[Vox] What Bill Gates is afraid of

🎯 Загружено автоматически через бота: 🚫 Оригинал видео: 📺 Данное видео принадлежит каналу «Vox» (@Vox). Оно представлено в нашем сообществе исключительно в информационных, научных, образовательных или культурных целях. Наше сообщество не утверждает никаких прав на данное видео. Пожалуйста, поддержите автора, посетив его оригинальный канал. ✉️ Если у вас есть претензии к авторским правам на данное видео, пожалуйста, свяжитесь с нами по почте support@, и мы немедленно удалим его. 📃 Оригинальное описание: What’s likeliest to kill more than 10 million human beings in the next 20 years? It’s probably not what you’d think. For much more, read Ezra Klein’s feature story: UPDATE: Watch our 2020 follow-up interview with Gates: There’s something out there that’s as bad as war, something that kills as many people as war, and Bill Gates doesn’t think we’re ready for it. “Look at the death chart of the 20th century,“ he says, because he’s the kind of guy that looks at death charts. “I think everybody would say there must be a spike for World War I. Sure enough, there it is, like 25 million. And there must be a big spike for World War II, and there it is, it’s like 65 million. But then you’ll see this other spike that is as large as World War II right after World War I, and most people, would say, ’What was that?’“ “Well, that was the Spanish flu.“ In a 1990 paper on “The Anthropology of Infectious Disease,“ Marcia Inhorn and Peter Brown estimated that infectious diseases “have likely claimed more lives than all wars, noninfectious diseases, and natural disasters put together.“ Infectious diseases are our oldest, deadliest foe. And they remain so today. “In a good year, flu kills over 10,000 Americans,“ says Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “In a bad year, it kills over five times that. If we have a pandemic, it will be much worse. People think the H1N1 flu wasn’t so bad. But more than 1,000 American kids died from H1N1!“ Read the full Ezra Klein feature on Vox: And if you’re revisiting this video in 2020, you can find all of our coronavirus coverage on Vox right here: Subscribe to our channel! is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what’s really driving the events in the headlines. Check out Check out our full video catalog: Follow Vox on Twitter: Or on Facebook:
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