With all the knowledge in the who, haven’t they figured out that maybe just maybe the earth no longer wants us here, that it is working to eradicate the human species. Humans had a good run, now it’s time for some other species to be at the top of mountain
My understanding is, that if it jumps from cattle in the US to pigs at US farms that will be a very worrying escalation. So far, to our knowledge, this has not happened.The virus has already jumped to a fairly long list of mammals, including pigs:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mammals_that_can_get_H5N1
This is precisely what evolution has on the table for any species though. Earth does its utmost to cultivate the strongest to survive. Unfortunately since a few thousand years, it decided to groom us - the crickets with monkey faces - to be at the forefront.With all the knowledge in the who, haven’t they figured out that maybe just maybe the earth no longer wants us here, that it is working to eradicate the human species. Humans had a good run, now it’s time for some other species to be at the top of mountain
My understanding is, that if it jumps from cattle in the US to pigs at US farms that will be a very worrying escalation. So far, to our knowledge, this has not happened.
Mexican Health Secretary Jorge Alcocer has refuted claims made by the World Health Organization (WHO) regarding the cause of death of a 59-year-old man in Mexico. The WHO had earlier announced that the man had succumbed to a new strain of bird flu that had not previously been found in humans. During a morning briefing on Thursday, Alcocer vehemently denied the WHO’s announcement and clarified that the man died due to complications from kidney and respiratory failure, not from avian influenza, according to AA.“I can point out that the statement made by the World Health Organization is pretty bad, since it speaks of a fatal case (of bird flu), which was not the case,” Alcocer said firmly.The health secretary further suggested that the WHO failed to recognize that the patient’s death resulted from complications associated with longstanding health problems such as diabetes and renal failure. Investigations conducted found no evidence of contagion among people who had been in contact with the patient.“So far, there is no evidence of human-to-human transmission,” he added.
Out of 17 contacts identified and monitored at the hospital where the patient died, only one reported a minor symptom – a runny nose.
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