Posted on 07/02/2014 12:26:00 PM PDT by chessplayer
Working at a lab with a relatively low level-two biosafety rating, University of Wisconsin-Madison professor Yoshihiro Kawaoka has created a strain of flu that can completely escape the human immune system.
Most people today have a level of immunity to the H1N1 flu, which is now regarded as a relatively low threat. Kawaoka genetically manipulated H1N1 so it can "escape" our neutralising antibodies. This would make the human immune systemand populationunable to resist an outbreak.
(Excerpt) Read more at sploid.gizmodo.com ...
Why would he do such a thing?
Six months later...
Wow. The warmers and ecowackos will love that. Let’s let them do the clinical trials on it. Lookin’ for hands.
“Have there been any accidental releases from labs in the past?”
“Some experts cite the unexpected emergence of a new H1N1 strain of flu in 1977, which spread globally over three decades, as an early example of a flu virus being accidentally released from a lab. Genetic evidence points to it having escaped from a lab in China or the Soviet Union.”
“There are many examples of other infectious agents escaping from labs. Smallpox virus escaped from Birmingham Medical School in 1978 and killed a medical photographer, Janet Parker, the last person to die of smallpox. Foot and mouth virus escaped in 2007 from a veterinary lab in Surrey and in 2004 the SARS virus escaped from a high-containment lab in Beijing, infecting nine people before it was stopped.”
A new product from the Umbrella Corporation.
Why indeed.
Tom Clancy discussed such a scenario in “Rainbox Six”. No doubt there are some extreme Greenies who daydream about making mankind extinct to restore the natural balance (in their eyes).
Why would he do such a thing?
They do it because they can. Curiosity and damn the consequences.
Working for the obama administration’s solution to world over population.
Well, this will end well. Thank God there’s no such thing as human error.
“Why would he do such a thing?”
Mary Shelley pondered the same question in “Frankenstein.”
Well, well. Isn’t he special?
The regular h1n1 came close to killing me.
Well not all of humanity because eventually there won’t be enough people having contact with each other for it to transmit. Which is the reason why viruses tend not to be extremely fatal to their normal host (all bets are off on species jumpers), killing off the host too quickly is bad for the long term survival of the virus.
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