It's the Twenty Fucking First Century, So Why CAN'T We Cure the Common Cold?

reminds me of the informary at college. The joke was, no matter what you walked in with, you left with Cepacol lozenges and Advil.

I think that’s the on that causes…

[QOUTE=Tuckerfan]…been rushed to the hospital because their nutsack suddenly exploded and has been told that they have a cold.
[/QUOTE]

I’ve LOST more than $50 this week because I have a cold. Had to cancel over $200 worth of child care jobs because I don’t want to get their babies sick. My husband missed two days of his work last week when he had it, so as a household we’re out way more than $50. Not to mention probably $25 or so I’ve spent on OTC symptom relief that isn’t working anyway. And I’m pretty sure I’ve now got an opportunistic bronchitis that pleasegod let it be bacterial (no crackling, but thick and pus filled with wheezing and a low grade fever), so I have to go spend money on a doc visit and antibiotics for that today. Wouldn’t have *that *if the cold had been stopped on day one or two.

Yeah, I’d pay at least $50 for a cold cure.

Except Mother Nature is a lazy bitch and a number of species have been found to have developed identical or nearly identical solutions to problems even though they’re seperated by vast distances and have no common ancestor.

Gee, I don’t know. I mean the immune system has been fighting things like cancer and we’ve not been able to do anything about that. Oh, wait. . .

And last time I checked, the pharma companies were still researching for better ones, not resting on their laurels. Just because we don’t have the perfect treatment today, doesn’t mean we won’t have it tomorrow.

Right, so as long as we slap a rubber on our willy before we have sex with mice, we should be okay.

Given that the first vaccines for smallpox appeared in the 1800s, but it took us until the 20th Century to wipe it out, I wouldn’t say that it was “easy.” It took a concerted effort by the developed nations to get the vaccine out there and wipe the disease out. We’re now attempting the same thing with polio.