Anonymous wrote:Yes you can from monkey pox. Try to avoid orgies for now and cut down on the sex partners you have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no accurate way to know the mortality rate since it hasn't been around widely in countries with good health care. This is probably as dangerous as chicken pox -- people with no access to health care and antibiotics pick at the scabs, they get infected and are left untreated. Nothing to be concerned about here, where we have access to health care and antibiotics.
Anyone else hear Spring 2020 in this comment?
COVID was a once in a century event. It would actually be shocking to have two catastrophic worldwide pandemics back to back, from a statistical perspective.
Lmao. Covid wasn’t a catastrophic pandemic. The death rate was what, 0.3%? It killed mostly the elderly or infirm. You clearly bought into the narrative sold by the media and you’ll feel stupid if there ever is a deadly pandemic that kills healthy young people. 40% of people with COVID in their bodies don’t even get sick…you think that’s catastrophic?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no accurate way to know the mortality rate since it hasn't been around widely in countries with good health care. This is probably as dangerous as chicken pox -- people with no access to health care and antibiotics pick at the scabs, they get infected and are left untreated. Nothing to be concerned about here, where we have access to health care and antibiotics.
Anyone else hear Spring 2020 in this comment?
COVID was a once in a century event. It would actually be shocking to have two catastrophic worldwide pandemics back to back, from a statistical perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people really feel that monkey pox has to be fatal for them to take it seriously?
It doesn't seem to be serious, fatality aside. The images I've seen on the news look like no big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Do people really feel that monkey pox has to be fatal for them to take it seriously?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There was an outbreak of Monkeypox in 2003 in six midwestern states, where all the cases stemmed fron contact with pet prairie dogs. The prairie dogs had contacts with rats. So, just because you don't have contact with rats, doesn't mean you won't have contact with something else that has contact with rats.
I am 100% certain I will not be in contact with anyone or anything that is in contact with rats. How many people do you think have pet prairie dogs? You're really reaching if you think that's supposed to be scary.
I think this is basically what "endemic" means. When the virus is so widespread in an area that it infects the animals there widely as a reservoir of the illness. It can spread from animal to human, but it can also spread, apparently fairly easily though not AS easily as COVID, from human to human.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no accurate way to know the mortality rate since it hasn't been around widely in countries with good health care. This is probably as dangerous as chicken pox -- people with no access to health care and antibiotics pick at the scabs, they get infected and are left untreated. Nothing to be concerned about here, where we have access to health care and antibiotics.
Anyone else hear Spring 2020 in this comment?
COVID was a once in a century event. It would actually be shocking to have two catastrophic worldwide pandemics back to back, from a statistical perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no accurate way to know the mortality rate since it hasn't been around widely in countries with good health care. This is probably as dangerous as chicken pox -- people with no access to health care and antibiotics pick at the scabs, they get infected and are left untreated. Nothing to be concerned about here, where we have access to health care and antibiotics.
Anyone else hear Spring 2020 in this comment?
Anonymous wrote:I just saw a bit on the news about someone's "harrowing, exhausting two-week struggle with MonkeyPox." They said, we need to warn you that some of the images you're about to see may be disturbing. I couldn't look away.
It was literally like looking at a pimple on a man's cheek and a flat wart on his hand. Literally. It was not disturbing in any way. WTH, media???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There was an outbreak of Monkeypox in 2003 in six midwestern states, where all the cases stemmed fron contact with pet prairie dogs. The prairie dogs had contacts with rats. So, just because you don't have contact with rats, doesn't mean you won't have contact with something else that has contact with rats.
I am 100% certain I will not be in contact with anyone or anything that is in contact with rats. How many people do you think have pet prairie dogs? You're really reaching if you think that's supposed to be scary.