Coronavirus.

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rainman

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have to say the number of mask wearing people in sydney has dropped off something severe
a week or so ago there were 1000s now not many at all i think they are in hiding
 

bricktamland

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Either bio medically engineered to wipe out China due to population or another Ebola ... bet it dies off again. .. propoganda 101
 

Memberberries

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Either bio medically engineered to wipe out China due to population or another Ebola ... bet it dies off again. .. propoganda 101
Conspiracy thoughts are dirty thoughts.
Be a sheep with no individual thought!
 

KambahOne

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https://www.news.com.au/travel/trav...d/news-story/57497f11882d576e2f2b4df513c23188

China has suffered its worst day of the coronavirus outbreak, with 120 people dying in one day.

The death toll from coronavirus in China has risen to 426 — exceeding the fatalities from Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).

During the SARS outbreak of 2002-03 there were 349 deaths in mainland China and it eventually killed nearly 800 people globally.

One hundred and twenty new deaths from coronavirus were confirmed today — the single-biggest daily increase since the virus was detected late last year in the central city of Wuhan.

The number of people infected in China has skyrocketed to 20,438. In late January there were less than 1000 confirmed cases.

The South China Morning Post reports there were 3235 new confirmed cases in mainland China today.

The death toll in Hubei — the epicentre of coronavirus — was today at 414 people.

In mainland China, 425 people have died from the virus. Worldwide, the official death toll is 426 and the number of people infected is 20,622. Hong Kong reported its first death today from the virus.

The virus has so far spread to more than 20 countries, and several other nations have instituted tough travel rules with China.
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Wow! I'm wondering how many preppers are currently nursing their 'go' bags?
 

south of heaven

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https://www.news.com.au/travel/trav...d/news-story/57497f11882d576e2f2b4df513c23188

China has suffered its worst day of the coronavirus outbreak, with 120 people dying in one day.

The death toll from coronavirus in China has risen to 426 — exceeding the fatalities from Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).

During the SARS outbreak of 2002-03 there were 349 deaths in mainland China and it eventually killed nearly 800 people globally.

One hundred and twenty new deaths from coronavirus were confirmed today — the single-biggest daily increase since the virus was detected late last year in the central city of Wuhan.

The number of people infected in China has skyrocketed to 20,438. In late January there were less than 1000 confirmed cases.

The South China Morning Post reports there were 3235 new confirmed cases in mainland China today.

The death toll in Hubei — the epicentre of coronavirus — was today at 414 people.

In mainland China, 425 people have died from the virus. Worldwide, the official death toll is 426 and the number of people infected is 20,622. Hong Kong reported its first death today from the virus.

The virus has so far spread to more than 20 countries, and several other nations have instituted tough travel rules with China.
__________________________________________________

Wow! I'm wondering how many preppers are currently nursing their 'go' bags?
Big jump , how many bodies has China burned not in that count?
 

KambahOne

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https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/h...s/news-story/c3447b296c96b23cdbc771b548c4f7e4

“Striking” mutations of the coronavirus may have occurred during transmissions between family members, Chinese scientists say.

The effects of the mutations could have the potential to alter the way the virus behaves.

According to the South China Morning Post, some virus mutations can alter biological traits and allow them to adapt to different environments.

A new study by Professor Cui Jie and colleagues at the Institut Pasteur of Shanghai, published in the National Science Review journal, indicated “viral evolution may have occurred during person-to-person transmission”.

“Close monitoring of the virus’s mutation, evolution and adaptation is needed,” they said.

The team of scientists detected a total of 17 nonsynonymous mutations from cases around the country between December 30 and late January — which could make them more adaptable.

The worrying new findings come as China has suffered its worst day of the coronavirus outbreak, with 120 people dying in one day.
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wendog33

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https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/h...s/news-story/c3447b296c96b23cdbc771b548c4f7e4

“Striking” mutations of the coronavirus may have occurred during transmissions between family members, Chinese scientists say.

The effects of the mutations could have the potential to alter the way the virus behaves.

According to the South China Morning Post, some virus mutations can alter biological traits and allow them to adapt to different environments.

A new study by Professor Cui Jie and colleagues at the Institut Pasteur of Shanghai, published in the National Science Review journal, indicated “viral evolution may have occurred during person-to-person transmission”.

“Close monitoring of the virus’s mutation, evolution and adaptation is needed,” they said.

The team of scientists detected a total of 17 nonsynonymous mutations from cases around the country between December 30 and late January — which could make them more adaptable.

The worrying new findings come as China has suffered its worst day of the coronavirus outbreak, with 120 people dying in one day.
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Time to put ya masks back on.
 

Hacky McAxe

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Your guess is a good as mine man. This thing is now mutating and THAT is a very real concern.
Mutations are very common in RNA based viruses. Very, very common. An DNA based virus will usually mutate many time within a single host and increase mutation each time it jumps to a new host.

While mutation is common, it's the type of mutation that's the problem. Like with all other organisms including humans, most mutations are non-beneficial and result in parts of the virus dying. But the occasional small mutation that is beneficial will be reinforced. For example, a virus that can survive in a dead host will have a higher chance of survival than a virus that can't survive in a dead host.

Think of it like lotto, but there's millions of people playing lotto every hour. Eventually someone will win by chance alone.

So when they say "virus mutates", that doesn't mean much as all viruses mutate. It's the type of mutation that's the concern.
 

south of heaven

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Mutations are very common in RNA based viruses. Very, very common. An DNA based virus will usually mutate many time within a single host and increase mutation each time it jumps to a new host.

While mutation is common, it's the type of mutation that's the problem. Like with all other organisms including humans, most mutations are non-beneficial and result in parts of the virus dying. But the occasional small mutation that is beneficial will be reinforced. For example, a virus that can survive in a dead host will have a higher chance of survival than a virus that can't survive in a dead host.

Think of it like lotto, but there's millions of people playing lotto every hour. Eventually someone will win by chance alone.

So when they say "virus mutates", that doesn't mean much as all viruses mutate. It's the type of mutation that's the concern.
Will it turn into the blue chick from xmen?
 

Hacky McAxe

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Will it turn into the blue chick from xmen?
Possible but unlikely. Mutations are random so generally it won't be something you've seen before. More likely it'll be something sexy that you've never seen before but you still want to put your dick in. Kind of like when you're randomly browsing porn sites and you discover you have a new fetish you never even thought about.
 

south of heaven

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Possible but unlikely. Mutations are random so generally it won't be something you've seen before. More likely it'll be something sexy that you've never seen before but you still want to put your dick in. Kind of like when you're randomly browsing porn sites and you discover you have a new fetish you never even thought about.
Absolutely like when I discovered perve mum
 

Bob dog

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How did this start?
Did a chong butt fuck a monkey or something?
 

MatstaDogg

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Mutations are very common in RNA based viruses. Very, very common. An DNA based virus will usually mutate many time within a single host and increase mutation each time it jumps to a new host.

While mutation is common, it's the type of mutation that's the problem. Like with all other organisms including humans, most mutations are non-beneficial and result in parts of the virus dying. But the occasional small mutation that is beneficial will be reinforced. For example, a virus that can survive in a dead host will have a higher chance of survival than a virus that can't survive in a dead host.

Think of it like lotto, but there's millions of people playing lotto every hour. Eventually someone will win by chance alone.

So when they say "virus mutates", that doesn't mean much as all viruses mutate. It's the type of mutation that's the concern.
My DNA mutated and turned into two kids.

Unfortunately neither of them turned out to have superpowers so they will not be attending Professor Xavier School For The Gifted.
 
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