Wuhan Coronavirus: Megathread - Got too big

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Via the Daily Mail, this is from one of the warehouse death camps hospitals in Wu Han. Utter cringe. Packed in like sardines and for some reason wearing winter coats in bed, suggesting there's no heating worth a shit in there. Wonderful for sick people ...
I fucking told you, barracones like those have no insulation whatsoever, and even worse, actually due to the thermal conductivity of the walls and presence of airleaks make the temperatures even more extreme than just being outside. In winter, they're freezers. In summer, they're easy bake ovens. Why the chinese would put sick people in them after we figured this shit out in the 20th century would be beyond me were it not because, well, china.
 
View attachment 1132729

Via the Daily Mail, this is from one of the warehouse death camps hospitals in Wu Han. Utter cringe. Packed in like sardines and for some reason wearing winter coats in bed, suggesting there's no heating worth a shit in there. Wonderful for sick people ...
This photo suggests the structure is not sealed.

I haven't seen any photos that include actual HVAC, just air ducts.
 
So, a highly infectious, and in some case lethal virus is roaming the land. What do you do? You throw an open party for 40k people. What could possibly go wrong?

Coronavirus: Wuhan neighbourhood sees infections after 40,000 families gather for potluck

WUHAN - A neighbourhood in Wuhan, the central Chinese city where a new coronavirus first broke out, reported at least 10 cases of infection after the local government allowed 40,000 families to gather and share their home-cooked food in a Chinese New Year banquet last month, even as the bug crept across the city.

Many residents of Hubei province's Baibuting community, which covers an area of 4 sq km with a population of 130,000, came down with fever after the traditional event on Jan 18, prompting the local authorities to label 57 of its residential buildings as "fever buildings", Caixin Global reported.

"On Feb 1, we found more than 10 suspected cases, and to my best knowledge there were two infections. There are more cases that I don't know of," a Baibuting residential community worker told Caixin Global on Tuesday (Feb 4).

Residents in the so-called fever buildings - each housing 14 units - said they were not advised by officials on what precautions to take even after the entrance of their buildings were pasted with red paper bearing the words "fever building".

"Being listed a 'fever building' does not affect our lives. We don't really get out of the house now. Occasionally we go downstairs to buy things and no one controls us," said a resident.

According to the Chinese language Economic Observer, there were at least 10 cases of infection identified as at Feb 4.

The first cases of the virus were detected in Wuhan when workers at the Huanan Wholesale Seafood Market that sold seafood, animals and birds fell ill with a mysterious pneumonia.


On Dec 31 last year, China reported the string of cases for the first time to the World Health Organisation, 23 days after the first patient sought medical attention on Dec 8.

The following day, the seafood market was shut down.

In an interview on Jan 21 with Chinese broadcaster CCTV, Wuhan mayor Zhou Xianwang argued that the annual event was given the greenlight this year despite the risks involved as the decision was made "based on the judgment that human-to-human transmission was limited".

On the day the interview was aired, China confirmed 291 cases of infection, including 270 in Hubei. Mr Zhou also revealed that six Wuhan residents had died after catching the virus.

Two days later, the city of 11 million was locked down in an effort to quarantine the epicentre.

Mr Zhou later took responsibility for the delay in reporting the scale of the epidemic, but said he was hampered by the national law on infectious diseases.

That law allows provincial governments to declare an epidemic only after receiving central government approval.

"After I receive information, I can release it only when I'm authorised," he said.

The coronavirus has since killed 563 people and infected 28,018 in mainland China.

Other countries and regions reported around 200 infections, with one death each in Hong Kong and the Philippines.



On a side note, the effects of centralism and organizing everything around the glorious CPC are showing. You can have epidemics, but to declare it and use measures that come with it you need to have authorization from Beijing.
 
A neighborhood council buried a pet cat alive while its owner wasn't home. The owner is now pursuing legal remedies.
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So some cunt decided to use the virus to try to achieve Instagram clout. A hilarious prank!


Holmes is lucky he didn't do this on a US flight, where just sassing a flight attendant gets you charged with terroristic threats under DHS.
 
Translation please.
"...In the empty field."
"Where exactly? How did you take care of it?"
"We buried it deep in the dirt.
"I need a full explanation.
Give me a time, date, and process."
"We buried it deep around 5:50 today."
"Was it alive?"
"Alright, I understand your feelings, but please understand us, because of the epidemic."
"You're not answering my question."
 
To quote DJ Khaled - ANOTHER ONE

3rd case confirmed in the UK:


Another confirmed case in Germany (the wife of one of the infected Webasto employees, 2 of their kids are also infected), count rises to 13.

 
I know that this guy has been declared coporate shill or w/e but he has good points and now he has gotten the media ire


Worth to take a look
 
Bolivia:

Three Japanese tourists suspected of nCoV have been cleared (they have asthma): they travelled from Japan, to USA and to Peru and didn't fit the main criteria of being in China during the last 14 days. They were still isolated due to population concern. They are recovering.

Another Bolivian resident who was in China in the past weeks has shown symptoms of CV and it's been taken to the hospital, he's in isolation until tests confirm or rule it out.

They have decided to NOT close yet the borders as it's not recommended by WHO.

 
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