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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#1 |
In the Brig
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Oceans used to protect us from this kind of stuff happening. Now, with no controls in place disease just needs too find a non-stop flight to spread.
http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2014/09/30/c...e-ebola-virus/ Last edited by Rockstar; 09-30-14 at 06:39 PM. |
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#2 |
Navy Seal
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Those Texans, always have to the first for everything...
<O>
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#3 |
Rear Admiral
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and how many did they infect and they infect.....this could be a mess. Maybe the book of Revelation is true...
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#4 |
Ace of the Deep
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I think oceanic protection from this sort of event evaporated long ago. it certainly didn't protect anybody during the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic. It didn't help later with AIDS, SARS, or any number of mass flu epidemics.
Certainly didn't protect the Indians here much from any number of nasty bugs. |
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#5 |
In the Brig
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Sorry didn't mean to imply oceans had only recently become obsolete.
Anyway, according to France 24. The person diagnosed with Ebola in Dallas did not work in the medical field and had no direct contact with Ebola patients in Africa |
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#6 | |
Wayfaring Stranger
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http://www.iata.org/pressroom/pr/pag...-12-06-01.aspx
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#7 |
Gefallen Engel U-666
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Nothing new here perhaps
![]() Thucydides' narrative pointedly refers to increased risk among caregivers, which is more typical of the person-to-person contact spread of viral hemorrhagic fever (e.g., Ebola virus disease or Marburg virus) than typhus or typhoid. Unusual in the history of plagues during military operations, especially when relatively close physical proximity of combatants was the rule, besieging Spartan troops appear not to have been afflicted by the illness raging near them within the city. Thucydides' description further invites comparison with VHF in the character and sequence of symptoms developed and of the usual fatal outcome on about the eighth day. Olson et al. have interpreted Thucydides' "lugx kenē" (empty heaving) as the unusual symptom of hiccups, which is now recognized as a common finding in Ebola Virus Disease. Outbreaks of VHF in Africa in 2012 and 2014 reinforced observations of the increased hazard to caregivers and the necessity of barrier precautions for preventing disease spread related to grief rituals and funerary rites. With an up to three-week incubation period, transmission of Ebola via Nile commerce into the busy port of Piraeus is certainly plausible. Ancient Greek intimacy with African sources is reflected in accurate renditions of monkeys in art of frescoes and pottery, notably guenons, the primates implicated in transmitting Marburg into Germany and Yugoslavia when that disease was first characterized in 1967. Circumstantially tantalizing is the requirement for the large quantity of ivory used in the Athenian sculptor Phidias’ two monumental ivory and gold statues of Athena and of Zeus (one of the Seven Wonders), which were fabricated in the same decade. Never again in antiquity was ivory used on such a large scale. Unfortunately DNA sequence-based identification is limited by the inability of some important pathogens to leave a "footprint" retrievable from archaeological remains after several millennia. The lack of a durable signature by RNA viruses means some etiologies, notably the Viral Hemorrhagic Fever viruses, are not testable hypotheses using currently available scientific techniques." Bottom line: Thucydides is seldom inaccurate; this plague cost Athens the Peloponnesian War against Sparta. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plague_of_Athens
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"Only two things are infinite; The Universe and human squirrelyness?!! |
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#8 |
Best Admiral in the USN
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#9 |
Ace of the Deep
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#10 |
Lucky Jack
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BUY ALL GOLD!
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#11 |
Admiral
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"When you're born into this world, you're given a ticket to the freak show. If you're born in America you get a front row seat." - George Carlin |
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#12 |
Lucky Jack
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#13 |
Ace of the Deep
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Humanity is doomed. Time to live underground, time travel and join the Army of the Twelve Monkeys. And no, Bruce Willis can't save you. He just runs around naked a lot.
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#14 |
Lucky Jack
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"And what's so bad about living underground, eh? Not been so great living up here if you want my opinion!"
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#15 |
Ace of the Deep
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"Yes, you should see it down there. Hundreds of miles of drains. Sweet and clean now after the rains."
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