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Plague Craig's avatar

We've got a bunch of billionaires in this world. A bunch of them are into rockets, this one is into vaccines which is an improvement. I hope we get one as motivated to solve the systemic problems that create billionaires in the first place.

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ghampton's avatar

So I'm a microbiologist. In early Feb 2020, newly graduated from my doctorate I went to a conference in Australia. At the time, cases of COVID-19 were starting to increase in China, and the WHO was saying travel bans are mainly racist and unhelpful (oh, the joys of hindsight). Anyway, at this conference there was a session on COVID-19 and I heard from experts around Australia re their responses. One group who develops vaccines was ~3 months into a 5 year project designed to prepare for "disease X" including developing a vaccine for this unknown disease. The exercise was to help plan for as well as practice the process of rapid vaccine development. What ended up happening was COVID-19 became "disease X". The point is, multiple teams of immunologists, epidemiologists and microbiologists around the world have been researching infectious diseases and pandemics since well before the general public; we've already experienced multiple pandemics of coronaviruses (SARS-CoV-1 in 2004 and MERS 2012) so it's absolutely baffling to me that the tabletop exercise got picked up on.

Having said that over the weekend in Wellington there was a tropical storm in Wellington called Cyclone Dovi and I saw multiple threads where protestors/conspiracy nuts thought that the name of the cyclone (C. Dovi) being an anagram for COVID meant that the Govt. must be causing the weather to give them all COVID-19.

I've spent a lot of time thinking about anti-vaxxers and their motivations, since before the pandemic when NZ had a couple of measles outbreaks and parents still didn't want to vaccinate their children. Honestly, NZ's vaccination rates being so high has really impressed me. And I've also found comfort in reading about historical pandemics (all the way back to Roman times) and the first outbreaks of smallpox where people discovered variolation (similar to immunisation, but involved grinding up a smallpox pustule and exposing it to healthy people to prevent them getting sick) - even then there were anti-vaxxers.

Thanks for posting this snippet of conversation, it's really interesting to have some insight into how Bill thinks about these things.

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