mothra wrote on Sep 2
nd, 2019 at 9:16am:
Gnads wrote on Sep 2
nd, 2019 at 9:12am:
mothra wrote on Sep 2
nd, 2019 at 8:49am:
Gnads wrote on Sep 2
nd, 2019 at 8:24am:
mothra wrote on Sep 2
nd, 2019 at 8:22am:
Gnads wrote on Sep 2
nd, 2019 at 8:20am:
mothra wrote on Sep 2
nd, 2019 at 2:10am:
Question:
Does Setanta consider the African survivors of Ebola equal to him?
How do you think they survived Ebola?
Various factors. Individually determined.
Are you actually arguing that those who survived were superior to those who didn't? In any other meaningful way than they were more resistant to a specific pathogen?
No.
Setanta purports that white people are superior to brown skinned people because we are the survivors of a few rounds of the bubonic plague.
You agree?
Did he mention "whites" only?
And don't forget the Influenza pandemics/ epidemics.
Swiss/French & Japanese bacteriologists Alexandre Yersin & Kitasato Shibasaburō were co-discoverers of the bubonic plague bacillus.
Belgians Guido van der Groen & Peter Piot discoverers of the Ebola virus.
How many tinted folk living in Europe in the black death outbreaks?
What the bugger do you think he meant.
Stop defending the indefensible to get at me.
You went me this morning,m when this was said by Setanta.
You said nothing to that but went me.
You smacking think about that.
You farqing think about it you melodramatic ditz ....
"went at you"?

How many tinted people here?
Quote:The Justinian Plague of 541-544
The first great pandemic of bubonic plague where people were recorded as suffering from the characteristic buboes and septicaemia was the Justinian Plague of 541 CE, named after Justinian I, the Roman emperor of the Byzantine Empire at the time. The epidemic originated in Ethiopia in Africa and spread to Pelusium in Egypt in 540. It then spread west to Alexandria and east to Gaza, Jerusalem and Antioch, then was carried on ships on the sea trading routes to both sides of the Mediterranean, arriving in Constantinople (now Istanbul) in the autumn of 541.12, 13
Were TARTARS -white Europeans?
Quote:The ‘Black Death’ of Europe in 1347 to 1352
The Black Death of 1347 was the first major European outbreak of the second great plague pandemic that occurred over the 14th to 18th centuries. In 1346 it was known in the European seaports that a plague epidemic was present in the East. In 1347 the plague was brought to the Crimea from Asia Minor by the Tartar armies of Khan Janibeg, who had laid siege to the town of Kaffa (now Feodosya in Ukraine), a Genoese trading town on the shores of the Black Sea. The siege of the Tartars was unsuccessful and before they left, from a description by Gabriel de Mussis from Piacenza, in revenge they catapulted over the walls of Kaffa corpses of people who had died from the Black Death. In panic the Genoese traders fled in galleys with ‘sickness clinging to their bones’ to Constantinople and across the Mediterranean to Messina, Sicily, where the great pandemic of Europe started. By 1348 it had reached Marseille, Paris and Germany, then Spain, England and Norway in 1349, and eastern Europe in 1350. The Tartars left Kaffa and carried the plague away with them spreading it further to Russia and India.17
Are the Chinese white Europeans?
Quote:The Third Pandemic of 1894
The plague re-emerged from its wild rodent reservoir in the remote Chinese province of Yunnan in 1855. From there the disease advanced along the tin and opium routes and reached the provincial capital of K’unming in 1866, the Gulf of Tonkin in 1867, and the Kwangtung province port of Pakhoi (now Pei-hai) in 1882. In 1894 it had reached Canton and then spread to Hong Kong. It had spread to Bombay by 1896 and by 1900 had reached ports on every continent, carried by infected rats travelling the international trade routes on the new steamships.3,23 It was in Hong Kong in 1894 that Alexandre Yersin discovered the bacillus now known as Yersinia pestis, and in Karachi in 1898 that Paul-Louis Simond discovered the brown rat was the primary host and the rat flea the vector of the disease.
https://jmvh.org/article/the-history-of-plague-part-1-the-three-great-pandemics/