PRUDEN: "Are we dead yet?"
Wes Pruden has a good piece today in the Washington Times titled, A pandemic of panic -- are we dead yet?
The hysteria is palpable thanks to those who gain from imposing mindless fear on as many who will pay attention. Here are a few of the money paragraphs from Pruden's piece:
In case you missed my commentary a couple of days ago on this subject, check it out here.
O' and get a major grip, America!
The hysteria is palpable thanks to those who gain from imposing mindless fear on as many who will pay attention. Here are a few of the money paragraphs from Pruden's piece:
We haven't seen a panic quite like this one since the last one. SARS was once thought to be the ultimate panic, though the longest running panic was the AIDS scare, when big media set out to convince us that "now we are all at risk." SARS was never a threat in the United States, and worth the P-word only in China and even there a risk confined mostly to people who sleep with their chickens. You can step in all manner of unpleasant things in a chicken house. AIDS continues to be a succession of personal tragedies, but it has lost its power to terrorize continents. Worse, it lost its media cachet. Besides, nobody at the New York Times or at CNN wants to credit George W. Bush with anything good, or even acknowledge how he has become a hero in Africa for the American campaign against AIDS in Africa that has saved millions of lives.Be sure to read the entire piece.
But here we go again. The World Health Organization is heroically feeding the hysteria with the warning on front pages across the globe and trumpeted by hundreds of television talking heads: "The World Health Organization has warned that the [swine flu] virus has the potential to become a pandemic." The words "flu" and "pandemic" are such powerful scare words that almost nobody notices the accompanying weasel words "may," "could," "might," "potentially" and "possibly" that would stand out in bright red and green neon to the skeptical eye of a wizened old city editor. Alas, most of the wizened old city editors really are in the graveyard, having succumbed more to world-weariness than to fashionable diseases. The director of the World Influenza Center in London says of the outbreak, such as it is so far: "It's difficult to look on the bright side."
In case you missed my commentary a couple of days ago on this subject, check it out here.
O' and get a major grip, America!
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