Anonymous ID: f6f12f Sept. 5, 2020, 2:26 p.m. No.10539660   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9728

>>10537479

>>>10537523

This is crazy.

2011 - from the CDC

 

Zombie Preparedness Graphic Novel

Related Pages

Zombie Graphic Novel

CDC has a fun way of teaching about emergency preparedness. Our graphic novel, “Preparedness 101: Zombie Pandemic” demonstrates the importance of being prepared in an entertaining way that people of all ages will enjoy. Readers follow Todd, Julie, and their dog Max as a strange new disease begins spreading, turning ordinary people into zombies. Stick around to the end for a surprising twist that will drive home the importance of being prepared for any emergency. Included in the novel is a Preparedness Checklist so that readers can get their family, workplace, or school ready before disaster strikes…

 

Zombie Flu… kek.

Here's the plan the CDC implemented. Complete with illustrations.

 

https://www.cdc.gov/cpr/zombies/#/page/1

 

https://www.cdc.gov/cpr/zombie/novel.htm

Anonymous ID: f6f12f Sept. 5, 2020, 2:36 p.m. No.10539728   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9755

>>10539660

So the really interesting thing about this to ME is that they call Q a LARP, but they've done the LARP. More than once.

 

There are other aspects of media-generated hoaxes and panic that are worth noting. Those who studied the “War of the Worlds” fiasco noted that the apparent authority of a well-known figure like Orson Welles, coupled with the modality of radio (the major means by which information was transmitted at the time), lent credibility to what would otherwise have been received as science fiction. (Imagine, by contrast, if a random person ran screaming toward you on the street, saying that Mars was invading Earth.) Additionally, the Great Depression and the looming, free-floating anxiety of World War II proved to be fertile soil for panic. The public was waiting for something in which they could situate their already present fears.

 

This means that we’re more likely to believe a fictional account told by a reputable source using a modality through which many people receive their news, especially in the context of the uncertainty characteristic of modern times. Voilà! A Harvard physician talks about zombie infection on the radio during a time when we can’t open a newspaper without reading about pandemic flu or the risk of mercury in our fish oil, and then the Internet confirms every fear of zombies that anyone ever harbored, supported by references to the very doctor who was just on the radio.

 

MORE here:

https://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/27/magazine/the-harvard-doctor-who-accidentally-unleashed-a-zombie-invasion.html

 

COVID was a real-life LARP.