Oink, oink my good manā€¦

I try to stay away from politics in this particular blog and focus on business instead, but one cannot help to take notice of the ā€œswine fluā€ outbreak. The news is every where along with the warnings and the seemingly constant social reminders in the form of hand sanitizers or face masks. MoreĀ  appropriately for this publication, is the scary ties to business that swine flu holds, but more on that in a bit.

First, a quick recap on swine flu. Swine flu (for those few of you who have not been bombarded by the hype of the situation) is a form of influenza called H1N1 by medical professionals and scientists. As the outbreak caps over 800 official cases today and slowly lunges towards a pandemic, there is some sense of panic. This is for good reason because this particular virus is a new hybrid virus formed by two variants of swine flu, one of avian flu, and one of human flu origins. In short, this is a virus weā€™ve never seen before. The result of virus breeding and Darwinism at its scariest. H1N1 refers to the underlying composition of proteins that somewhat uniquely identify both the manner in which the virus spreads and the core components of which it is formed.

While the rest of worldā€™s population scatters themselves into self imposed quarantines resorting to social distancing and face masks to try to control something well beyond any one personā€™s own ability to control; I must pause the panic on a the note of a major component of the story that is being overlooked by many.

Wired early this week pointed out that doctors had scientifically isolated the genetic materials that directly link this swine flu to a previous outbreak that occured back in 1998 in the South US. This 1998 outbreak was limited in scope and quickly contained as it did not have the capability to spread pig to human (unlike H1N1). The root cause of the outbreak was at that time determined to be industrial agricultural pig compounds within the US and Mexico. Those corporate farming compounds used methods of animal production that are still in use today. Those methods center around high concentrations of stationary animals confined to stalls, forced fed, and in many instances poorly sanitized due to the scope and nature of the facilitiesā€™ capability to support such a large population of animals. In this instance, it was concluded the outbreak was caused by the pigs constant exposure to fecal matter and the overall sub-standard living conditions the pigs were confined within that literally became a Garden of Eden of sorts for the various viruses and bacteria that cause such outbreaks.

Now Iā€™m not going down some liberal bleeding heart avenue here, but the parallel can be seen today where the first victim (aptly named ā€œPatient Zeroā€) of H1N1 and every patient since then, have all had infections with trace genes that show this current virus is a direct descendant from the 1998 H3N2 swine influenza. That fact alone shows there is a real direct link between H3N2 and H1N1 that cannot be ignored. Notably, H3N2 also was capable of quick mutation and gene swapping with other strains of influenza in the host bodyā€™s blood stream. This remarkable capability stunned investigators at the time who expressed high concern that if left unattended this virus could reemerge within the decade even more mutated and less capable of isolation. Further H1N1 Patient Zero (a five year old boy) just happens to live down the road in a small Mexican village from several major pig farms owned by US corporations and operated in similar manners to the facilities described above.

The owners (Smithfield Foods Corporation) have denied any link and noted they have tested their flock, but regardless of whether the existing pigs have the flu or not one can only deduce how a mutated virus would make its way across an isolated region with no know previous H1N1 or H3N2 cases to the local populace via water, dirt, or just good old wind. Ultimately, that same local populace would spread it to the surrounding areas population who in turn would spread it to tourists and so forth.

Rolling Stone has an article on Smithfield Foods and how one they are one of the biggest polluters in the world. They describe how Smithfield runs their operations. Needless to say, you may not want to eat any ham or bacon before glancing over the article, but I do highly recommend it. The article is from December 2006 and again the warning signs are nothing short of shocking in retrospective.

Now Iā€™m not saying every corporation is run like this or that we need to have some of wild witch hunt on industrial manufactures because Iā€™ll also note that if we hadnā€™t driven these operations out of the US with excessive taxes that maybe we could have done a better job of regulating theĀ  industry as whole.

What I am saying is that the world as a whole has to wake up and focus on how our daily activities impact those around us. While we may have not been able to prevent the flu (pigs will get the flu just like the rest of us) being more proactive on daily operations safety and awareness is nothing short of life saving. As an operations manager myself Iā€™m at a loss to explain this, but I can only hope that going forward the meat production industry will try to address these concerns directly instead of pointing fingers and shrugging shoulders.

In a global nation there is no longer the ability to hide our garbage in somebody elseā€™s backyard. Especially when that same backyard happens to also be one of the biggest tourist destinations in the world. That secret will quickly become one that is unable to be contained because after allā€“ unlike Ops managers, viruses donā€™t take orders from CEOs and have a tendency to just do whatever the heck they want to.

Originally published at http://digitalflood.wordpress.com on 3/3/09
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Classic DF – 7/31/02

July 31, 2002: [ā€¢] A terrorist attack on a school in Jerusalem, Israel has left 7 people dead. Hamas has claimed responsibility for it. [ā€¢] The Pope is continuing his tour. Today he is in Mexico to grant sainthood to an Indian martyr. [ā€¢] US Sen. Joseph Biden, Democratic chairman of the Senate committee, says that Iraq is a threat; but an invasion this year is unlikely. [ā€¢] The US Justice Department in investigating AOL Time Warner. [ā€¢] A gunman opened fire at the Beirut university campus in Lebanon killing 8 people. [ā€¢] The Turkish parliament has voted to hold early elections. [ā€¢] A gun battle in Somalia has left 13 people dead. [ā€¢] The November 17th terrorist group has issued a statement to Greece that it is alive and well (unfortunately). [ā€¢] Zimbabwe is expected to take out its frustrations over EU imposed sanctions by targeting pro-democracy advocates within its country. [ā€¢] Rwandan President Paul Kagame says that presidential and parliamentary elections will be held by the end of next year. [ā€¢] A 6.2 earthquake rocked Costa Rica. [ā€¢] A drug sting operation has busted over 2,000 drug dealers since March near the US-Mexico border. [ā€¢] Thousands of illegal Indonesian immigrants are leaving Malaysia before a new labor law can impose strict fines on them. [ā€¢] The South Korean National Assembly has rejected the nomination of Chang Sang as Prime Minister. [ā€¢] Alimzhan Tokhtakhounov, a Russia mob figure, has been arrested and charged with trying to fix the 2002 Winter Olympic Games figure skating competition. [ā€¢] A forest fire in Oregon is expected to merge with a forest fire in California. [ā€¢] Two men in a van crashed into a house. One problem: The house had mobsters in it. [ā€¢] The US Senate has rejected a Medicare prescription plan. [ā€¢] The Pentagon has imposed a wireless device standard for its employees. [ā€¢] A group of whales that beached themselves for a third time has been euthanized after refusing to return to the sea despite rescuers’ efforts. [ā€¢] A serial killer is loose in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. [ā€¢] Alanta, Georgia is about to create a wireless access point that covers several blocks. [ā€¢] Web master Jon Messner has bought the domain name of Alneda.com (it was owned by the al Qaeda), but the FBI dropped the ball so it’s of no use to anyone. [ā€¢] Dogs are a lot brighter than previously thought. In fact, they may even be able to count. [ā€¢] Your computer is a great bug repellent. [ā€¢] The FBI has busted up several Net scams. [ā€¢] Artemis Records has decided to waive all webcasting fees for its catalog for a year. [ā€¢] Australia is famous for big things. Well, things used to be a whole lot bigger there! [ā€¢] Cosmic rays may help to heat up the Earth’s surface. [ā€¢] Senate cracks me up. They should be giving better educational opportunities to kids, working to eliminate poverty, and fixing the recession. So what are they doing? Try to get us to exercise. Okay then. [ā€¢] Spin announced its favorite metal albums ever. [ā€¢] Now Warwick’s water supply is being threatened by Mayor Newhard’s crazy schemes. Thanks Mr. Mayor… sheesh. [ā€¢] Contrary to yesterday’s report Sun says it isn’t developing an OS X version of Star Office. [ā€¢] This is it people. I have demanded a Mini Cooper S for 3 months now and none of you have helped me. Thanks for nothing! [ā€¢] Nissan has committed itself to selling fuel cell cars by 2003. [ā€¢] Ford and Toyota may team up. [ā€¢] Loads of car recalls (including Rolls-Royce!). [ā€¢] Microsoft has partnered with AT&T wireless and this partnership is expected to propel the next wireless versions of Windows to bigger and better things. [ā€¢] Google will provide the search feature in AOL 8. [ā€¢] I love you wife and daughter! [ā€¢] Immy got a hold of some Pepsi Blue. Was I invited? No! “Sniff” LOL [ā€¢] On a brighter note: Maybe I can scam some Pepsi Blue off of Mermaid šŸ™‚ Oh Mermaid! [ā€¢] I added a link to a New York Times story covering the CVS and Warwick, NY issue. Very interesting comments from the Village Mayor, Michael Newhard. Looks like he is going after condemnation though he promised he wouldn’t. I think it’s time we call for a referendum ASAP and fix things before these political egomaniacs currently in power ruin the Village.

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Classic DF – 4/7/01

Apr. 7, 2001: [ā€¢] A bomb has killed a boy and injured several people in Thailand. [ā€¢] Pacific Gas & Electric has declared bankruptcy. [ā€¢] The Hunley Confederate submarine crew apparently went down with the ship quite fast. [ā€¢] Russia wants its independent TV. [ā€¢] Filipino rebels have released their last hostage. [ā€¢] Growing food isn’t the problem in Angola; it’s getting to it without being shot. [ā€¢] Two students are being held in connection to a dorm fire in Kenya. [ā€¢] Security concerns have closed the US embassies in Paraguay, Uruguay, and Ecuador. [ā€¢] Indonesian separatists have bombed an Exxon Mobil natural gas field. [ā€¢] Vietnam’s school are under attack by chemical weapons, but no one why knows why. [ā€¢] 33 police officers were killed by Maoist rebels in Nepal. [ā€¢] This evening the Jewish holiday of Passover begins. For most Jews it is a joyous holiday, but not so in worn torn Israel. [ā€¢] Iraq claims that US and UK jets once again bombed them. [ā€¢] Meanwhile, Amnesty International has charged Iraq with massive human rights violations. [ā€¢] Algerian national Ahmed Ressam has been found guilty of plotting to bomb New Year’s Eve celebrations. [ā€¢] President Bush’s tax cut proposal has passed Senate (sort of). [ā€¢] About 100 college students have caught a respiratory infection from going to Spring Break in Mexico. [ā€¢] Roosevelt Junior and Senior High School has been closed as teachers and administrators try to figure out how to regain control over students. [ā€¢] A child escapes a kidnapper in New York City. [ā€¢] A man attacks the Liberty Bell with a ball peen hammer. [ā€¢] Four Spidey costumes were stolen from the set of Spider-man: The Movie. [ā€¢] The FCC has almost explained exactly what indecent or patently offensive programming is. “Almost” being the operative word. [ā€¢] Get your own brothel! [ā€¢] A shop lifter dies fighting security guards. Is it really worth a couple of chocolate bunnies and a box of Cheez-Its to die? I think not. [ā€¢] Beware of tumbleweeds. [ā€¢] Linux users beware: The Adore Virus is out and looking for holes in your system. [ā€¢] EMI has teamed up with HitHive to deliver downloadable music to wireless devices and PCs. [ā€¢] Microsoft is developing an add-on for Outlook that will sort your mail by preference and priority. Great. Just great. “Sigh” [ā€¢] SunBlade 1000 workstations have a data corruption issue. Downloading a patch will fix the issue. [ā€¢] Microsoft is licensing their text-to-speech software to third parties. [ā€¢] The last of ten Norway wolves has eluded hunters. [ā€¢] Baldur’s Gate: Dark Alliance brings half assed Dungeons & Dragons: Third Edition rules to the Playstation 2. [ā€¢] Once again, NASA is going to send another probe to Mars to poke around for two days and then break down when they realize they forgot to include that one vital component. [ā€¢] Houston, Texas is low on blood causing both doctors and vampires to worry. [ā€¢] Some anorexia may be genetic. [ā€¢] Smoking raises the risk of bladder cancer in women. [ā€¢] Two teenage girls are suing MTV after they were shit on (literally) during a pilot taping. Nice. [ā€¢] Now, I’m Mr. Pro-Life. However, the whole posting doctors’ home addresses on the Net thing just doesn’t sit right with me. Legally it is allowed. So why can’t you do the same thing with the Feds? It’s not right either way. [ā€¢] Linus Torvalds says Mac OS X sucks. [ā€¢] Nothing is safe. [ā€¢] Back Orifice gets a Middletown teen in trouble. [ā€¢] Roy Lee Elliott is sentenced to 15 years in prison for tying up his wife and beating her. [ā€¢] A child molester is caught, the usual traffic stop turns into drug bust story, Middletown Schools has its budget approved, a man falls asleep while his house is on fire, a woman hits a senior citizen, police save a girl’s life, and a cocaine bust. [ā€¢] Creed sends kids to space camp. [ā€¢] It turns out Weezer wasn’t on the Warped Tour at all. [ā€¢] MaximumPC walks you through how to build the ultimate PC entertainment system. [ā€¢] The PT Cruiser gets topless. [ā€¢] Other distributed file sharing systems are following Napster’s lead and blocking copyrighted material. [ā€¢] My wife so rules. [ā€¢] That is this week’s flurry of postings. Once again we’ll return next week with more furry fun! See you on Monday.

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Classic DF – 4/3/01

Apr. 3, 2001: [ā€¢] Of course it’s the US’s fault that a Chinese pilot rammed a surveillance plane because God forbid that the Chinese government admits it did something imperfectly. “Sigh” [ā€¢] The US Senate approved a campaign finance reform bill. Now it must pass through the House. [ā€¢] A US F-16 crashed off the coast the Japan, but the pilot is okay. [ā€¢] The Philippine Supreme Court has voted unanimously to oust President Joseph Estrada. [ā€¢] Peace talks in Macedonia have begun. [ā€¢] A murderer is hung in Botswana. [ā€¢] Mexico has arrested a drug czar. [ā€¢] Fighting in Colombia continues. [ā€¢] 87 anti-globalization protesters were arrested in Ottawa, Canada during a peaceful protest. [ā€¢] Four people were killed in riots in Bangladesh as citizens continue to demand that prime minister Sheikh Hasina resign. [ā€¢] Ex-LAPD officer Nino Durden has pleaded guilty to three counts of conspiring to violate civil rights and one count of possessing a firearm with an obliterated serial number. [ā€¢] Chinese stowaways are found hitchhiking in a ship. [ā€¢] The Duh Study of The Day: The US Census says our population grew. I could have told you that! [ā€¢] Two bodies are found floating off the coast of Alaska. They are believed to be part of the crew of a missing boat. [ā€¢] Providence, Rhode Island Mayor Vincent Cianci Jr. has been indicted on accepting bribes. [ā€¢] Try playing kick ball in this park. [ā€¢] The ex-Chevron employee charged with trying to blow up a plant has pleaded innocent. [ā€¢] Today the digital music battle goes to Congress. [ā€¢] ICANN has granted Verisign extended rights to manage dot com domains. [ā€¢] Cisco releases its web capable cell phones. [ā€¢] AIM 4.5 Beta for Mac is out. [ā€¢] FCC Chairman Michael Powell overhauls the FCC. [ā€¢] The lawsuit against IBM by holocaust victims has been dropped in hopes that they can settle out of court. [ā€¢] Black & White has been described by my colleagues as addictive, incredible, and everything a game should be. [ā€¢] What the hell is with Japan? Are you guys retards or something? First you want to kill whales so you can eat them even if it means making them extinct and now you want to do the same with elephants for their ivory. When does the stupidity end? [ā€¢] Two of the three cows cloned at Chico State University have died. [ā€¢] When lakes attack. [ā€¢] Overheating a child can kill them (duh). [ā€¢] If you have sinus pain like me right now chances are it’s allergies. [ā€¢] Be likes Popeye Da Sailor and eatz your spinach, but spell poorly! [ā€¢] Stress can ruin sleep. [ā€¢] No matter what the patch for the Internet Explorer hole says install it! [ā€¢] Dredging draws both support and protests. [ā€¢] Get your drugs here. [ā€¢] Warwick Police arrest a man accused of raping a woman. [ā€¢] A pit bull attacks a mentally disabled man. [ā€¢] Sex, lies, and… lies. [ā€¢] Sean Kinney (ex-Alice in Chains), Mike Inez (ex-Alice in Chains), Vin Dombroski (Sponge), and Chris DeGarmo (ex-Queensryche) have formed Spys4Darwin. [ā€¢] Here come the new albums: Run DMC kicks it old school and Rammstein kicks it hard. [ā€¢] The AMD Duron hits 900MHz. [ā€¢] Maxtor has bought Quantum’s hard drive division. [ā€¢] 2002 Acura TL Type S rules. [ā€¢] I love you wife! [ā€¢] Poor Immy šŸ™ Hope you have a better day soon! [ā€¢] BTW: I made an OOPS. I said I was off today and I wasn’t! I’m off tomorrow. Anyhow, that means our next update will be Thursday. See you then.

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Classic DF – 8/21/09

Aug 21, 2000: [ā€¢] The submarine rescue mission has been called off after Norwegian divers opened the rescue hatch only to find the entire vessel had filled with water. [ā€¢] The Verizon strike is over. [ā€¢] A pipeline in New Mexico exploded killing 6 people. [ā€¢] Ford has been under-inflating Firestone tires (at 26 psi) on Explorers. Firestone says that they recommend 30 psi, but that Ford had to under inflate the tires in order to avoid rollover issues with the Explorer. [ā€¢] Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak is proposing to modernize the government by giving women equal rights and removing Orthodox Jewish beliefs from law to religion. Most of Israeli’s conservative groups oppose the change. [ā€¢] Citizens of the Chiapas (Mexico) have elected a non-PRI Governor, Pablo Salazar, with hopes of ending the war between the Mexican Army and Zapatista rebels fighting for Native Mexican rights. [ā€¢] East Timor has set up a multiparty Congress. [ā€¢] 8 children have died when a bus crashed in Germany. [ā€¢] A train derailed that was carrying fuel and caused an explosion that has left 18 people dead in Kenya. [ā€¢] Tiger Woods is either very good or very evil. [ā€¢] The pilot of a Northwest Airlines DC-10 died of a heart attack in the middle of a flight, but his copilot managed to land the plane without anyone else dying. [ā€¢] The Duh Study of The Day: Most people want privacy policies that require users to “opt in” to give out personal data. That is how is should be, but greed makes companies do otherwise. [ā€¢] President Clinton got flashed for his birthday (needless to say he didn’t complain). [ā€¢] The top 15 PCs. [ā€¢] The Cell is a special effects bonanza, now if only the script didn’t suck. [ā€¢] Can metal detectors and video cameras prevent violence in the school? [ā€¢] Coming to a cable lineup near you: ZDTV. [ā€¢] Celebrex, an arthritis fighting drug, seems to prevent tumors and slow the growth of tumors already there. [ā€¢] A 7 year old boy was killed at the Grahamsville Fair by an SUV who didn’t see him. [ā€¢] E-mail killed the letter. [ā€¢] The Tri-State Car Club’s 13th annual car show was yesterday in case you missed it. [ā€¢] Dr. Mark McMahon hopes to give Democrats a choice beside Hillary Clinton in the NY Senate race. [ā€¢] Cornwall has a new high school in the works. [ā€¢] Newburgh is getting an infrared detector, which is used to find survivors in fires. [ā€¢] Warwick will be hosting several experts on revitalizing and improving towns (oh there’s an original idea… improvement). [ā€¢] Cops went to a house because of a cat problem and ended up finding illegal guns, hippies arrested for trespassing, teens arrested for smoke bombing a trailer, a man shot a puppy because he was afraid it would attack his kid, a teen surrenders, and a man who pushed a prostitute out of a moving car has been found. [ā€¢] U2 has issued the track list for All That You Can’t Leave Behind. [ā€¢] The Big Day Out lineup has been confirmed. [ā€¢] SeemsLikeSalvation News is reporting October 10th as the release date for the new Nine Inch Nails EP, Marilyn Manson’s Disposable Teens and The Fight Song are getting airplay early, and I get props for spotting a Skinny Puppy scoop. [ā€¢] If you’re looking for a Java based PDA check out Teapot. [ā€¢] Apple is offering to buy back faulty Powerbooks and sell you the new model $700 cheaper. [ā€¢] Cadillac will be producing a roadster based on the Corvette platform, the Jaguar F-type will only be produced if there is demand, Mercedes will offer a C-class coupe next year, Lexus has announced prices for the LX 470 and IS 300, and Toyota has raised prices on some of its 2001 models. [ā€¢] The Presidents will take over local TV stations. [ā€¢] Ministry will be releasing one final video on Warner Brothers entitled Tapes of Wrath. [ā€¢] Various Jeph.net News: In case you missed it Korpios has resigned as an administrator and they need a new IRC operator which can be voted on here. Of course you should vote for me to become Supreme Commander of Underwater Basket Weaving for All Things Jeph.net. [ā€¢] I love my wife (that’s not really new news, but I just thought you’d like to know) šŸ™‚ [ā€¢] Daemon Immortalis will be posting the new Marilyn Manson songs since he likes them so much. [ā€¢] I think Red Raven has finally lost it LOL. [ā€¢] So following Immy’s tip I downloaded several of the new Marilyn Manson tracks (including a bunch of fakes) and I wasn’t disappointed. The new songs are hard like the Antichrist Superstar stuff, punked out like Portrait of an American Family, and at the same time funky like Mechanical Animals. I guess that means its the best of all worlds, but without all the crap there was in previous albums. This is exciting stuff. Talk to you tomorrow.

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