Bill Gates warns of impending pandemic

Awoken2

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Steve Aoki, predictive programming the transhumanism post apocalyptic era, where apparently they will hold God like status... bet they can't wait

 

saki

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I have science twist? You said healthy people have immunity? ...To what? That sentence didn’t even make sense but Im trying to be patient with you. You also keep insituating that pandemics aren’t possible in clean environments with generally healthy people, not true. You said our bodies have the capability to fight off anything, not true or else people wouldn’t die from sickness. Our immune systems are very impressive but they aren’t invincible. If you come in contact with a pathogen you haven’t been exposed to you may get sick. That’s just life. You’re rambling and missing the point of this thread. I agree that a pandemic wouldn’t likely occur in developed countries naturally but two people that are pro eugenics warned that our biggest threat is a global pandemic that can occur naturally or engineered. If they’re creating something specifically to kill they could program it to make your immune system useless. They can do a lot, they have plenty of money and research.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/...ly-prepared-deadly-pandemic-report-finds.html
A deadly pandemic could sweep the world in hours and kill millions because NO country is fully prepared, report claims
  • Scientists say outbreak of flu-like illness is inevitable and could spread in hours
  • Found just 13 countries had resources and health care systems to put up a fight
  • But given how fast it'd spread, they think even those countries would struggle
By CONNOR BOYD HEALTH REPORTER FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 07:16 EDT, 25 October 2019 | UPDATED: 15:22 EDT, 25 October 2019

No country is fully equipped to deal with the next global pandemic, a major report has claimed.

Scientists say an outbreak of a flu-like illness could sweep across the planet in 36 hours and kill tens of millions due to our constantly-travelling population.

But a review of health care systems already in place across the world found just 13 countries had the resources to put up a fight against an 'inevitable' pandemic.

Among the countries ranked in the top tier were Britain, the US, Australia, Canada, France and Holland.

But given how fast the outbreak is likely to spread, experts warn even these nations may struggle to curb the disease.


A world map shows areas that were most, more and least prepared for a global pandemic. Greenland (in grey) was not studied


A worker in protective gear disinfects an ambulance carrying a suspected Ebola patient in DR Congo, amid claims that responses to epidemics so far have been 'grossly insufficient'

Most of the EU 28, including Spain, Germany, Italy, Austria and Norway, were considered 'more prepared', a tier below Britain and the US.

Whereas the majority of Africa was deemed the 'least prepared' of all the countries due to poor immunisation .

The sobering report, known as the Global Health Security (GHS) index, was drawn-up by scientists at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security, and the Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI).

In their recommendations, the team said governments must ring fence money for putting preparations in place and do routine simulation exercises.

They also called for more private investment into countries' pandemic preparations and said the UN must do more to co-ordinate responses across international borders.

The scientists assessed how countries around the world would deal with an inevitable pandemic, by looking at a range of factors.

Income, border security, health care systems, as well as political, socioeconomic and environmental risk factors that can limit response, were all considered.

The average overall index score was just over 40 out of a possible 100. Scientists say this points 'to substantial weaknesses in preparedness'.

TOP 10 COUNTRIES BEST PREPARED
United States - 83.5

United Kingdom - 77.9

Holland - 75.6

Australia - 75.5

Canada - 75.3

Thailand - 73.2

Sweden - 72.1

Denmark - 70.4

South Korea - 70.2

Finland - 68.7

TOP 10 COUNTRIES WORST PREPARED
Equatorial Guinea - 16.2

Somalia - 16.6

North Korea - 17.5

São Tomé and Príncipe - 17.7

Marshall Islands - 18.2

Yemen - 18.5

Kiribati - 19.2

Syria - 19.9

Guinea Bissau - 20

Gabon - 20

But they found that even among the 60 high-income countries assessed, the average score was barely over 50.

Writing in their report, the scientists said: 'The Index, which serves as a barometer for global preparedness, is based on a central tenet: a threat anywhere is a threat everywhere.

'Deadly infectious diseases can travel quickly; increased global mobility through air travel means that a disease outbreak in one country can spread across the world in a matter of hours.'

The report comes a month after a group headed by a former World Health Organisation (WHO) chief issued a stark warning that Disease X was on the horizon.




A report last month called A World At Risk listed dozens of illnesses which the experts suggested had the potential to trigger an outbreak which could spiral out of control, among them plague, Ebola, Zika virus and Dengue

THE 1918 FLU OUTBREAK - THE WORST THE WORLD HAS EVER SEEN
The deadly flu virus attacked more than one-third of the world's population, and within months had killed more than 50 million people – three times as many as the World War I – and did it more quickly than any other illness in recorded history.

Most influenza outbreaks disproportionately kill juvenile, elderly, or already weakened patients; in contrast the 1918 pandemic predominantly killed previously healthy young adults.

To maintain morale, wartime censors minimized early reports of illness and mortality in Germany, Britain, France, and the United States.

However, newspapers were free to report the epidemic's effects in Spain, creating a false impression of Spain as being especially hard hit - and leading to the pandemic's nickname Spanish flu.

The close quarters and massive troop movements of World War I hastened the pandemic and probably both increased transmission and augmented mutation, researchers believe.

The global mortality rate from the 1918/1919 pandemic is not known, but an estimated 10% to 20% of those who were infected died, with estimates of the total number of deaths ranging from 50-100 million people.

The report, named A World At Risk, said current efforts to prepare for outbreaks in the wake of crises such as Ebola are 'grossly insufficient'.

It was headed by Dr Gro Harlem Brundtland, the former Norwegian prime minister and director-general of the WHO,

He said in the report: 'The threat of a pandemic spreading around the globe is a real one.

'A quick-moving pathogen has the potential to kill tens of millions of people, disrupt economies and destabilise national security.'

He claimed that previous recommendations about the threat of a global pandemic have been largely ignored by world leaders.

The team drew up a map of the world with a list of possible infections which could trigger the hypothetical outbreak.

These were split into 'newly emerging' and 're-emerging/resurging'. Among the former were the Ebola, Zika and Nipah viruses, and five types of flu.

And the latter included West Nile virus, antibiotic resistance, measles, acute flaccid myelitis, Yellow fever, Dengue, plague and human monkeypox.

The report referenced the damage done by the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic and said modern advances in international travel would help the disease spread faster.

A century ago the Spanish flu pandemic infected a third of the world's population and killed 50 million people.

But more recently an Ebola epidemic in West Africa claimed the lives of more than 11,000 people.

Another outbreak of the deadly virus has killed 2,100 in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the fatalities are rising.

Leo Abruzzese, senior global advisor at The Economist Intelligence Unit, who helped compile the report, said the report helped to identify important gaps in global preparedness.

'Without a way of identifying gaps in the system, we're much more vulnerable than we need to be,' he said.

'The index is specific enough to provide a roadmap for how countries can respond, and gives donors and funders a tool for directing their resources.'
 

rainerann

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What a fascinating little time capsule this thread is. Reviewing the article from the opening post references a research article for some sort of gene-editing technology. The technology appears to be used in genetically modifying food and is referenced because it has been found to be useful in the rapid testing of viral diseases. Considering the present delays with test results for the coronavirus, this actually seems to be useful. I think it sounds worse than it is because it is used externally. Nothing is internal about this. There is nothing about this in particular that suggests human gene editing simultaneously happening while testing for viral disease. In fact, it would even be nice to have right about now.

I'm still undecided about what Gates is saying considering the present number of deaths after 3 months of the coronavirus is nowhere near a million, suggesting that is unlikely that we will reach 30 million in 6 months, which makes this thread all the more interesting for reflection. Would the reality of the coronavirus help motivate to be prepared for something worse, or would it escalate suspicions so that they are even less likely to take the possibility of something worse seriously?

I would even agree with his comment about how people deny the need to prepare for a pandemic in the modern age after doing some searches on the number of hospital beds available in different countries. Overall, there has been a decline in the number of hospital beds rather than an increase to coincide with an increasing world population. The world seems to agree that the possibility of an epidemic is something of a conspiracy theory that people don't need to take seriously.

It is concerning to consider the possibilities that are created by knowing how to test for viral diseases in this way, but are we really safer living in the dark? As usual, history will be the judge.

This is from the research article referenced in the article from the op.

CRISPR techniques are allowing the development of technologies for nucleic acid detection (see the Perspective by Chertow). Taking advantages of the distinctive enzymatic properties of CRISPR enzymes, Gootenberg et al. developed an improved nucleic acid detection technology for multiplexed quantitative and highly sensitive detection, combined with lateral flow for visual readout. Myhrvold et al. added a sample preparation protocol to create a field-deployable viral diagnostic platform for rapid detection of specific strains of pathogens in clinical samples. Cas12a (also known as Cpf1), a type V CRISPR protein, cleaves double-stranded DNA and has been adapted for genome editing. Chen et al. discovered that Cas12a also processes single-stranded DNA threading activity. A technology platform based on this activity detected human papillomavirus in patient samples with high sensitivity.
 

The X-Files

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Don't know if it's been posted here already but Bill Ryan gave the word before Bill Gates did.

Why is no one talking about this video? It has been around for like a decade. Look at the date of this other version. As far as I know, you can't edit a YouTube's video upload date. Look at what this guy says. It mostly fits what's been happening these last years.

 

Awoken2

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Why is no one talking about this video? It has been around for like a decade. Look at the date of this other version. As far as I know, you can't edit a YouTube's video upload date. Look at what this guy says. It mostly fits what's been happening these last years.

It's pretty irrefutable proof that this virus was planned.
 
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