While we are all piling on Dave …. 

 

His post made me grumpy because it cast us back into Excluded Middle discourse. 
 Neither are we going to go back to the way we were, nor are we going to remain 
in lock down mode.  We ARE going to do something in the middle.  What is that 
thing going to be?  Public health people seem to thing that we are going to 
squeeze the infection rate DOWN and the testing rate UP to the point where 
test, trace, isolate becomes a practical policy.  NM should be trialing such a 
program and Santa Fe right now, given that the County of 150k only has 2 
identified new cases a day.  That is so few, that it would seem that the City 
has zero endemic circulation.  This small number of new cases could be entirely 
from people coming in from outside.  It’s a wonderful opportunity to explore 
test, trace, isolate as a policy.  

 

I am sympathetic to the notion lurking in Dave’s post that too much effort is 
being expended to spare the White Elderly at the expense of the Brown Poor.  
But I have completely lost track of the statistics that would support 
sequestering the vulnerable and letting everybody else go about their business. 
 That’s not going to be easy, as the recent experience of our elder-living 
facilities has demonstrated.  And I keep reading reports of horrendous deaths 
of hale people in their 40’s.  For people under 50, what is the relative 
lethality of this virus and the flu? That data must be out there. 

 

By the way, speaking  of predictions, I predicted back in February that there 
would be no democratic convention this year.  That one’s looking pretty good. 

 

By another way, my 7 years of Childhood Latin, otherwise totally useless, 
suggests to me that Tempus Dictum should be translated, “Only Time Will Tell”.  

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

 <mailto:thompnicks...@gmail.com> thompnicks...@gmail.com

 <https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/> 
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> On Behalf Of Steven A Smith
Sent: Monday, May 11, 2020 10:50 AM
To: friam@redfish.com
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] the end of the pandemic

 

Dave -



The COVID-19 pandemic will end, at least in the US, by mid-June, 2020.
 
This assertion is premised on making a distinction between the biological and 
the perceptual.
 
The virus is not going away, a vaccine may or may not be found and made widely 
available, and treatments that reduce severity and death rate may or may not be 
soon at hand. Hot spots will continue to flare. Model-based prognostications 
will be confirmed.  And none of this will matter.
 
A radical shift in perception from "we're all going to die" to "I have next to 
zero chance of severe illness or death" is reaching a tipping point and a 
catastrophic (mathematical sense of the word) change from one to the other is 
imminent.
 
"Science" will quickly confirm (justify / rationalize) this shift  — after all, 
my individual risk is 150,000 / 300,000,000 or "pretty damned small."
 
Politicians will quickly cave to this new perceptual reality and socio-economic 
restrictions will collapse.
 
The percentage of the population that wear masks (just one example of a 
behavioral phenomenon) will roughly equal the number that fastidiously fasten 
their seat belts; but this and similar behaviors will mitigate the the 
infection/death rate.
 
Covid will be PERCEIVED to be no worse than the flu, the death rate will become 
"acceptable," and the current media "hysteria" will fade away.
 
There will be a segment of the populace — mostly the affluent elderly and 
individuals who have acquired money/influence/notoriety the past few months — 
who will argue against these changes but their objections will be quickly 
countered with, "why should I suffer all kinds of consequences — ones you do 
not share — to cater to your fears or your ego?"
 
None of the above should be interpreted as anything except a simple observation 
/ prediction.

Look away...nothing to see here... move along... nothing up my sleeve!

Glen (and others here) often use the idiom of "strawman" and "steelman" as 
apparatus for argument or maybe more to the point of my interest, illuminating 
dialog.  I would like to bring up a related idiom of "the stalking horse".  I 
would like to submit your prediction here as such is significantly meant (and 
taken) as a "stalking horse"... And the p;oint of it is "what is it helping us 
to think about in a different way?"

I simply can't read this as a "simple observation / prediction"... I believe it 
is laced with judgements and assumptions... some I agree with and some which I 
find either questionable in substance or in intent, but all worth inspecting.  

I don't want to bash you with this Dave, just put it out on the table in the 
same spirit I think you are offering these observations.   What DOES this 
observation expose and what does it (perhaps) obscure?   Can it do both at the 
same time?   

A radical shift in perception from "we're all going to die" to "I have next to 
zero chance of severe illness or death" is reaching a tipping point and a 
catastrophic (mathematical sense of the word) change from one to the other is 
imminent.

I think this phrase (framed by other phrases like "media hysteria") suggests 
that whatever this pandemic (virtually?) the entire planet has been 
experiencing is predominately a psychological/social experience, rather than 
the biological/physiological phenomenon identified as SARS-Cov-2 and it's 
biological coupling with it's newly found host population of modern humans who 
live, work, and socialize in confined spaces and travel widely (often in 
closely confined conveyances).   It seems to imply that this last 4-8 weeks of 
radical self/government incited social-distancing has had NO (or little) effect 
on the biological reality of the network spread of a human-human airborne 
disease, and that it has been ENTIRELY (or mostly) a tool of social 
manipulation and control (and/or self-soothing?). 

I don't want to suggest for a moment that we as a people/culture are not 
capable of mass hysteria or mass illusions...  and in fact would submit that 
ideas like "politics" or "economy" or "society" are constructed on precisely 
that.   The part of your observation (without accepting or rejecting the 
prediction aspect) that exposes that aspect I think is very important... but to 
expose it in a way that is limited to undermining *one* illusion, whilst 
supporting *yet another* does not improve our circumstance, but rather simply 
stirs the mud in a different direction.

I think your allusion to seat-belt laws (and my own extension of that to 
motorcycle helmet laws) is apt and relevant but wrong.   Both seem to *only* 
preserve the sensitivities and sensibilities of the public and/or 
emergency-response people who have to scrape up the gore that might have been 
mildly less gory with those safety devices in use.   I will also admit (in this 
tangent) that seat-belts and helmets usually/mostly also help to shift the 
costs of insurance-supported-recovery from/to funeral expenses, etc.  I'm 
fairly confident that the my wearing a mask while mixing in a population whose 
R0 is close to or above 1.0 (whether from herd immunity or lack of infection in 
the community or effective prophylaxis) protects others from the *probability* 
of my infecting them, as well as *signalling* to them that *I* believe R0 to be 
sufficiently high without it so as to want to reduce my own participation with 
this asymmetric "spittle barrier".   

I currently never leave my property without a bandana and raise it over my 
mouth and nose anytime I expect to be within a few yards of other people or am 
on approach to them.  I am *over* careful with this by some standards for two 
specific reasons related to your "perception" point.   I want to reinforce the 
idea that it is prudent for everyone who might have the virus to keep their 
spittle to themselves whether it is a cough, a sneeze, or just the specks that 
fly while speaking whether currently in a frothy mood or not.   I also feel 
*midly* safer with that in place while standing opposite someone *without* 
their own face-covering and without a sneeze shield (virtually all retail 
encounters?) between us.   I also almost entirely avoid close contact (same 
room) with anyone I recognize as high-risk (elderly, immuno-compromised, etc.) 
and maintain the 6'+ prescribed distance from everyone not already "in my pod" 
(nod to Nick's term) with or without masks.

- Steve

 

 

 

 

 
 
davew
 
 
 
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