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In Naming Omicron Variant, Authorities Skipped 'Xi' and 'Nu' (wsj.com) 237

WHO has been using the Greek alphabet to name coronavirus strains, but avoided two letters that presented problems. From a report: As health authorities around the world grappled with the emergence of a new strain of the coronavirus, virologists were struggling with a thorny question of their own: What should they name it? The World Health Organization has been using Greek letters to refer to the most widely prevalent coronavirus variants, which otherwise carry unwieldy scientific names. It had already gone through 12 letters of the Greek alphabet when a new variant called B.1.1.529 was detected. But the next two letters in the Greek alphabet, Nu and Xi, posed problems. The WHO said it had skipped them because Nu was too easily confused with "new," while Xi is a common surname. The body cited best practices for naming diseases that seek to avoid causing offense to any cultural, social, national, regional, professional or ethnic groups.

Xi ranked 296th last year among the most common family names in China, according to the government. The top 100 family names are used by about 85% of the population, official data show. The Xi surname is shared by Chinese President Xi Jinping. Until the practice of naming variants after characters in the Greek alphabet was adopted in May, new strains of the virus were commonly referred to by the country where they were first detected. The new system sought to avoid stigmatizing countries that discover new variants. And so what was known as the U.K. variant -- also the Kent variant after the English county where it was discovered -- became Alpha, while a strain detected in South Africa was named Beta. Another thought to have originated in Brazil was given the name Gamma, while Delta was one of the variants first found in India.

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In Naming Omicron Variant, Authorities Skipped 'Xi' and 'Nu'

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  • by mhocker ( 607466 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @11:49AM (#62051965)

    Does Delta Airlines count as a "professional group"?

  • Question (Score:5, Funny)

    by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @11:53AM (#62051975)

    If they didn’t want to use “Xi”, couldn’t they have used either “Winnie” or “Pooh”?

    • Clearly this is really about Sceintology and avoiding using any part of the evil god XeNu's name.

    • by hawk ( 1151 )

      We *all* need to spend more time singing, "Xinnie the Pooh" . . . in as many places as possible.

      Preferably a stadium breaking in it when he visits . . .

      "chubby little ChiCom all stuffed with fluff."

  • WHO didn't use "xi" because of ignorant people who don't know how to differentiate between using the GREEK alphabet and their language.

    Cool, then they should have skipped "gamma" because it sounds exactly like Spanish "gama" ("range"); "beta" because it sounds exactly like Spanish "veta" ("vernier"); etc. In fact, the last one can be also be written with "b", making them homographs.

    And, of course, I know WHO will stop calling the 1918 flu "Spanish flu" because we all know it hurts Spain and start calling "U

    • Huh? Everyone uses the term Spanish Flu, not just racists.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      They didn't even skip Mu, which is used by about 50% more Chinese people than Xi. It's narrative that has nothing to do with reality. They simply need to justify kowtowing to their bosses to the masses, and this was a good enough lie to spin.

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      I think we know why ignorant people have made such a big deal over Omicron, which is really a non issue, as WHO is using Greek letters, but has no obligation to use them in order. But it turns out that Trump Truth website is host, on the top level, by rightforge. It appears to be created around August, 2021, with what is called angel funding. It reportedly has 5000 visitors a day. It claims to own backbone and hosting created in a few months. In fact, at least some servers seems to be housed at Highwinds
    • Nobody associates Spanish Flu with being Spain's "fault". You're being silly. Even before it was widely known Spain was just reporting it, it was just assumed to be a name, like the much later "Hong Kong Flu". It only became a big issue with the current one, when a certain country became upset over the naming convention. Just like what's happening now.
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        I think you're wrong. If you ask most people, in the US at least, where the Spanish Flu originated from they'll say Spain instead of the United States where it was first discovered. People in Spain at the time called it the French Flu because they incorrectly assumed it came from France. People in the United States thought it came from Spain because Spanish journalists were reporting on it whereas, due to wartime censorship, American journalists were not reporting on it originally. People at the time were v

    • by FuegoFuerte ( 247200 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @02:19PM (#62052689)

      My wife is in nursing school right now, and mentioned the Spanish Flu in one of her classes. She was corrected by the professor that it was the " Flu Pandemic of 1918," not the "Spanish Flu."

      So yes, some people have already stopped calling it the Spanish Flu, because reasons.

  • Do: Name hurricanes after men and not just women.
    Reason: Virtue signal whining

    Don't: Name a variant after a dictator obfuscating and holding uncounted hundreds of billions in investments in his hand.
    Reason: "In his hand"

    What do both have in common? Failure to behave yields punching by government in ways it shouldn't.

  • They should have gone with a more mathy label. Capital Xi-bar over capital Xi.

    • by Comboman ( 895500 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @01:02PM (#62052277)

      Abbot: Did you hear about the Nu Covid variant?

      Costello: There's a new Covid variant? What's it called?

      Abbot: Nu.

      Costello: Yes, the new variant. What are they calling it?

      Abbot: W.H.O. is calling it Nu.

      Costello: I'm asking you. Why are you asking me?

      Abbot: They haven't gotten to 'Y' yet.

      Costello: Who hasn't gotten to 'Y' yet?

      Abbot: Exactly, they're still on Nu.

      Costello: Who is?

      Abbot: Exactly. W.H.O. is still on Nu.

      Costello: What are asking me for? Geez.

      Abbot: Not geez; Xi. That comes after Nu.

      Costello: But then it won't be new anymore.

      Abbot: Exactly.

  • Obviously they skipped it because of Xi, leader of China.

    Okay? So? How is that unethical, misleading, or immoral? There were (and are) issues since the beginning of the pandemic with people calling it Wuhan Flu, China Virus, etc. for the explicit purpose of being edgy in an embarrassingly childish display of mild racism and right-wing virtue signalling. In some cases around the world, people were being assaulted for "being in a pandemic while Asian".

    If they had named a new variant with the same title as the

    • by luvirini ( 753157 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @12:20PM (#62052083)

      It is dishonet when they give bullshit excuses for the naming.

      If they had just said that they did not want to name it Xi variant because of the dictator that would not have at least been dishonest or misleading.

      Immoral on the other hand? That is more arguable, what is clearly immoral is the coverup that the Chinese authorities did at the beginning of the pandemic thus helping it spread.

    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      The one thing I'd say is I personally would either have them not comment at all on why they skipped or admitted explicitly that it was because of the association with Xi Jinping. Instead they claim it's a "common" Chinese surname when it isn't common at all.

      Other than that detail, I agree that people wouldn't be mature about it and in their abuse of the name Xi wouldn't stop at criticizing Xi Jinping the person or even just the CCP, but would disparage the entire nation and anyone that vaguely looks like th

    • The entire naming scheme mess was created by WHO-s new directive to stop using places of discovery to name diseases. It would have been perfectly fine being Wuhan virus as it was originally coined as per tradition and absolutely nothing would have been worse. Whatever stigmatization people from city of Wuhan suffered, they suffered anyway, WHO causing a giant confusion with naming conventions didn't change that one bit. Following clear and consistent naming scheme as has been done for ages, nobody would hav
    • by iamacat ( 583406 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @12:51PM (#62052217)

      There is absolutely nothing racist about "Wuhan flu". It's obvious to everyone that ordinary people of Wuhan were the first victims of communist thugs that let the virus lose (lab or wet market doesn't really matter, still criminal negligence) and covered it up until eradication was not an option. We should keep the name so that one day these government officials can be prosecuted for crimes against their fellow countrymen and humanity at large.

      As for anti-Asian crimes, a good chunk of those are committed by non-white individuals for reasons that have more to do with defunding the police / pandemic unemployment / simple racial tensions rather than blame for virus origins. By all means, prosecute any perpetrators to full extent of the law, regardless of race and motives. But don't let CCP hide behind the victims and shift attention away from its own crimes.

  • PC out of control. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Asynchronously ( 7341348 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @12:11PM (#62052043)
  • Omicron sounds more menacing. If you're trying to scare people into getting their shots and staying home this Christmas season, it's better to have the new virus variant sound like a villain from a Transformers movie.

  • by Whatanut ( 203397 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @12:17PM (#62052071)

    Apparently they didn't care about the poor Omicronians being singled out...

    https://futurama.fandom.com/wi... [fandom.com]

  • We know exactly whose name caused them to skip it. It would be nice if someone...anyone...in a position of moral authority would conspicuously fail to grovel at the feet of a petty dictator, on occasion. Just for a change.
    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      While I agree that the 'common surname' is BS, and that there is generally too much pandering to the CCP and Xi Jinping in particular, I don't think avoiding the name of the head of China is necessarily about him or the CCP, as I doubt the people that scream 'Wuhan Flu' would apply a lot of nuance and precision to limit their rhetoric to the leadership of China rather than apply to not only all of China, but also anyone who vaguely resembles ethnic Chinese.

      Given the history of racially directed anger over t

  • by Cowardly Lurker ( 2540102 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @12:31PM (#62052135)

    If you want me to take you seriously, please don't insult my intelligence.

    This shouldn't be a political issue so you can stop with the pandering. Save your patronizing bullshit for the idiots who think they're in charge.

    • Not naming something because one name is a common name in a country is "pandering"? If the variants were based on the NATO phonetic alphabet, and they decided not to name a variant "Mike" or "Oscar" that is also pandering?
  • Humans are not intelligent nor intellectual for the most part and that can never be different. We evolved to reproduce in millennia of savage combat and the creatures that evolutionary process built only exist to make offspring. They are hypersensitive and vicious and stupid. If you are one of the trivially few exceptions you understand this.

    Use computers to generate syllable combinations without prior meaning and consider using alphanumeric names. There is only need for clarity (as much as practical, there

  • by gTsiros ( 205624 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @01:36PM (#62052439)

    it is named "ni", as in nit, nib, nick

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    In 2018 there was a large fire in California that they named the "Camp Fire". Traditionally, California wildfires are named after roads that they're closest to.

    Yet they'll also name fires that combine together as "complex" fires. However "complex" is most commonly in reference to housing complexes.

    They weren't very creative w/ naming covid/sars-cov-2, they should just stick to the regular names.

    Some people need to act like world leaders and not let petty things like this m

    • by Megane ( 129182 )
      This really bothered me, because the place was called "Camp Creek". It should have been called the Camp Creek Fire. Instead they shortened it to a name that sounded like they were trivializing it.
  • by waspleg ( 316038 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @02:08PM (#62052631) Journal

    This is 100% because of Xi Jing Pooh, The director of the WHO has his job because of Xi Jing Pooh. Mu was used as a variant name is a more common last name than Xi is. They're 100% full of shit as always.

  • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

    The Slashdot editors saw an opportunity to troll the Russian troll-bots, their American victims, AND the COVID trolls, at the same time.

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