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Tue, 30 Nov 2021 01:30:11 +0100
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0mega ☣ [hz]
0mega@social.c-r-t.tk
WelshPixie (dawel a dirgel)
schrieb den folgenden
Beitrag
Mon, 29 Nov 2021 23:08:27 +0100
Re. the 'South African' COVID variant
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4
Christoph S
KAOS
Alexander Goeres
mrd_ill_be_back@diasp.org
Tue, 30 Nov 2021 10:26:58 +0100
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Alexander Goeres
jabgoe2089@hub.netzgemeinde.eu
like the spanish flu, that originated in the usa
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0mega ☣ [hz]
Tue, 30 Nov 2021 14:03:47 +0100
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Joseph [Moved to Glasswings] Teller
joseph_teller@pluspora.com
The travel bans wouldn't work anyway, as they are randomly enforced. Unless an area has zero infections and shuts down its borders completely to everyone (including all forms of travel and physical goods trade) like New Zealand did for a while with the original pandemic, it doesn't work to stop the disease from entering the area.
As long as there exceptions, the disease will get thru. This is the problem with quarantines and isolation rules.
Reporters picking up on location is in part the fault of the insistence that somehow the 'naming' of a virus must come from a board of doctors some time after reporting. They just need a naming convention and assignment system, like Hurricanes have, set up ahead of time, for when these things happen, whether it be letters of the Greek Alphabet, or the old Radio Codes "Alpha Bravo" etc. and just assign a designation when a new one appears rather than the current process. Then there would be no nation state or geographic region burdened with a false source point name.
@
Alexander Goeres
the Spanish Flu, by the way, was not the first disease that was attached to a specific location by the press (that goes back to the press in 1889-1990 and the so-called "Russian Flu"). And it appears calling it the Spanish Flu originated in England because the Spanish Newspapers (which were neutral) were calling it that and had headlines about it after the King of Spain was infected... the newspapers there called it the "Three Day Flu" because that is how long it was believed after infection that they would show symptoms.
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