Host: And that’s your biggest worry?
Dr. Schoenheiss: Yes, any kind of virus, but mostly probably something similar to influenza.
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Host: Because of air travel?
Dr. Schoenheiss: Through the air. Coughing…
Host: I’m sorry. I meant people. On planes. That was something you described in your book.
Dr. Schoenheiss: Yes, a new virus in Madagascar, say, could be in Chicago within a matter of weeks. And we end up with a global pandemic. Pan meaning all. The whole world becomes sick all at once.
Host: And, Dr. Neuman, you’re also an epidemiologist. I presume the prospect of a viral pandemic keeps you up at night as well.
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Dr. Neuman: No.
Host: No?
Read more : When The Legend Becomes Fact Print The Legend
Dr. Neuman: No.
Host: All right, well, that’s our show.
Dr. Neuman: No, mankind has been at war with the virus from the start. Sometimes, millions of people die, as in an actual war. But in the end, we always win.
Host: But you – just to be clear, you do think microorganisms pose a threat.
Dr. Neuman: In the most dire terms.
Host: Bacteria.
Read more : When The Legend Becomes Fact Print The Legend
Dr. Neuman: No.
Host: You like saying no.
Dr. Neuman: Yes.
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Host: Not bacteria. Not viruses. So?
Dr. Neuman: Fungus. Yes, that’s the usual response. Fungi seem harmless enough. Many species know otherwise. Because there are some fungi who seek not to kill, but to control. Let me ask you, where do we get LSD from?
Host: Where do you get it from?
Dr. Neuman: It comes from ergot, a fungus. Psilocybin? Also a fungus. Viruses can make us ill, but fungi can alter our very minds. There’s a fungus that infects insects. Gets inside an ant, for example, travels through its circulatory system to the ant’s brain, and then floods it with hallucinogens, thus bending the ant’s mind to its will. The fungus starts to direct the ant’s behavior, telling it where to go, what to do, like a puppeteer with a marionette. And it gets worse. The fungus needs food to live, so it begins to devour its host from within, replacing the ant’s flesh with its own, but it doesn’t let its victim die. No, it keeps its puppet alive by preventing decomposition. How? Where do we get penicillin from?
Host: Fungus. Dr. Schoenheiss, you’re in distress.
Dr. Schoenheiss: Fungal infection of this kind is real, but not in humans.
Dr. Neuman: True, fungi cannot survive if its host’s internal temperature is over 94 degrees. And currently, there are no reasons for fungi to evolve to be able to withstand higher temperatures. But what if that were to change? What if, for instance, the world were to get slightly warmer? Well, now there is reason to evolve. One gene mutates and an ascomycete, candida, ergot, cordyceps, aspergillus, any one of them could become capable of burrowing into our brains and taking control not of millions of us, but billions of us. Billions of puppets with poisoned minds permanently fixed on one unifying goal: to spread the infection to every last human alive by any means necessary. And there are no treatments for this. No preventatives, no cures. They don’t exist. It’s not even possible to make them.
Host: So, if that happens?
Dr. Neuman: We lose.
Host: We’ll be back.
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Category: WHEN