An I’m-so-cute-and-clever reporter recently asked the president if he deserved to be re-elected given the number of deaths from coronavirus, noting that the number is greater than American fatalities from the Vietnam war.
People can always find something as a point of comparison as if that automatically adds weight to what they are implying. No doubt this reporter thought stats from the Vietnam war added gravitas to her query.
…She may have been unaware that at the height of the Vietnam war, there was something that killed more Americans than the war did, and it was a similar virus — and no one questioned whether a president should be elected or not because of the virus, known as the Hong Kong Flu.
In 1968-69, the Hong Kong flu ravaged the world; it wound up killing more than one million people worldwide, over 100,000 of them in the United States. No lockdowns were imposed and people still went to work, albeit lessening bus travel and implementing social distancing and more washing of their hands.
The Wall Street Journal
explained. “The novel virus triggered a state of emergency in New York
City; caused so many deaths in Berlin that corpses were stored in subway
tunnels; overwhelmed London’s hospitals; and in some areas of France
left half of the workforce bedridden.”
As John Fund notes in National Review,
the Hong Kong Flu “was an especially infectious virus that had the
ability to mutate and render existing vaccines ineffective … Hundreds of
thousands were hospitalized in the U.S. as the disease hit all 50
states by Christmas 1968. Like COVID-19, it was fatal primarily to
people older than 65 with preexisting conditions.”
The Encyclopedia Britannica
pointed out the highly contagious nature of the disease: “Indeed,
within two weeks of its emergence in July in Hong Kong, some 500,000
cases of illness had been reported … The 1968 flu pandemic caused
illness of varying degrees of severity in different populations. For
example, whereas illness was diffuse and affected only small numbers of
people in Japan, it was widespread and deadly in the United States.”
The Hong Kong flu still exists today. The Centers for Disease Control note,
“It was first noted in the United States in September 1968 … The H3N2
virus continues to circulate worldwide as a seasonal influenza A virus.”
Fund notes that a retired professor of medicine, Philip Snashall, noted in the British Medical Journal that
his two-year-old daughter was the first known case of the Hong Kong flu
in Europe. He wrote, “How things change. The stock market did not
plummet, we were not besieged by the press, men in breathing apparatus
did not invade my daughter’s play group.”
But now hysteria rules the day and the left is gunning for collapse on all fronts.............Times
have changed since 1968. Big tech overlords are wielding incredible
power, the hostile media is pure propaganda, the left will stop at
nothing as they adhere to the edict by “any means necessary. These past
couple of months, they’ve proven that they’re rather fond of
totalitarian rule........To Read More....
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