Bird Flu Monitor > Also the end of everything: More H5N1
[blinkit] Today's bLINKit: Crawford Killian has a bird flu blog. Pay attention, all.
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Some related posts from Technorati and Google.
Just a Bump in the Beltway: you recommend a "beach novel" you've read this summer which is worth the cost of the paperback. I have some serious reading to do in the next couple of weeks, but at this time of the year, I like one breezy but worth it fiction read. (via Cosmos)
J. LeRoy: that currently are credited with influencing public opinion will both draw from and be challenged by these communities. Lawmakers will find themselves being educated by these bloggers and find these bloggers formidable and sophisticated foes should they find themselves on the wrong side of an issue. (via Cosmos)
Article 19: After reading the book about the 1918 flu pandemic that wiped out about 5% of the world's population, I've tried not to become overly paranoid about the Asian bird flu. Compared to our capabilities in 1918, we are in a much better position to know and understand what's happening, even if we're not, at this point, in much better shape to do anything about it if when it mutates to become human-to-human contagious (if it hasn't already). (via Cosmos)
Shattering Rose-Colored Glasses: There are some really smart and well-educated folks out there blogging about the avian flu! If this is a subject that intrigues you, you can see several arguments to my post from yesterday and the day before both in the comments at my blog and at the following links (all of the comments are different, although there are some folks who are responding at more than one site). (via Cosmos)
The Coming Influenza Pandemic?: There's an Asian flu coalition pledge cooperation in the Greater Mekong Subregion. A comment in the Effect Measure post pointed this, where there is a claim of a new flu drug developed by China. (via Cosmos)
[Blinkit.typepad.com] blinkit: Camping in a provincial campground a short ferry hop from Vancouver is no hardship, especially when stores (and flush toilets) are a short drive away. And camping for most people, especially with kids, is an expedition to bring as much technology and convenience with them as possible: trailers or campers with electric lights and propane stoves;
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