jorgesborges 13 days ago

It’s easy to subscribe to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency[0] and receive updates on cases of AI in livestock across the country. I was a subscriber for a year or so and thought it was fun but ultimately received too many emails — sometimes multiple cases a month. Not once did any of those get blown up to a media-worthy case, which I always found interesting: relatively high frequency but low severity.

I suppose the “severity” is low only because the rate of transmission to humans is low. The article mentions how we come into contact with wild animals especially birds more often than we might think. I wish they expanded on that — from touching things in public? from unwashed food? These aren’t wild populations of birds right?

Also gotta love the “we’re hoping no more transmissions occur and the mutation dies out” statement. I mean I don’t have a better plan.

[0] - https://notification.inspection.canada.ca/

  • brailsafe 12 days ago

    > The article mentions how we come into contact with wild animals especially birds more often than we might think. I wish they expanded on that

    On a large enough scale, it might be a different type of contact most people haven't thought of, maybe there's a good reason not to expand on that ;)

xyst 13 days ago

Reports like this remind me of very early COVID days. And USA just elected a POTUS that did a shit job of getting us through that same pandemic. With the cabinet that he has (rfk jr, oz…), let’s just hope these are truly fringe cases and doesn’t lead to an outbreak

  • llamaimperative 13 days ago

    Don't worry, we're unlikely to know whether that's the case anyway. All we'll have is word of mouth to augment suppressed (or never collected) data, which is just the same as the problem not existing!

    https://youtu.be/Ti4sSRonNwY?t=27

  • bee_rider 13 days ago

    Ya know, I could have sworn I remember reading a little bit about COVID in Nov of 2019, but my recollection doesn’t line up with the Wikipedia timeline. I remember being nervous around campus at the time… although there were some other pretty bad colds going around that year, so maybe I just got mixed up.

    I think I recall a little bit on Reddit in Dec 2019 and Jan 2020, is that plausible?

    Anyway, “early COVID” had a feeling to it—stuff was going on in China but news was taking a long time to trickle out, probably just because of the language barrier, and also because nobody (general public-wise) was paying attention to that sort of thing. The bird flu stuff seems quite different, it’s been reported on quite a bit, people are hyper-vigilant about this kind of stuff now, and it has been bouncing around quite visibly in non-human animals for ages. Plus it is in the US, so we hear about it immediately.

    Not saying it isn’t anything to be worried about, but we’re getting updates in realtime.

    • drjasonharrison 13 days ago

      First case in December 2019. February 2, 2020 fogging machines on city streets in China: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vLdwCdyiDCw

      We were definitely reading about the lockdowns in Wuhan in January 2020.

      January 19, 2020, the first case in Washington state was detected in a man who had recently traveled from Wuhan.

      Surveillance blood samples from Dec 13, 2019 to January 17, 2020 from several nine US states were tested for COVID-19 antibodies: "Of the 7389 samples, 106 were reactive by pan-Ig. Of these 106 specimens, 90 were available for further testing. Eighty-four of 90 had neutralizing activity, 1 had S1 binding activity, and 1 had receptor-binding domain/ACE2 blocking activity >50%, suggesting the presence of anti–SARS-CoV-2–reactive antibodies. Donations with reactivity occurred in all 9 states"

      https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/72/12/e1004/6012472

    • nostrademons 13 days ago

      2019-2020 was also a big H1N1 (Spanish/Swine Flu) year, as were 2017-2018 and 2018-2019. Entirely possible that's what you remember reading about or getting. If COVID hadn't happened Spanish Flu would've been a big headline anyways; as it is, a lot of the people who think they got COVID before March 2020 probably actually had H1N1. Before then the case numbers are orders of magnitude higher for flu, but COVID was more transmissible and almost 10x more lethal, and so post-lockdown it dominated.

      • mleo 12 days ago

        My daughter’s birthday party in January 2020 was canceled last minute due to her getting the flu. No idea of the type, but remember we were unable to reschedule due to Covid lockdowns occurring before getting rescheduled at the venue.

      • thenipper 12 days ago

        I remember going in for a physical Jan 2020 and my doctor talking about lot about the flu. He gave me the pneumonia vaccine and then was like oh there is this other thing but probably nothing to worry about…

    • Anon84 12 days ago

      You probably did, but it wasn't called CoVID back then. I remember I had Chinese coworkers who were already forced to quaranteen when they went home around late Dec 2019.

      In the beginning nobody knew what it was and it went through some name changes over the first few months. It the beginning (from what I remember) it was nCov19 (as in Novel Coronavirus). Eventually people figured out it was an off-shoot of SARS-Cov (from 2004) so it settled as SARS-CoV-2 and the respective cluster of symptoms/disease as CoVID-19 (CoronaVirus Infectious Disease).

    • anonzzzies 13 days ago

      Nov sounds early but I was in China in oct-dec '19 and jan '20 and then it was definitely talked about a lot going to feb when I left (luckily and completely coincidental). I had to go on another business trip right after and returned, again completely coincidental (I was an idiot in hindsight), just 2 days before my country fully locked down. On that last trip I contracted covid which gave me an annoying couch.

      Coming out of covid, suddenly it appears we can work with slack, zoom, etc and I have not been on a business trip since.

      • bee_rider 13 days ago

        It is funny, I guess it is it uncommon at all given the nature of a, well, pandemic. But you got it so early. I dodged the thing for like two and a half years I think. Our experiences were so different, haha.

        Did you get out much, being immune and all?

        I guess it’s somehow just occurring to me that, despite this giant shared experience that we all had as a society, a lot of us had it in totally different ways.

        • anonzzzies 12 days ago

          My big mistake was ignoring all the (growing) news that this was bad; my last business meetings where in very busy spaces and so where my wife's meetings. So we both had it early.

          We weren't allowed to go out very far, it was a weird time, but luckily we live in the countryside and not in a city so not too much change besides police blockades to stop you from venturing too far.

    • piva00 12 days ago

      Dec 2019 is when I first read something on reddit about it, I remember thinking "oh, SARS is coming back".

      I remember commenting about it during Christmas dinner that year, spending whole January reading the news dripping from China, and then it hit us hard in Sweden in February, my friends and I were a little more prepared than others (had a month's worth of food stocked, didn't need to leave the house until late March for groceries).

      • bee_rider 12 days ago

        I quietly and slowly bought extra stuff—canned food, etc, in the weeks leading up. Didn’t want my m significant other to think I was paranoid, if nothing happened, haha.

    • ashoeafoot 12 days ago

      The first ive heard of it was a wave of sickleave traversing through the machine integrator community ,many of them travelling back from the coast. Oh and then adv china.

    • mmmlinux 12 days ago

      yeah the time line was never quite right for me either. I had a coworker get a "corona virus" in dec / jan and it was the first time I had ever heard of such a thing. It was just like "Did you hear about xyz hes in the hospital with a corona virus." This was in the US for context.

  • nightowl_games 13 days ago

    One lone case doesn't remind me of early covid. Many cases reminds me of early covid.

    Though this case is concerning.

    • xcrunner529 13 days ago

      Cases were happening in China around Dec ‘19 and I was worried. Then a case in the US followed by “no reason to worry”. Then it spiraled.

  • dyauspitr 13 days ago

    They’re just going to deny anything is wrong, sweep deaths under the rug and carry on with absolutely nonsensical “gut feel” reactions to real problems. Hell, didn’t Hegseth say he doesn’t even believe in germs and so he doesn’t wash his hands.

    • letmevoteplease 13 days ago

      This is pretty clearly a joke: "Really, I don't really wash my hands ever. Germs are not a real thing. I can't see them, therefore they not real. I can't get sick."

      https://x.com/RonFilipkowski/status/1856494554624442433

      • tharkun__ 13 days ago

        And the Fox news hosts laughed at him! That's a good thing I suppose!

        But seriously: God am I glad I don't watch all these kinds of shows. I'd be much more sad than I already am about the state of America.

        • tourmalinetaco 12 days ago

          > laughed at him

          While you may be unfamiliar, the typical response when one finds a joke humorous is to laugh with someone, as seen here.

          • tharkun__ 12 days ago

            That would presume that I would even entertain the idea that he was making a joke and not being dead serious. Like Trump suggesting internal application of chlorine bleach should maybe somehow work against Covid-19.

            That said I don't know the entire scene and what came before nor after nor do I follow what this person does and thinks usually.

      • dyauspitr 12 days ago

        Interesting, I didn’t know the context. They’re not blameless though, with all the conspiracies they’re in bed with it’s hard to tell what’s a joke anymore.

  • tomjen3 12 days ago

    It sounded like the same in the beginning with monkey pox, but that did not take of in the same way covid did.

    We shall see.

    • AuryGlenz 12 days ago

      If we were all gay men with many sexual partners though, boy would we have been in trouble!

      I remember my mother in law was seriously concerned about monkeypox. The media was practically salivating at the attention a new viral outbreak was getting them, not letting those pesky details of how it was mostly transmitted get out.

  • shiroiushi 13 days ago

    It's really concerning how the next 4 years in America will turn out; during his 1st term, along with some clowns, Trump at least picked some people who were pretty competent. This time, the competent people want nothing to do with him (and vice versa) and he's surrounded himself entirely with incompetent clowns.

    • Neonlicht 12 days ago

      [flagged]

      • rickydroll 12 days ago

        Which will declare the deaths from any future pandemic as god's will.

  • UncleOxidant 13 days ago

    Will there even be a flu shot next year with rfk jr. in charge of HHS? NIH formulates what goes into to the next year's flu vaccine in the spring and HHS is over the NIH.

    • etiam 12 days ago

      The rest of the World won't have it skipped and I expect that US entities will not be banned outright from importing vaccines, though maybe with cost penalties added. So even in a bad case scenario you shouldn't be cut off completely, right?

      It's important to realize that H5N1 "bird" influenza is very different from anything that typically goes into the annual vaccines. Typical seasonal influenzas can have case fatality ratios up to about 1% for bad years if memory serves. Strains close to what's discussed in the article have had CFR into many tens of percent in spillover events. Metaphorically speaking, this one has potential to turn into a blazing inferno that makes the coronavirus spillover in 2019 look like an ambitious fire drill.

  • raylad 13 days ago

    So far, there's always a global pandemic whenever Trump is president.

    • tourmalinetaco 12 days ago

      And through the 2000s every Democratic president has brought economic collapses.

      • infinite8s 12 days ago

        The only democratic president in the 2000s was Obama, and by the time he came into office the shit was already in the air heading towards the fan.

        • AuryGlenz 12 days ago

          Yes, and as we all know Trump definitely caused COVID and the bird flu.

          I think that was probably the point of the comment.

      • triceratops 12 days ago

        I know of collapses in 2001, 2007, and 2020. No Democratic president present for any of them. Which collapses are you referring to?

  • OCASMv2 12 days ago

    What would have a democrat president done different during the first year of the pandemic?

    • th0ma5 12 days ago

      The premise here is that there would've been one. It is vaguely possible that since a Democrat wouldn't have defunded the US presence in the region, that it could've been contained. Not plausible really, but possible. That scenario would not have been (and was not) possible with the decisions that Republicans took in the lead up to the pandemic.

      • tourmalinetaco 12 days ago

        Then the premise is lackluster. If the Chinese government couldn’t contain the US-paid coronavirus, then how could (or more accurately, why would) the US if they were in the region?

        • infinite8s 12 days ago

          Do tell - what is the US-paid coronavirus?

          • tourmalinetaco 12 days ago

            Up until and just before lockdowns started the US was funding a lab in Wuhan, the WIV, which specializes in bat coronaviruses and has had a long history of failure to meet safety standards. We only stopped funding them in July 2020, meaning US money funded the very virus that killed ~0.0875% of the world population.

            https://abcnews.go.com/Health/us-halts-funding-access-wuhan-...

            • th0ma5 11 days ago

              I guess this is a causation directionality error in your thinking? We were there because nasty viruses spread near there.

              • tourmalinetaco 11 days ago

                We were there before nasty viruses spread. We stopped funding them in July 2020, meaning we were funding it before lockdowns started and just as China was being affected. You truly need to work on your reading comprehension skills before attempting to suggest anyone has errors in anything.

                • th0ma5 11 days ago

                  I'm sorry which part of that article says that? That funding contributed to the outbreak somehow?

    • piva00 12 days ago

      Probably not block CDC scientists of speaking about it[0]. Also not interfere with data collection by the CDC[1].

      They probably wouldn't have dismantled the global health security branch of the National Security Council either[2][3][4], 2 years prior to the pandemic.

      There's a timeline outlining the disastrous bullshit[5].

      [0] https://www.ucsusa.org/resources/attacks-on-science/trump-ad...

      [1] https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/14/us/politics/trump-cdc-cor...

      [2] https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/to-your-health/wp/2018/0...

      [3] https://csis-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/publication/1...

      [4] https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/white-house-homeland...

      [5] https://doggett.house.gov/media/blog-post/timeline-trumps-co...

      • AuryGlenz 12 days ago

        Let’s be real - the CDC are the important ones in that situation, not the restructuring of the National Security Council.

        And preventing panic in the beginning isn’t a terrible idea, as we say from the toilet paper debacle. Whether or not it was warranted in retrospect it’s hard to say, but it’s not like the CDC’s messaging was clear or accurate for quite a while.

        When Trump tried to lock down travel from China the democrats called him racist. The Obama administration depleted the national stockpile of PPE and didn’t restock. I’m sure there are a bunch of stupid little fingers to point here and there but the fact of the matter is the US had about as many deaths as you’d expect with our demographics that ran in line with other similar countries. The Trump administration also was responsible for Operation Warpspeed, without which we would have almost certainly gotten vaccines later.

        The only way it could have been stopped was in China, early. Whether that would be preventing a leak, if that’s how it originated, or from an immediate local lockdown. Certainly keeping international organizations from investigating didn’t help.

mullingitover 13 days ago

I wonder if we'll be firing any more pandemic surveillance staffers like we did last time[1].

[1] https://www.reuters.com/article/world/exclusive-us-slashed-c...

  • AuryGlenz 12 days ago

    As the article goes into, China was exactly cooperative during the outbreak so those 30 people almost certainly wouldn’t have made a difference.

  • xyst 13 days ago

    [flagged]

    • AlexandrB 13 days ago

      > The USA re-elected the same idiot that worsened the outcome in US and globally.

      This seems a-historic to me. The start of the lockdown in the US was as firm as Canada and most other western countries. Trump also funded Operation Warp Speed. Not saying he handled it perfectly, but as I recall the US had tests and vaccines available before we Canucks did.

      The real problem is that the political capital needed to get people to agree to something like lockdowns or wearing masks was all spent in 2020. I don't think any administration would be able to make it happen again without heavy use of force and considerable risk of social upheaval.

      • llamaimperative 13 days ago

        He did the one thing that was unambiguously, knowably, certainly incorrect, which was to slow down testing: https://youtu.be/Ti4sSRonNwY?t=27

        And he did it because he didn't like "his numbers."

        Lots of mistakes were made, some less excusable or more harmful than others, but this wasn't "a mistake." This was inarguably and knowably a selfish decision to put self above millions of Americans.

        > The real problem is that the political capital needed to get people to agree to something like lockdowns or wearing masks was all spent in 2020

        Let's not act like this attitude emerged out of thin air. Trump also had an opportunity to bring Americans together against a common threat, and he (and his lookalikes abroad) decided to turn it into the cultural catastrophe that you're now supposing was inevitable.

        • AlexandrB 13 days ago

          > Let's not act like this attitude emerged out of thin air. Trump also had an opportunity to bring Americans together against a common threat, and he (and his lookalikes abroad) decided to turn it into the cultural catastrophe that you're now supposing was inevitable.

          This kind of depends on the "great man" view of history where these figures have the kind of influence needed to move entire cultures. I don't put much stock in this. No matter how much togetherness rhetoric one threw at the problem the mistakes made in handling the pandemic, while understandable, emboldened and enabled forces that would result in an eventual backlash.

          Witness Canada, where we had a government that constantly emphasized togetherness against a common threat, and yet we also got the trucker convoy. Some of this was probably cultural contagion from the US, but not all of it.

          • llamaimperative 13 days ago

            > This kind of depends on the "great man" view of history where these figures have the kind of influence needed to move entire cultures.

            No it doesn't it just depends on the "words the most important person in the world says matters in times of crisis" view of history.

            > Some of this was probably cultural contagion from the US, but not all of it.

            I don't think "all of it" is the alternative. There has clearly been a groundswell of similar sentiments across the western world, but to suppose that the question of who is the US President is literally immaterial is frankly insane.

        • drjasonharrison 13 days ago

          >> The real problem is that the political capital needed to get people to agree to something like lockdowns or wearing masks was all spent in 2020

          > Let's not act like this attitude emerged out of thin air. Trump also had an opportunity to bring Americans together against a common threat, and he (and his lookalikes abroad) decided to turn it into the cultural catastrophe that you're now supposing was inevitable.

          I don't agree with your implication, because I don't interpret the original statement the same way. The attitude was present, Trump turned into a cultural catastrophe. What political capital that remained was spent. We have less agreement now among the population as to what is acceptable and what is useful than before the last pandemic. The trenches have been dug, the no-man's land will be filled with mud and bodies.

          • mullingitover 13 days ago

            > What political capital that remained was spent.

            Arguably the political capital was just incompetently set on fire.

            I imagine a Reagan, or a Kennedy, or a Roosevelt in that situation, and for anyone with a good instinct for leadership it just becomes a shooting-fish-in-a-barrel setup for becoming an absolute legend. The populace was dying of thirst for leadership and unity, and they were given huge blocks of salt and turned on each other. The last time a leader was set up for such an easy approval ratings layup it was Bush post 9/11.

            It's wild that the 2020 election wasn't a complete 1984-scale rout for the republicans. It should've been if they'd had an ounce of gravitas or the ability to lead.

          • llamaimperative 13 days ago

            In an alternative universe, Trump said something like, "Hey folks, I know wearing masks can be a bit unusual and uncomfortable at times, and we're not totally certain how effective they are, but there's good reason to believe they'll save the lives of some of our fellow Americans... please put them on when you're around other people, we'll re-assess as we get a better understanding of the cost-benefit tradeoff."

            In that universe, we're not even toying with the idea that the American public would violently revolt at the idea of some basic mitigations of a respiratory epidemic.

            • AlexandrB 13 days ago

              I agree. And I think a lot of the most extreme backlash took off towards the end of the pandemic, when vaccine mandates became a thing. This was the moment where many people I know who were otherwise ok going along with many of the other measures started drawing a line and then began working backwards towards doubting everything else they had been told up to that point.

              Notably, this was not Trump's fuckup.

              And just to be clear about where I stand - I get the COVID booster together with a flu shot every fall now.

      • account42 12 days ago

        > I don't think any administration would be able to make it happen again without heavy use of force and considerable risk of social upheaval.

        We can only hope.

metalman 11 days ago

winter is coming and birds migrate, south so ,ya, great ,blame us for the "candemic" but we didnt do it, the rusianees emporer beamed the virus into our geese from the 5g towers and its bad, them geeses are flying in circles gathering up for a strafing run all across the fields and parks everywhere. The only way to be safe is to move north for the winter, get your visa now.

ryandvm 12 days ago

Bird flu has the opportunity to do the funniest thing possible to the second Trump term...

therein 13 days ago

Let this post make you notice they have been working on an mRNA payload that supposedly provides immunity against this already, however they were working on a self-replication feature but they merged that branch beforehand so this new version will have multiple new features.