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From Solar Eclipse to Bird Flu, Histrionics and Panic Taint Today’s News Coverage and Policy Making

From Solar Eclipse to Bird Flu, Histrionics and Panic Taint Today’s News Coverage and Policy Making

A review of reports about the April 8th solar eclipse and “super bird flu” (aka HPIA).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=06-ZlBYEnRQ

Back when I was a young girl, watching one of the three broadcast channels on a black-and-white TV, I recall the news coverage related to 1970’s total eclipse of the sun that dimmed regions across North and Central America. I was fascinated, and a little upset that we weren’t going to experience the total darkness in Michigan, where I lived at the time.

I also learned from these broadcasts that total darkness during an eclipse lasts just four minutes.

The last time I experienced a partial eclipse in the San Diego area, my sole concern was getting the correct cardboard box set-up to view the event safely.

Back in 2017, Legal Insurrection reviewed the #FakeNews about President Donald Trump staring into the eclipse that occurred that year. He was actually wearing protective glasses.

The reporting associated with the upcoming April 8th eclipse that will cross this country has managed to devolve further. The stories related to event preparation are filled with histrionics and panic.

State and local officials whose areas will get the best views of the rare coast-to-coast solar eclipse later this month are issuing emergency advisories and taking crisis precautions as they brace for a massive influx of tourists.

The eclipse’s “zone of totality” — where the moon will almost fully block the sun — is a 70-mile-wide strip that will fall across towns and cities in 12 states from Oregon to South Carolina. It’s the first coast-to-coast total solar eclipse in 99 years.

An estimated 12 million people will be plunged into darkness for nearly three minutes on Aug. 21 — and as many as 7.4 million more people are expected to travel to areas along the eclipse band. Local officials — some of whom could see the populations of their towns double in just a few days — are now faced with undertaking massive precautionary measures.

For example, Democratic Governor Maine Governor Janet Mills, fresh off her loss to impose an EV mandate in the state, issued safety warnings.

In a release, Maine Governor Janet Mills offers safety advice for the event, as residents and visitors will find themselves in the path of totality as the moon completely blocks out the sun.

…Ahead of the eclipse, Maine residents have been urged to plan ahead. Travel is likely to be difficult on that day given the large number of people traveling to witness the event. Motorists are urged to research their destination and find out where they may need to stop to buy fuel and other necessities.

Schools are going to remote learning in many states.

Because of expected heavy traffic and other disruptions, hundreds of schools are closing or switching to remote learning in states including Texas, Indiana, Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania and Vermont.

But, to be fair, there is a spate of state and local officials reminding people of the gas shortages, food issues, and other potential hiccups based on experiences that occurred during the 2017 eclipse. But the descriptions and language used make it seem that the four riders of the Apocalypse are lining up at the gate and are ready to ride.

But the eclipse isn’t the only topic being covered hysterically, either. Legal Insurrection has been following the highly pathogenic avian flue (HPAI) since reports of the most recent pandemic of the disease reported, and providing updates as needed.

We have reported HPAI is now being reported in cattle in six states and a Texas man had a case. But we have also noted the disease has been mild in cows, and the Texas man essentially had a bad case of “pink eye.”

However, the press has managed to round a few “experts” up, and now the reports being issued that the ensuing disease can be “100 times worse than covid.

A bird flu pandemic with the potential to be “100 times worse than COVID” may be on the horizon after a rare human case was discovered in Texas, experts have warned.

The H5N1 avian flu has spread rapidly since a new strain was detected in 2020, affecting wild birds in every state, as well as in commercial poultry and backyard flocks.

But it has now even been detected in mammals, with cattle herds across four states becoming infected, and on Monday, federal health officials announced that a dairy worker in Texas caught the virus.

…John Fulton, a pharmaceutical industry consultant for vaccines and the founder of Canada-based BioNiagara who organized the meeting, also expressed his concerns, the Mail reports.

“This appears to be 100 times worse than COVID — or it could be if it mutates and maintains its high case fatality rate,” he said.

“Once it’s mutated to infect humans, we can only hope that the [fatality rate] drops.”

I will simply point out that it was a pharmaceutical industry consultant that tossed out this “number.” I anticipate it will be a number of days before this number morphs into “consensus” and becomes “settled science.”

Conservative pundit Don Surber noted the following on the 4th anniversary of “15 days to slow the spread”: Star Wars was wrong. Liberty does not die to thunderous applause; it dies in fear.

The trouble with rule-by-fear is that eventually fear hormones deplete, and people can’t sustain constant levels of anxiety. They start making different choices, seek different sources of information, and begin to push back. Politicians, bureaucrats, and “journalists” should really recalculate, as it is clear people are truly tired of the needless drama and nanny-state lectures.

In fact, the push-back has already started.

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Comments

ThePrimordialOrderedPair | April 6, 2024 at 4:14 pm

What is the great excitement in looking at a solar eclipse? I don’t get it. I understand that ancient peoples worshiped and/or feared eclipses … but they have since been quite demystified.

The sun gets covered up for a moment … big whoop. It gets totally covered up by the ground half of every single day, on average. We get to see the process of it being covered up and uncovered every single day at sunrise and sunset. Most people never even bother to get up or go outside to watch them … though they love making big deals of sunrises and sunsets in poems and movies.

If someone is really hankering for an eclipse he can make a little cardboard disc and hold it right in front of the sun any time he wants. 100 times a day. Every day. An eclipse is an eclipse.

BigRosieGreenbaum | April 6, 2024 at 4:42 pm

So if I wear my protective glasses, I won’t get the bird flu?

I live in an area where the eclipse will be complete. My county and my state have declared states of emergency for a completely harmless natural event.

But then, I already knew that our “leaders” were imbeciles.

    geronl in reply to irv. | April 6, 2024 at 6:36 pm

    Have they decided to sacrifice any virgins to appease the heavens?

    BierceAmbrose in reply to irv. | April 6, 2024 at 10:47 pm

    “My county and my state have declared states of emergency for a completely harmless natural event.”

    One hopes that they declared states of emergency anticipating silly people’s silly over-reactions to a mostly innocuous event. Officialdom had some experience with over-reaction in recent years, and probably imagines everyone else as unregulated.

    In other news, they can’t quite decide where the band of total coverage is, because they don’t quite agree how big they think the sun is. Follow the science!

    diver64 in reply to irv. | April 7, 2024 at 5:37 am

    The State of Emergency is not from the eclipse but from the numbers of people not from the area clogging the roads to see it preventing not only residents from going to the store for food but making it difficult for emergency vehicles to get around if needed. I also thought it was silly until a lady called into a local radio show and explained this from when she was living in Ohio and there was an eclipse. I hadn’t thought of it but makes sense.

henrybowman | April 6, 2024 at 6:16 pm

I am currently experiencing the heartbreak of eclipse mania. I am returning home through Texas these past few days. Between San Antonio and El Paso there is not a single powered RV site available. To top it off, experts using the real Science are predicting solid cloud cover at this latitude during the event. I am hurriedly fleeing the epicenter in expectation of the mostly peaceful riots at 2 pm Monday.

E Howard Hunt | April 6, 2024 at 6:17 pm

I laughed my head off when I saw the movie, Network, back in 76. It looks like Shakespeare now.

The States declare emery cause there are federal monies you can get

Panic and superstitions about the eclipse is crazy. We’ve gone back to Pagan reading signs and what do the gods want from us? Are we gonna start sacrificing virgins to appease the sun god?

    BierceAmbrose in reply to geronl. | April 6, 2024 at 10:54 pm

    I can’t decide whether to make mostly Pagan summoning, or Copernicus jokes at the Eclipse Day Party. The folks there mostly won’t get either.

    Normally that cluelesness would be disqualifying, but they’re good people, otherwise quite cool. And the party’s at a literal Cabin In The Woods. Plus, porch overlooking a lake, and There Will Be Booze.

    “It’s the end of the world as we know it…”

    I’m making a play list … they mostly won’t get that, either.

    henrybowman in reply to geronl. | April 7, 2024 at 2:02 am

    The sun god has been defunded and defrocked.
    Man is now entirely responsible for the temperature of the earth.

That was very funny with Trump and Melania

What’s all this about Stacey Abrams blocking out the sun?

Nanny mentality needs purging.