This is a strange hill to die one. "The Chinese may be known to eat bats but there is no proof bat flu came from a guy making bat soup. Patient zero could just be a house pet bat connoisseur you racist."
epidemics are a fact of human life and have been throughout our species history. we need to think about developing measures that will limit and contain them, as and when they do occur, in a very small and globalised world. it's no good banning the consumption of one food. viruses mutate. they spread from animal to animal, and eventually, occasionally, wind up in humans. we not part of a different biosphere. we are not masters of all Nature. it's going to happen and we cannot extract ourselves from it.
there is no proof that it came from eating bats. earliest best guess was pangolins. frankly the more we look into it, the less certain it even seems that the first mutation occurred in the wet market. a virus mutating and hopping to humans isn't exactly like a smoking gun. there isn't a chalked body outline on the floor surrounded by police tape.
there is no proof that it came from eating bats. earliest best guess was pangolins. frankly the more we look into it, the less certain it even seems that the first mutation occurred in the wet market. a virus mutating and hopping to humans isn't exactly like a smoking gun. there isn't a chalked body outline on the floor surrounded by police tape.
Last edited by uziq (2020-04-30 10:10:47)
I think it's just a matter of frustration. Bats exist. Bats carry coronavirus. Coronaviruses can go from bat to human in many different ways, yet you and dilbert are focused like autists on one of those ways in order to denigrate an entire population.SuperJail Warden wrote:
This is a strange hill to die one. "The Chinese may be known to eat bats but there is no proof bat flu came from a guy making bat soup. Patient zero could just be a house pet bat connoisseur you racist."
Australians weren't eating bats when Hendra broke out. It went from bats to horses to humans. Why not hold all those rural Australians to task for eating horse meat? Or maybe you could not be an idiot and realize that you don't have to eat the horse to be infected - simply being around it is enough. Just like various zoonotic illness in the past, not every one is transmitted by consumption of meat.
You're right. Being stupid and insisting that wet markets are the culprit is a very strange hill to die on.
Could've started in any developing nation and probably in some developed nations as well. That said China is home to 1.3 billion and has insane population density in some places, while there's still quite a bit of poverty and lacking sanitation. Cities are simply growing too fast for municipal government to arrange necessary infrastructure or prepare control measures.
So the likelihood of this starting in places like that - sprawling urban areas in huge developing countries - is high.
The only thing the Chinese can really be held to account for is supressing early warnings, numbers and not sounding the alarm bells early. After this whole thing is over, and I mean after, I would support an international inquiry into the origins of the spread and the CCP role in letting it get as bad as it did. But people should be realistic about this. The parallels with Chernobyl are uncanny. You're wandering into a very murky grey area here seeking out 'responsibles' and trying to punish them.
That being said it should also be acknowledged that in today's connected world it's almost impossible to effectively stop viral spread of this type. Unlike Chernobyl, it's debateable how much human error or control was involved.
So the likelihood of this starting in places like that - sprawling urban areas in huge developing countries - is high.
The only thing the Chinese can really be held to account for is supressing early warnings, numbers and not sounding the alarm bells early. After this whole thing is over, and I mean after, I would support an international inquiry into the origins of the spread and the CCP role in letting it get as bad as it did. But people should be realistic about this. The parallels with Chernobyl are uncanny. You're wandering into a very murky grey area here seeking out 'responsibles' and trying to punish them.
That being said it should also be acknowledged that in today's connected world it's almost impossible to effectively stop viral spread of this type. Unlike Chernobyl, it's debateable how much human error or control was involved.
Last edited by Larssen (2020-04-30 10:30:46)
infographic - How the Virus Got Out 3/22
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/202 … pread.html
A lot of coronavirus discussion from work seems to always result in someone rehashing the theory that the Chinese intentionally seeded the planet using infected agents, unwitting or otherwise. "They knew about it, Xi is the most evil man of the 21st century using it as a bioweapon! The Chinese are going to have to answer for this!"
While I can neither prove nor disprove that conspiracy theory, I do believe it far more likely that the virus was just ahead of government reaction to it, on a worldwide scale. We're flooded by a daily stream of articles about how measures weren't strong enough (or were implemented too late), the harmfulness of pandemic denialism from officials and pundits, and a general lack of preparedness despite decades of warnings.
But sure, call it the "China virus" and the "bat flu." Totally helpful. Past few months I've seen increasing spite and resentment towards people of east Asian ethnicity.
Dilbert will appreciate or remember this one:
Revolting footage shows Chinese woman eating a whole bat at a fancy restaurant as scientists link the deadly coronavirus to the flying mammals
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl … nimal.html
"Revolting!" says a co.uk news site, completely oblivious to some of the wacky dishes at home.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/202 … pread.html
A lot of coronavirus discussion from work seems to always result in someone rehashing the theory that the Chinese intentionally seeded the planet using infected agents, unwitting or otherwise. "They knew about it, Xi is the most evil man of the 21st century using it as a bioweapon! The Chinese are going to have to answer for this!"
While I can neither prove nor disprove that conspiracy theory, I do believe it far more likely that the virus was just ahead of government reaction to it, on a worldwide scale. We're flooded by a daily stream of articles about how measures weren't strong enough (or were implemented too late), the harmfulness of pandemic denialism from officials and pundits, and a general lack of preparedness despite decades of warnings.
But sure, call it the "China virus" and the "bat flu." Totally helpful. Past few months I've seen increasing spite and resentment towards people of east Asian ethnicity.
Dilbert will appreciate or remember this one:
Revolting footage shows Chinese woman eating a whole bat at a fancy restaurant as scientists link the deadly coronavirus to the flying mammals
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl … nimal.html
"Revolting!" says a co.uk news site, completely oblivious to some of the wacky dishes at home.
Reminds me of that one page I posted a really long list of western youtube videos prepping various other animals for consumption. But no, it's the Chinese.'[After] experiencing this matter, can Chinese people give up eating wildlife?' the blogger asked in a post.
there was some discussion of russian units pumping out those videos when the virus broke out. it's so weird to think we live in some twisted absurdist, postmodernist reality where disinformation is weaponized during almost every single big public news story. we live in a deepfake universe now. so a random video captured in a totally different province of china, months/years before, suddenly becomes the focal point about a plague that we don't even know for sure came from people eating bats.
I mean honestly the weaponisation of information has a pretty long history. On the positive flipside it is or should be easier today to verify and fact check as well.
You can separate treatment of East Asians in the west from animosity towards China. I am very sorry that Chinese Americans are getting targeted for harassment by stupid people. I think my post history proves that I don't condone that and instead have a very special affection for the people of East Asia and their culture.
I think you guys are falling into a trap of defending China and Asia broadly from criticism when you should instead be focusing on the failure of western government's to prepare and manage. Defending Chinese food standards and foreign policy just makes people in the middle and with brains groan. It won't convince Joe Pickup Truck to be better towards East Asians. It's wasted breath and ink.
You should acknowledge that China doesn't have peaceful intent towards it's neighbors and needs to work on food safety standards. And reminding people that rural American eat roadkill is unconvincing as a defense of the Chinese. Tony New Jersey or Mikey California doesn't think highly of that practice either.
I think you guys are falling into a trap of defending China and Asia broadly from criticism when you should instead be focusing on the failure of western government's to prepare and manage. Defending Chinese food standards and foreign policy just makes people in the middle and with brains groan. It won't convince Joe Pickup Truck to be better towards East Asians. It's wasted breath and ink.
You should acknowledge that China doesn't have peaceful intent towards it's neighbors and needs to work on food safety standards. And reminding people that rural American eat roadkill is unconvincing as a defense of the Chinese. Tony New Jersey or Mikey California doesn't think highly of that practice either.
But defending a food culture that doesn't conform to your idea of a norm is different than absolving a nation state of accountability or belligerence. Food safety, animal living conditions, and pathogen screening (food-related or otherwise) could stand to see improvement in many parts of the world, including the west. But no, "oh, ew, ick, bats!" Reflexive and juvenile.
I brought up stuff like cleaning and cooking squirrels because there was an inordinate amount of focus on Chinese bats (without hard evidence proving causation), with strong "fear the yellow savage" overtones. How many people do you suppose are overly concerned about the possum flu patient zero appearing in an Arkansas hospital? Wild animal here, it's "quaint and silly" (unless one of the "accepted" wild animals, like deer). Wild animal there, "yucky and backwards."
There are probably people who don't mind that hot dogs and hamburgers exist, but raised an eyebrow at Bush Jr.'s invasion of Iraq.
Mikey California thinks quarantines are communism.
I brought up stuff like cleaning and cooking squirrels because there was an inordinate amount of focus on Chinese bats (without hard evidence proving causation), with strong "fear the yellow savage" overtones. How many people do you suppose are overly concerned about the possum flu patient zero appearing in an Arkansas hospital? Wild animal here, it's "quaint and silly" (unless one of the "accepted" wild animals, like deer). Wild animal there, "yucky and backwards."
There are probably people who don't mind that hot dogs and hamburgers exist, but raised an eyebrow at Bush Jr.'s invasion of Iraq.
Mikey California thinks quarantines are communism.
If you read the posts I made in the other thread on Chinese foreign policy and some basic IR theory but still go on about how I'm shielding them from criticism .... fuck sakes man. I'm not going to infinitely reduce and reiterate those points I made to accomodate your inability to read.
also who gives a fuck what an american thinks about global affairs. it’s a country where ‘joe michigan’ is role playing in his duck hunter camo and storming the state capitol with his ‘paramilitary’ friends. your country looks as deranged as china blaming covid on suspicious american soldiers.
world's number one country, alright. you've created a golem!
world's number one country, alright. you've created a golem!
Last edited by uziq (2020-04-30 15:13:06)
There's no reason to be transporting either wild bats or pangolins, both well known disease vectors, to food markets.uziq wrote:
epidemics are a fact of human life and have been throughout our species history. we need to think about developing measures that will limit and contain them, as and when they do occur, in a very small and globalised world. it's no good banning the consumption of one food. viruses mutate. they spread from animal to animal, and eventually, occasionally, wind up in humans. we not part of a different biosphere. we are not masters of all Nature. it's going to happen and we cannot extract ourselves from it.
there is no proof that it came from eating bats. earliest best guess was pangolins. frankly the more we look into it, the less certain it even seems that the first mutation occurred in the wet market. a virus mutating and hopping to humans isn't exactly like a smoking gun. there isn't a chalked body outline on the floor surrounded by police tape.
OK so lets not worry about how pandemics are caused, we'll just figure out how to deal with them when they happen, cure being so much easier than prevention.
We can deal with a total lockdown and no world trade, say, two years in every ten as we try to figure out a vaccine?
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2020-04-30 16:57:22)
Fuck Israel
I don't even find it weird people would eat a bat, a dog, a cat, a horse, or whatever else. Hot dogs are one of my favorite foods. You could feed me a cat hot dog and I probably wouldn't notice it over the taste of ketchup and mustard. I can even find it completely justified that someone on a budget would feed the family discounted bat meat to survive or as a special treat. I wasn't kidding about sustainable bat farming.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
But defending a food culture that doesn't conform to your idea of a norm is different than absolving a nation state of accountability or belligerence. Food safety, animal living conditions, and pathogen screening (food-related or otherwise) could stand to see improvement in many parts of the world, including the west. But no, "oh, ew, ick, bats!" Reflexive and juvenile.
I brought up stuff like cleaning and cooking squirrels because there was an inordinate amount of focus on Chinese bats (without hard evidence proving causation), with strong "fear the yellow savage" overtones. How many people do you suppose are overly concerned about the possum flu patient zero appearing in an Arkansas hospital? Wild animal here, it's "quaint and silly" (unless one of the "accepted" wild animals, like deer). Wild animal there, "yucky and backwards."
There are probably people who don't mind that hot dogs and hamburgers exist, but raised an eyebrow at Bush Jr.'s invasion of Iraq.
Mikey California thinks quarantines are communism.
But I resent attempts to pretend that China doesn't have a special responsibility for this disaster. Liberals and such who ignore that in the service of anti-racism are thinking like Trump supporters. Just like Joe Pickup truck ignores the science of COVID, an Adam Cuck would ignore the fact that the virus came from China because he has an unrequited crush on a married Asian woman.
It's Kenny Alabama who hates communism. Joe Michigan just wants to go to work and die.
I'm sure bat is an expensive delicacy compared with chicken - which pretty much farms itself.
Fuck Israel
I think you mean Chad ThundercockSuperJail Warden wrote:
Adam Cuck would ignore the fact that the virus came from China because he has an unrequited crush on a married Asian woman.
The shape of an eye in front of the ocean, digging for stones and throwing them against its window pane. Take it down dreamer, take it down deep. - Other Families
If the Republican party wasn't at the total service of the Corporate Jews and their fake numbers on Wall Street, they would use this an opportunity to redefine the trade relationship between the U.S. and China. If they actually cared about Joe Michigan, they would be spending money on opening factories and businesses to challenge Chinese manufacturing.Dilbert_X wrote:
There's no reason to be transporting either wild bats or pangolins, both well known disease vectors, to food markets.uziq wrote:
epidemics are a fact of human life and have been throughout our species history. we need to think about developing measures that will limit and contain them, as and when they do occur, in a very small and globalised world. it's no good banning the consumption of one food. viruses mutate. they spread from animal to animal, and eventually, occasionally, wind up in humans. we not part of a different biosphere. we are not masters of all Nature. it's going to happen and we cannot extract ourselves from it.
there is no proof that it came from eating bats. earliest best guess was pangolins. frankly the more we look into it, the less certain it even seems that the first mutation occurred in the wet market. a virus mutating and hopping to humans isn't exactly like a smoking gun. there isn't a chalked body outline on the floor surrounded by police tape.
OK so lets not worry about how pandemics are caused, we'll just figure out how to deal with them when they happen, cure being so much easier than prevention.
We can deal with a total lockdown and no world trade, say, two years in every ten as we try to figure out a vaccine?
If Clinton would have won and this happened, that evil bitch would have this shit on lock. She would have signed the Trans-Pacific Partnership with the East Asians. She would be willing to spend all of the money we will never pay back on American businesses to make boots for gays. And she would be pressuring the Europeans to move away from Chinese trade. But instead we got Trump and all Bat Flu.
Adam Cuck would never get Lee Korean to ever see him as anything more than a friend.Pochsy wrote:
I think you mean Chad ThundercockSuperJail Warden wrote:
Adam Cuck would ignore the fact that the virus came from China because he has an unrequited crush on a married Asian woman.
Hopefully Chad lets Adam watch from between the closet slats.
The shape of an eye in front of the ocean, digging for stones and throwing them against its window pane. Take it down dreamer, take it down deep. - Other Families
you have a very limited view of what ‘causes’ a zoonotic infection.Dilbert_X wrote:
There's no reason to be transporting either wild bats or pangolins, both well known disease vectors, to food markets.uziq wrote:
epidemics are a fact of human life and have been throughout our species history. we need to think about developing measures that will limit and contain them, as and when they do occur, in a very small and globalised world. it's no good banning the consumption of one food. viruses mutate. they spread from animal to animal, and eventually, occasionally, wind up in humans. we not part of a different biosphere. we are not masters of all Nature. it's going to happen and we cannot extract ourselves from it.
there is no proof that it came from eating bats. earliest best guess was pangolins. frankly the more we look into it, the less certain it even seems that the first mutation occurred in the wet market. a virus mutating and hopping to humans isn't exactly like a smoking gun. there isn't a chalked body outline on the floor surrounded by police tape.
OK so lets not worry about how pandemics are caused, we'll just figure out how to deal with them when they happen, cure being so much easier than prevention.
We can deal with a total lockdown and no world trade, say, two years in every ten as we try to figure out a vaccine?
what about bat droppings getting into a food supply that is unrelated to meat? what about contact between an ‘exotic’ (your word) carrier and a domestic animal? what if it mutated and hopped to a horse, or a dog?
frankly there’s no reason people should keep dogs, they carry lethal diseases ... bla bla bla.
susceptible, infectious, recovered
https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v42/n09 … -recovered
https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v42/n09 … -recovered
interesting stuff. some good graphs and visuals inside the article -- can't embed them here.You can build a simple mathematical model of an epidemic in a spreadsheet, using three columns to represent the Susceptible, the Infectious and the Recovered and calculating daily totals to show how an imaginary population is affected. The SIR model has two mathematical formulae controlling the flow from Susceptible to Infectious and from Infectious to Recovered. These formulae tell us how many people to subtract each day from the Susceptible population and add to the Infectious, and how many to subtract from the Infectious and add to the Recovered. The number of people moved out of the Susceptible group is calculated from the average number of contacts each individual has, the likelihood that a contact is with an infectious person, and the likelihood that such contacts will lead to infection. The number moved from Infectious to Recovered is simply the number of infectious individuals multiplied by the average rate of recovery.
...
The teams that have been advising the government have now published accounts of their models. The one from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) is superficially similar to mine. Susceptible people pass through a latent phase between becoming infected and being infectious, and then either have a mild, or subclinical, version of the disease, or a more serious illness with both a preclinical phase and a clinical phase requiring a stay in hospital. It is assumed that the mild cases are only half as infectious as the more severe cases.
Only one of the parameters in my model – the average number of contacts per person per day – is a fact about human behaviour. This is the parameter that can be manipulated when we attempt to alter the course of a pandemic. In the LSHTM model a separate value for the average number of contacts was calculated for every five-year age band in each of the 186 county-level administrative units in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. To do this, demographic data on the proportion of people in each age group in each county was combined with data from an EU-funded study from 2008 (which seems to have been carried out in anticipation of a need for this kind of modelling) that surveyed 7290 people of different ages and asked them about the number of people they typically encountered at home, at work, at school or elsewhere. In my model the transitions between phases were determined by applying an average figure to everyone in each group at a particular time. In the LSHTM model the probability of each individual moving from one phase to the next at a given time was drawn from a range of values taken from early analyses of data from Wuhan. The length of time between onset and death, for example, is modelled using data that a Japanese team collated on 44 patients for whom those dates were reported either on Chinese government websites or in news stories.
The model predicted that, if nothing was done to mitigate the effects of the epidemic in the UK, 85 per cent of the population would be infected, there would be 24 million clinical cases and 370,000 deaths. At its peak, 220,000 ICU beds would be required. In February this year the number of adult ICU beds open in England was 4122. The effects of different policies – school closures, social distancing, shielding of the elderly and self-isolation of symptomatic individuals – and of combinations of them were simulated by adjusting the average number of contacts. The most effective single strategy, shielding the elderly, still resulted in 220,000 deaths and a need for 120,000 ICU beds, as well as 230,000 other hospital beds. There are about 100,000 general and acute NHS hospital beds currently available in England.
...
The LSHTM team also modelled the impact of more aggressive strategies, such as the use of repeated lockdowns, triggered when the number of ICU beds occupied by Covid-19 patients reaches a particular number. If the threshold was set at a thousand ICU beds, the number of cases could be kept to four million and the number of deaths to 51,000. The downside is that 73 per cent of the time between now and December 2021 would be spent in lockdown, by which point only 11 million people would have been infected and, unless a vaccine had been found, the epidemic would be far from over.
...
The burden of the pandemic has so far fallen mainly on countries in South-East Asia, which coped with it relatively well, and Europe and North America, where the results have been more variable. Its spread will be global. We don’t have the data for many low and middle-income countries that would allow us to run detailed simulations of the kind I have described here. The Imperial team used a simple SIR model, adding survey data, where it exists, to estimate age-specific contact rates, which were then combined with demographic data and the Infection Fatality Rate estimates from China. The results suggest that, if nothing is done, the pandemic will lead to seven billion infections and forty million deaths worldwide. These figures could, in theory, be halved if various mitigation strategies were deployed, but healthcare systems everywhere would still be overwhelmed. The conclusion for the world is the same as it was for the UK. The only option is suppression, and its consequences, economic and social, are unknown.
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-01 04:02:29)
meanwhile.
also, this diary, written from inside china by an ex-bureaucrat, is one of the best things i’ve read to give insight on the situation and mood there. very interesting context.
https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v42/n08 … ying/diary
https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v42/n08 … ying/diary
america is a militarised quasi-fascist culture. this is what happens when you pump trillions of dollars into fake wars and giant arms companies. your police look like special forces and martial hero-worship becomes the norm.
people who save lives? worthless, spivs, grifters, enemies of the state.
people who kill innocent brown folks? HEROES.
people who save lives? worthless, spivs, grifters, enemies of the state.
people who kill innocent brown folks? HEROES.
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-01 06:10:57)