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and from that article...I thought the tracking app was a good idea.
Not any more.
Why not give the contract to an Australian company ?
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-04...services-for-coronavirus-tracing-app/12176682
No.So what you are saying is that the West is not allowed to hide its failings, but China and WHO are allowed to hide their failings.
I thought the tracking app was a good idea.
Not any more.
Why not give the contract to an Australian company ?
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-04...services-for-coronavirus-tracing-app/12176682
I thought the tracking app was a good idea.
Not any more.
Why not give the contract to an Australian company ?
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-04...services-for-coronavirus-tracing-app/12176682
You would have to be f***ing stupid awarding that contract, most were paranoid beforehand even though it was a game changer for recovery if it was taken up, now no hope IMHO.
In a world where the relevant stakeholders can be trusted not to unduly exploit the powers granted them, it may have been a good thing.I thought the tracking app was a good idea.
Not any more.
Why not give the contract to an Australian company ?
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-04...services-for-coronavirus-tracing-app/12176682
Having at times witnessed the sorts of behaviours that such lucrative government contracts attract, this turn of events comes as no great surprise.You would have to be f***ing stupid awarding that contract, most were paranoid beforehand even though it was a game changer for recovery if it was taken up, now no hope IMHO.
Sinophobia is rife here.UK removes China from official coronavirus deaths comparison after ‘cover-up’ claims and disbelief at low figures
The government has removed China from graphs it uses to compare the UK's coronavirus deaths to those elsewhere amid accusations the country has covered up the true impact of the pandemic.
The official toll in China, where the virus first broke out in December, currently stands at 4,632, a fraction of those registered across Europe and the United States.
A graph shown at a Downing Street press briefing on Wednesday compared the death tolls of nine countries - the UK, the US, France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Sweden, South Korea, and China - over time.
On the updated graph shown on Thursday, China had been removed.
China had previously been among those countries - Germany, Sweden, and South Korea - whose death tolls plateaued early on in the outbreak and have remained below 5,000.
Photos have also showed huge stacks of urns being delivered to funeral homes and long queues of people waiting outside to collect their loved ones' remains.
Officials in Wuhan, the epicentre of the original outbreak, last week revised the city's toll up by 1,290 in a single day, bringing the total to 3,869.
The city cited incorrect reporting by overstretched hospitals as the reason for the error.
Some estimates have placed the city's true toll since the start of the pandemic as high as 42,000.
Speaking to Radio Free Asia, a number of Wuhan residents cast doubt on the official toll.
“It can’t be right because the incinerators have been working round the clock, so how can so few people have died?” one said.
Gilead was granted the patent in May 2016 - over 4 years ago!China tried to patent potential coronavirus drug Remsvidir the DAY AFTER Beijing confirmed virus was transmissable between humans
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...filed-patent-drug-helps-patients-recover.html
...what can we learn from the outbreaks of the past? What clues do they leave us about how COVID-19 will end? And is humanity really getting better at handling infectious disease?
Of course, there is the more terrifying prospect that a vaccine doesn’t work or the pathogen mutates to evade our immunity, evolving and lingering like seasonal flu, Doherty admits. Most researchers, Doherty among them, think it very unlikely the virus will morph into something nastier – by its very nature, a virus wants to spread rather than kill and coronaviruses are much more stable than the wildly unpredictable genetic code of influenza. Usually, a virus will beef up its potency to jump across species lines – say, from civet to human. Over time circulating in a new population they tend to lose more of their bite – as has already happened with the four most common coronaviruses. Today they give humans only mild colds and coughs.How did past pandemics end?
Most diseases, once loose, tend to linger in some form in humans. But there are two main ways a pandemic wave comes to an end, says Nobel Prize-winning immunologist Professor Peter Doherty. The old road of early history saw infections burn out once enough people had either died or recovered with natural immunity then encoded into their cells. The other way is intervention – quarantine and, today, medicine.
Isn't it weird how everything is going along fine, smooth as butter, then some dick does something like this.I thought the tracking app was a good idea.
Not any more.
Why not give the contract to an Australian company ?
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-04...services-for-coronavirus-tracing-app/12176682
Isn't it weird how everything is going along fine, smooth as butter, then some dick does something like this.
I mean do they think it is smart? Is it the cheapest tender? What comes into their heads?
It isn't as though they haven't thrown the kitchen sink at the virus, now they want to save $20 on cloud storage, weird.
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