[Mb-civic] Happy Doomsday to You! - Dana Milbank - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Fri Mar 24 03:49:30 PST 2006
Happy Doomsday to You!
Dana Milbank
The Washington Post
Friday, March 24, 2006; A02
Washington was about one horseman short of an apocalypse yesterday.
It began with a breakfast meeting in a Senate office building where,
over fruit salad and bagels, government and academic experts discussed
the coming avian flu pandemic. "Currently it has a fatality rate of 56
percent," reported Nancy Cox, flu expert with the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. "An increasing number of countries have reported
human cases. The severe cases are really quite severe."
Pointing to slides of some nasty chest X-rays, she added: "Death from
this particular pathogen is not a pleasant death."
Next: the mid-morning news conference on mad cow disease at the National
Press Club. There, a beef producer explained why he is suing the
government for not letting him test his cattle for bovine spongiform
encephalopathy, an "invariably fatal, progressive, incurable,
neurodegenerative disease" that can be transmitted to people. The feds
say the testing is unnecessary, but the rancher, John Stewart, warned
that "BSE is not understood enough today to really come to scientific
conclusions."
For those who still had an appetite, there was a luncheon meeting of the
National Economists Club at the Chinatown Garden restaurant on H Street,
where Congressional Budget Office economist Bob Shackleton was
explaining the "high-end" global-warming projections, which have Earth's
temperature growing by five degrees Celsius -- nine degrees Fahrenheit
-- this century.
"That five degrees centigrade is the equivalent of the change that
happened since the end of the last glaciation 18,000 years ago to now,"
he told the economists as they munched on fortune cookies and orange
wedges. "Eighteen thousand years ago, there was a mile of ice over New
York City and you could walk 100 miles out into the ocean and still be
on land."
Have a nice doomsday? Possibly. When President Bush went to Cleveland on
Monday, a questioner asked him about a claim "that members of your
administration have reached out to prophetic Christians who see the war
in Iraq and the rise of terrorism as signs of the apocalypse. Do you
believe this, that the war in Iraq and the rise of terrorism are signs
of the apocalypse?"
"I haven't really thought of it that way," the president said. "The
first I've heard of that, by the way."
But maybe not the last, if yesterday's collection of end-of-days
warnings was any indication.
On the fourth floor of the Russell Building on Capitol Hill, public
health experts were so perplexed by the bird flu that they had trouble
setting up the presentation. The start was delayed for about 15 minutes
as organizers debated where best to place the lectern (Q: "Where do you
suggest?" A: "Where do you suggest?").
Once underway, the experts, assembled by the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, displayed a number of slides, some frightening
(675,000 Americans dead from the 1918 flu), some technical ("vestigial
esterase E region"), and some merely drawings of ducks, geese, pigs,
horses and seals. But the message was, as pathologist Jeffrey
Taubenberger of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology put it, "we
really don't understand a lot."
"If we take everything we know about influenza virology now, take
everything I know about influenza virology now, and formulate a model of
the next pandemic, it would look like this," Taubenberger said as he
displayed a large question mark on the screen.
In fact, Taubenberger had evidence that the bird flu might have some
difficulty mutating to a human form. But that did not entirely satisfy
David Nabarro, the U.N. coordinator for influenza. "It's a very virulent
and horrible virus," he said. "It has also moved into 20 countries
during the last six weeks and I just checked the reports this morning:
Overnight we have reports of it moving into the Gaza Strip and also
moving into settlements in the West Bank."
Nabarro spoke of "mounting concern" across the world. "We are very
vulnerable," he warned. "Most of us, I think, feel that it's best to be
preparing to hunker down."
At the press club, John Stewart of Creekstone Farms Premium Beef was all
done hunkering. Explaining his lawsuit against the Agriculture
Department, he said the government wasn't testing enough animals for mad
cow disease, so he wanted to do it himself. Stewart, just in from
Kansas, said he was "surprised" USDA had cut back on testing. Sounding
much like the influenza scientists, he said there are "question marks
today about the science of this matter," and, besides, "consumers want
the beef tested."
It was time for lunch in Chinatown. The CBO's Shackleton stood at a
microphone stand in the middle of a room decorated by plastic and
cardboard trinkets, as if delivering a toast to the economists assembled
at banquet tables. There, the economist said something the Bush
administration can't bring itself to say: "The problem of climate change
stems mainly from the use of fossil fuels by human beings."
Shackleton said the likely temperature increase this century would be
between one and five degrees Celsius, and the average rise in sea levels
one to three feet. There is, he continued, "also the possibility of
relatively abrupt shifts where the climate system could experience a
dramatic shift."
The good news: We "won't be alive when most of the effects occur," he said.
The bad news: We all will have succumbed to bird flu and mad cow disease.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/23/AR2006032301783.html?nav=hcmodule
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