knowaveragejoe 11 hours ago

> In a Breitbart article, USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins blithely assures us that increased biosecurity supported by the Trump Administration will negate the need for vaccines. I have to wonder how that’s going to work out for poultry flocks next to dairy (or feedlot) H5N1 B3.13 or D1.1 outbreaks, especially when she is also taking cattle vaccines off the table in the same conversation? I’ll give Secretary Rollins credit for one thing - she definitely does not hide her intentions in 3rd person language anonymity! She will own these comments!

That'll be something to keep in mind.

  • neuronexmachina 9 hours ago

    Worth noting that Rollins is the same USDA Secretary who advocated for Americans to keep chickens in their yards to counter rising egg prices. Besides that not making financial sense, it also creates even more vectors for H5N1 to spread.

  • mlinhares 10 hours ago

    "negate the need for vaccines" i guess we should start to buy only imported powdered milk as US milk won't be safe for human consumption anymore. what is wrong with these people, go be corrupt and steal government money but leave this shit alone.

    • hypeatei 10 hours ago

      > what is wrong with these people

      Brain worms, eating road kill, the usual.

      • mlinhares 7 hours ago

        you couldn't write a joke with this but here we are. fiction could never predict this reality, its too stupid to be believable.

    • Hikikomori 10 hours ago

      I hear raw milk is good for you.

      • p1necone 9 hours ago

        You just have to boil it first ;)

      • Sabinus 10 hours ago

        I hear that too. But I also hear of the occasional death when the unpasteurized milk has a pathogen in it. It's rolling the dice.

    • DrillShopper 10 hours ago

      [flagged]

      • superq 9 hours ago

        Is this hyperbole, or are you seriously claiming that the Jewish men who run Breitbart, or Jewish founders like Ben Shapiro or Andrew Breitbart, are neo-Nazis?

        • BriggyDwiggs42 7 hours ago

          A lot of people who hate Jews are surprisingly fine with Ben Shapiro

        • watwut 9 hours ago

          Andrew Breitbart is dead and not running anything right now. Also, antisemitism was not the only thing wrong with nazi.

        • piva00 7 hours ago

          Nazi became a bit too broadly used in place of fascism, it's American Fascism, its own special flavour of it which is not anti-semitic (quite the opposite, it's actually very pro-semitic with its allegiance to Israel).

          Of course it's all semantics, and you very likely understand that.

ggm 12 hours ago

The fact that indicators of decision-making have to be indirect, speaks to the risk environment of public health officials. Post Fauci, it's huge.

Is this problem also a function of both devolution of power to states and the environment post animal activism? Or just the "don't ask don't tell" of US policy these days? A bunch of laws got passed about revealing inner truths of animal husbandry in the wake of activist filming in chicken houses and piggeries.

We depend on the massive herds of food animals. We depend on clear information sharing about their health. They aren't just tasty beef and cheese, they are disease vectors and storage grounds of infection. This information policy nightmare isn't good.

  • CrossVR 11 hours ago

    > Post Fauci, it's huge.

    How is Anthony Fauci related to this? He headed the NIAID, not the USDA.

    • Blackthorn 11 hours ago

      Are you really going to try to say that the absurd levels of bile, vitriol, and threats that he received for doing his job during a pandemic has zero knock-on effect for other public health officials?

      • CrossVR 10 hours ago

        Woah, I'm not sure how you got that from my comment. It was a genuine question since OP made it seem as if Dr. Fauci had played some role in the USDA's handling of the H5N1 epidemic. In fact I was concerned OP was trying to pin yet another conspiracy on him.

    • ggm 10 hours ago

      As others note, its the public health aspect of being a voice for science and reason, against the political backlash and death threats. I did not mean to imply USDA and NIAD related, except in needing public health policy people making decisions and statements in the public eye.

    • guhidalg 11 hours ago

      I remember in 2020 how a career public servant, colleague to those in USDA, was contradicted by the president because it made the administration's COVID response look bad.

      Recently, the US president has decided he doesn't want to protect his public servant's lives anymore https://apnews.com/article/fauci-trump-security-detail-4b2e3...

timewizard 10 hours ago

This isn't my field but I always feel it's disingenuous to show PCR results without telling me how many cycles of PCR you did. PCR is effectively a magnifying glass and you're obscuring the level of magnification you used to get a detection. It doesn't seem, on it's own, to ever be a useful piece of information.

  • blackguardx 9 hours ago

    PCR is a basic tool. It amplifies, much like your car stereo. If you can hear music when tuning in an AM station, you don’t question the automatic gain correction the stereo is doing internally. PCR is the same way. If the target is present, it is detectable. If it isn’t then it isn’t. There are so many variables at play that the number of cycles isn’t very meaningful.

    • tanseydavid 9 hours ago

      Kary Mullis, inventor of PCR does not agree with your analogy.

      • churchturing 9 hours ago

        He also

        * believed in astrology

        * denied Avogadro’s number (???)

        * practiced telepathy

        * didn’t believe in HIV causing AIDs

        * didn’t believe in climate change

        * didn’t believe in the ozone hole

        While he certainly had incredible intelligence, clearly him believing something isn’t a hugely convincing reasoning.

        disclaimer: i am a person who believes in Avogadro’s number and not astrology. truly an intellectual outcast and rebel

        • dekhn 8 hours ago

          he didn't deny avogadro's number so much as say that its definition was somewhat arbitrary.

          IIRC he made the comment before the modern redefinition of SI units. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019_revision_of_the_SI#Mass_a... for more details about the ongoing issues associated with absolute numeric counts of elements and their association with mass.

      • blackguardx 6 hours ago

        Can you expand on this? What does he not agree with?

    • aftbit 9 hours ago

      Is sample contamination more impactful (likely to lead to a false positive) at 100 or 200 cycles than at 20? I remember some distrust of high PCR cycle counts during COVID but I never quite understood the fear.

      • Izkata 4 hours ago

        With enough cycles, dead virus you're successfully fighting off can be detected. It doesn't need contamination. For what it was used for, those were false positives that inflated the counts.

      • blackguardx 6 hours ago

        If there is contamination with the target sequence then it will be found by the PCR analysis. I don’t know the practical limits of sensitivity but theoretically it can detect a single occurrence of the target sequence.

    • timewizard 4 hours ago

      You run PCR for cycles. You run it for 32 cycles? You've got a 4 billion times multiplication of the input signal. You see the problem? "Detectable" isn't a single ended specification with "PCR." You really do need to disclose how many cycles you ran.

      Similarly there's ionizing radiation in your home. Right now. Flowing through you. If it's not above the background it's not interesting or material. So just saying "we found radiation" is equally meaningless unless you tell me that level in relation to something.

  • stonogo 10 hours ago

    For a diagnostic application, the cycle count doesn't really matter. Either the DNA your primers are targeting is present or it is not. That's why they talk about a "positive" or "negative" PCR test -- the presence or absense of the viral DNA is a binary.

    For diagnostic use like this, the standard is 30±10 cycles, but it doesn't really matter if it's ten or a hundred, since all you're really doing is verifying the presence of the target genome.

    • realityfactchex 6 hours ago

      Is a robust citation each available for each of those related claims?

      I'm not looking for dogmatic assertions, I mean the fundamental and reproducible papers proving those claims.

      Because those are all in direct opposition with the parent. And two views of an issue will not be resolved by each claiming opposite dogma.

      Hopefully someone can present the evidence. A textbook citation is not enough. Are there really controlled experiments showing these things? Or is it mostly theoretical? Is it time to ask what we know--are these "facts we have been taught", or have we looked into the scientific validity of the proofs with the criticality of a practicing scientist?

      I think that very solid citations here would actually go a long way to inform the parent, but I doubt that anything short of that would do so.

    • timewizard 4 hours ago

      > is present or it is not.

      Yes. And don't you use a /threshold/ mechanism to detect presence? Or you have tests so sensitive that a /single/ molecule or equivalent will deliver a reliably positive signal? I mean if it's that good why are you even doing PCR amplification in the first place?

      > the standard is 30±10 cycles

      The difference between 2^30 and 2^40 is massive.