Re: Your opinion please.
- From: chris thompson <chris.linthompson@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 15 Oct 2008 07:55:21 -0700 (PDT)
On Oct 15, 9:18 am, "\(M\)-adman" <g...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Lee wrote:
"(M)-adman" <g...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:zNbJk.75526$XB4.54139@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Lee wrote:
"(M)-adman" <g...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:yVTIk.41568$IB6.38348@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
spintronic wrote:
On Oct 13, 7:06 pm, "Lee" <m...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"spintronic" <spintro...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
We leave stupidity to create it's own undoing.
Yes very true, you certainly do, four centuries was it before
Galileo got a much deserved apology?
Nothing to do with me. How many centuries do you believe man will
last when a child can make a deadly pathogen in their kitchen?
ouch!
reality at it's best.
There is an ever present possibility of naturally occurring
pathogens, the post WW1 flu epidemic killed more people (estimated
30 mill) than the actual war. One of the major causes is believed
to be the unprecedented amount of infected servicemen returning
home to various parts of the world thus enabling the disease to
spread on a global scale.
It could be surmised then that 110 years later that massive
globalisation and an exponential increase in world travel is a far
greater threat of causing a catastrophic pandemic than the chance of
a child producing a pathogen in a kitchen let alone creating a
working delivery method and funding it.
One problem.
Most of the deaths were from pneumonia
Yes Adman dying from flu induced pneumonia is a usually considered a
problem by both the sufferer and his/her family.
It skews the numbers.
pneumonia can replicate on it's own
The flu victims were places togeteher.
No, Virginia, incoherent is NOT too strong a word.
Even if togeteher was a word, I don't think that...construction... can
be diagrammed, let alone parsed for meaning.
In any case, the flu victims were people, not places.
Some that got flu may not have caught
pneumonia otherwise.
Gee, ya think?
At the time of the influenza outbreak, pneumonia was the leading cause
of death in the United States. No antibiotic treatment, poor sanitary
facilities, trained health care generally unavailable.
Most pneumonia cases were a direct result of the influenza pandemic.
The two are inseparable. Even today the CDC lumps influenza and
pneumonia together, especially with regard to people over 65 years of
age.
Your thrashing about like a convulsing weasel just makes you look
sillier.
Chris
--
A cup of coffee and some truth with:
·.¸Adman¸.·
^^^^^^^^^^^
My List of confirmed liars
1) J.J. O'Shea
Don't fret!! YOU can be added to the list too!
You must be very, very important if you have a list!
(snicker)
.
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