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View Full Version : Time to cull the herd?


Rockstar
03-03-17, 11:54 PM
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/to-your-health/wp/2017/03/03/surge-in-human-cases-of-deadly-bird-flu-is-prompting-alarm/?utm_term=.4f082363c7e5

A surge in human infections of a deadly bird flu in China is prompting increasing concern among health officials around the world. While the human risk of these outbreaks is low at the moment, experts are calling for constant monitoring because of the large increase in cases this season, and because there are worrisome changes in the virus. U.S. officials say of all emerging influenza viruses, this particular virus poses the greatest risk of a pandemic threat if it evolves to spread readily from human to human, according to a report released Friday.

CDC report. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/66/wr/mm6609e2.htm?s_cid=mm6609e2_w

How many rememeber back in the day when not only couldn't this flu be transmitted between humans, bird to human inffection was a extremely rare event.

Skybird
03-04-17, 03:40 AM
The planet certainly would not complain if mankind were about to loose a couple of billions. Thats the point: man is sentimental, and morally handicapped - nature is not. If we do not get our acts together and breed like crazies, of which mass animal farming and superintense agriculture are consequent results, then nature takes care of them in its own unique, unsentimental way. And by intense monocultures and industrial lifestock farming, we help such pandemics to rise, and spread.

Not the only reason, but a major one.

Jimbuna
03-04-17, 07:18 AM
Natures way of culling perhaps? :hmmm:

Obltn Strand
03-04-17, 07:30 AM
My father once said that humans could be evolution's mistake. Quess there's some seed of truth about it. Perhaps nature fixing it's mistakes...

Skybird
03-04-17, 09:48 AM
^ I admit I tend to have my doubts, too. Maybe not a mistake in the meaning of "not worth to research it further", but a design study that ultimately has led into a dead end. - Bitter to realise that, as a human, maybe, but I never seemed to have bought the idea of man being the "crown" of evolution. Just one strain amongst many others, being run and tested under the blueprint title "sophisticated individualized intelligence concept study". It may be like with concept cars. They get tested, but the serial production cars then look very different, and concept cars end up in museums soon.

Oberon
03-04-17, 09:57 AM
We're certainly not immune to the laws of nature, no matter how hard we try.

Time to move to Madagascar (http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/shut-down-everyting) perhaps?