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Yesterday I had not much to say. But that doesn’t mean I don’t have much to feel. And it all feels bad out there lately. (“Waves hand generally,” younger folks would say on Reddit.)

Today it has hit me in the stomach real hard that irreparable damage has been done to the lives of millions of people by this destructive and insidious virus that causes #Covid. And that’s not just from people with #LongCovid but also those of who still know #CovidIsNotOver and #CovidIsAirborne and all that shit.

Looking for plant suggestions! I live in the Pacific North West, South coastal BC and am looking for some drought tolerant plants, either veggies or noninvasive/native plants. I won't have access to regular water in my garden for a while and water is generally an issue where I live in the summer.

Any suggestions? 😁🌱💧

#gardening

The WHO - COVID is not airborne.

Everyone for 4 years - Declare it airborne!

The WHO - Here's a 66 page document painstakingly detailing how COVID is airborne titled "Indoor airborne risk
assessment in the context of SARS-CoV-2" followed by a 33 page document bringing the droplet people and aerosol people under one umbrella explaining how droplets can go through the air and be deposited AND aerosols can fly long distances through the air. To make both happy we'll put transmission in two subcategories:

Airborne transmission/inhalation and direct deposition.

Everyone - No, not like that!

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I have chosen to die on this hill, and so I will continue. I was going to ignore this new opinion piece in The Lancet, but, I can't help myself in the end.

thelancet.com/journals/lancet/

The first time I read it I gave up on the first paragraph.

Read this carefully:

"The report proposes that use of the unqualified terms airborne and airborne transmission in the context of infectious disease transmission should be avoided."

Followed by:

"It introduces new terms matched to specific definitions, including “through-the-air transmission”, “infectious respiratory particles”, “airborne transmission/inhalation”, “direct deposition”, “semi-ballistic”, and “puff cloud”. "

What this, literally, says is that we should replace "airborne transmission" with "airborne transmission/inhalation." This is what everyone is fighting over.

After it came across my timeline for the 20th time I decided I'd give the rest a read.

Paragraph two. Two examples of airborne being used in papers in the last 127 years to show that there was no confusion regarding the term "airborne"?

Compare that to the extensive writing of Prof. Jimenez on the history of the droplet dogma and decide if you think everyone understands this.

researchgate.net/publication/3

royalsocietypublishing.org/doi

onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/fu

Paragraph 3. Finally something we agree on. The WHO botched the last 4 years horribly.

The next paragraph is where this falls off the rails for me.

"This new WHO report appears to assume that because some infectious disease experts believe that the SARS-CoV-2 virus is airborne only “situationally” (ie, under unusual conditions),1"

I, for one, read this and went directly to the report itself because I was appalled. Guess what? The quoted word, "situationally", never once appears in the document, which is cited. Nor does "under unusual conditions." So now it's just quoting things that don't exist and citing them.

To be clear, it's citing a document titled "Global technical consultation report
on proposed terminology
for pathogens that transmit
through the air" not the document actually about COVID(iris.who.int/bitstream/handle/), while complaining about COVID.

I don't see a need to continue.

Mark my word. The CDC delayed their response to this document, whether or not they would go along and declare COVID airborne, because people are making it "controversial" and giving them cover to.

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The #CDC is trying to persuade dairy farms to use PPE to protect workers from #H5N1 #birdflu. But between fear of the stigma and the fact PPE isn't well suited to hot, wet environments, the offers of free equipment aren't finding many takers, @statnews's Sarah Owermohle reports. statnews.com/2024/05/10/bird-f

🔗 New 'forever chemical' cleanup strategy discovered phys.org/news/2024-05-chemical

> The method…involves treating heavily contaminated water with ultra-violet (UV) light, sulfite, and a process called electrochemical oxidation

#PFAS

Last week, the requirement for US hospitals to report key COVID data to the federal government ended.

But there's a proposed HHS/CMS rule that would change this, and require hospitals to report key COVID, flu, and RSV hospitalization data *outside* of public health emergencies.

🔗 COVID an 'occupational disease,' Colo. appeals court rules coloradopolitics.com/courts/co

> Colorado's second-highest court ruled for the first time on Thursday that COVID-19 is an "occupational disease" that entitled the widow of a deceased nursing home employee to workers' compensation benefits.

Y’know, a hurricane can be downgraded from a Category 4 to a tropical storm once it hits landfall, but even a storm can push giant trees onto your car or flood your house or tear your roof off. Just because you don’t die outright from it, doesn’t mean it can’t devastate you.

(Yes, this is about Covid.)

When papers discuss "viral clearance" in regards to COVID, they generally test this by PCR. In other words, your nasopharynx has cleared the virus.

When papers about COVID discuss "viral persistence" they're usually talking about the virus taking up safe harbor somewhere deep in your body. These people are generally not testing positive by PCR.

The fact that I'm seeing a few prominent science people mixing these interchangeably recently tells me just how far we have to go on this subject.

Apropos of the subject, longer term antivirals have been the subject of more than one clinical trial for long COVID and thus far the results are mixed, as would be expected. Here's one for an example:

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/

Over the past 27 years, #H5N1 #birdflu has repeatedly defied #flu dogma, doing things scientists thought #influenza viruses couldn't or didn't do. We would be foolhardy to assume it doesn't have more tricks up its sleeve. statnews.com/2024/05/09/bird-f

Thankfully it was a "minor" heart attack. He's really into hiking and camping and can't figure out why his health's been so bad for 6 months. I just don't think it's my place to launch into the "COVID talk" but I feel bad for the guy. He's hoping to do our roof work in a couple weeks. I'll see if an opportunity presents itself to casually drop COVID into a conversation.

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Via @n, time.com/6898943/is-covid-19-s is awful. What editor let this through? Is their fact checker now AI?

I'm going to vent at this example of very bad journalism!

1/n 🧵

#stillCOVIDing #CovidIsNotOver #sarscov2 #covid19 #journalism

Woohoo my youngest's teacher said she will have a look at the Covid Safety for Schools course 💃🏻💃🏻

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