WE live in strange but sadly not unprecedented times. There is the “invisible” coronavirus pandemic, which is still sweeping across a large swath of inhabited lands across the globe, albeit in an undulating manner, leaving trails of devastation in both life and economy.
But of course, almost a century ago, the Spanish flu also devastated a large part of the world and its population. We, as the human race, have perhaps become rather complacent a century onward, thinking that such a horrible pandemic would not recur in a significant manner.
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