Either way, we've seen how vile the practices are where one species is shown crammed into a cage, under, above, to the side of neighbouring cages housing totally different animal species. All different animals are lumped together hodgepodge, hosed down (hence the word "wet" in "wet market") with debris overflowing or outflowing into the surrounds. Animals defecate over each other and between the bars of the individual cages, so poos and other dirt from one species spread and contaminate others. Those conclusions wouldn't be a long bow.Some people seem to think China is the only country with wet markets. We markets are common right across Asia. I've spent around 6 years in Asia (I am trapped in Australia because I happened to be here for a 2 week visit at the time the travel bans came into place, which has utterly destroyed my 10 year plan and put me in a terrible situation), I routinely shopped at wet markets from India to Vietnam, Laos to Malaysia and everywhere in between (and yep, I've seen, bought and eaten a huge variety of things from them including bats). I've been close to the border but never actually into China. There is plenty of evidence which says this virus didn't originate at the wet market, including the face that people were being infected with it *before* it first arrived at the wet market. Amusingly, the official story is that the virus came from horseshoe bats, a type of bat which has never been sold at the wet market in question and doesn't occur anywhere within a thousand km from the wet market. However, it is open, public knowledge that the nearby virus research laboratory (where the original patients were right next to, and much closer to it than the market) was working on horseshoe bat coronaviruses. Yet they still push the wet market story!
It's not the only country with them, just the only one whose national government claimed they were the cause of having stuffed almost every country on earth and which then allowed them to re-open.Some people seem to think China is the only country with wet markets.
It's not the only country with them, just the only one whose national government claimed they were the cause of having stuffed almost every country on earth and which then allowed them to re-open.
China is provoking serious conflict over this one and they couldn't possibly fail to realise that.
If China say it escaped from the markets, well that is a problem because it is obviously difficult to guarantee it won't happen again.It's not the only country with them, just the only one whose national government claimed they were the cause of having stuffed almost every country on earth and which then allowed them to re-open.
China is provoking serious conflict over this one and they couldn't possibly fail to realise that.
Either way, we've seen how vile the practices are where one species is shown crammed into a cage, under, above, to the side of neighbouring cages housing totally different animal species. All different animals are lumped together hodgepodge, hosed down (hence the word "wet" in "wet market") with debris overflowing or outflowing into the surrounds. Animals defecate over each other and between the bars of the individual cages, so poos and other dirt from one species spread and contaminate others. Those conclusions wouldn't be a long bow.
It's not the only country with them, just the only one whose national government claimed they were the cause of having stuffed almost every country on earth and which then allowed them to re-open.
China is provoking serious conflict over this one and they couldn't possibly fail to realise that.
Every reasonable country should refuse to accept visitors from China until those markets are closed down.
Should every country boycott every country with wet markets?
It doesn't really matter whether I've been or not, and I wasn't talking about fish markets and those that deal only in fish which is what you seem to be partial to.It's pretty clear you've never actually been to a wet market. The often don't even have live animals, and it's pretty common for them to only have live fish. I shopped at them for years for my staples. I'd have been to one today, yesterday and I'd be going to one tomorrow if I wasn't stuck in Australia, I've been to wet markets in several countries in Asia over the last few months, so I'm not sure why you're feeling the need to describe them to me, and since what you're describing sounds like a description of an extreme example you saw on shock value media (and yes, I have been to such places, they do exist).
Bottom line, the vague story is that either 'the market sold infected bats to people' or 'the market mixed bats with pangolins, creating a virus, and that's how people got it'. The story makes no sense though because that species of bat doesn't come from anywhere remotely near that market and the market doesn't sell bats. Plus, people had COVID-19 before COVID-19 first arrived at that market.
It's also worth mentioning that most outbreaks have come from domesticated animals, not wild animals. Swine flu (domestic pigs), bird flu (domestic fowl), MERS (domestic camels), mad cow disease (domestic cattle)... yet a fake story about a wet market which doesn't even sell the type of animal they claim the virus comes from and everyone wants to shut down Chinese wet markets (ignoring the fact that wet markets exist all over Asia, and most certainly won't be going away in a hurry).
@hja, so why is everyone swallowing whole the official CCP story of originating from a wet market?It doesn't really matter whether I've been or not, and I wasn't talking about fish markets and those that deal only in fish which is what you seem to be partial to.
I didn't even mention bats. But there has been research showing that the virus most likely originated from an animal. Maybe the genes were tinkered with at some time afterwards; I don't know. But wasn't the point. We're talking about the practices of keeping and selling exotic meats. Who knows, maybe there was no first instance in a wet market but was propagated there anyway. It doesn't matter.
Funny how when someone is disgruntled about unbiased reports of goings-on in their neck of the woods, they feel the need to label it as "fake news", just like the Chinese ambassador to Australia who came on Q&A to label the Uyghur situation "fake news".
Yes.
It doesn't really matter whether I've been or not, and I wasn't talking about fish markets and those that deal only in fish which is what you seem to be partial to.
I didn't even mention bats. But there has been research showing that the virus most likely originated from an animal.
Maybe the genes were tinkered with at some time afterwards; I don't know. But wasn't the point. We're talking about the practices of keeping and selling exotic meats. Who knows, maybe there was no first instance in a wet market but was propagated there anyway. It doesn't matter.
Funny how when someone is disgruntled about unbiased reports of goings-on in their neck of the woods, they feel the need to label it as "fake news", just like the Chinese ambassador to Australia who came on Q&A to label the Uyghur situation "fake news".
I have something more than an idea just like you. And I have an opinion that just doesn't coincide with the one your spouting here. But like the next person, I'm perfectly capable of keeping abreast with what the score is now, having access to the same sources as you whether its footage, eyewitness accounts, etc. So don't give me the holier than thou speech because you think your circumstance is "privileged".It matters because you have absolutely no idea what you're talking about yet feel inclined to not only have an opinion about something you have no concept of, but you feel that this unfounded opinion should be pushed on others. The majority of wet markets contain a variety of fruits and vegetables, fish (often live), chicken (often live), pork (occasionally live), insects, prawns etc. The smaller and poorer the towns and villages, the more often you see things like reptiles, snails, frogs, squirrels, bats, rats, game birds, civets, etc. If you're in a remote village where many people eat mainly bamboo and rice and are lucky to catch a few insects and wild animals to supplement their diets, you can hardly blame them for wanting to eat something else. If I dumped you into a remote area for a few months where you were forced on to a diet of little more than bamboo and rice, you'd be pretty angry if I told you that you weren't allowed to eat any of the animals you occasionally manage to obtain. It's a world you clearly have no idea about, and I guarantee that if you spent years in that environment like I have you would have a completely different way of seeing things. I would love to watch you struggle to cope in the first few weeks as you came to terms with the realities you were faced with, and with a comfortable armchair expert attitude, you'd totally deserve it.
And the sky is blue and water gets things wet.
It does matter, it's literally the entire point about the discussion in relation to wet markets! If you think they have nothing to do with the virus (and for this virus, they don't) then you agree it's an entirely unrelated issue which we should not be discussing in terms of this virus outbreak. If you think it's an animal welfare issue that's a separate issue, perhaps with some validity, but as someone who clearly demonstrates you have absolutely no concept of what wet markets are like, you have no reason to have a say in it. To have a valid opinion you first need something to base it on. In any case, as an irrelevant (even if important) topic, it shouldn't be discussed here.
Who is the person disgruntled about unbiased reports you are referring to?
https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/apr/16/what-is-a-wet-market-coronavirusThe display of naivety and insanity required to say this is extreme.
https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/apr/16/what-is-a-wet-market-coronavirus
...
The now-infamous Wuhan South China seafood market, suspected to be a primary source for spreading Covid-19 in late 2019, had a wild animal section where live and slaughtered species were for sale, including snakes, beavers, badgers, civet cats, foxes, peacocks and porcupines among other animals.
............ even if it was mot engineered ..my view..it comes from a lab
Engineered in the lab is likely a nonsense. Escaped from the lab is very likely
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