God's judgement for others, Hell's judgement for me
Wiles reports that he has been released from the hospital, but several family members and employees are now very sick. https://t.co/b91NEAAvZX pic.twitter.com/PFvgtFAHC8— Right Wing Watch (@RightWingWatch) June 1, 2021
― worst boy (Sanpaku), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 07:05 (five years ago)
To stop associating the variants with specific countries they will be called Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta,...https://gizmodo.com/british-and-indian-variants-renamed-alpha-and-delta-und-1847006007
Result: the Greek are offended
As a Greek I am deeply offended by the appropriation of our ancient and magnificent alphabet to name coronavirus variants! What fresh hell is this?(By the way if you think Greek letters are easier to say you have no idea how Greeks cringe when non Greeks pronounce them!) https://t.co/N0T9jZuwbx— Theodora (@theodora_nyc) May 31, 2021
― StanM, Wednesday, 2 June 2021 16:12 (five years ago)
Think the WHO erred in assigning Greek characters to the variants of interest as well.
The VOIs haven't received more than a small fraction of media coverage that the variants of concern have, and given vaccination rates in the developing world, Covid will be a global health concern for months to years to come. I fear the WHO will run out of Greek characters.
― worst boy (Sanpaku), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 16:51 (five years ago)
they can use Beanie Babies then
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 16:52 (five years ago)
I am deeply offended
(gently lifts right hand to head and places it against forehead, palm out, while tilting head slightly backward)
― What's It All About, Althea? (Aimless), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 16:54 (five years ago)
It does seem like a stupid idea tbh.
― Are Animated Dads Getting Hotter? (Tom D.), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 17:03 (five years ago)
It's in line with the WHO's best practices for naming new human infectious diseases from 2015.
“In recent years, several new human infectious diseases have emerged. The use of names such as ‘swine flu’ and ‘Middle East Respiratory Syndrome’ has had unintended negative impacts by stigmatizing certain communities or economic sectors,” says Dr Keiji Fukuda, Assistant Director-General for Health Security, WHO. “This may seem like a trivial issue to some, but disease names really do matter to the people who are directly affected. We’ve seen certain disease names provoke a backlash against members of particular religious or ethnic communities, create unjustified barriers to travel, commerce and trade, and trigger needless slaughtering of food animals. This can have serious consequences for peoples’ lives and livelihoods.”
Neutral names are a good idea. And the existing scientific nomenclature was terrible for media coverage.
National Geographic: How virus variants get their confusing names—and why that’s changing
“Who wants to keep saying 501Y.V2?” Abdool Karim says. “501Y.V2 is such a mouthful to say. It’s a terrible name. You wouldn’t want to call your child 501Y.V2.”...“I have no doubt that the associations between COVID-19 and China and the stigma around that has been unfortunately critical to the rise in anti-Asian hate crime around the world,” he says. This is not exactly a new phenomenon. The spread of infectious disease has been a powerful force for justifying racism and xenophobia for centuries.But there’s also a scientific argument for staying away from geographical names: Scientists point out that the names are misleading at best and totally inaccurate at worst. The truth is that scientists don’t know where the so-called South African variant actually originated. Sure, the variant was first identified in South Africa, but researchers haven’t yet found patient zero. It’s possible that South Africa was just the first country to find the variant because it was doing more genetic sequencing than other countries. Abdool Karim also says the label is misleading because the variant has spread throughout the world and is now more prevalent in places like the United States than it is in South Africa. “So you can see how crazy it is to call it the South African variant,” he says.
But there’s also a scientific argument for staying away from geographical names: Scientists point out that the names are misleading at best and totally inaccurate at worst. The truth is that scientists don’t know where the so-called South African variant actually originated. Sure, the variant was first identified in South Africa, but researchers haven’t yet found patient zero. It’s possible that South Africa was just the first country to find the variant because it was doing more genetic sequencing than other countries. Abdool Karim also says the label is misleading because the variant has spread throughout the world and is now more prevalent in places like the United States than it is in South Africa. “So you can see how crazy it is to call it the South African variant,” he says.
― worst boy (Sanpaku), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 17:10 (five years ago)
I wouldn't name my child "Mad Cow Disease" either
― frogbs, Wednesday, 2 June 2021 17:12 (five years ago)
up until this year, the World Meteorological Organization would name any tropical storm/hurricane after the 21st storm of the season using the Greek Alphabet. they stopped only due to preventing confusion, as apparently people were dumb and thought Hurricane Alpha wasn't a real hurricane.
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 17:13 (five years ago)
beginning this year, they're just adding more first names instead
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 17:14 (five years ago)
xp: To be fair, "Monkey Pox" has charm as a nickname.
― worst boy (Sanpaku), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 17:14 (five years ago)
Lemme go ask my children if being named after a disease is a bad thing. Their names are Sam and Ella.
― portmanteaujam (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 17:17 (five years ago)
lol
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 17:19 (five years ago)
Hi, Philip Perlman here, and these are my kids Donna and Rhea
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 17:21 (five years ago)
Those bastards in Kent have a lot to answer for.
― Are Animated Dads Getting Hotter? (Tom D.), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 18:09 (five years ago)
not Kent, alpha
― koogs, Wednesday, 2 June 2021 18:28 (five years ago)
Alpha Men or Men of Alpha.
― Are Animated Dads Getting Hotter? (Tom D.), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 18:29 (five years ago)
“To get 70% of the planet’s population inoculated by April, the IMF calculates, would cost just $50 billion. The cumulative economic benefit by 2025, in terms of increased global output, would be $9 trillion, to say nothing of the many lives that would be saved.”
https://www.economist.com/leaders/2021/06/09/the-west-is-passing-up-the-opportunity-of-the-century
oh well!
― welcome to lorde season (Karl Malone), Sunday, 13 June 2021 16:27 (five years ago)
If you save lives, you rob pharmaceutical companies of the ability to treat them
― cancel culture club (Neanderthal), Sunday, 13 June 2021 17:01 (five years ago)
yes, but if they're lucky, some of the saved lives will go on to get other slow-motion death diseases that will also drain the money out of families
chin up, pharmaceuticals!
― welcome to lorde season (Karl Malone), Sunday, 13 June 2021 17:11 (five years ago)
Appears that the Delta variant may have different symptoms to the traditional continuous cough etc
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-57467051
― groovypanda, Monday, 14 June 2021 11:12 (five years ago)
Luckily runny noses aren’t that common in hay fever season
― The 💨 that shook the barlow (wins), Monday, 14 June 2021 11:24 (five years ago)
yeah I fuckin' get those on the regular, as does my mother. yay for having to worry whether it's allergies or COVID!
― cancel culture club (Neanderthal), Monday, 14 June 2021 13:11 (five years ago)
"Does Nicotine protect against Covid symptoms?" researchers were paid by... (guess!)
https://www.bmj.com/content/373/bmj.n1303
― StanM, Monday, 14 June 2021 17:39 (five years ago)
surely people with covid could also have hayfever. and then a runny nose looks like a “symptom”.
― Tracer Hand, Monday, 14 June 2021 17:56 (five years ago)
Terrific piece on the lab conspiracy
https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/06/15/lab-leak-theory-doesnt-hold-up-covid-china/
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 15 June 2021 21:42 (five years ago)
Love #resistance types, libs, democrats pushing this Trump type conspiracy because China.
Right now: Jon Stewart on the Covid Lab Leak “theory” is solid laughs pic.twitter.com/WlRX35p9WK— siskin.eth (@mns) June 15, 2021
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 11:24 (four years ago)
it is definitely cool that jon stewart got dennis miller'd by covid
― Clay, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 11:33 (four years ago)
I was waiting for Jon to reveal he was just messing around but apparently not? wtf
― frogbs, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 14:39 (four years ago)
I'm not as confident as Jon, but the lab leak thing has always been totally plausible.
― DJI, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:00 (four years ago)
I mean, no.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:11 (four years ago)
The only people who have been confident about the lab leak theory or the jumped-from-animals theory had obvious agendas, or are very credulous of people with agendas. I'm not saying the lab leak theory is true, just that it is plausible.
― DJI, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 16:34 (four years ago)
― a (waterface), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 17:03 (four years ago)
So possible, but very unlikely? That sounds about right, I guess.
― DJI, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 17:23 (four years ago)
Sorry, I couldn't read that article until switching to Chrome.
― DJI, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 17:24 (four years ago)
possible does not = plausible
― cancel culture club (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 17:24 (four years ago)
also note that if the lab leak story is true the jumped-from-animals story is quite possibly also true
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 17:34 (four years ago)
the idea that this virus was "designed" as a bioweapon is clearly false and it's funny to see the same people who spent a year insisting that it was basically harmless now spout that line
it did seem plausible that this virus was discovered and then was studied in a lab and may have escaped from there, idk if there's any proof of that though. that article is paywalled for me.
― frogbs, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 17:46 (four years ago)
idk if there's any proof of that though. that article is paywalled for me.
― 𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 17:49 (four years ago)
possible does not = plausible― cancel culture club (Neanderthal), Wednesday, June 16, 2021 6:24 PM (twenty-eight minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
― cancel culture club (Neanderthal), Wednesday, June 16, 2021 6:24 PM (twenty-eight minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
Yeah that's why I wrote possible the second time. I changed my mind after reading more information.
Love you Neanderthal, but sometimes this fucking place is so lame.
― DJI, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 17:57 (four years ago)
The author of that FP piece, Justin Ling, was writing articles dismissing the lab leak theory as early as January 2020, so he may not be the most unbiased observer.
― o. nate, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 18:42 (four years ago)
Read the full Foreign Policy article and while I felt like not all of the author's arguments are bulletproof, the main takeaway that it's much more likely to have come from animals/nature than a lab is pretty convincing.
After reading it and bearing that point in mind, it sucks extra hard to see Stewart doing that familiar "Has the world gone insane? How am I the only person seeing how obvious this is?" routine about it. Dennis Miller comment otm. We're truly in The Upside-down.
― beard papa, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 19:35 (four years ago)
I agree it's more likely it didn't come via the lab in some shape or form, but rather took another pathway to Wuhan, just because that's one very specific pathway which has gotten a lot of attention, and there are many other less visible pathways. Most likely we will never know exactly where or how it started. However, I didn't find his arguments all that convincing. He seems to think that Wuhan Institute of Virology wouldn't have had any virus specimens that the international scientific community didn't know about. That seems unlikely to me.
― o. nate, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 19:43 (four years ago)
Love too call a place 'lame' when my efforts to be clever with words fall flat.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 19:59 (four years ago)
there’s an unstated implication that it’s this huge coincidence that wuhan has a virology lab because well, wtf is wuhan, but it’s as big as new york, of course there’s a virology lab there
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 19:59 (four years ago)
Well as of 2017 it was the only lab of its type in China, rated to study the most dangerous pathogens.
https://www.nature.com/articles/nature.2017.21487
― o. nate, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 20:07 (four years ago)
it also literally doesn't matter
― Clara Lemlich stan account (silby), Wednesday, 16 June 2021 20:13 (four years ago)
Not trying to be clever. Just accurate. But keep piling on. You are clearly very confident in your take!
― DJI, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 20:22 (four years ago)
right o nate, just that there’s a kind of “of all places” appended to the conspiracy theories and it’s like.. wuhan is a major world metropolis. plus it’s close to where a bunch of viruses appear to have propagated earlier, so it kinda makes sense it would be there as opposed to somewhere else
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 20:55 (four years ago)
Sure, I agree. There's lots of ways the virus could have gotten to Wuhan. I can also understand why some people see it as a coincidence though. If you just read that 2017 Nature article, highlighting the fact that a new lab was opening in Wuhan to study the most dangerous viruses and some scientists were worried about the possibility of lab leaks, and fast-forwarded to today, you might say, "Huh, that's a coincidence."
― o. nate, Wednesday, 16 June 2021 21:01 (four years ago)