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by nekcihc
1589 days ago
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I for one do not wish to have any such worm in my body, but eradication of whole species(in other words - genocide) raises some moral questions and also some other issues that have to be dealth in near future. Apparently, in this case humans already are giving advantages to baboons and if they multiply too many - humans again will need to intervene to kill them to maintain their "normal" numbers. The solution to the worm and other parasites is very simple - boil your water before using it. Swim only in pools that have been threated against parasites.
Instead the offered solution is to sterilize all water in nature - in jungle environment, that is infested with life, that by nature is hostile to humans and others.
I suppose, that the thinking of eradication of these worms comes from how they are dealing with malaria. |
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This is not the treatment approach and is not remotely feasible.
The guinea worm life cycle is largely human driven as well. It's like objecting to reducing heavy metals leaching into drinking water out of some notion of keeping it unchanged from its current state, when it's largely put there by human behavior in the first place.