Measles Outbreak in Texas Turns Deadly so dumbass anti vax Parents Scramble for Shots

The measles outbreak in Texas has now turned deadly. Texas and federal health officials have just reported the first deaths attributed to the still-growing outbreak, which has sickened over a hundred people.

The Texas Department of State Health Services reported the tragic death of an unvaccinated “school-aged” child Wednesday morning. In the first cabinet meeting of the second Trump Administration held Wednesday afternoon, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the new U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary, stated that two deaths from measles have occurred so far, though he provided no further details. At least 124 cases and 18 hospitalizations have been documented so far, and even vaccine-hesitant families in the region are now rushing to get their measles shots.

The measles outbreak has been ongoing since at least mid-January. It’s largely affected people living in Mennonite communities along the rural South Plains region of western Texas, many of whom are unvaccinated against the highly contagious virus. Health officials have previously attributed the low vaccination rate in these communities mostly to a lack of interaction with the wider health care system, rather than to an explicit anti-vaccination attitude among residents.

A week ago, with only 48 cases reported, the measles outbreak had already become the largest seen in the state in nearly 30 years. Dozens more cases have been documented since, in both western Texas and a bordering county of New Mexico, and officials fear that hundreds of residents have or will ultimately become infected. The fatality reported by the Texas Department of State Health Services is the first measles death documented in the U.S. since 2015.

While this outbreak may not be tied to the anti-vaccination movement, it has convinced some people in the area to change their minds about the value of the highly effective measles vaccine—which is taken in combination with vaccines for mumps and rubella. Vaccine-hesitant parents in Lubbock County, one of the areas hit hard by the outbreak, have reportedly started to send their children to get their shots. Lubbock County is also where the child who died from measles was hospitalized.

“We’ve vaccinated multiple kids that have never been vaccinated before, some from families that didn’t believe in vaccines,” Katherine Wells, director of public health at Lubbock’s health department, told NBC News Tuesday.

In the U.S., measles has been locally eliminated for over two decades. But outbreaks can still occur, particularly in places with vaccination rates below the herd immunity threshold (around 94% of a population). Worldwide, measles remains a major public health threat. In 2023, an estimated 10 million cases of measles were reported worldwide, up 20% from the previous year, as well as over 100,000 deaths that year. Measles infection is also thought to sap people’s immune memory to other common infections.

Source: Measles Outbreak in Texas Turns Deadly as Parents Scramble for Shots

Shadow of Mordor’s Nemesis system is locked behind a patent until 2036 – you can patent that an enemy remembers you and your fights with him, apparently

Warner Bros Discovery recently shut down a trio of game studios, including the well-regarded Monolith Productions. This has put one of the coolest game mechanics of the 2010s in limbo. Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor’s excellent Nemesis system is locked behind a patent owned by Warner Bros all the way until 2036, according to reporting by Eurogamer.

The Nemesis system was featured in both 2014’s Shadow of Mordor and the follow-up Middle-earth: Shadow of War. Simply put, it’s a gameplay mechanic in which enemies remember previous encounters with the protagonist. These antagonists, typically orcs in the LOTR games, would use these humiliating memories to fuel their thirst for revenge as they rose through the ranks. This mechanic also worked both ways, so enemies would remember besting you in a previous encounter.

It was the best part of those two titles and Monolith had planned on bringing back the mechanic for a now-cancelled Wonder Woman game. Now the system is lying unused, locked behind a patent vault in David Zaslav’s mega-yacht or whatever. Gigantic multinational corporations are awesome!

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Warner Bros Discovery patented the system in 2016, which you can read right here. The patent is active until 2036, so long as the company keeps up with the associated fees. It’s worth noting that in the nine years since patenting the system, it’s only been used in a single game. That’s Shadow of War, which came out in 2017 and was already in development when Warner Bros went ahead with the patent.

It remains to be seen if Warner Bros Discovery will do anything with the Nemesis system. It had nine years of heavy game development to make use of it across its entire IP portfolio, but didn’t. In that time period, plenty of Batman games and Hogwarts Legacy all came out. Those would have surely benefited from the unique mechanic. Oh well.

WB will still focus some resources on game development, but the company’s efforts will be primarily spent on four franchises. These include Harry Potter, Mortal Kombat, the DC universe and Game of Thrones. Three of those four seem like good fits for the Nemesis system to me.

Source: Shadow of Mordor’s innovative Nemesis system is locked behind a patent until 2036

Patents stifle innovation yet again.