• laranis@lemmy.zip
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    5 hours ago

    Can’t wait to see how they turn this into another grift.

    I’d bet a shiny nickel one of his cronies gets the contract to eradicate the screw worm where lip service is paid to solving the problem and a few people take in that sweet, sweet gov funding.

    Also, I’d bet another shiny nickel this gets blamed on brown people and funding the wall gets pushed as a way to contain the screw worm.

  • Midnitte@beehaw.org
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    4 hours ago

    We should shame him into fixing it.

    I bet Elon Musk couldn’t fix it! There’s no way he could figure out how to spend a billion dollars fixing it!

  • Wilco@lemmy.zip
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    8 hours ago

    There is no “finding out”. No one will ever hold these deranged weirdos accountable.

  • Lvxferre [he/him]@mander.xyz
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    9 hours ago

    When you see an animal, there’s likely a bunch of the same species you didn’t see. Specially if it’s a small animal, with a fast lifecycle, and the animal burrows itself into something (like, dunno… the flesh of another animal?). And if the animal can live pretty much anywhere there’s another, warm-blooded, animal living. (Livestock? Wild fauna? Pets? Humans? Yes.)

    So a dozen cases isn’t just “a dozen cases”, there’s likely millions of those flies in USA already. I’m taking a wild guess here and say a billion dollars won’t even scratch the surface of the problem there.

    (Not that it changes things for me. Here in South America the fly in question goes from “present” to “present”. Just businesses as usual.)

    • Scirocco@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      I agree that “a” billion isn’t even gonna start to cover it.

      Will it even EVER be controlled down to Panama again?

      It will take many years.

    • AlligatorBlizzard@sh.itjust.works
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      8 hours ago

      So how nasty are these things to humans? They seem like body horror nightmare fuel.

      (I think I live far enough north to not have to worry about them but thinking about them still makes me a bit queasy.)

      • Lvxferre [he/him]@mander.xyz
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        8 hours ago

        In general humans are the least concern. We’re smart enough to know something is wrong with our bodies, and fix it before it gets worse; we wear clothes and bandage wounds so there’s less exposure of vulnerable areas; etc. It’s a bit more concerning because of children, since the flies can attack eyes and mouths, but as long as the parents actually do their job and take care of the kid, no issue. (Bug repellent, pay attention to small wounds, regular visits to the doc, this kind of stuff.)

        Dogs and cats are another can of worms (or maggots). Specially urban strays; if anyone here wants some nightmare fuel, websearch images for [NSFL] miíase cachorro or miasis perro [/NSFL], apparently the flies (it isn’t just C. hominivorax) responsible for this sort of infestation will lay multiple eggs in the same wound, if they can; so it can get really nasty. Same deal with the fauna.

  • Hadriscus@jlai.lu
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    15 hours ago

    folks please caption your pictures. which one of these is the new world screwworm ?

    • dalekcaan@feddit.nl
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      12 hours ago

      Well it’s pretty simple, one of these pictures shows a horrible disgusting blood-sucking parasite, and the other is a new world screwworm.

    • sik0fewl@piefed.ca
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      11 hours ago

      The one causing damage to America that will take decades to repair, if it’s even possible repair.

  • fox2263@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    They will bemoan it and cry there is no money due to evil democrat fraud and the worm is a hoax.

    And then give Iran another 50 billion.

  • ThanksForAllTheFish@sh.itjust.works
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    13 hours ago

    I block DOGE, Trump and Elongated Muskrat as keywords, because Lemmy sometimes thinks it’s AmeriLemmy, and I just don’t care. But the blocks don’t work on comments or pictures. Using Voyager app, anyone have any ideas?

  • JesusSon@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    I’d love to blame this entirely on DOGE and trump but honestly this was a perfect storm that built up over decades.

    The screwworm was eradicated from the US a long time ago using sterile fly releases that pushed the population progressively southward until the Darién Gap became the permanent chokepoint. They maintained the barrier there with sterile fly releases and ground monitoring and it worked. It worked so well that the Mission, Texas facility closed in 1981 and the Mexico facility closed in 1999 because there was no longer a need for them.

    That success is part of what caused the problem. Complacency set in, and capacity eroded. Then COVID wrecked the monitoring infrastructure. Ground teams couldn’t operate, sterile fly releases got disrupted, and the barrier at the Gap was breached. The flies started moving north again and the program didn’t have the capacity it once did to respond.

    DOGE cuts to USDA APHIS in 2025 hit an already compromised program at the worst possible time reduced staffing and funding when they needed to be scaling up emergency sterile fly production and reestablishing the barrier.

    So yes, the current administration made it worse. The vulnerability was already there before those cuts, and once COVID broke the barrier there was always a real chance they were going to make it back to the US regardless.

    Fuck DOGE and trump though for real, I just cant get on this “its entirely their fault” train.

    • tired_fedora@lemmy.ml
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      5 hours ago

      Thank you for the context. Highly appreciated! I had gathered the gradual decline in funding and surveillance from this publication but they didn’t really talk about the damages done by COVID or DOGE.

    • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      15 hours ago

      Fuck DOGE and trump though for real, I just cant get on this “its entirely their fault” train.

      Ah yes, let them blame COVID instead. Because we all know in hindsight that Trump’s response to the pandemic was amazing \s

      • anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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        14 hours ago

        They’d also cut funding to vaccine and pandemic research in his first term. So it was his fault at more than one step along the way.

    • emmy5482@quokk.au
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      19 hours ago

      So trump is just the last in line whose failure was worst.

      That still makes it his fault

      • marcos@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        He was the one that broke it at first too. It’s just Musk that came later and only finished breaking it.

        • Maeve@kbin.earth
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          18 hours ago

          Texas facility closed in 1981 and the Mexico facility closed in 1999 because there was no longer a need for them.

          Nah it was a series of overconfidence and underfunding, this is capitalism.

      • nagaram@startrek.website
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        14 hours ago

        I thought you said it was “frustrating” seeing some with nuance get upvoted and I appreciated the sarcasm on that and the sincerity in this one

    • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      That old lady was standing near the edge of the cliff. The fence was already broken. I pushed her off the edge. You can’t say it’s entirely my fault.

    • justaman123@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      I dunno, this just seems like the entire narrative that government ran things are bad. I mean sure everything was crumbling when Trump started actively breaking things with Doge. But the reason they were crumbling before that was Republican policy and Covid was absolutely Trump’s fault from dismantling the programs that monitored pandemics.

      • cynar@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        Any government run system needs something to trim the bloat down. Otherwise there is nothing to stop it becoming dangerous. Capitalism relies on profit motives to do this. It works, to an extent.

        The problem comes with how to trim. E.g. this programme. Once the barrier was established, it could be trimmed. The fact it worked for 25 years after is proof of this. This (in theory) would free up resources for more critical tasks. The catch is that it needed to hard protect the barrier itself. It also needed the capability to rapidly scale back up. It seems that that was trimmed too, leading to the current crisis.

        A dam is a good analogy. It takes a lot of resources to build one. But far less to run and maintain it. You also need the option for emergency maintenance, but that can be shared with other dams or construction projects, when not needed.

        The first trim got rid of the construction budget. DOGE got rid of the maintenance budget. Now the dam needs rebuilding, not just maintaining.

        • prole@sh.itjust.works
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          6 hours ago

          Any government run system needs something to trim the bloat down. Otherwise there is nothing to stop it becoming dangerous

          What does this even mean. Sounds like slippery slope to me.

          • cynar@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            No department, government or commercial likes giving up resources, once it has them. This can cause them to become quite inefficient.

            In commercial companies, this is corrected for by financial pressures (imperfectly). In government systems there is no obvious mechanism. Instead it’s a lot more ad-hoc. This allows for things like “starving the beast” to break government functions. Conversely it allows for a lot of public money being funneled into private hands.

            A better option is to have systems in place to control spending. Critically, those systems need to have people who understand what is being done. They simultaneously allow for reduction in spending when appropriate (or at least stop run away), but stop the chainsaw to the knees approach (e.g. DOGE under musk).

            A good example would be something like the UKs NHS NICE (National institute for Clinical Excellence). They keep drug prices under control in the NHS. They are powerful enough to give pause to the drugs companies, they stop the government from going “chainsaw massacre” directly and they keep the NHS efficient in their area. They are also small enough to not bloat themselves as easily.

            They act as a 2 way shield. They stop governments sticking their oar in too directly. They also keep the service efficient and updated.

            Basically we need localised intelligence to filter what rolls down from higher government, while keeping those below accountable.

            In this case, it seems like they over trimmed the science. Some stand down from full height is reasonable, but no mothballed facilities were kept to rapidly spool back up in an emergency.

    • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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      14 hours ago

      well if it wasnt cut, there would be a much faster response than it is now. 1bn likely wont stop the screworms in the long run anyways. since they are coming from the south unabated.

    • 87Six@lemmy.zip
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      9 hours ago

      Okay cool then use that same train of thought to make all those involved pay, not the taxpayers. Musk and Trump too.

  • Diddlydee@feddit.uk
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    20 hours ago

    It’s almost as though DOGE was doing lots of shit the people involved knew fuck all about. ‘I don’t understand this or see the point, therefore it must be woke wastage.’

    • GraniteM@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      “What does this 400-room hotel need to employ a full-time plumber for? The pipes are all fine, and no one ever complains about a clogged toilet. Fire that lazy bum!”

    • NekoKoneko@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      Musk is the living embodiment of the Dunning-Kruger effect, and his wealth represents the exact monetary value delta of confident ignorance over intelligence.