http://www.urbansurvival.com/week.htm
lots of links there
Sick People = Sick Markets
We're officially in a public health emergency now, says acting HHS Secretary Charles Johnson:
"As a consequence of confirmed cases of Swine Influenza A (swH1N1) in California, Texas, Kansas, and New York, on this date and after consultation with public health officials as necessary, I, Charles E. Johnson, Acting Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, pursuant to the authority vested in me under section 319 of the Public Health Service Act, 42 U.S.C. § 247d, do hereby determine that a public health emergency exists nationwide involving Swine Influenza A that affects or has significant potential to affect national security."
Despite trying to take some time off, our friends with the predictive linguistics project have been just tripping over all the temporal markers that have been showing up over the past couple of weeks. Besides the appearance of 10XCSN this weekend, that I explained to Peoplenomics subscribers, our 'masked people/revolution pending' marker is here as this note from chief time monk Cliff explains:
"...regular readers of the ALTA reports will recall a forecast made in 2008 about [changes in fashion] which would bring about [environmental reasons] for people to go about [masked] in their daily routine. This temporal marker is intimately associated with a stream of following forecasts that lead up to the [active] phase of the [revolution] at the global level.
Please note that this may be manifesting (beginning) *now* as the news reports from Mexico city are for people to be wearing *ANY* form of [respiratory mask] as protection against the developing outbreak of 'flu'.
We still expect that other environmental factors such as [volcano ash] later in the summer will prolong the trend. However it seems now that the first impetus for the mass behavior change into [masked fashion] will be the [disease] sub sets.
Hmmmm.....designer 'anti flu masks' anyone?
Also just a note that Fungi Perfecti sells Reishi mushroom in powdered form. This is not to be taken daily or anything, but it will seriously boost (temporarily) the immune system. So if exposed, or just before predictable exposure. But bear in mind that this is a fungal product and as such may not agree with all body types.
Thanks. Further updates over the next months as warranted. "
My own sense of things is that this episode of flu-ishness, although serious enough to have US authorities now calling it a 'public health emergency' and actions are beginning worldwide may just be a prequel to the sequel: The biggest data bulge seems to be September, or so, which either means the swine flu will be a slowly evolving outbreak or there will be another something along, or the model's timing is off. Taker your pick and throw a dart, but do so after you've picked up some bleach, masks, gloves and chicken soup, vitamins C & D and visted the
www.pandemicflu.gov web site.
. The problem is, however, that once the genie is out of the bottle, it's hard to put it back in. While this begins to fulfill more of the trend toward "restrictions on travel" that have been almost a fixture of modelspace since the 2006 reports of bird flu.
While it may see extreme (now) of us to be talking about flu/masking/somehow playing into a global revolution meme, remember the government's own web site cautions about both the economic and social consequences of the flu. Since our emphasis around here is buckeroo's, let's start with what this does to the global economy:
A Potential Influenza Pandemic: Possible Macroeconomic Effects and Policy Issues The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) assessment of possible economic effects of an avian flu pandemic concludes that a pandemic involving a highly virulent flu strain (such as the one that caused the pandemic in 1918) could produce a short-run impact on the worldwide economy similar in depth and duration to that of an average postwar recession in the United States.
May 22, 2006 Update (PDF) (128KB)
December 8, 2005 Report (PDF) (311KB)
The Economic Impact of Pandemic Influenza in the United States: Priorities for Intervention (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) A 1999 article that estimates the possible effects of the next influenza pandemic in the United States and analyzes the economic impact of vaccine-based interventions. (September - October 1999)
The Global Economic and Financial Impact of an Avian Flu Pandemic and the Role of the IMF (PDF - 229 KB) (International Monetary Fund) Provides a preliminary assessment of the risks and potential impact to the global economy and financial system. Includes summary of the common elements of business continuity planning in the financial sector for pandemic risks. (Feb. 28, 2006)
Avian Flu Economic Impact (The World Bank) Read about the global economic impact an influenza pandemic will have.
All of which makes interesting reading, but as I explained to subscribers this weekend, I expect that most economists of the conventional sort will be wrong because the reports I've read take a very limited view of rippling flu impacts. In other words, there's an assumption that a pandemic impact might be in the range of 6%, or so, and that's on the high side.
I respectfully disagree. If you want to hold a long term easy to figure estimate, take whatever the sickness rate and the fatality rate, multiply times two and you've got the GDP deflator. So, for example, if 50% of the people in America were to get flu'ed, and the mortality rate were to be 10%, then the national mortality rate would be 5% and the GDP impact 10%...if you follow the logic there.
On the other hand, if 100% of people got the flu, and 10% died, then you'd have a 20% GDP impact (or larger) since you'd subtract 10% of the your workers (this strain hits healthy young adults, you know) and then you'd have 10% less consumers, and tons of estate sales on eBay driving down prices on top of all the other problems.
Not to quibble, but an impact of 1-2 times the mortality rate in a given country seems like a starting point to me.
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One salient ponder is this note about the economic differences between the 1918 flu and what's going on now...
"Finance: there were no credit cards or personal checking accounts, which meant far more frequent visits to the bank. In 1918, there was almost exclusively a cash economy. Closure of banks might be explained as a response to a pandemic, but it could have been perceived that the closure meant the bank did not have funds."
I have to suspiciously wonder if the PowersThatBe might have a little something up their sleeve with regard to how money is managed in the world: Could a flu pandemic be used as an excuse to rid the world of "dirty money" (e.g. cash) and set us all in a grand central computer system where infinitely expandable digidollars could be inflated forever?
On the other hand, I can make a pretty good argument that silver has some serious antibacterial and antiviral properties, so yeah, I have noted that silver was back over $13 an ounce when I looked this morning. Whether it's a coincidence that I hold some July $20 silver commodity options and some September $25's I'll just leave to your imagination. But just keep your eyes open for mentions of silver...
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I won't go on and on about this except to say that the flu exposes the weak underbelly of globalism and all that remains to be seen is how restrictions on travel will play out and whether North America will find itself isolated by the rest of the world to any meaningful degree. The EU is already saying "stay home."
With people in the US now being told by some doctors to wear masks, I can sense some interesting change in marketing of some products. Marketing of N-95 or better dust/surgical masks just got really easy. But on the flip side, be thankful you don't have to sell video surveillance cameras with facial recognition software for a living - that just got a lot tougher