Kay Redfield
Versed in the lewd.
- Joined
- May 27, 2019
- Messages
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C hinese
O riginated
V irus
I n
D ecember
19 2019
O riginated
V irus
I n
D ecember
19 2019
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Do not goad on that on purpose please.
Yes, easily.
Viruses are, essentially, just a string of DNA protected and transported by a thin bubble of fatty protein.
If we want to get into technicalities like that... if it's an RNA virus, it's either called a Ribovirus (which only uses RNA) like influenza, or a Retrovirus (which uses *both* RNA and DNA) like HIV.
According to stuff I saw online, I should be going to the doctors so they can cut my thumbnail open and extract it, but...
Nah, they got bigger things to worry about, and i'd rather not head into a building full of sick people.
Eh, while "ribovirus" is a term it's not exclusively used; calling a non-retrovirus RNA virus a "virus" isn't wrong and is in fact pretty common unless you're very specifically talking about that attribute.If we want to get into technicalities like that... if it's an RNA virus, it's either called a Ribovirus (which only uses RNA) like influenza, or a Retrovirus (which uses *both* RNA and DNA) like HIV.
Meanwhile, the various poxes are exclusively DNA viruses. Which are generally just called 'viruses'.
1 - alcohol is able to denature most proteins (and many other biological components), which includes RNA and is not limited to DNAAlso, while retroviruses use DNA in their lifecycle, there is no DNA in the virion (the infectious vector, the stage of the lifecycle outside a cell, and the part you're going to be killing with alcohol).
You obviously didn't read what I said. Alcohol destroys basically all forms of protein... of which, DNA and RNA only two of many, many examples. Especially Isopropyl- with enough time and concentration, that shit will melt through tougher skin than human.(the infectious vector, the stage of the lifecycle outside a cell, and the part you're going to be killing with alcohol).
DNA and RNA are not proteins.You obviously didn't read what I said. Alcohol destroys basically all forms of protein... of which, DNA and RNA only two of many, many examples. Especially Isopropyl- with enough time and concentration, that shit will melt through tougher skin than human.
I think you may be confused. A virion is a free virus particle, in its entirety.Also, destroying the virion merely neutralizes a virus. Alcohol *kills* it (in as much as something that's not quite alive can die) when it dissolves the capsid (that is, the viral equivalent of a cell wall). And alcohol is very good at destroying capsid... but, then, so are almost any reactive substances (or energy)... capsids are about the flimsiest protein structures that can still be found in nature.
Fine. Alcohol chemically reacts with and in doing so destroys the acids that make up all important structures of a cell (or cell-like thing in the case of a virus). Is that pedantic enough for your tastes, or do I have to go into details about what sorts of salts are created in the process? Spoiler: lots of them are nitrogen based.
Yeah, I was thinking of the chemical binders that let the virus inject itself into the host cell.I think you may be confused. A virion is a free virus particle, in its entirety.
Alcohols don't actually chemically react with most macromolecules. What they do is disrupt their structure (and thus function) due to lessening the hydrophobic effect. Many individual macromolecules can recover from being denatured, but larger structures typically can't because the individual molecules drifted apart.Fine. Alcohol chemically reacts with and in doing so destroys the acids that make up all important structures of a cell (or cell-like thing in the case of a virus). Is that pedantic enough for your tastes, or do I have to go into details about what sorts of salts are created in the process? Spoiler: lots of them are nitrogen based.
Then you must also take into account that most virrii have a rather short, shall we say, live-expectance once outside
an host.
Yeah, I'm compiling a "these are people I will forever advocate against" list based upon which jackasses tried to exploit this natural disaster. I will vote for their opponents at every opportunity, even if it means voting for someone whose policies I actively despise. I'd rather a person I hate who has integrity than a person I agree with who's scum.Afterall, capitalising on a crisis to advance your agenda or to demolish your opponent is a time honnored tactict in politic.
By what measure? Outside the body, this one appears to be average, perhaps slightly below average, for the coronavirus family... which are one of the shorter-lived groups to begin with.
Not looking forward to the waves of reinfections that will result from this thing. It's gonna change lifestyles and if there is not a viable treatment or vaccine in the near future we will most likely see many fields of jobs being virtually eliminated from the the work force. I'll just settle for working from home for the meantime if possible or failing that just not working for the majority of this year.
I already miss being able to go to the gym.
Shouldn't be this bad the next wave. Vaccine progress is looking fine (no harmful side effects thus far, we're just waiting to see if it works against the disease in humans the way it does in animals- but there's almost no risk that it won't) and we know from the handful of reinfected that it's not nearly as harmful the second go around.Not looking forward to the waves of reinfections that will result from this thing.
Yeah... if anything comes out of there, it will undoubtedly be bacterial (with a teensy tiny chance of fungal) in nature... and in my personal opinion, bacteria are vastly more frightening than viruses. If only because it's not truly possible to eliminate bacteria, because they can live outside of the body indefinitely and vaccines don't often work on them. Sure, antibiotics are an option, but they're treatments rather than preventatives and sometimes don't work.*Points to places like the Tibetan Ice Sheets and other locations*
Either way, Nature has many, many darts to throw at the dartboard named humanity. So it's not a matter of if but when and how much are going to die. The future is going to get more dangerous.Yeah... if anything comes out of there, it will undoubtedly be bacterial (with a teensy tiny chance of fungal) in nature... and in my personal opinion, bacteria are vastly more frightening than viruses. If only because it's not truly possible to eliminate bacteria, because they can live outside of the body indefinitely and vaccines don't often work on them. Sure, antibiotics are an option, but they're treatments rather than preventatives and sometimes don't work.
If we somehow did invent a biological weapon to preemptively wipe out bacteria en masse, we could never deploy it for fear of destroying the entire ecosystem (and us with it).
Viruses are scary because of their spread rates, but bacteria are functionally immortal.
Eh, it's been getting progressively less dangerous for a very long time. At this point, we're comfortably insulated.
Yep. At this point, there are only two true threats to humanity. The first being ourselves (we have gotten very good at killing each other over the last century) and the second being celestial events. One unfortunate space rock and all are works are for naught.We have managed to breed ahead of things killing us so far. Life goes on, if not necessarily for everybody.
Long Term, you are right. Short Term, we will have to deal with waves of new diseases. Plus, I still factor in the other crisis and how the diseases will affect them. Kinda the whole 'Darkest before the Dawn' type scenario. Overall, not good projections.Eh, it's been getting progressively less dangerous for a very long time. At this point, we're comfortably insulated.
The future grows ever more stable, as we increase in numbers, knowledge, and genetic diversity with every new generation... we've reached a point where no disease can ever threaten the entire species ever again.
Yeah, we've been through that, already. Somewhere in the late 19th/early 20th centuries. We're sitting at roughly 7:30 in the morning in this particular metaphor. Noon would be right around the time we have self-sustained off-world colonies. Sunset is the first interplanetary war.
Yeah, as far as historic plagues it is far away from the worst. Black death killed about 30% to 50% of population.Guess we should just be glad it's not like HIV, which can go for years without detection.
When coupled with the effective nonexistence of herd immunity... we get ourselves a mini plague. And, yes, this is a *miniature* plague. Compared to the real monsters like Bubonic and Smallpox, we got off lucky. Sooner or later this is going to happen again with something ten to twenty times more deadly.
Sadly, technology base/communities/culture becomes more and more fragile. And I would argue that threat of wiping out species was lowest when we reached Australia/Americas. We were already the apex predator, able to kill any animal.The future grows ever more stable, as we increase in numbers, knowledge, and genetic diversity with every new generation... we've reached a point where no disease can ever threaten the entire species ever again.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma-ray_burst is my favoriteYep. At this point, there are only two true threats to humanity. The first being ourselves (we have gotten very good at killing each other over the last century) and the second being celestial events. One unfortunate space rock and all are works are for naught.
Well the answer is still spread and breed. If planetary travel is too fast, easy and cheap, go interplanetary. If we somehow manage interplanetary mass tourism, go interstellar and keep going.Yeah, as far as historic plagues it is far away from the worst. Black death killed about 30% to 50% of population.
Plagues brought by Europeans into America killed 70-90% of population (and collapsed societies so thoroughly that it had plenty of bizzare results).
And I am glad that it has quite limited death rate. Still high enough to kill (hopefully temporarily) economy. And have "For your own and your family safety. Please remain within your homes" recordings blasted out of loudspeakers of police vans cruising through my city.
Sadly, technology base/communities/culture becomes more and more fragile. And I would argue that threat of wiping out species was lowest when we reached Australia/Americas. We were already the apex predator, able to kill any animal.
And our advances since that time (especially travel-related) made us more fragile to plagues. Yes, medicine improved - but slower than our ability to travel. And as far as species-extinction our advances made situation worse. We were multiple times decisions away from nuclear war.
And we are still unable to deal with cosmic-level threats (major impacts, or more theoretical ones like aliens)...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma-ray_burst is my favorite
"a typical burst releases as much energy in a few seconds as the Sun will in its entire 10-billion-year lifetime"
For bonus irony "GRBs were first detected in 1967 by the Vela satellites, which had been designed to detect covert nuclear weapons tests; this was declassified and published in 1973."