Like they say - history doesn't repeat itself, but it sure fuck rhymes.
Jan 7, 2025
Today's BlueSky
Butker should step aside. Make his wife a sandwich. He should realize his life really started when he became a husband and a father. He should give up his day job. He should realize he’s been told diabolical lies — his place is in the home.
— Jess Piper (@piperformissouri.bsky.social) January 7, 2025 at 6:38 AM
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Today's LAMF
LEOPARDS ATE MY FACE
As Trump's gang of thieves moves to further gut the system of safety regulations, it's going to get harder to keep track of the dangers, and to know who's at fault when the inevitable bad things start to happen.
We grew accustomed to assuming the FDA is on the job and looking out for us - even though they've been badly impacted already, owing to the GOP's decades-long assault on government's obligation to promote the general welfare of we the people.
Joseph Journell thought he was doing the wholesome thing when he fed raw, unpasteurized milk to his cats. Journell also drank the raw milk, thinking it provided benefits that pasteurized milk did not have.
After two of his pets died in late 2024 and a third became seriously ill he realized the raw milk from Raw Farm LLC was dangerous.
Journell’s cats Alexander and Tuxedo died horrible deaths involving convulsions and blindness and a third cat, Big Boy, was hospitalized for eight days in critical condition. A fourth cat that did not drink the raw milk remained healthy. Journell himself was feeling sick just before his cats became ill and now believes it was the raw milk.
He said he is not sure when, or if, he will go back to drinking raw milk, which usually costs between $15 and $17 per gallon.
“I think there should be better testing and regulation to make sure it is safe,” Journell said.
Journell, who lives in San Bernardino, CA, paid for testing that showed Big Boy was infected with bird flu. The testing was done at USDA’s National Veterinary Services Laboratories and the Animal Health Diagnostic Center at Cornell University. The testing, medical bills and other expenses for Big Boy were about $14,000.
Big Boy’s recovery is ongoing. He is partially blind and had to use a wheeled device because he could not walk on his back legs for several weeks. His vision is still impaired but he is walking and eating normally.
Journell is now trying to recover costs from Mark McAfee, the owner of Raw Farm LLC, which is the dairy that produced the raw milk that made Journell and his cats sick.
McAfee has denied all liability, telling Journell that his cats must have gotten bird flu from eating a sick bird. This is impossible as Journell’s cats were all strictly indoor pets.
McAfee also told Journell that his raw milk is safe and said that his own cats at Raw Farm’s dairy drink raw milk and are healthy.
McAfee told Jounell that the Raw Farm LLC milk is entirely safe, saying that the H5N1 bird flu virus can not survive in cold milk for extended periods.
I asked an official with the state health department and she told me that isn’t true, Journell said.
McAfee had to recall his raw milk in November and December of 2024 because it tested positive for the bird flu. California health officials shut down the dairy until McAfee could prove that his milk was not contaminated.
“I feel like he (McAfee) just lied to me to protect his own company,” Journell said.
State and federal officials have been warning the public for months that unpasteurized, raw milk can be contaminated with the bird flu virus, which can infect those who consume it.
“I would tell other pet owners that if their cats begin having any symptoms out of the ordinary that they should seek medical attention fast. If I had done that sooner my other cats might still be alive,” Journell said.
Since Dec. 1, at least 11 cats in California that consumed raw milk and raw pet food have died. There have also been cases of cats in Texas and Oregon dying. In December, 20 animals at a big cat sanctuary in Washington State died as a result of infection with the virus.
Journell is represented by the Marler Clark law firm, headed by food safety attorney Bill Marler. The law firm contacted McAfee on Jan. 1 asking that he immediately reimburse Journell for his expenses.
“This incident represents yet another outbreak linked to Raw Farm and highlights ongoing concerns regarding the safety of your raw milk products,” according to a letter sent by Ilana Korchia of the law firm.
Jan 6, 2025
WTF - Again?
The good news is that there's been no documented case of human-to-human transmission of Bird Flu.
1st bird flu death in the US reported in Louisiana
The patient was over age 65 and had underlying medical conditions.
The patient, who was exposed to non-commercial backyard flock and wild birds, was over age 65 and had underlying medical conditions, officials said.
Last month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the patient was experiencing the first case of severe bird flu in the U.S.
The bad news is, of course, that we will soon have the worst possible guy in charge if it gets bad.
The patient was over age 65 and had underlying medical conditions.
The first person has died of bird flu in the United States, the Louisiana Department of Health confirmed on Monday.
H5N1 Avian Flu virus |
The patient, who was exposed to non-commercial backyard flock and wild birds, was over age 65 and had underlying medical conditions, officials said.
Last month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the patient was experiencing the first case of severe bird flu in the U.S.
At the time, a spokesperson from the Louisiana Department of Health told ABC News the patient was experiencing severe respiratory illness related to bird flu infection and was in critical condition. The patient remains the only human case of bird flu confirmed in Louisiana.
The U.S. has seen an increase in human cases of bird flu, or avian influenza, since April, when the first human case was reported.
In a statement on Monday, the CDC said the first bird flu death in the U.S. was "not unexpected" given the "known potential for infection with these viruses to cause severe illness and death."
The agency said its risk assessment has not changed, that the risk to the general public remains low and no person-to-person transmission has been identified.
As of Jan. 3, there have been 66 human cases of bird flu reported in the U.S., according to CDC data.
Signs and symptoms of infection in humans often include sore throat, cough, fever, runny or stuffy nose, headache, muscle or body aches, fatigue and shortness of breath, the CDC says. Less common symptoms include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and seizures.
Infections can range from no symptoms or mild illness, such as flu-like symptoms, to more severe illness, such as pneumonia that could require hospitalizations, the CDC says.
Almost all confirmed cases have had direct contact with infected cattle or infected livestock. Aside from the case confirmed in the Louisiana patient, cases have been mild, and patients had all recovered after receiving antiviral medication, according to the CDC and state health officials.
One previous case in Missouri was hospitalized, but health officials pointed to other health conditions aside from bird flu infection involved in the patient's admission to the hospital.
The Louisiana Department of Health and the CDC say there is no evidence of person-to-person transmission and the risk to the general public is low.
The U.S. has seen an increase in human cases of bird flu, or avian influenza, since April, when the first human case was reported.
In a statement on Monday, the CDC said the first bird flu death in the U.S. was "not unexpected" given the "known potential for infection with these viruses to cause severe illness and death."
The agency said its risk assessment has not changed, that the risk to the general public remains low and no person-to-person transmission has been identified.
As of Jan. 3, there have been 66 human cases of bird flu reported in the U.S., according to CDC data.
Signs and symptoms of infection in humans often include sore throat, cough, fever, runny or stuffy nose, headache, muscle or body aches, fatigue and shortness of breath, the CDC says. Less common symptoms include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and seizures.
Infections can range from no symptoms or mild illness, such as flu-like symptoms, to more severe illness, such as pneumonia that could require hospitalizations, the CDC says.
Almost all confirmed cases have had direct contact with infected cattle or infected livestock. Aside from the case confirmed in the Louisiana patient, cases have been mild, and patients had all recovered after receiving antiviral medication, according to the CDC and state health officials.
One previous case in Missouri was hospitalized, but health officials pointed to other health conditions aside from bird flu infection involved in the patient's admission to the hospital.
The Louisiana Department of Health and the CDC say there is no evidence of person-to-person transmission and the risk to the general public is low.
However, those who work with birds, poultry or cows -- or have recreational exposure to them -- are at higher risk.
The CDC recommends staying away from sick or dead wild birds, poultry and other animals and, if contact is unavoidable, using personal protective equipment.
The agency also suggests not touching surfaces or materials contaminated with saliva, mucous or animal feces from wild or domestic birds and animals confirmed or suspected to have bird flu as well as not consuming raw milk or raw milk products.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture issued a new federal order last month that raw milk samples nationwide will be collected and shared with the department in order to test for bird flu.
A few weeks later, the Food and Drug Administration announced that federal health officials had begun collecting samples of aged raw cow's milk cheese across the U.S. to test for bird flu
The CDC recommends staying away from sick or dead wild birds, poultry and other animals and, if contact is unavoidable, using personal protective equipment.
The agency also suggests not touching surfaces or materials contaminated with saliva, mucous or animal feces from wild or domestic birds and animals confirmed or suspected to have bird flu as well as not consuming raw milk or raw milk products.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture issued a new federal order last month that raw milk samples nationwide will be collected and shared with the department in order to test for bird flu.
A few weeks later, the Food and Drug Administration announced that federal health officials had begun collecting samples of aged raw cow's milk cheese across the U.S. to test for bird flu
Not A Good Start
So there won't be a honeymoon, and prices won't be coming down quickly, and the big-ass omnibus bill is a bit too complicated to get done before summer - if then - and the mass deportations will have wait a while, and at least some of Trump's cabinet picks are going to meet with resistance.
But hey - on the bright side, John Thune says he'll provide a little Congress 101 Tutorial for MAGA's mango-faced ape god so maybe he'll be a little less stupid about what it actually takes to get the whole governance thing done.
Fake Jesus have mercy.
Waking Up To It
- it's not about brown people
- it's not about queer people
- it's not about fallopian people
- it's not about trans people
- it's not about testicularian people
- it's not about old people
- it's not about young people
- it's not about race
- It's not about religion
- it's not about ethnicity
- it's not about blue
- it's not about red
- it's not about anything else that I just can't think of right now
What it's actually about is not being such a sucker that you can't see that it always ends up being about rich powerful people fucking everybody over.
About Today
Considering how some of these MAGA assholes behave - how they put their thoughts into action - there are no words that are adequate beyond "fuck you."
Be sure to catch the shittiness of Deb Ficher's husband, starting at about 6:30.
Today's TweeXt
one night I had an uber driver who was new to san francisco. he refused to turn down a street the gps told him to bc it went straight downhill and he was legit afraid his car would go end over end. my lighthearted “don’t worry, that almost never happens” did not persuade him.
— shauna (@goldengateblond.bsky.social) January 5, 2025 at 11:06 AM
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