Let’s Talk About Bird Flu

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My question is about dedicated shoes. The Ag Dept here in GA recommends having dedicated shoes that are only worn while attending the flock. I've read about people having shoe wash stations, wearing booties over the shoes, etc. I'm wondering what you all are doing.
I should do this...

I have a pair of boots and a pair of crocs that are my "coop boots", but I also wear them when I go out because I only own one other pair of shoes besides those.

Excuses, excuses!

I do need to give my crocs a good wash, though. They are incredibly poopy.
 
My question is about dedicated shoes. The Ag Dept here in GA recommends having dedicated shoes that are only worn while attending the flock. I've read about people having shoe wash stations, wearing booties over the shoes, etc. I'm wondering what you all are doing.
I have town shoes and clothes that I take off as soon as I get home.
 
Well, my neighbor is spreading untreated chicken/turkey feces on his pasture from the local poultry farm. There are several tons of it sitting in huge piles stinking up the place and attracting all kinds of birds, four-legged critters that will spread whatever is in raw fecal matter. This is how Bird Flu is spread: Poultry facilities not properly disposing the fecal matter.
Factory farming creates sickly, tortured animals without immune systems that are threatened by weak viruses.
This is a problem they create and the "solution" to this problem is one of complete madness: killing any and all healthy animals that may have been exposed to the virus

I know a man who had his entire flock killed by the government because it was reported that an "infected" vulture came within 200 yards of his property

This crazed, murderous response to bird flu ensures that no animal will ever develop an immune defense. It's evil madness

A far better solution would be outlawing factory farming and allowing ethically raised animals to develop a natural immune response. Humans have raised poultry for the past 10,000 years without needing to mass-murder entire flocks because of any illness
 
Humans have raised poultry for the past 10,000 years without needing to mass-murder entire flocks because of any illness
I am in no way defending factory farms: the large scale farming of animals either indoors or on tiny lots with concentrated feeds and antibiotics has ushered in all sorts of problems.
But even if you got rid of all of the factory farms today, you would not return to some idyllic worry free time. You can not compare the way that illnesses spread today to any other time in human history, no matter what may have been the case for the previous 10,000 years. Because, since the twentieth century, we have had a huge increase in the human population, compounded with mass human migration into previously wild areas and amongst inhabited areas. Illness are able to move from animal to animal and human to human faster than ever.
Our greatest weapon against single celled parasites, bacteria, and DNA replicating viruses should be human brains, but... we have overused our antibiotics to make pigs and cattle grow bigger, faster. We had two generations get vaccinated and now we forget how scary the diseases are that we can vaccinate against and are cavalier about getting vaccinated. Hell, in less than two years Covid-19 killed more Americans than every major foreign conflict in American history and was the deadliest pandemic in American history and yet it is being represented here as being over-hyped.
 
My country is on lock down for many winters now . Im not in the US, but we got hit by other types of bird flu before and by the H5N1 a few years before it the US.

Initially I followed the instructions of the government and kept my chickens inside the run. But the girls were not as happy and the soil in the run got dirty.
I decided to free range for a few hours each day again. Nothing happened with my flock.

I use the autumn leaves again to enhance the soil in run yearly. And make compost again with the chick shit and bedding material.

My idea : you cant stop a virus that is carried around the world by wild birds. The wild bird populations that got hit in the first years of this H5N1 flu got hit with dead’s but there numbers came back in the following years. A healthy flock that lives in a healthy environment (free ranging in lively gardens, forests and on meadows) can coop with diseases better than the poultry kept inside an overcrowded stable.

People with backyard chickens or ducks who report a possible infection with bird flu have their poultry killed. The ones who don’t often see that a part of their flock dies, but not all of them. Cant give numbers because these dead and survivors are obviously not reported. The messages I’ve read are from (unreliable) social media and forums.
This seems right to me. Culling the entire flock means that birds with resistance to bird flu die too. Breeding the survivors is how we can get robust animals that won't be so susceptible to illness. Gassing or baking the whole flock means the problem won't get better.

I would also support having more smaller farms as opposed to the huge operations we have today. Many smaller farms will lose birds to illness, but it gives a greater prospect of genetic diversity and different living conditions could give information about best practices to keep poultry healthy.
 
We had two generations get vaccinated and now we forget how scary the diseases are that we can vaccinate against and are cavalier about getting vaccinated. Hell, in less than two years Covid-19 killed more Americans than every major foreign conflict in American history and was the deadliest pandemic in American history and yet it is being represented here as being over-hyped.
Over-hyped only because it predominantly affects a high risk miniority of people with comorbidities. The same people who are at risk of a lot of things. The virus itself needs a living host to be successfull enough to pass itself around, there's no evolutionary benefit to killing off your host so again it's back to their existing risk factors.

But make no mistake people are concerned about being pressured into something against their will in order to be part of an experiment. Pushing that out to the entire population you will find people who are sensitive to it. This is why there was a very clear disclaimer on the paper work for your shot about the fact you could have a severe reaction.

The same reason you sat in a chair for 15 minutes after, and the same reason many people actually got sick after taking it and end up with unintended side conditions following.

Therefore you not only create risk for these people, but introduce the things like myocarditis and thrombosis to groups who weren't necessarily at risk due to either their demographic factors, location and/or best practices of social distancing and hygiene.

But of course we can't prove the claims of death and injury because the industry is protected from lawsuits. The injury board isn't awarding anyone compensation for death or injury because that would surely cause panic, and discord in the politically charged media narrative of "safe and effective".

Speaking of the narrative you'll remember after Trump's Operation Warp Speed to get the vaccine produced and out there. Kamala wasn't about to take it because she didn't trust the fact it was done so quickly, under his direction. But once Biden was in office all of a sudden she was rolling up her sleaves.
 

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