First Corona Virus case confirmed in SA.

Hi all

Here’s a great article I read earlier. It’s an interview with an epidemiologist who helped fight against smallpox. This guy knows his stuff. What I appreciated about this is the clarity and the high level view.

It’s not all bad news and there is a bright side.

Well worth a read

Am going to paste it below:

Article credit - Wired.com
URL -
https://www.wired.com/story/coronavirus-interview-larry-brilliant-smallpox-epidemiologist/

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The Doctor Who Helped Defeat Smallpox Explains What's Coming
Epidemiologist Larry Brilliant, who warned of pandemic in 2006, says we can beat the novel coronavirus—but first, we need lots more testing.
Science_LarryBrilliant-547175256.jpg

PHOTOGRAPH: PAUL ZIMMERMAN/GETTY IMAGES
LARRY BRILLIANT SAYS he doesn’t have a crystal ball. But 14 years ago, Brilliant, the epidemiologist who helped eradicate smallpox, spoke to a TED audience and described what the next pandemic would look like. At the time, it sounded almost too horrible to take seriously. “A billion people would get sick," he said. “As many as 165 million people would die. There would be a global recession and depression, and the cost to our economy of $1 to $3 trillion would be far worse for everyone than merely 100 million people dying, because so many more people would lose their jobs and their health care benefits, that the consequences are almost unthinkable.”

Now the unthinkable is here, and Brilliant, the Chairman of the board of Ending Pandemics, is sharing expertise with those on the front lines. We are a long way from 100 million deaths due to the novel coronavirus, but it has turned our world upside down. Brilliant is trying not to say “I told you so” too often. But he did tell us so, not only in talks and writings, but as the senior technical advisor for the pandemic horror film Contagion, now a top streaming selection for the homebound. Besides working with the World Health Organization in the effort to end smallpox, Brilliant, who is now 75, has fought flu, polio, and blindness; once led Google’s nonprofit wing, Google.org; co-founded the conferencing system the Well; and has traveled with the Grateful Dead.

We talked by phone on Tuesday. At the time, President Donald Trump’s response to the crisis had started to change from “no worries at all” to finally taking more significant steps to stem the pandemic. Brilliant lives in one of the six Bay Area counties where residents were ordered to shelter in place. When we began the conversation, he’d just gotten off the phone with someone he described as high government official, who asked Brilliant “How the **** did we get here?” I wanted to hear how we’ll get out of here. The conversation has been edited and condensed.

Steven Levy: I was in the room in 2006 when you gave that TED talk. Your wish was “Help Me Stop Pandemics.” You didn't get your wish, did you?

Larry Brilliant: No, I didn't get that wish at all, although the systems that I asked for have certainly been created and are being used. It's very funny because we did a movie, Contagion—

We're all watching that movie now.

People say Contagion is prescient. We just saw the science. The whole epidemiological community has been warning everybody for the past 10 or 15 years that it wasn't a question of whether we were going to have a pandemic like this. It was simply when. It's really hard to get people to listen. I mean, Trump pushed out the admiral on the National Security Council, who was the only person at that level who's responsible for pandemic defense. With him went his entire downline of employees and staff and relationships. And then Trump removed the [early warning] funding for countries around the world.

I've heard you talk about the significance that this is a “novel” virus.

It doesn't mean a fictitious virus. It’s not like a novel or a novella.

Too bad.

It means it's new. That there is no human being in the world that has immunity as a result of having had it before. That means it’s capable of infecting 7.8 billion of our brothers and sisters.

Since it's novel, we’re still learning about it. Do you believe that if someone gets it and recovers, that person thereafter has immunity?

So I don't see anything in this virus, even though it's novel, [that contradicts that]. There are cases where people think that they've gotten it again, [but] that's more likely to be a test failure than it is an actual reinfection. But there's going to be tens of millions of us or hundreds of millions of us or more who will get this virus before it's all over, and with large numbers like that, almost anything where you ask “Does this happen?” can happen. That doesn't mean that it is of public health or epidemiological importance.

Is this the worst outbreak you’ve ever seen?

It's the most dangerous pandemic in our lifetime.

We are being asked to do things, certainly, that never happened in my lifetime—stay in the house, stay 6 feet away from other people, don’t go to group gatherings. Are we getting the right advice?

Well, as you reach me, I'm pretending that I'm in a meditation retreat, but I'm actually being semi-quarantined in Marin County. Yes, this is very good advice. But did we get good advice from the president of the United States for the first 12 weeks? No. All we got were lies. Saying it’s fake, by saying this is a Democratic hoax. There are still people today who believe that, to their detriment. Speaking as a public health person, this is the most irresponsible act of an elected official that I've ever witnessed in my lifetime. But what you're hearing now [to self-isolate, close schools, cancel events] is right. Is it going to protect us completely? Is it going to make the world safe forever? No. It's a great thing because we want to spread out the disease over time.

Flatten the curve.

By slowing it down or flattening it, we're not going to decrease the total number of cases, we're going to postpone many cases, until we get a vaccine—which we will, because there's nothing in the virology that makes me frightened that we won’t get a vaccine in 12 to 18 months. Eventually, we will get to the epidemiologist gold ring.

What’s that?

That means, A, a large enough quantity of us have caught the disease and become immune. And B, we have a vaccine. The combination of A plus B is enough to create herd immunity, which is around 70 or 80 percent.

I hold out hope that we get an antiviral for Covid-19 that is curative, but in addition is prophylactic. It's certainly unproven and it's certainly controversial, and certainly a lot of people are not going to agree with me. But I offer as evidence two papers in 2005, one in Nature and one in Science. They both did mathematical modeling with influenza, to see whether saturation with just Tamiflu of an area around a case of influenza could stop the outbreak. And in both cases, it worked. I also offer as evidence the fact that at one point we thought HIV/AIDS was incurable and a death sentence. Then, some wonderful scientists discovered antiviral drugs, and we've learned that some of those drugs can be given prior to exposure and prevent the disease. Because of the intense interest in getting [Covid-19] conquered, we will put the scientific clout and money and resources behind finding antivirals that have prophylactic or preventive characteristics that can be used in addition to [vaccines].

When will we be able to leave the house and go back to work?

I have a very good retrospect-oscope, but what's needed right now as a prospecto-scope. If this were a tennis match, I would say advantage virus right now. But there's really good news from South Korea—they had less than 100 cases today. China had more cases imported than it had from continuous transmission from Wuhan today. The Chinese model will be very hard for us to follow. We're not going to be locking people up in their apartments, boarding them up. But the South Korea model is one that we could follow. Unfortunately, it requires doing the proportionate number of tests that they did—they did well over a quarter of a million tests. In fact, by the time South Korea had done 200,000 tests, we had probably done less than 1,000.

Now that we've missed the opportunity for early testing, is it too late for testing to make a difference?

Absolutely not. Tests would make a measurable difference. We should be doing a stochastic process random probability sample of the country to find out where the hell the virus really is. Because we don't know. Maybe Mississippi is reporting no cases because it's not looking. How would they know? Zimbabwe reports zero cases because they don't have testing capability, not because they don't have the virus. We need something that looks like a home pregnancy test, that you can do at home.

If you were the president for one day, what would you say in the daily briefing?

I would begin the press conference by saying "Ladies and gentlemen, let me introduce you to Ron Klain—he was the Ebola czar [under President Barack Obama], and now I’ve called him back and made him Covid czar. Everything will be centralized under one person who has the respect of both the public health community and the political community." We're a divided country right now. Right now, Tony Fauci [head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases] is the closest that we come to that.

Are you scared?

I'm in the age group that has a one in seven mortality rate if I get it. If you're not worried, you're not paying attention. But I'm not scared. I firmly believe that the steps that we're taking will extend the time that it takes for the virus to make the rounds. I think that, in turn, will increase the likelihood that we will have a vaccine or we will have a prophylactic antiviral in time to cut off, reduce, or truncate the spread. Everybody needs to remember: This is not a zombie apocalypse. It's not a mass extinction event.

Should we be wearing masks?

The N95 mask itself is extremely wonderful. The pores in the mask are three microns wide. The virus is one micron wide. So you get people who say, well, it's not going to work. But you try having three big, huge football players who are rushing for lunch through a door at lunchtime—they're not going to get through. In the latest data I saw, the mask provided 5x protection. That's really good. But we have to keep the hospitals going and we have to keep the health professionals able to come to work and be safe. So masks should go where they’re needed the most: in taking care of patients.

How will we know when we’re through this?

The world is not going to begin to look normal until three things have happened. One, we figure out whether the distribution of this virus looks like an iceberg, which is one-seventh above the water, or a pyramid, where we see everything. If we're only seeing right now one-seventh of the actual disease because we're not testing enough, and we're just blind to it, then we're in a world of hurt. Two, we have a treatment that works, a vaccine or antiviral. And three, maybe most important, we begin to see large numbers of people—in particular nurses, home health care providers, doctors, policemen, firemen, and teachers who have had the disease—are immune, and we have tested them to know that they are not infectious any longer. And we have a system that identifies them, either a concert wristband or a card with their photograph and some kind of a stamp on it. Then we can be comfortable sending our children back to school, because we know the teacher is not infectious.

And instead of saying "No, you can't visit anybody in nursing home," we have a group of people who are certified that they work with elderly and vulnerable people, and nurses who can go back into the hospitals and dentists who can open your mouth and look in your mouth and not be giving you the virus. When those three things happen, that's when normalcy will return.

Is there in any way a brighter side to this?

Well, I'm a scientist, but I'm also a person of faith. And I can't ever look at something without asking the question of isn't there a higher power that in some way will help us to be the best version of ourselves that we could be? I thought we would see the equivalent of empty streets in the civic arena, but the amount of civic engagement is greater than I've ever seen. But I'm seeing young kids, millennials, who are volunteering to go take groceries to people who are homebound, elderly. I'm seeing an incredible influx of nurses, heroic nurses, who are coming and working many more hours than they worked before, doctors who fearlessly go into the hospital to work. I've never seen the kind of volunteerism I'm seeing.

I don't want to pretend that this is an exercise worth going through in order to get to that state. This is a really unprecedented and difficult time that will test us. When we do get through it, maybe like the Second World War, it will cause us to reexamine what has caused the fractional division we have in this country. The virus is an equal opportunity infector. And it’s probably the way we would be better if we saw ourselves that way, which is much more alike than different.

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Excellent! Thanks for sharing this @Silver!
 
Screenshot_20200323-214415~2.png
This screenshot taken from something @X-Calibre786 posted and I just realised... countries that has most confirmed cases is in winter or should I rather say spring season. Except for america.
Now I'm wondering what's the worst that can happen seeing that were moving further south soon???
 
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This screenshot taken from something @X-Calibre786 posted and I just realised... countries that has most confirmed cases is in winter or should I rather say spring season. Except for america.
Now I'm wondering what's the worst that can happen seeing that were moving further south soon???
Not correct, It's coming out of winter going into Spring in America also but the theory goes tits up when we look at Australia with 1709 cases unfortunately unlike flu it's not believed the virus is seasonal. Looking at the map on WHO it clearly points to movement of people, a lot of travel between China and Europe is common so this would of happened while many had the virus without knowing during it's incubation period and then travel between Europe and America. This also fits into when it hit in both Europe and America.
 
Latest in UK

Only allowed out for essential items such as food and medicines
Can't be more than two people out together and even then you must be members of the same household
All shops closed except for food and pharmacies
All pubs, clubs, restaurants etc closed
Can't have people around your home or visit other people this includes family
Schools closed
All Exams for 2020 scrapped
All sporting events cancelled
All churches of every religion not to open
Weddings etc cancelled, the only things allowed are funerals
All operations cancelled unless life saving
Evictions made illegal as it's obvious people won't be able to pay rent or mortgage following these measures
Police given new powers of arrest and handing out fines for people and businesses not following these rules
 
Latest in UK

Only allowed out for essential items such as food and medicines
Can't be more than two people out together and even then you must be members of the same household
All shops closed except for food and pharmacies
All pubs, clubs, restaurants etc closed
Can't have people around your home or visit other people this includes family
Schools closed
All Exams for 2020 scrapped
All sporting events cancelled
All churches of every religion not to open
Weddings etc cancelled, the only things allowed are funerals
All operations cancelled unless life saving
Evictions made illegal as it's obvious people won't be able to pay rent or mortgage following these measures
Police given new powers of arrest and handing out fines for people and businesses not following these rules

From Thursday we are pretty much the same. Altough some people don't take it seriously. Military has been assembled today so will see where that leads. Most media think its to babysit civilians during the lockdown. But its really to start planning on where the temporary hospitals will go.
 
From Thursday we are pretty much the same. Altough some people don't take it seriously. Military has been assembled today so will see where that leads. Most media think its to babysit civilians during the lockdown. But its really to start planning on where the temporary hospitals will go.
It gives you a fighting chance bringing in these measures early, your government have obviously followed global events and come to the conclusion (correctly in my opinion) drastic measures were implemented far too late in other countries! Your government should be applauded!! :claps:
 
It gives you a fighting chance bringing in these measures early, your government have obviously followed global events and come to the conclusion (correctly in my opinion) drastic measures were implemented far too late in other countries! Your government should be applauded!! :claps:

In reality I think the world is going into unchartered territory and nobody got a cheat sheat for it.

But right now, at this very moment, if I had to chose between Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, and Cyril Ramaphosa as a leader, I would wear my Faffie with pride.
 
In reality I think the world is going into unchartered territory and nobody got a cheat sheat for it.

But right now, at this very moment, if I had to chose between Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, and Cyril Ramaphosa as a leader, I would wear my Faffie with pride.
I don't think many would chose Donald Trump in any situation!
 
Those of us working in healthcare will agree that we all are questioning the denominator and the current official figures of cases. The truth is that most of the countries with the exception of Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore did not upscale their testing capacities so the number of positive cases is far less than the reality. So yes the mortality rate may be less than the announced figures. But! This virus is far more contagious than its predecessors and the speed at which it’s spreading is making us look foolish when try to deal with the implications.
Let me give you a concrete example. Bloemfontein’s population counts a little more than half a million people. If 60 percent of the population gets the disease before the spread is naturally controlled then we’re looking at 300K patients of which 60K (20%) Will was need some form of medical care and 15K (5%) will present with critical conditions that require high care, ICU admission with assisted ventilation for a good 2 weeks over the next 6 months.
It goes without saying that we don’t have nearly enough capacity to deal with 1/4 of that figure.
All this is not taking into consideration that people will still have heart attacks, car accidents, strokes and other conditions that will also require intensive care.
This dear sir is going to be life changing experience for most of our healthcare professionals.
Yes, the mortality rate may not be as high but the absolute numbers and the speed at which the disease is spreading and all the psychosocial and economic repercussions will make this such a traumatic experience that will mark our lifetime.
Let’s do our best to protect the most vulnerable amongst us by protecting them from our germs.
 
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CDC flu stats for the past few years (USA only)

The overall burden of influenza for the 2014-2015 season was an estimated 30 million influenza illnesses, 14 million influenza-associated medical visits, 591,000 influenza-related hospitalizations, and 51,000 flu-associated deaths.

The overall burden of influenza for the 2015-2016 season was an estimated 24 million influenza illnesses, 11 million influenza-associated medical visits, 280,000 influenza-related hospitalizations, and 23,000 flu-associated deaths.

The overall burden of influenza for the 2016-2017 season was an estimated 29 million influenza illnesses, 14 million influenza-associated medical visits, 500,000 influenza-related hospitalizations, and 38,000 influenza-associated deaths.

The overall burden of influenza for the 2017-2018 season was an estimated 45 million influenza illnesses, 21 million influenza-associated medical visits, 810,000 influenza-related hospitalizations, and 61,000 influenza-associated deaths.

CDC estimates that the burden of illness during the 2018–2019 season included an estimated 35.5 million people getting sick with influenza, 16.5 million people going to a health care provider for their illness, 490,600 hospitalizations, and 34,200 deaths from influenza.

Source: https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/2018-2019.html


Investigating the impact of influenza on excess mortality in all ages in Italy during recent seasons (2013/14–2016/17 seasons)

Highlights

In the winter seasons from 2013/14 to 2016/17, an estimated average of 5,290,000 ILI cases occurred in Italy, corresponding to an incidence of 9%.
More than 68,000 deaths attributable to flu epidemics were estimated in the study period.
Italy showed a higher influenza attributable excess mortality compared to other European countries. Especially in the elderly.

Abstract

Objectives
In recent years, Italy has been registering peaks in death rates, particularly among the elderly during the winter season. Influenza epidemics have been indicated as one of the potential determinants of such an excess. The objective of our study was to estimate the influenza-attributable contribution to excess mortality during the influenza seasons from 2013/14 to 2016/17 in Italy.

Methods
We used the EuroMomo and the FluMomo methods to estimate the annual trend of influenza-attributable excess death rate by age group. Population data were provided by the National Institute of Statistics, data on influenza like illness and confirmed influenza cases were provided by the National Institutes of Health. As an indicator of weekly influenza activity (IA) we adopted the Goldstein index, which is the product of the percentage of patients seen with influenza-like illness (ILI) and percentage of influenza-positive specimens, in a given week.

Results
We estimated excess deaths of 7,027, 20,259, 15,801 and 24,981 attributable to influenza epidemics in the 2013/14, 2014/15, 2015/16 and 2016/17, respectively, using the Goldstein index. The average annual mortality excess rate per 100,000 ranged from 11.6 to 41.2 with most of the influenza-associated deaths per year registered among the elderly. However children less than 5 years old also reported a relevant influenza attributable excess death rate in the 2014/15 and 2016/17 seasons (1.05/100,000 and 1.54/100,000 respectively).

Conclusions
Over 68,000 deaths were attributable to influenza epidemics in the study period. The observed excess of deaths is not completely unexpected, given the high number of fragile very old subjects living in Italy. In conclusion, the unpredictability of the influenza virus continues to present a major challenge to health professionals and policy makers. Nonetheless, vaccination remains the most effective means for reducing the burden of influenza, and efforts to increase vaccine coverage and the introduction of new vaccine strategies (such as vaccinating healthy children) should be considered to reduce the influenza attributable excess mortality experienced in Italy and in Europe in the last seasons.

Source:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1201971219303285
and respectively:
https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(19)30328-5/fulltext


If I take into consideration that flu vaccines were available and used in the previous seasons and compare those numbers to the cruise ship (Diamond Princess) with no vaccines, closed enviroment, old people and and 1% mortality rate, they look equally deadly.
The same applies if I compare those numbers to the Various covid trackers available today.
With my chronic heart failure, severe flu or covid-19 can kill me (and many others) the very same way.
Yet I see no reason for people now to start attacking each other over the difference in opinion, or a bundle of toilet paper, except fearmongering pushed by various media outlets and "authorities".
I also can't find a reason for the entire economies to colapse and the whole World to change over night.
This flu will go away, but the changes, we now accept in fear, will last.
What happens when the next "Big Disaster" strikes?
 
The problem with the lockdown. SA economy is really bad so how long can we afford a lockdown? I think this 3 weeks is it, cant go longer, to many poor people. So what happen after three weeks if virus is not contained? Going to town the last week I dont think SA is taking this very serious and dont think lockdown will work at this stage.
Although a noble idea, I think the lockdown came way to early. I hope Im wrong, but I wont keep my hopes up.
 
The problem with the lockdown. SA economy is really bad so how long can we afford a lockdown? I think this 3 weeks is it, cant go longer, to many poor people. So what happen after three weeks if virus is not contained? Going to town the last week I dont think SA is taking this very serious and dont think lockdown will work at this stage.
Although a noble idea, I think the lockdown came way to early. I hope Im wrong, but I wont keep my hopes up.

No country can really "afford" a lockdown. The idea behind the lock down is not to contain the virus, but rather to slow the infection rate to a pace that the country can better cope with it. The lockdown should have started a little earlier, but I'm very glad they did not wait any longer. The onus is on us to reach out and support our fellow South Africans that cannot look after themselves. In true South African spirit, we will unite and we will help each other, I believe this with my whole heart. For all our faults, we are a compassionate nation.
 
Not correct, It's coming out of winter going into Spring in America also but the theory goes tits up when we look at Australia with 1709 cases unfortunately unlike flu it's not believed the virus is seasonal. Looking at the map on WHO it clearly points to movement of people, a lot of travel between China and Europe is common so this would of happened while many had the virus without knowing during it's incubation period and then travel between Europe and America. This also fits into when it hit in both Europe and America.
Yes. It might have read incorrect but America is also in the same group I mentioned in the northern hemisphere.
 
No country can really "afford" a lockdown. The idea behind the lock down is not to contain the virus, but rather to slow the infection rate to a pace that the country can better cope with it. The lockdown should have started a little earlier, but I'm very glad they did not wait any longer. The onus is on us to reach out and support our fellow South Africans that cannot look after themselves. In true South African spirit, we will unite and we will help each other, I believe this with my whole heart. For all our faults, we are a compassionate nation.
Yes so after 3 weeks of slowing down, what then? How long can our economy afford to slow down the virus? How long can the world afford to slow down the virus?
Yes we can write pretty dreams, but in reality we know the state of Eskom, pollution of our water, well actually the state of anything touched by the government. SO why would the handling of this be any different. Will all these emergency funds be used in correct way?
 
Not correct, It's coming out of winter going into Spring in America also but the theory goes tits up when we look at Australia with 1709 cases unfortunately unlike flu it's not believed the virus is seasonal. Looking at the map on WHO it clearly points to movement of people, a lot of travel between China and Europe is common so this would of happened while many had the virus without knowing during it's incubation period and then travel between Europe and America. This also fits into when it hit in both Europe and America.
Yup. Australia is also coming out of summer into autumn .that's also seeing that they have autum and winter because they never leave the southern hemisphere It wasn't a theory, it was an observation based on the pic.
The other thing is they have slot of traffic to and from China so that might have given them the power up into the big leagues.
Still not a theory. On just an observation.
 
Yes so after 3 weeks of slowing down, what then? How long can our economy afford to slow down the virus? How long can the world afford to slow down the virus?
Yes we can write pretty dreams, but in reality we know the state of Eskom, pollution of our water, well actually the state of anything touched by the government. SO why would the handling of this be any different. Will all these emergency funds be used in correct way?

We can't afford the lockdown, but the cost of the lockdown is way better in the long run than a total collapse of the system. You seem the have a generally negative outlook for our country, probably like a lot of people in the country. But honestly, it really is not that bad. To some,we have had better, which is a matter of perception . but there are plenty of countries that are worse off than us. Our country is not perfect, no country is, all of them have shortcomings, crooked politicians and are failing in some sector or the other. The easiest thing to change is our OWN mindset and how we treat our situation.
 
We can't afford the lockdown, but the cost of the lockdown is way better in the long run than a total collapse of the system. You seem the have a generally negative outlook for our country, probably like a lot of people in the country. But honestly, it really is not that bad. To some,we have had better, which is a matter of perception . but there are plenty of countries that are worse off than us. Our country is not perfect, no country is, all of them have shortcomings, crooked politicians and are failing in some sector or the other. The easiest thing to change is our OWN mindset and how we treat our situation.
Yes thats true. But every month there are fewer countries that are worse off than us. One of these days we will be at the bottom. nothing ever happen to stop, improve or even stabilize the downward spiral.
 
Yes thats true. But every month there are fewer countries that are worse off than us. One of these days we will be at the bottom. nothing ever happen to stop, improve or even stabilize the downward spiral.

"Yes thats true. But every month there are fewer countries that are worse off than us." That is a very bold and cynical statement. I would love to know what information you are basing this on. I understand you have your reasons and I respect your opinions. I just can't see our country through your eyes at this moment in time.
 
Yup. Australia is also coming out of summer into autumn .that's also seeing that they have autum and winter because they never leave the southern hemisphere It wasn't a theory, it was an observation based on the pic.
The other thing is they have slot of traffic to and from China so that might have given them the power up into the big leagues.
Still not a theory. On just an observation.
Exactly a lot of movement between Australia and China exactly my point it's movement of people not to do with the temperature, the average temperature in Australia at the moment would be a hot summers day in the UK when flu like viruses die but isn't proven the case with the Covid -19. New Zealand are behind Australia but again it's the same movement of people pattern, China to Australia then Australia to New Zealand. I hope it can be halted by temperature that would mean give it a month and we will be ok in the UK but then minimum temperature is 25 Celsius in Darwin max of 31 so looks unlikely!
 
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"Yes thats true. But every month there are fewer countries that are worse off than us." That is a very bold and cynical statement. I would love to know what information you are basing this on. I understand you have your reasons and I respect your opinions. I just can't see our country through your eyes at this moment in time.
well thats easy, dont need any statistics for that. Simple question, over the last 20 years has the economy, infrastructure, education, health services, etc improved, stabilized or going backwards?
Only thing improving is corruption.
 
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