Say we open up everything today, make some protesters happy. The stores will not all open up! They will continue to insist that no more than a handful can be inside at any time and that they maintain social distance rules, and they may require that masks and gloves be worn. This is because the customers will demand this and the store's workers will demand this. And other countries will be the same. We are not going back to normal anytime soon.
This is worse then the flu. The flu has not caused anything th
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Interesting - ID cards often don't reflect a person's current address - my long time partner and I have lived together for a while and neither of our addresses are the same on our ID cards, or even the address we live at now. Do most people's ?
Or do you have to then do some sort of court appeal process ?
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Well, with most fines you can pay them, or you can not pay them. Opting not to pay them means you'll have to argue your point in court. I assume this would work like that, after all it's kind of similar to a speeding ticket in many regards, in how these are being issued.
They didn't start doing this at first, they started doing it because people weren't taking the order seriously, it's gradually escalated.
And yea, I know what you mean about ID cards. I would assume that an out of date ID card (which is no
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This is news to me, and doesn't appear you're wrong. I've never updated my address with the DMV until I get a new license ... ... oops?
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For sweden that is allowing it to sweep through its population, it will probably mean no changes near term.
Pleas stop the lying. Sweden is doing no such thing. The only thing they are doing is the rely more on recommendations and less on outright banning things. Of course, such an approach only works with a somewhat sensible and educated population.
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Sweden's death rate is also quite high, so I wouldn't say that their policy worked out very well. Hundreds died who didn't need to die, and the country will still be nowhere near herd immunity anytime soon.
I don't think the loved ones of those who died will take much solace in the fact that their economy took a bit less of hit for a few weeks.
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Look down below where it looks at death rate vs recovery. Sweden is one of the few, if not only, western nation with a death rate higher than recovery. If anybody gets sick there, 70% chance of dying. [worldometers.info]
Considering that your bars/movie theaters/etc are still open AND POPULATED, and that Sweden is going to the top with deaths /
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Pretty likely. This is one vaccination nobody will be able to avoid except with convincing medical reasons.
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"Pretty likely. This is one vaccination nobody will be able to avoid except with convincing medical reasons."
And if they do, there's space on Typhoid Mary's island for them.
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As I replied to the GP of your post.....there's no way in the US, that they can by force of law or penalty force you to allow yourself to be injected with something.
Even if they try to pass such a law, there is NO way it would stand up to lawsuits, that's way against your civil rights.
I agree everyone "should" get one, but I do not believe in the US, there is any way they could pass a law forcing yo
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As I replied to the GP of your post.....there's no way in the US, that they can by force of law or penalty force you to allow yourself to be injected with something.
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You are not thinking this through. If you suddenly cannot go shopping anymore, cannot go to the doctor's, cannot work, etc. that will make for a pretty hard to avoid vaccination. Nobody can be forced to be close to a filthy unvaccinated or provide any kind of service to them...
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Pariah status may not be official, but will be no less real.
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Possibly, that's very possible.
On the other hand, I could easily see some "creative" lawyer types bringing equal access, discrimination or even a twist on the Disabilities Act lawsuits that might successfully challenge such things.....at least for sure with Public Access buildings (govt, etc)....
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Err...I'm guessing you do NOT live in the US right?
I mean, we do have civil liberties here and they cannot by force of law, compel you to allow a needle or whatever invasive inoculation method they choose to be thrust upon your body.
There's no way that would stand up to lawsuits and Supreme Court if they ever did try to pass such a thing.
I'm not s
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Civil liberties do not extend to the right to endanger other people's health, and absent a herd immunity to an evidently very contagious disease, unvaccinated individuals objectively *do* endanger other people's health.
The number of people who would qualify for an exemption on account of a documented medical condition that shows that a vaccination will objectively directly endanger that invidual is low enough that herd immunity will not be impacted.
Barring that, as I suggested, one could also be free t
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I understand your arguments, and I can see where you're
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You don't have to haul off anyone... you just prevent them from being able to continue to be functional members of society until they get vaccinated.
" For example, what if they made a proof of vaccination or proof of medical exemption a requirement for filing taxes in 2022?
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The unintended consequences of that particular policy option will be far, far worse than Covid itself.
You see, there are conspiracy theories regarding 5g and Covid. If people will buy into that nonsense, imagine how well a forced vaccination regimen would go over?
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There are conspiracy theories that suggest that the US faked the moon landing too. They don't hold up to the science. Neither does any excuse to not get a vaccine if one is available unless one has a medical condition that directly endangers the person.
Also, civil liberties have not ever extended to having the right to pose a danger to other people's health. States and municipalities would have absolutely no authority to order lockdowns on their regions if they were not permitted to suspend certain
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I see your point. I guess we can take solace in that given the exemplary handling of the virus on the federal level, a vaccine program probably would be handled with equal efficacy.
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Don't try to sell Covid as something good, will ya?
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Round up all the anti-vaxers and put them in the superdome. Then have them cough all over each other. In about 30 days the problem will be solved.
Re: Does any of this affect our response ? (Score:2)
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So you're not Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick [usatoday.com].
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I guess I was not the only one whose immediate reaction was "you first, asshole!"
Re: Does any of this affect our response ? (Score:2)
Thanks for showing concern.
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Re: Does any of this affect our response ? (Score:2)
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“The virus is heat sensitive, but that’s when it’s exposed to 56 degrees Celsius for 30 minutes and the weather is never going to get that hot,”
“This is very likely to be an epidemic that co-exists with humans for a long time, becomes seasonal and is sustained within human bodies,”
If it is seasonal, then it is affected by outside temperature. At this point it's just educated guessing.
Because it's impossible to get the flu during summer too.....
Re:Can't have it both ways (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm not sure what you see the contradiction as. Seasonal infections do not actually go away in the warmer months, they just slow down so that most people don't notice them. Measles, for example, is a seasonal infection that has no known animal reservoirs. If "seasonal" means "it doesn't happen in the summer", then measles would eradicate itself.
Re: Can't have it both ways (Score:2)
Yes, because it's commonly 130F and above in the summer, in most parts of the world.
Not sure what your point was here.
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Global Warming will save us. Burn a dinosaur today!
Top Chinese scientists (Score:4, Insightful)
Well that sounds rather trustworthy. On what data is their science based - and has the data been approved by the government?
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Re:Top Chinese scientists (Score:5, Insightful)
If these scientists disappear, then we know that their science is accurate and hasn't been approved by the government.
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This is after a long line of non-Chinese scientists have said the same thing. Try to keep up with the news.
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Well, racism is not really a good argument. Do you have any of those instead?
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On what data is their science based
The science of epidemiology. It stands to reason too. Multiple mutations of SARS-COV-2019 have already been identified. If we don't build up immunity to them then this virus like all viruses which mutate and for which we don't vaccinate against or build immunity against will pop up seasonally, typically in winter for societal reasons.
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It's utterly incoherent as well. Seasonal viral illnesses have a natural reservoir of viral payload from which to resurge. This is a zoonotic virus that comes from bats with whom humanity doesn't normally interact in a meaningful way, and jumped species in what seems to be a freak accident in a wet market in China.
If we can eliminate the virus with a vaccine, there's no natural reservoir for it to begin the next yearly cycle from. Wet markets are not reliable enough points of initial seeding of infection, a
IOW (Score:2)
Buy vaccine bonds.
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Buy vaccine bonds.
The way the Market is going, that'll probably give your wallet autism.
Funny I thought China (Score:2, Informative)
Well except, big chunks of the lamestream media who print the Chinese propaganda verbatim.
Just my 2 cents
Re: Funny I thought China (Score:2, Troll)
I don't think anyone has claimed China had this beat, though New Zealand is claiming that now. No, China has claimed they have it under control, and all available evidence supports that claim.
Re:Funny I thought China (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, that's science for you. Sometimes the story changes.
It's easy to forget how rapidly our understanding of this has progressed. It wasn't until the middle of last month that we understood how important spread by asymptomatic people was. That's why the CDC reversed itself on masks for the public.
The significance of asymptomatic carriers is a novel feature of this pandemic. Experts initially weren't terribly concerned by early reports out of China of asymptomatic transmission. Until now that has never been a significant factor in any respiratory disease epidemic.
If this epidemic can sustain itself with asymptomatic transmission, there's nothing anyone can do, short of mass vaccination, to prevent its re-emergence. That is why Dr. Fauci in the US and medical researchers in China are warning of a possible reemergence.
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This report that covid-19 will keep coming back has been claimed by many scientists already, it is not a Chinese clalm.
Nextstrain data analysis - COVD-19 vs influenza (Score:4, Informative)
There is a website, https://nextstrain.org/ncov [nextstrain.org], that takes in the DNA sequences of viruses from researchers all over the world, like SARS-CoV-2, and tracks their mutation rate as a function of time.It likely won't come back every year, but it has the potential for every 2.5 to 3 years based upon available data. Nextstrain estimates 8 × 10^-4 mutations per nucleotide per year, and influenza is more like ~2 x 10^-3 So it looks like it has a lower mutation rate overall.
A computational biologist colleague of mine made these comments based about the efficacy of a vaccine: "It also has FAR less genetic diversity relative to influenza, so a vaccine might be able to affect the entire population"
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Great! (Score:2)
I could do with working from home for 2-3 months every year!
Of course... (Score:5, Funny)
Of course it will come back, like every other (Score:2)
H1N1 comes back every year.
So does MERS and SARS and every other virus that once hit the world in a big way. But they don't come back with the same force the second, or third or fourth time.
The Gift That Keeps On Giving! (Score:2)
Wuhan National Laboratory Vision Statement:
"Run out of Pandemics"
We'll Make MORE!"
How long does immunity last? (Score:3)
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Well it is the common cold (Score:2)
No worse than the flu as it is turning out, it's just like having two flu strains in one year. Oh the deaths are vastly over-stated.
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"Of course it and other bad things are going to keep showing up if they keep eating bats and other shit. Stop it!"
More than a billion people want you to stop eating that disgusting pork. And that directive comes directly from an old bearded guy in the sky.
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More than a billion people want you to stop eating that disgusting pork. And that directive comes directly from an old bearded guy in the sky.
Fortunately for me, Jesus came along and said, "Bacon is awesome!!".
Seriously, it's in the New Testament somewhere. Go look.
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Jerry Garcia.
Re:Stop eating bats! (Score:5, Insightful)
It is a good thing it didn't originate from Deer, Rabbits, Water Fowl, Wild Turkeys... Or anything that American Hunters will normally catch and Eat (Alligator, Rattle Snakes being the more exotic).
The world calls it the RedNeck flu, or Hackansas (A play on Arkansas ) Feaver.
People around the world will wonder why we hunt and eat such things, and use this to show our social inferiority to the rest of the world.
Viruses mutate and cross species. Different Animals will handle the virus differently than others.
The real response isn't as much as where it originated from but how to treat it now that it is spread from human to human.
Re:Stop eating bats! (Score:5, Funny)
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Demographics are changing which makes the problem worse. For instance, the boundary between the wild and civilization is thinning, and there are major cities in very close proximity to wilderness areas. We also have people travelling around the globe on a regular basis and it's only increasing. So ebola shows up in a remote village and spreads a bit but then dies down, because there's not a lot of travel in that area; but if ebola shows up in Nairobi then it would be a much more serious matter (but ebola
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Last i heard american hunters don't keep their prey in wire cages stacked on top of each other. Nor do they intentionally torture the animals to 'enhance the flavor'.
But please, continue drawing false equivalences between barbaric animal cruelty and shooting a fucking deer with a .30-06
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I am sure if you look around, you will see a lot of Animal abuse and unsanitary living conditions for our food stock animals.
Until recently the Bull Dog breed was made to torture cattle and bulls before they were slaughtered and well that is also the point of bullfighting. Because the felt it "enhance the flavor"
It is also common for hunting to have traps, say a bear trap, which captures the animal but doesn't kill it, while there are metal teeth gripping into its leg.
Just because of you and your friend's
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FYI: Factory farming is by far the safest way to raise animals in terms of virology. Farming a large amount of a single animal with very little contact with other species means minimal ability for virus to jump species.
As a point of comparison traditional, or as hipsters call it "organic" farming is far worse, as it promotes interanimal contact far more. And Chinese style open markets with massive amount of animals stacked in cages on top of each other is the worst situation. But there, there's no other way
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Until the world economies collapse 'cos the govs tried to keep everyone home, we'll have go out and eat the corpses of our dead neighbours!
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Thousand die per month for lots of reasons, true... but people don't ordinarily die at a rate of thousands per day for weeks on end for the same single reason. p. That's how it's different.
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Lets check this against your stupilations:
Thousands per day? Check.
For weeks on end? Check.
For the same reason? Check.
Did you just also say "That's how it's different" ?
It almost seems like nothing you just said is true.