Are you afraid of Zika?

Are you afraid of Zika?

  • Yes, I'm a conservative. I fear everything.

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • No, I'm a liberal. I fear nothing.

    Votes: 1 50.0%
  • What is Zika?

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • No, because President Trump has a plan to stop it.

    Votes: 1 50.0%

  • Total voters
    2
  • Poll closed .
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Legion Troll

A fine upstanding poster
map-zika-virus.jpg






The Zika virus is "spreading explosively", according to the World Health Organization.

As many as 4 million people could be infected over the next year.

U.S. government health officials say Zika's unlikely to spread much in the U.S., although they say small, occasional outbreaks are possible as travelers bring the virus back and get bitten by mosquitoes.

80 percent of people infected by Zika don't even feel sick at all.



http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/zika-virus-outbreak/worried-about-zika-here-s-some-other-bugs-you-re-n507391
 
map-zika-virus.jpg






The Zika virus is "spreading explosively", according to the World Health Organization.

As many as 4 million people could be infected over the next year.

U.S. government health officials say Zika's unlikely to spread much in the U.S., although they say small, occasional outbreaks are possible as travelers bring the virus back and get bitten by mosquitoes.

80 percent of people infected by Zika don't even feel sick at all.



http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/zika-virus-outbreak/worried-about-zika-here-s-some-other-bugs-you-re-n507391

Afraid of Zika?

Why?

I still remember how, right out of HS, people used to get together with their buddies and chug a couple six packs of Zika before going out partying.
 
map-zika-virus.jpg






The Zika virus is "spreading explosively", according to the World Health Organization.

As many as 4 million people could be infected over the next year.

U.S. government health officials say Zika's unlikely to spread much in the U.S., although they say small, occasional outbreaks are possible as travelers bring the virus back and get bitten by mosquitoes.

80 percent of people infected by Zika don't even feel sick at all.



http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/zika-virus-outbreak/worried-about-zika-here-s-some-other-bugs-you-re-n507391

I would think that lefties like you would love Zika. It is the abortion virus. It only impacts pregnant women. It was designed by white men to further the war on women
 
I would think that lefties like you would love Zika. It is the abortion virus. It only impacts pregnant women. It was designed by white men to further the war on women

The majority of...er.....contributors to this forum appear to be microcephalic already. What have you got to fear ?
 
Distribution-of-Aedes-aegypti-2013-cdc-map1.jpg





Mosquitoes species that weren’t previously present in the U.S. have arrived and are now expanding their ranges. Aedes albopictus, or the Asian tiger mosquito, has spread throughout the world via international trade, and the mosquitoes follow major transportation routes.

Also, infected travelers can bring their infections home with them, causing further spread. This is one strong hypothesis as to how Zika began in Brazil—brought by attendees to the 2014 World Cup.

This is a growing concern about the upcoming summer 2016 Olympics in Brazil, along with spreading multi-drug resistant bacteria from the markedly polluted water.

The American Gulf states have similar climates to the endemic areas that are already plagued by arbovirus (insect and other arthropod) infections. There is concern that if Zika adapts to transmission by A. albopictus, 32 states that host that mosquito will be at risk. Because the Asian tiger mosquito, A. albopictus, can adapt to cold temperatures by becoming dormant during the winter in temperate regions, it is more likely to spread through the U.S.

Along with the range expansion, we’re seeing the spread of disease, with locally transmitted dengue in Florida in 2009, then Chikungunya in Florida in 2014. Antibodies to dengue, indicating previous infection, were found in 5% of Key West residents and in 38% of the Brownsville, TX residents tested.

Zika is likely exploding in Latin America because the virus was introduced into a population with no prior immunity. The Brazilian strain is quite similar genetically to one found in the South Pacific.

To control Zika, some people are suggesting more pesticide spraying, and news is full of images of fumigation in Brazil.

As with antibiotic overuse, resistance has developed to four of the six pesticides used against the A. aegypti mosquito in the Keys, the main mosquito vector transmitting the dengue and Chikungunya viruses (although the aggressive Asian tiger mosquito, A. albopictus, can do so as well).

Vaccines are certainly under development, but will likely take a long time. A recent editorial by Drs. Anthony Fauci and David Morens also dashes vaccines as a panacea, as being slow, cumbersome to apply, and costly. Such a vaccine would also only target Zika, doing nothing for the other mosquito-transmitted viruses.

With the explosive spread of Zika through Latin America, and realization that the virus will spread in the U.S. (though how large that would be is uncertain and being debated, with Peter Hotez, a Baylor tropical diseases and vaccine expert, being justifiably gloomier than officials), more attention has been focused on mosquitoes.

We are facing a crisis with mosquito-borne arboviral infections spreading throughout Latin America and the Caribbean, and undoubtedly soon to threaten swaths of the continental U.S.


http://www.forbes.com/sites/judystone/2016/02/01/mosquito-wars-update-would-you-choose-gmo-mutants-pesticides-dengue-or-zika-viruses/#47b24beb6b11
 
Is their a clear and present danger that future Republicans will have very small heads ?
 
The majority of...er.....contributors to this forum appear to be microcephalic already. What have you got to fear ?

And yet, he's so scared of rational discourse, he threadbans virtually everyone at JPP from posting in one of his little threads.

Check the laundry list of posters he bans from his "discussions" some time...ROFL!
 
The World Health Organization declared the Zika virus and its suspected link to birth defects an international public health emergency on Monday, a rare move that signals the seriousness of the outbreak and gives countries powerful new tools to fight it.

It was first identified in 1947 in Uganda, and for years lived mostly in monkeys.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/02/health/zika-virus-world-health-organization.html

Looks like somebody is afraid....just what we need another virus spread because blacks keep fucking monkeys in the jungle.



 
Whitey bred it in a test tube to inflict on the negro like we did with the AIDS virus. Might as well just get it out there and beat Deshtard to it
 
Zika: As temperatures rise from CO2 Emissions, epidemics spread

““Zika is a disease of poverty, similar to other neglected tropical diseases such as chikungunya and dengue. The burden falls disproportionately upon poor populations living near open water sources which attract mosquitoes, and who do not have the resources to protect themselves individually though bite prevention methods.” – LSE Fellow in Global Health Politics at the London School of Economics and Political Science, Dr Clare Wenham”

http://treealerts.org/topic/public-health/2016/01/zika-as-temperatures-rise-epidemics-spread

We've been warned about the effects of climate change for decades.
 
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