That copyright thing again....
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This is not all that original, the 1951 novel "The Day of the Triffids" looks at something bioengineered used for good - that 'go bad'. Triffids itself a variation of the classic "Frankenstein" story, where man's creation turns on him. In this case technology.
I thought I would have a bit of fun with it.
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The use of a virus based cancer cure is a real ting.
http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/TopStories/20 ... wa-110831/http://www.smh.com.au/technology/sci-te ... 1xdtf.htmlThere is good anecdotal evidence - this will work.
There is the case of the eight-year-old African boy diagnosed with Burkitt's lymphoma at a Ugandan health clinic. He was exposed to the measles virus and in the next few weeks his tumour regressed completely and he entered remission.
An incident documented by the British medical journal The Lancet in 1971 described the example of a Hungarian chicken farmer who was suffering advanced colorectal cancer. When an outbreak of the avian virus Newcastle disease hit the farm, the man became infected and went into remission.
European researchers have been at this for more than a decade. The Canadians are using a modified Smallpox virus, scary indeed. In Oz, they are looking at the common cold as a source virus.
It had occurred to me after reading a Scientific American article in 2010, that such a virus, badly prepared could mutate - and become a scourge.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/artic ... s-vaccinesOf note to me
"Patients undergoing this viral therapy typically experience mild flulike symptoms, owing to immune response to the virus, Kirn said, but the company has reported no other side effects. Most Americans older than 40 received vaccinia as children in smallpox vaccines, but the company found no evidence that having had this vaccination hindered the effectiveness of the new virus."
So - there could be survivors in a mutated virus release....
Thanks for reading.