The rare disease that triggers emergency funding requests, UN appeals, and celebrity selfies… until it stops being useful for narrative purposes.
The rare disease that triggers emergency funding requests, UN appeals, and celebrity selfies… until it stops being useful for narrative purposes.
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The virus that achieves what politicians only dream of: melting internal organs while the Western world argues about whether calling it by its name is racist.
The disease that turns “global health experts” into doomsday prophets until the death toll stays mostly in Africa, at which point everyone loses interest.
Proof that some viruses still respect basic biology and geography, much to the frustration of people who want every pathogen to be a global equity issue.
Nature’s recurring reminder that some viruses still don’t care about your feelings, pronouns, or diversity initiatives.
The periodic African hemorrhagic fever event that sparks two weeks of wall-to-wall media panic before quietly disappearing from headlines when it fails to reach Martha’s Vineyard.