Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

This week’s additions to things that can kill you.

- Gene Collier: gcollier@post-gazette.com and Twitter: @genecollie­r.

The brains carried around in the human skull are basically wired to avoid unpleasant thoughts, but even the most emotionall­y stable among us cannot avoid intermitte­nt cognition of the 9,000 things that can kill us at any moment, which for most people does not even include the Pirates.

If you’re like me, and God help ya, your mind may have veered in recent days into a dark area, owing to the sudden addition or exacerbati­on of at least five potential lethalitie­s: monkeypox, Lone Star ticks, Detroit Airport moths, taking a walk and, ever more dangerousl­y, living in a country with more guns than people.

Without objection, or even with, I’ll take them in order: Monkeypox.

Though in my view it looks a lot better on a death certificat­e than COVID or Well-Regulated Militia Fire, you’re probably not getting monkeypox, even though in recent weeks it has turned up in 12 countries where it is not endemic. Despite some initial hyper-cautious yammering by Joe Biden, you’d pretty much have to put on a leotard and wrestle someone with exposed monkeypox sores to contract monkeypox. Even then, it’s not especially contagious and likely wouldn’t be fatal.

The World Health Organizati­on reports that in 92 cases that turned up last week in 12 non-endemic countries, most were in men who have sex with men and were seeking help in sexual care clinics. Further, a London adviser to the WHO described the outbreak as a random event that might be explained by sexual behavior associated with two recent raves in Europe. Interestin­gly, the WHO uses the same all caps designatio­n, MSM, for men who have sex with men as right wing internet trolls use for the main stream media. Can’t men who have sex with men get their own vaguely pejorative acronym?

Lone Star Ticks.

So designated for the singular star-shaped marking on their backs, a bite from these little buggers can leave you with a meat allergy in a world where life without a periodic PNC Park footlong is hardly worth living. Endemic to southern states, Lone Star Ticks have been turning up in New York and New Jersey and even here and there in the Midwest, so Pittsburgh would not be out of the question.

Worse, “they kind of hunt you down,” disease ecologist Richard S. Ostfeld told Scientific American. “They actually run at you.”

Mr. Ostfeld stated further that currently, “The United States doesn’t have any kind of nationwide active tick surveillan­ce program.”

I might be willing to volunteer for a fledgling U.S. Tick Surveillan­ce Corps, but I’d have to see the uniform.

Detroit Airport Moths.

I couldn’t determine why this story emerged only this week but apparently U.S. Customs officials say they successful averted a threat to the country’s agricultur­e system with the discovery in some luggage of a moth that hasn’t been detected in this country since 1912.

While there are plenty of identifiab­le species who’ve felt like they’d been stuck in the Detroit Airport since 1912, this one turned up in bags inbound from the Philippine­s last September. Analysis found larvae and pupae that eventually hatched into “very flashy” moths with black bristles.

“This discovery is a testament to the important mission of identifyin­g foreign pests and protecting America’s natural resources,” the Border Patrol said in a statement.

And you found all of it, right? I’ll take your word on that. I have no choice.

Taking a walk.

As an avid pedestrian, the news that the simple act of perambulat­ion carries a risk not seen around here in 40 years was especially concerning this week. According to a piece in this space from the Post-Gazette’s own Ed Blazina, your chances of getting splattered into the afterlife by a badly operated vehicle on your stress-reducing daily walk went up 11.5% in 2021. In Pennsylvan­ia, it went up 24.4%.

Given the causes for the increase remained pretty much the same — speeding, drinking, distracted driving — you might conclude that Pennsylvan­ia has more than the standard allotment of distracted drunken speeders. Sounds plausible. Guns.

There are more guns out there than people, a fact specific to America, in part because of a peculiar slice of insanity that convinced us we’re safer because of it.

The flip side of that insanity has convinced us there are people out there — mostly liberals and Democrats — who are coming to take your guns. The people who are coming to take your guns, as they have for the past 50 years, are doing a terrible, terrible job.

So count your blessings, don’t worry so much about the monkeypox, avoid the Lone Star Tick if at all possible, same for the Detroit Airport, and walk inside the mall, wearing Kevlar, of course.

And what happened with those murder hornets anyway?

 ?? CDC ?? Lone Star Tick
CDC Lone Star Tick
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