Posted on 02/11/2020 10:48:15 AM PST by Red Badger
Fleets of firetrucks can be seen rolling down the streets of Wuhan spraying chemicals in the air.
Chinese government-owned newspaper The Peoples Daily released video of the disinfection of the city of Wuhan featuring fire trucks and platoons of men in hazmat gear roaming the streets and spraying chemicals in the air.
The Peoples Daily, which is the official newspaper of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, posted the video to Twitter.
Full-front disinfection work has started in #Wuhan, an effort to contain the spread of #coronavirus, the tweet caption read.
In the footage, fleets of fire trucks can be seen rolling down the streets of Wuhan spraying some type of chemicals, presumably disinfectant, into the air.
The flashing emergency lights and clouds of mist create an interesting scene on what appear to be otherwise deserted streets.
In another clip, men in hazmat suits run while rolling a wheeled liquid cannon down a street, covering storefronts in a white mist.
Another man-portable variant of the disinfectant cannon is seen carried by several members of the hazmat crew. This version has a set of twin gas canisters that are mounted to the back of the user.
The footage seems to suggest that the Chinese government is launching a concerted, high-budget operation to fight the spread of the novel Wuhan coronavirus, contrasting with early reports that characterized the virus as a minor infection.
In Indonesia, deplaning passengers were sprayed with liquid as they descended the steps of their flight in an effort to fight the spread of coronavirus.
Via National File: Video footage shows deplaning Indonesian passengers being sprayed with liquid by men in yellow hazmat gear, presumably in an attempt to fight the coronavirus.
The tanks holding the disinfectant liquid appear to be labeled ALKOHOL.
The passengers, many of whom are clad in religious garb and facemasks but with no eye protection, are unceremoniously doused with the spray as they descend the airplane staircase.
Clothes and personal belongings appear to be of particular interest to the hazmat crew, but some passengers take blasts direct to the face from the hose.
Video footage shows deplaning Indonesian passengers being sprayed with liquid by men in yellow hazmat gear, presumably in an attempt to fight the coronavirus.
The tanks holding the disinfectant liquid appear to be labeled ALKOHOL.
The passengers, many of whom are clad in religious garb and facemasks but with no eye protection, are unceremoniously doused with the spray as they descend the airplane staircase.
Clothes and personal belongings appear to be of particular interest to the hazmat crew, but some passengers take blasts direct to the face from the hose.
he video was posted to Twitter by @russian_market with the caption They call it disinfection? Indonesia no words.
The exact makeup of the chemicals used in the disinfection campaign was not released by The Peoples Daily.
——Chinese panicking.-——
The visual effect of the very large sprayers is great
As a bureaucrat, doing something visual is far better than doing nothing. To soothe fears of thousands of women distraught with fear over the well being of their children is a worthwhile endeavor even if the effort is not real.
alcohol, especially when mixed with water is cheap
Down south it was a regular summer occurrence to spray to get rid of mosquitoes.
[Whats interesting is that the bubonic plague ravaged the Roman Empire during the lifetime of Zhang Fei.]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plague_(disease)#Biological_weapon
This pre-dates, by almost 800 years, the first (fictional) mention I recall of plague in the Chinese context. A plague epidemic was a background element in one of (Dutch sinologist) Robert van Gulik’s Judge Dee detective novels. Judge Dee’s character was a Tang dynasty magistrate who occasionally operated as an imperial censor/auditor to check up on non-local “local” officials helicoptered in to high provincial posts by the emperor.
Brings back memories of riding behind the truck spraying for skeeters in Tampa in the early 50s. Still hack, hack, here. :-)
Same here, but mid 50’s, Albrook AFB Canal Zone
I remember reading that several large areas in Europe had little Plague. Come to find out those people did have a genetic advantage and were not as likely to get the Plague or die from the Plague. I think it helps to protect those same people from AIDS.
[Actually, I believe it is the opposite. Not yet confirmed, but there’s been several articles that this virus is more infectious for either Chinese or East Asians in general, with those populations have 5-6x the numbers of receptors in the lungs for it, as compared to most European descendants.]
Pre-Columbian Indians were killed by smallpox in huge numbers because they had no prior exposure to the bug. Similarly non-Chinese should have very little exposure to coronaviruses because for most part, they don’t think of bats or pangolins as food. In theory, this should make them especially vulnerable.
Another possibility is a prior Coronavirus vaccine may have been used in inoculations, one which resulted in dire side effects with exposure to the new virus.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22536382
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