The full name is "severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2".
It is not mild, nor has it ever been. They don't call it MARS-CoV-2. It would be a very confusing name anyways because we live on Earth, not Mars, btw. And I don't think the Martians would appreciate being unluckily associated with this virus.
turns out they're both incorrect, we actually live on hellworld :covid-cool:
tfw you remember the first SARS outbreak
In March 2003, WHO established a global network of leading laboratories to collaborate in the identification of the causative agent of SARS. Early on, labs in the network narrowed the search to members of the paramyxovirus and coronavirus families. Early findings shared by the labs pointed to coronaviruses with increasing consistency. On 21 March, scientists from the University of Hong Kong announced the isolation of a new virus that was strongly suspected to be the causative agent of SARS.
China was the first country to sound the alarm back then too. And you bet your ass the same xenophobic shit about wet markets was rampant back then too.
The first successful transfection of designed mRNA packaged within a liposomal nanoparticle into a cell was published in 1989.[16][17] "Naked" (or unprotected) lab-made mRNA was injected a year later into the muscle of mice.[3][18] These studies were the first evidence that in vitro transcribed mRNA with a chosen gene was able to deliver the genetic information to produce a desired protein within living cell tissue[3] and led to the concept proposal of messenger RNA vaccines.[19][20][21]
Liposome-encapsulated mRNA encoding a viral antigen was shown in 1993 to stimulate T cells in mice.[22][23] The following year self-amplifying mRNA was developed by including both a viral antigen and replicase encoding gene.[22][24] The method was used in mice to elicit both a humoral and cellular immune response against a viral pathogen.[22] The next year mRNA encoding a tumor antigen was shown to elicit a similar immune response against cancer cells in mice.[25][26]
The first human clinical trial using ex vivo dendritic cells transfected with mRNA encoding tumor antigens (therapeutic cancer mRNA vaccine) was started in 2001.[27][28] Four years later, the successful use of modified nucleosides as a method to transport mRNA inside cells without setting off the body's defense system was reported.[27][29] Clinical trial results of an mRNA vaccine directly injected into the body against cancer cells were reported in 2008.[30][31]
It would have been interesting to see the mRNA vaccine arrive two decades earlier. It unlocks so much new medicine and we underfunded it until COVID sparked wartime funding.
In March 2022 Moderna announced the development of mRNA vaccines for 15 diseases: Chikungunya virus, COVID-19, Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever, Dengue, Ebola virus disease, HIV, Malaria, Marburg virus disease, Lassa fever, Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV), Nipah and henipaviral diseases, Rift Valley fever, Severe fever with Thrombocytopenia syndrome, Tuberculosis and Zika
That's so many lives destroyed from 2003-2022 who could have cheaply lived if SARS-CoV-1 took off like SARS-CoV-2.
Also like 700 people worldwide died and we were talking about it for years.
Now covid has killed well over a million people and you barely hear a peep. It's incredible.
SevereSmollbean Acute (it's cute :3) Respiratory Syndrome - Coronavirus - 2This is a bad argument because things have to be named extremely early to be able to talk about them, and early naming is based on early information, which has a high likelihood of becoming incorrect as the situation evolves.
Yes I think the world should be doing more to stop the virus! And it's good to talk and think rationally about the reason why I/you/we think that, rather than compressing one's reasoning into a tweet length.
I like the play on words in the OP though. Thumbs up for that.
I disagree, this is exactly the correct level of reasoning for the people that would argue against the correct conclusion. In real life, at least.