Hi everyone.

I usually read you often to learn, but rarely have I participated in the 
forum. However, on this occasion I consider that I must pronounce myself 
after reading Mohammad's message that I subscribe 100%.

In this world where everything is so interconnected, in which we can travel 
from one end of the planet to the other, a disease like CoV can do a lot of 
damage. On the one hand we have people who get sick as a result of the 
virus and on the other hand the episodes of panic that are occurring in 
various parts of the planet. Shortage of food, masks, etc ... Hopefully 
everything remains in a scare and ends soon.

Here in Spain there have already been the first cases of infected, the 
first were from people who had been in the affected areas of Italy, but 
today they are already appearing in people who have not traveled abroad ...

And I totally agree with TiddlyTweeter. If the virus mutates as it happened 
with the badly called Spanish Flu, which did not originate in Spain, the 
thing would get very bad. The mortality rate of those infected ranged 
between 10% and 20%. The 1918 flu spread rapidly and killed 25 million 
people in the first six months alone. In total, about 500 million people 
became ill, one third of the world's population at that time. This death 
toll meant that almost 3% of the world's population died.

Although as with all things we have to take into account the context in 
which everything happened, the First World War with its consequences and 
still precarious health systems.

Hopefully this time things don't get so ugly.

Greetings.


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