Terxpahseyton
Nobody
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2006
- Messages
- 10,759
Granted, but analogies have the habbit to carry a message and in that case the message was "Worry!" without bothering to prove it. That's what I disliked.it was an analogy.
Like...? As far as I know every jungle has or has had human inhabitants.Normally, people avoided intruding into certain areas, because they were very "unhealthy" for them.
Those natural reservoirs may have a high deversity, but not one which comes close to outmatching the entire rest of the world. Hence it's importance is highly exaggerated.Today, humans are cutting deeper into the natural reservoirs of diseases, so it's pretty logical that sooner or later, they hit the jackpot (and "win" a pandemic).
True, but that stuff just happens and if it does we are screwd anyways. Things like jungles who get explored and so on IMO do not have a significant impact.As the author of the book said: if HIV was as stealthy as it is now, but as communicable as common flu, we'd now face extinction because 95%+ of humans would be infected.
I see the possibility of a super-mega-pandemic but not our possibility to rule that out or to cause it in a way which could have been prevented. I also see the possibility of our universe exploding any minute or a plaine crashing on my house. But as I won't worry about the plaine nor the universe I also won't worry about end of humanity because of a terrible desease. And I wouldn't advise it to anybody else due the lack of a point.You underestimate the scope of the problem. As I explained in another thread, our society is now more vulnerable to a really bad pandemic than the medieval society was to the Black Death.
In the past, no virus could spread as fast as today and no virus would find so dense human populations to spread in.
Already dismissed, next!1) We're sticking our noses into nature's reservoir of very deadly diseases
You think HIV as infectious as an pandamic could be stopped?2) The parts of the world where this is happening are very underdeveloped, lacking a proper healthcare which could discover/stop the disease before it gets a chance to spread
Well, true.3) Air travel can spread these diseases around the world in just few days
True, again!4) We're so overpopulated that the virus won't find it hard to infect more people
Still as long as something ain't as mean as HIV we can fight it pretty good. And if it is ... busted man.
See above.Nature is pretty capable killer and a random mutation can produce something as deadly as any human researcher. You can downplay it as much as you want, but denial doesn't make the problem disappear.
I don't deniale, I think practically