Originally posted by northernladuk
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Previously on "Who's afraid of the [S]Xi[/S] [S]Nu[/S] Omicron variant?"
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Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
Not so I'm afraid, of viruses generally anyway.
If they have a fairly long incubation and infectious period, there's no advantage in mutating to be less deadly.
For example, nobody in recorded history has ever survived a rabies infection without medical help (an induced coma).
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News just in. All flights to Malta in January cancelled. Entry has been closed to visitors all that month. Dooooooooom
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Originally posted by TwoWolves View PostAll pandemics mutate into less dangerous variants because it's not advantageous to kill your host ...
If they have a fairly long incubation and infectious period, there's no advantage in mutating to be less deadly.
For example, nobody in recorded history has ever survived a rabies infection without medical help (an induced coma).
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Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
I read somewhere that in ancient times the emphasis was on the "micron" and "mega" rather than the "O"
If that is true, then Mary Beard fluffed it by publicly claiming the emphasis should be on the "O"
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Originally posted by Gibbon View Post
Its Greek obv. for little "o" i.e. micro O, Omega is as you've guessed by now is great "O" pronounced OO. See my beginners Greek wasn't wasted!
If that is true, then Mary Beard fluffed it by publicly claiming the emphasis should be on the "O"
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Originally posted by mattster View Post
Maybe in a developed country. The UK simply let a couple of plane loads from SA land and disembark as normal over the weekend, whereas in the Netherlands they held the passengers and tested them all. There was a near 10% positivy rate.
You'd think the UK et al would require the other country to test, or would insist on tests on arrival.
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