Like terrible diseases.
I was link-hopping from a friend's Facebook page the other day when I discovered this interesting graphic on the good.is website - Outbreak: the Deadliest Pandemics in History. If you think the brain-dead ass clowns of the far right and far left are a plague, consider plagues that were demonstrably worse: the champion appears to be smallpox - now supposedly eradicated - which has killed more than 300 million people throughout recorded history. Measles comes in second with a mere 200 million victims, and the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918-1919 is in third with an estimated 50-100 million deaths. And, of course, there was the infamous Black Death that killed off much of the population of Europe in the 14th century.
Almost makes you appreciate low-grade nuisances like election seasons and ass clowns who insist on loud cell phone conversations in public, doesn't it?
Anyhow, there are lots of interesting infographics at the good.is website ... I'm not sure how accurate they all are, but they provide good food for thought, if nothing else.
That's all for today. Yesterday, my daughter and I met for lunch at Oyamel, and today Agnes and I are planning to enjoy lunch at Chef Geoff's downtown in observance of DC Restaurant Week - one of those things that help take the edge off the disadvantages of living in Disneyland-on-the-Potomac. Around here, we take our jollies where we can find them.
Have a good day. Wash your hands and get your flu shots. And have a good lunch. More thoughts tomorrow.
Bilbo
The .is domain is Iceland. Interesting site.
ReplyDeleteDid you see the study last year that showed that hand sanitizers do not reduce the transmission of colds and flus? The difference of incidence rates was statistically not significant. Nevertheless, people are still urged to use them with the main beneficiaries being the companies who make them.
ReplyDeleteTHanks for putting things in perspective, Bilbo! I get my flu shots yearly and look with jaundiced eyes upon mosquitos: worring about yellow jack, malaria, and now West Nile virus. Actually, the first two are pretty much under control; but oversized skeeters make me worry. Ancestral memory.
ReplyDelete