Tuesday, May 5, 2009

H1N1 and H1Z1 Paranoia

A blogger calling himself Gary Macabre at his "Blogue Macabre" site has posted his humorous reading of the CDC warnings about the H1N1 virus. While his comments are generally silly, what is worth noting is the blogger's intellectual connection between viral pandemics and zombie plagues. It's worth keeping as proof of an argument.

GM's "Blogue Macabre" posting is re-produced below.

Monday, May 4, 2009

H1N1 Swine Flu: Is this the zombie apocolypse?

Greetings and condolences once again fellow travelers. My recent prolonged existence in the land of the living has certainly not been without it's fair share of excitement. It would seem that regardless of what remote hovel you occupy you would be made well aware of the current H1N1 virus,aka Swine Flu outbreak. Odd that such a minor viral pest, with no more adverse side effects than a normal human influenza virus that this should receive such widespread, nearly panicked global attention, after all "seasonal human influenza" claims the lives of 250,000 to 500,000 people annually (according to the WHO). Or, my dear conspiracy theorists, is there more to it?

Here is what the Center for Disease Control is telling us...(WARNING official and rather dull text follows in italics, but regardless if H1N1, Rage virus or Zombie outbreak it will all look the same, bet on it.)

WHAT TO DO?

Background

The novel H1N1 flu virus is causing illness in infected persons in the United States and countries around the world. CDC expects that illnesses may continue for some time. As a result, you or people around you may become ill. If so, you need to recognize the symptoms and know what to do.
Symptoms

Common symptoms include fever, headache, tiredness, cough, sore throat, runny nose, body aches, diarrhea, and vomiting. Nearly all persons with flu will have at least two of these symptoms. (GM: yeah sounds just like what you'd expect if you were bitten by a zombie to me) The high risk groups for novel H1N1 flu are not known at this time but it’s possible that they may be the same as for seasonal influenza. People at higher risk of serious complications from seasonal flu include people age 65 years and older, children younger than 5 years old, pregnant women, people of any age with chronic medical conditions (such as asthma, diabetes, or heart disease), and people who are immunosuppressed (e.g., taking immunosuppressive medications, infected with HIV).
Avoid Contact With Others

If you are sick, you may be ill for a week or longer. You should stay home and avoid contact with other persons, except to seek medical care. If you leave the house to seek medical care, wear a mask or cover your coughs and sneezes with a tissue. In general you should avoid contact with other people as much as possible to keep from spreading your illness. At the current time, CDC believes that this virus has the same properties in terms of spread as seasonal flu viruses. With seasonal flu, studies have shown that people may be contagious from one day before they develop symptoms to up to 7 days after they get sick. Children, especially younger children, might potentially be contagious for longer periods.
Treatment is Available for Those Who Are Seriously Ill

It is expected that most people will recover without needing medical care. (GM: or at least appear to before they go on a murderous rampage gnawing at any breathing being in eye shot)

If you have severe illness or you are at high risk for flu complications, contact your health care provider or seek medical care. Your health care provider will determine whether flu testing or treatment is needed. Be aware that if the flu becomes wide spread, there will be little need to continue testing people, so your health care provider may decide not to test for the flu virus.

Antiviral drugs can be given to treat those who become severely ill with influenza. These antiviral drugs are prescription medicines (pills, liquid or an inhaler) with activity against influenza viruses, including H1N1 flu virus. These medications must be prescribed by a health care professional.

There are two influenza antiviral medications that are recommended for use against H1N1 flu. The drugs that are used for treating H1N1 flu are called oseltamivir (trade name Tamiflu ®) and zanamivir (Relenza ®). (GM: although the WHO ha already said these seem to have little effect on the current contamination. But that's OK they're just trying to keep you blissfully calm and comforted) As the H1N1 flu spreads, these antiviral drugs may become in short supply. Therefore, the drugs will be given first to those people who have been hospitalized or are at high risk of complications. The drugs work best if given within 2 days of becoming ill, but may be given later if illness is severe or for those at a high risk for complications.
Emergency Warning Signs

If you become ill and experience any of the following warning signs, seek emergency medical care.

In children emergency warning signs that need urgent medical attention include:

* Fast breathing or trouble breathing
* Bluish or gray skin color (GM: who here has seen Dawn of the Dead?)
* Not drinking enough fluids
* Severe or persistent vomiting
* Not waking up or not interacting
* Being so irritable that the child does not want to be held
* Flu-like symptoms improve but then return with fever and worse cough
* Seemingly heightened senses of hearing and smell
* Heightened uncontrollable aggression towards others beyond the standard
report card comment "does not play well with others"
(GM: OK those last two I added)
In adults, emergency warning signs that need urgent medical attention include:

* Difficulty breathing or shortness of breath
* Pain or pressure in the chest or abdomen
* Sudden dizziness
* Confusion
* Severe or persistent vomiting
* Flu-like symptoms improve but then return with fever and worse cough
* desire to eat under prepared meat products, human flesh and headcheese
(GM:OK that was me again)

Protect Yourself, Your Family, and Community

* Stay informed. Health officials will provide additional information as it becomes available. Visit the CDC H1N1 Flu website.
* Cover your nose and mouth with a tissue when you cough or sneeze. Throw the tissue in the trash after you use it.
* Wash your hands often with soap and water, especially after you cough or sneeze. Alcohol-based hand cleaners are also effective.
* Avoid touching your eyes, nose or mouth. Germs spread this way.
* Try to avoid close contact with sick people.
* If you are sick with a flu-like illness, stay home for 7 days after your symptoms begin or until you have been symptom-free for 24 hours, whichever is longer. Keep away from other household members as much as possible. This is to keep you from infecting others and spreading the virus further.
* Learn more about how to take care of someone who is ill in "Taking Care of a Sick Person in Your Home"
* Follow public health advice regarding school closures, avoiding crowds, and other social distancing measures.
* If you don’t have one yet, consider developing a family emergency plan as a precaution. This should include storing a supply of extra food, medicines, and other essential supplies. Further information can be found in the “Flu Planning Checklist”
(GM: Seriously did I just read that right!!??? DEVELOP A FAMILY EMERGENCY PLAN!! With extra supply of food, water and other essential supplies!!!??? for a flu outbreak likely less significant than our "normal seasonal flu outbreak". Sorry but that seems a little extreme wouldn't you think?) You know I'd almost bet that was a cut and paste at least twice before replacing Nazi with Communist and flu respectively.

So this is all practical, and if we stay the course, and listen for updates, and do what the authorities tell us we all will be fine? Gee I don't know about you but I can't recall the last time that Miami was effectively shut down, with airlines canceling services to the US during any normal "normal flu" season, or the when World Health Organization called for a class 5 pandemic, even during such known deadly ailments such as the SARS outbreak a few years ago and the West Nile virus, a deadly summertime reality here in North America and Europe claiming hundreds of lives every year, or China just started detaining people based on nationality, ignoring human rights and banning import on meat products, or...Ummm, yeah forget that stuff about China.

Some interesting facts with possible Zombie plague parallels:

On March 18th. The Mexican Government starts investigating a mysterious disease in the province of Veracruz.

On April 6th. A US company located in Veracruz reports changes in behavioral patterns of local residents.

So far the World Health Organization claim that the virus is being contained and those affected have all been immediately connected to visits to Mexico, and no secondary transmission as been confirmed. Yet daily numbers of the infected are increasing. (Getting bit or wounded will do that you know.)

Mexico has confirmed 16 deaths, but are investigating an additional 85 deaths that have been reported since. (forget the paper masks, issue chain male.)

The Mexican Health Agency starts taking international flack for not getting heath workers to the families of the first reported casualty for nearly three weeks citing logistical problems. (Can you say zombie horde.)

Areas that have reported a limited number of early, less serious cases that had appeared to be recovering, suddenly have more and more serious cases. Nothing is said of the earlier patients current status. (If that doesn't scream dead returning to life and attacking others nothing does.)

Well folks it's too early to say that this is the beginning of the Zombie apocalypse, but stay tuned to this blog for any further developing information which could indicate that Hell is in fact full. In the mean time now might be a good time to check if you still have those Y2K supplies and buy some more ammunition.

Gary Macabre

Monday, May 4, 2009

Vermont Z-Signs . . . Again

Travel Vermont's roads and you'll see signs that construction season has started -- literally.

This one warns of work on the Interstate in Colchester. And this one ... Warns of zombies!? "I think it's pretty funny," said Christie White, a motorist that stopped for a second look.

Scofflaws targeted a digital construction sign on Route 7 near the Colchester-Milton town line. It once warned motorists about road work, and now advises people turn back due to a zombie invasion. The sign also mentions Swine Flu. Police suspect the culprits hacked into the sign's computer system to change it. "I had to take another glimpse at it and reread it," said Amanda Mobbs, who noticed the sign on her way to work at a convenience store. She says customers have been getting a kick out of it. "A lot of people are coming in and laughing about it and thinking its a joke."

It may have been a practical joke but police don't think it's that funny. Because hacking into the construction sign here could have serious consequences. "Tampering with that sign is not going to warn motorists there could be a problem up ahead until they are right into it," said Colchester Police Sgt. Jeff Fontaine.

Colchester Police tried to turn the sign off. But couldn't. Because it's password protected. The Agency of Transportation knows about the problem. And messages have been left for the construction company that owns the sign. Until the proper warning is back, police have a warning of their own. "If this leads to an accident," said Sgt. Fontaine, "then we would look into that as a contributing cause.

Police say potential charges against the perpetrators include making a false report. For now, the large sign is hard to miss. Generating a lot of buzz in town, and a lot of picture taking.

Darren Perron - WCAX News

Colchester, Vermont - May 3, 2009




Florida's Zombie Luau

The photos from the Melbourne Zombie Shuffle are pretty boring. But this item about an upcoming "zombie luau" in Florida seems interesting. Any excuse for a party? How zombielike is that kind of crowd-mentality thinking?

Chicago Trib: Year of the Zombie

This article from the Chicago Tribune calling this "The Year of the Zombie." I'm already a bit behind in my research and writing, and I'd better hurry up!
(Link to the 4 May 2009 article by staff reporter Christopher Borrelli)



Chicago Tribune

It's the Dawn of the Zombie Zeitgeist

People of Chicago, while you sleep, the Zombie Readiness Task Force worries, with admirably straight faces. In the event of an outbreak of the dead, should bodies of the deceased rise from their graves and stalk the streets of Chicago muttering for a bite of brain, the Zombie Readiness Task Force has a plan of action.


Its members have even written it down -- or rather, they have mostly written it down. The Zombie Readiness Task Force began at the University of Chicago as an act of speculative procrastination.

Junior Justin Hartmann and some friends, punchy after long hours of study at one of the most famously studious universities in the country, began to play a game of "What would you do if ... ?"

For instance, what would you do if the University of Chicago were besieged by zombies? As these things do in college, that late-night gab session last winter led to Hartmann and friends asking the university to recognize them as a student organization. Which led to a quick rejection. Which led to Hartmann and friends putting on ties and politely making their proposal before the sort of school officials who don't smile a lot.

This time, not only were they recognized, they also wrangled student-organization dollars out of the school -- $5,500 to be precise -- to bring author Max Brooks to campus, the guy behind "The Zombie Survival Guide" and "World War Z."

They grew to 25 members, and their timing was perfect.

This is the Year of the Zombie. (Feeling draggy? Just stumbling through the day, waiting to eat? Beset on all sides by moaning? You may be a zombie too. If so, cheer up, you ol' sack of flesh: Your time to shine has arrived.)

Forget the vampires of "Twilight" and their affectations. The A-list monster mascot of our miserable moment is a slouching corpse. Once you peek out at the zeitgeist from behind your fingers, you will see: Zombies are everywhere.

The next film from "Juno" scribe Diablo Cody is a bittersweet zombie tale called "Breathers: A Zombie's Lament." Which brings us to the burgeoning Z-lit genre: "Breathers" is an adaptation of a zombie novel by S.G. Browne, and hardly the only new zombie novel; Seth Grahame-Smith's literary mash-up, "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies," debuted last month at No. 1 on Amazon's contemporary literature list. Then there are video games: The fifth "Resident Evil" has sold more than 1.5 million copies.

Theater? Michael Jackson's zombie classic "Thriller" is headed for Broadway. Social media? Facebook's "Real Friends Kill Friends Who Become Zombies" has more than 25,000 members. Fashion? New York magazine, in a nod to the bedraggled male models at the most recent Fashion Week, coined "Zombie chic."

Recession?

As banks have failed, there has been a cry from financial analysts to put down the "zombie banks," institutions that continue to operate despite a negative worth.

Public works?

On Interstate Highway 255 -- just east of St. Louis -- traffic signs were hacked last winter to read "Daily Lane Closures Due to Zombies." ( Texas and Indiana had similar incidents.)

Even paparazzi are not immune: Woody Harrelson recently claimed he struck a photographer in New York because he just finished the comedy "Zombieland" and mistook him for a zombie.

Chicago alone has seen, in the last year, a zombie bowling party, a zombie skating party and a zombie gathering at Millennium Park; last Saturday, you had your choice of attending a zombie prom or, in Andersonville, a zombie pub crawl -- basically, you march down Clark Street crying for brains, banging on bus windows. (More than 600 attended.) There's even a Web site for all your local zombie needs: chicagozombie.com.

The zombie has become so ubiquitous the Zombie Readiness Task Force was not even the only zombie-centric happening at the University of Chicago in recent months. A few weeks ago, U. of C. hosted its annual Model United Nations conference -- four days of what-if scenarios handled by representatives from schools such as Harvard, Yale and Stanford. One mock situation that required solving a zombie outbreak.

"It was controversial, sure," said junior Sam Fishman, an undersecretary general for the Model UN. "It's a serious conference. Some people got upset. But I thought it was fantastic."

Decaying, walleyed, bowlegged. At a glance, the zombie appears hard to love. He does not have the gravitas of a Mary Shelley for support; he does not own a tuxedo like Dracula. He is difficult to talk to. His strength is in numbers.

But if there's a reason the zombie of 2009 fits snugly into society: We know him; we are him.

"There's a sadness," said S.G. Browne. "They used to be us. But they're tragic and comical and they want to be friends, but we run. Vampires are Brad Pitts. Zombies are more like the Steve Buscemis. We can relate."

Indeed, at Harvard Medical School, Dr. Steven Schlozman, an assistant professor of psychiatry, uses zombies in class to explain neurology. Not just the zombie brain, but our response to crisis.

"What happens in zombie movies is important," he said, "because we shoot zombies in the head, then we start to enjoy it, then we feel sheepish. We can learn a lot from a scenario like that."

So, last fall he wrote a medical paper, in bloodless New England Journal of Medicine prose, "Ataxic Neurodegenerative Deficiency Syndrome: A Preliminary Pathophysiology and Proposed Global Remedies," about a case of Zombieism. He kept a straight face.

He mailed it to neurologists, to psychiatrists. But instead of disdainful reactions, "the phone calls of support have not stopped coming." Which is in keeping with the new Zombieism, a lightly zombified version of the recognizable world.

One of the most popular additions to the Marvel universe in recent years is "Marvel Zombies": Spider-Man and Co., but as flesh eaters. There's DisneyZombies.com, a fiction blog that -- well, you know.

And then there's "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies" -- which Grahame-Smith said he wanted to hem close to the Jane Austen original, "to retain the idea of people not addressing what is before them, because they're too polite, even if it means not addressing zombies outside."

For instance, Chicago's WildClaw Theatre, which specializes in live horror plays, is currently producing "The Revenants" at the Angel Island Theater in Lakeview. It features two couples beset by zombies, and how the crisis tests their resolve.

"One of the strangest things I've noticed are the couples on their way out of the play," said WildClaw managing director Brain Amidei. "I've heard them whispering about the 'zombie conversation,' which is basically a twisted variation of the DNR conversation. Do Not Resuscitate. Except we have wives telling husbands: 'If I'm bitten by a zombie, shoot me in the head.' "

OK, so we have met the monster, and he is us. And we know where to look to find him: everywhere. But why now?

"Because with swine flu and everything else, it strikes a chord, it helps work out apocalyptic anxieties without getting too real," Brooks said.

In fact, "The Zombie Survival Guide" was born of pre-Y2K hysteria, he said, not unlike the zombies of George Romero's zombie classics, born of Vietnam and racial anxieties ("Night of the Living Dead") and zoned-out American consumerism ("Dawn of the Dead"). It may be a cringing irony that the current zombie craze coincides with a deadly outbreak of swine flu. But it goes beyond that, said Grahame-Smith.

"We live in a time when we think a lot about big faceless groups of people in the world who mean to do us harm and can't be talked to, and so it's not surprising we would take comfort in the zombie."

Indeed, Zombie Pub Crawl organizer Alaina Hoffman said she initially did it as a goof, as a fundraiser for her improv group. "But something happened when I showed up," she said.

"Everyone was gray and speaking in monosyllabic tones. There was no class, no race. You should have heard me the next day: 'We should all be zombies! This is what the world should be!' And I don't mean brain dead. ... We've been beaten up. I mean, it's so much easier to forgive a zombie. They're the best unifier we have."

cborrelli@tribune.com

Sunday, May 3, 2009

An Effectively Entertaining Z-Hoax

A prankster posted this faked BBC page about the H1N1 flu virus into a subtle warning about zombies. It is well-done, subtle enough to mimic what the real thing would look like. I have to admit that it gave a momentary shock to my rational mind.

Click on the photo at left for a link to the hoax, which is available at:

http://bouncewith.me.uk/europe/8027043.htm