Swine Flu

Started by Bicnarok23 pages

Swine Flu

This new swine flu virus could turn into a nasty bit of work. Its already in Mexico, the US and Canada.

The UN has warned the virus has the potential to become a pandemic, but said the world was better prepared than ever to deal with the threat.

I heard on the news it could be a mixture of Swine Flu, Bird Flu and Human Flu and has killed healthy people unlike normal Flu which can kill old and weakened people.

I bet the Pharmaceutical companies are rubbing their hands, in fact it wouldn´t surprise me if they created it to make some money.
😱

this may be the next big thing. lets HOPE it doesnt mutate and kill every1 on the planet, its sounding of hysteria alarms on most of the international news networks.

I hope it kills everybody.

Only 100 have apparently been died so far, so even though its sad its non mentionable on a global scale if you consider what other diseases can do.

And the media do like to scare the crap out of people to make the news exciting, so its a case of watching, wash your hands regularly, avoid people with a cold and stop kissing pigs.

This is really going to throw a wrench in my typical bestiality.

Originally posted by Symmetric Chaos
This is really going to throw a wrench in my typical bestiality.

Just use protection.

Wasn't it a Pig Flu?

Originally posted by bananen
Wasn't it a Pig Flu?

Yes, but that pig flu virus had viral sex with with bird (probably duck and chicken) and human flu viruses and birthed this super-virus.

Since it both contains human and animal elements, it can infect people, but then our immune system says "wtf is this shit" in regards to the animal elements and gets it's ass aptly kicked.

I wouldn't worry all that much, there's far worse shit brewing in China with their massive pig/duck/chicken farms and their complete lack of oversight. It's only a matter of time before a hybrid virus that's capable of killing us instantly or turning people into cannibalistic zombies is sharted out form their.

That or one of the HIV viruses in Africa mutates and becomes Super-AIDS.

Oh look, the media making everyone panic once again...

Read this today:

Now, here we are again. Eighty people have got a nasty flu and died in Mexico. May they rest in peace. But 200,000 of us die every day in the world, so the Mexican victims aren't exactly objects of rational fear. But the sentence that has been picked up and spun round the world says: "The World Health Organisation has warned that the [swine flu] virus has the potential to become a pandemic".

It sounds to us in the laity a bit like the Terror Level rating the Government puts out so that it can say, "We did warn you," if perchance a bombing takes place.

But it has made front pages all round the world. It is a pandemic of headlines. And the director of the World Influenza Centre has helped by saying of the outbreak and its future: "It's difficult to look on the bright side."

Actually, it is not at all difficult, with a little insensitivity. The bright side is that almost no one has been affected, there have been almost no deaths, we haven't had a major outbreak of flu for 40 years, there has been no swine flu in the UK for a decade, and also no one in Britain died of bird flu.

It may well be true that, virally speaking, H1 swine flu is "already worse than H5". But that H5N1 bird flu was hardly worth worrying us with at all. According to the World Health Organisation, 257 people have died of it in the last seven years, while the best part of a billion others have died of non-bird flu related causes.

Nonetheless, we were worried enough at the time. Avian flu was subjected to "detailed modelling" by the Department of Health.

It revealed "mortality estimates of between 50,000 and 750,000 additional deaths, depending on both the attack rate and case fatality rate". That is, in English, maybe 50,000 people would die or 750,000 people would die, depending on how many people died. In the event, nobody in Britain died.

Why we want to believe that 750,000 Britons are under threat of dying a miserable death through failure of the respiratory system isn't clear, but we do want to play with the idea. We do provide a receptive environment for the bacillus of looming disaster.

When Aids first came to prominence in the 1980s, it was widely accepted that most people would be infected over the next generation. The creation of misleading graphs, tortured tables and spurious argumentation was incredible. In the end, no one believed it. But we had to go through 15 years without Aids infecting most of us before we could accept it.

The Millennium Bug grew in a similar culture. The BBC estimated that $300m had been spent on preventing a global computer crash that would destroy the world's processing power. After nothing happened, the organisers of the prevention drive declared it a great success. But companies – and indeed countries – that did nothing performed as well as those who had spent the $300m.

Maybe these fears are what we have in a secular society instead of the Apocalypse. But there is one practical point we should take on board. If they – whoever "they" are – do get a good scare going, one prediction can make you rich.

Shares in Gilead Sciences (which holds the patent on the antiviral drug marketed as government-recommended Tamiflu) will bounce, along with shares in Roche, which has the marketing rights.

GlaxoSmithKline may also work (they produce Relenza).

Both drugs have apparently worked, in laboratory conditions, against the swine flu virus. Expect that the UK alone will be commissioning 30 million doses, paying emergency rates. The profits, at least, will be apocalyptic.

Originally posted by MildPossession
Oh look, the media making everyone panic once again...

Read this today:

Now, here we are again. Eighty people have got a nasty flu and died in Mexico. May they rest in peace. But 200,000 of us die every day in the world, so the Mexican victims aren't exactly objects of rational fear. But the sentence that has been picked up and spun round the world says: "The World Health Organisation has warned that the [swine flu] virus has the potential to become a pandemic".

It sounds to us in the laity a bit like the Terror Level rating the Government puts out so that it can say, "We did warn you," if perchance a bombing takes place.

But it has made front pages all round the world. It is a pandemic of headlines. And the director of the World Influenza Centre has helped by saying of the outbreak and its future: "It's difficult to look on the bright side."

Actually, it is not at all difficult, with a little insensitivity. The bright side is that almost no one has been affected, there have been almost no deaths, we haven't had a major outbreak of flu for 40 years, there has been no swine flu in the UK for a decade, and also no one in Britain died of bird flu.

It may well be true that, virally speaking, H1 swine flu is "already worse than H5". But that H5N1 bird flu was hardly worth worrying us with at all. According to the World Health Organisation, 257 people have died of it in the last seven years, while the best part of a billion others have died of non-bird flu related causes.

Nonetheless, we were worried enough at the time. Avian flu was subjected to "detailed modelling" by the Department of Health.

It revealed "mortality estimates of between 50,000 and 750,000 additional deaths, depending on both the attack rate and case fatality rate". That is, in English, maybe 50,000 people would die or 750,000 people would die, depending on how many people died. In the event, nobody in Britain died.

Why we want to believe that 750,000 Britons are under threat of dying a miserable death through failure of the respiratory system isn't clear, but we do want to play with the idea. We do provide a receptive environment for the bacillus of looming disaster.

When Aids first came to prominence in the 1980s, it was widely accepted that most people would be infected over the next generation. The creation of misleading graphs, tortured tables and spurious argumentation was incredible. In the end, no one believed it. But we had to go through 15 years without Aids infecting most of us before we could accept it.

The Millennium Bug grew in a similar culture. The BBC estimated that $300m had been spent on preventing a global computer crash that would destroy the world's processing power. After nothing happened, the organisers of the prevention drive declared it a great success. But companies – and indeed countries – that did nothing performed as well as those who had spent the $300m.

Maybe these fears are what we have in a secular society instead of the Apocalypse. But there is one practical point we should take on board. If they – whoever "they" are – do get a good scare going, one prediction can make you rich.

Shares in Gilead Sciences (which holds the patent on the antiviral drug marketed as government-recommended Tamiflu) will bounce, along with shares in Roche, which has the marketing rights.

GlaxoSmithKline may also work (they produce Relenza).

Both drugs have apparently worked, in laboratory conditions, against the swine flu virus. Expect that the UK alone will be commissioning 30 million doses, paying emergency rates. The profits, at least, will be apocalyptic.

People like that are always either the madmen that created the virus or certain victims of it in the end.

He is on about how it's all blown out of proportion... explain how he falls into your catagories?

Originally posted by MildPossession
He is on about how it's all blown out of proportion... explain how he falls into your catagories?

The madman wants people to ignore it rather than defend themselves. If he's wrong and writes articles about it he'll die horribly as an ironic point.

Yep, thought you would say that...

The infected school in NYC is only about a mile from where I work. TV crews were all over it a few days ago.

Originally posted by Symmetric Chaos
The madman wants people to ignore it rather than defend themselves. If he's wrong and writes articles about it he'll die horribly as an ironic point.

Yes and no, he has a point, a 'state of fear' makes those who can benefit from it, benefit from it.

Remember the bird flu?

Mexico is a third world country with shit medical care. That's why so many have died there.

Originally posted by Kris Blaze
I hope it kills everybody.

i hope it kills you!

Originally posted by leonheartmm
this may be the next big thing. lets HOPE it doesnt mutate and kill every1 on the planet, its sounding of hysteria alarms on most of the international news networks.
I am Legend.

Re: Swine Flu

Originally posted by Bicnarok
This new swine flu virus could turn into a nasty bit of work. Its already in Mexico, the US and Canada.

The UN has warned the virus has the potential to become a pandemic, but said the world was better prepared than ever to deal with the threat.

I heard on the news it could be a mixture of Swine Flu, Bird Flu and Human Flu and has killed healthy people unlike normal Flu which can kill old and weakened people.

I bet the Pharmaceutical companies are rubbing their hands, in fact it wouldn´t surprise me if they created it to make some money.
😱

I pray for those caught in its path. Hopefully there are no casualties.

Originally posted by Kris Blaze
I hope it kills everybody.

Except a few including me, so I can become kind of the world🙂