Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Science

First Global Pandemic Treaty Agreed - Without the US (nature.com) 139

For the first time -- and despite fears that it might never happen -- nations have agreed a series of measures to prevent, prepare for and respond to pandemics. Nature: The terms of the first global pandemic accord were still being hashed out at the World Health Organization (WHO) headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, up until the early hours of 16 April. "This is a definitive moment in the history of global health," says Lawrence Gostin, a specialist in health law and policy at Georgetown University in Washington DC, who followed the negotiations closely. The accord "sets out some very important norms to keep the world safe," he says.

The accord was agreed without the United States, which withdrew from the pandemic treaty the day that President Trump was inaugurated. This reduces its power, says Gostin, but is also a source of strength. "Instead of collapsing in the face of President Trump's assault on global health, the world came together." The treaty is not perfect but represents a major achievement, says Michelle Childs, policy advocacy director at the non-profit organization Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative in Geneva. "People didn't think that they'd get to this stage of agreeing at all."

First Global Pandemic Treaty Agreed - Without the US

Comments Filter:
  • by locater16 ( 2326718 ) on Wednesday April 16, 2025 @07:19PM (#65311245)
    till the US stops with the "special little boy" shit. It's not just Trump, the US just doesn't sign treaties like this in general and hasn't for decades. As Futurama put it over 20 years ago "One of these two men will be President of the World" "what do we care, we live in the United States"
    • Re:I cannot wait (Score:5, Informative)

      by Mspangler ( 770054 ) on Wednesday April 16, 2025 @08:59PM (#65311457)

      'Treaty' has a particular meaning in the US Constitution. It requires a 2/3 vote in the Senate to have effect. Without that it has no legal status, it's just big words drifting on the breeze and probably violating a noise ordinance.

      "The Treaty Clause of the United States Constitution (Article II, Section 2, Clause 2) establishes the procedure for ratifying international agreements. It empowers the President as the primary negotiator of agreements between the United States and other countries, and holds that the advice and consent of a two-thirds supermajority of the Senate renders a treaty binding with the force of federal law."

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      For historical reasons going way back Congress is not too keen on surrendering its authority to make the law.

      • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        For historical reasons going way back Congress is not too keen on surrendering its authority to make the law.

        Except THIS congress, over half of which is just waiting in line to suck the golden dick and wave their MAGA hats at their reelection rallies. After watching the fiasco with tariffs, firing federal employees for no cause, creating fictitious DOGE department, defying court orders, threatening to send citizens to foreign prisons for convenience, etc., you really think the Cheeto in Charge gives a shit about the law?

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        That's interesting but does anyone except Congress care?

        People dying because the US didn't join the pandemic prevention/response treaty probably don't.

        Other countries certainly don't.

        • Being ruled by morons 2000 miles away is bad enough. Being ruled by morons 6000 miles away would be even worse.

          (I'm in the western US.)

          Besides, if the WHO recommendations make sense we can follow them.

      • For historical reasons going way back Congress is not too keen on surrendering its authority to make the law.

        I'd like you to have a look around for the last 90 days or so. Congress has been surrendering its authority on a great many subjects, including it's authority to make the law, and it's authority to keep a rogue administration in check, and it's authority to control where and when money is spent.

  • by ZipNada ( 10152669 ) on Wednesday April 16, 2025 @07:21PM (#65311249)

    I hope the US survives this thrashing and can rejoin the global community some day.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      That would be nice. Even a basically second-world country like the US is better to have as a partner than as a country of isolationist freaks.

      • by rta ( 559125 )

        i don't support much of the H1 2025 upheaval / rhetoric, and hope things will chill out reasonably soon, but for all our problems and to some degree BECAUSE we're already kind of uncomfortable the US is still the force to recon with.

        If i had to pick between the US or the EU in any sort of serious crisis: war, pandemic, etc. ... i think i'd go US as to who would come out ahead.

        Final Verdict: Model or Warning?
        Europe presents a complex picture. On one hand, it offers a social model that prioritizes well-being, equity, and sustainability. On the other hand, it faces significant challenges in competitiveness, innovation, and demographic stability. For America, the European experience is both a model and a warning—a reminder that while social safety nets and progressive values are essential, they must be balanced with economic dynamism and innovation to ensure long-term prosperity.

        https://worldecomag.com/europe... [worldecomag.com]

        • i don't support much of the H1 2025 upheaval / rhetoric, and hope things will chill out reasonably soon, but for all our problems and to some degree BECAUSE we're already kind of uncomfortable the US is still the force to recon with.

          If i had to pick between the US or the EU in any sort of serious crisis: war, pandemic, etc. ... i think i'd go US as to who would come out ahead.

          Final Verdict: Model or Warning?
          Europe presents a complex picture. On one hand, it offers a social model that prioritizes well-being, equity, and sustainability. On the other hand, it faces significant challenges in competitiveness, innovation, and demographic stability. For America, the European experience is both a model and a warning—a reminder that while social safety nets and progressive values are essential, they must be balanced with economic dynamism and innovation to ensure long-term prosperity.

          https://worldecomag.com/europe... [worldecomag.com]

          Please don't do this.That site is obviously all AI generated content. I do live in the EU and I find no joy in this self-harm.

          • by rta ( 559125 )

            ok. how about The Guardian instead:

            The EU should fear for its self-preservation as it faces a “slow and agonising decline”, according to a hard-hitting report by the former Italian prime minister Mario Draghi that calls for an €800bn-a-year spending boost to end years of stagnation. ...
            EU growth had been persistently slower than that of the US in the past two decades, he said while China had subsidised many industries to a level where they could out-compete EU firms.

            The report highlighted how 30% of EU startup businesses that had grown to be valued at more than €1bn – known as unicorns – had moved abroad, and mostly to list on stock markets in the US.

            “There are too many barriers to scaling up,” he said. “We are also hindering growth in our traditional sectors. We want coordination to be a source of growth.”

            https://www.theguardian.com/wo... [theguardian.com]

      • lol.
        You crack me up.

        You're either in China, Russia, or you're our bitch. Deal with it.
        • I was expecting this to be implicit sarcasm. I had to scroll back up, see who you were responding to, to then notice, wait it's not!

          This viewpoint of "the world has superpower states and vassal states, and everyone outside China/Russia is a vassal" is... interesting. Sure can make a lot of friends by calling 75% of the world "our bitch". But that's right, you don't need friends, you have vassals. Give it a few years. If there's a WW3, I'm not sure the US will find itself in the "allies" group.
  • Wow (Score:4, Insightful)

    by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Wednesday April 16, 2025 @08:04PM (#65311353)

    Trump was right. I really AM getting tired of all this winning...

  • We will have discovered the cause of autism in just 9 months.

    I'm not saying it was aliens, but it was aliens.

    Also to anyone supporting Trump and his shit show what the fuck is wrong with you?
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Also to anyone supporting Trump and his shit show what the fuck is wrong with you?

      Probably sunk-cost fallacy in some. The rest is just too dumb to even understand what is happening. They are cheering on the destruction of their own country.

    • treaties schmeaties - real men bosh bioweapons for breakfast and can easily bench-press five times their weight in whale carcasses! (strong arm emoji, fist emoji, whale emoji etc)

  • Mhmmm.... (Score:2, Interesting)

    I'm sure this document will ensure that ...

    The Chinese and other totalitarian governments of the world don't cover up their lab leaks

    The ambitious and self-important science administrators jn the global public sector don't back-door fund gain-of-function research in BSL-2 labs

    Vaccine manufacturing capacity will just spring into being in the third world, like Athena from Zeus's head, along with cold chains and other logistics required for distribution

    • by rta ( 559125 )

      The ambitious and self-important science administrators jn the global public sector don't back-door fund gain-of-function research in BSL-2 labs

      i believe the labs were BSL-3.

      Vaccine manufacturing capacity will just spring into being in the third world, like Athena from Zeus's head, along with cold chains and other logistics required for distribution

      if by "Zeus's head" you mean taxes in the "rich" countries, then yes, that's exactly what the document says.

  • I am certain China will continue to be willing to freely share its pathogens with the United States.

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      I am certain China will continue to be willing to freely share its pathogens with the United States.

      Yeah, but to actually get them, U.S. labs will have to pay huge import tariffs.

      Or did you mean "share with" as in "spread to"?

  • And syringes
    And Guns... can you ever have enough?

  • > nations have agreed a series of measures to prevent, prepare for and respond to pandemics. Nature:

    a. Don't perform gain-of-function experiments on viruses that is illegal in the US.

    b. Don't perform such experiments in China and Ukraine.

    c. Don't leak such viruses into the environment.

    d. If you must experiment then have a patent for a vaccine already filed.

    e. Make billions on a mass vaccination campaign.

    f. The mass vaccination campaign accelerating the mutation of the virus requiring re
  • wish there were more concrete solutions in the "treaty"... once you get past the majority of the articles covering this talking about how the US isn't part of it... instead of a focus on WHAT IS ACTUALLY IN THE TREATY... which doesn't seem like much... it sounds like a conceptual agreement, with no specifics and no specific solutions to the problems identified - mainly- hoping for more timely vaccine dispersal in poorer nations. And enhanced sharing of data between manufacturers and health orgs.

  • The usa is also passing on the global land mine treaty.
    Like russia and china (133 countries signed) - fine company indeed.

    • And Finland and I think Latvia or another Baltic. Suddenly when the wolf is at the door, thinking changes.

You need tender loving care once a week - so that I can slap you into shape. - Ellyn Mustard

Working...