COVID-19 thread
-
- Posts: 1307
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2018 4:19 pm
COVID-19 thread
I think it's obvious this is going to keep being a topic of discussion here, so we might as well have a separate thread for it.
The controversies keep happening from the disappearance of the doctor who first reported it, to the lack of attention it got in China in the beginning, to the early attempts of many newspapers to understate the problem, to the incompetence of many governments around the world to hand out and allow testing, close operations and public events, provide care for people with accidents and other diseases, etc.
However, what I want to know at the moment is whether this medical attire is going to make a glorious comeback:
Source: "Plague doctor", English Wikipedia
The controversies keep happening from the disappearance of the doctor who first reported it, to the lack of attention it got in China in the beginning, to the early attempts of many newspapers to understate the problem, to the incompetence of many governments around the world to hand out and allow testing, close operations and public events, provide care for people with accidents and other diseases, etc.
However, what I want to know at the moment is whether this medical attire is going to make a glorious comeback:
Source: "Plague doctor", English Wikipedia
-
- Posts: 1307
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2018 4:19 pm
Re: COVID-19 thread
People in Vancouver are noticeably staying a lot more at home this weekend. Traffic is down, and so are pedestrians on the streets. This past Thursday in the afternoon I was on the local metro on the way to the centre Vancouver at around 6:00 p.m., and the train was fairly empty, with a lot less people than normal. Presumably, hardly anyone is bothering to go to events in downtown now.
Meanwhile, as far as Europe goes, people in Portugal and Sweden are especially advised not to get sick this season.
(Pubmed ref of the article above: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22777516 )
Meanwhile, as far as Europe goes, people in Portugal and Sweden are especially advised not to get sick this season.
(Pubmed ref of the article above: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22777516 )
Re: COVID-19 thread
I mean, it kinda already has?
Just need to make the masks longer and pointier. The guy in the back of the second image is halfway there! Although ideally yes, they should switch the PPE suits to be black.
Re: COVID-19 thread
but is it tho...or is it unwillingness to accept the reality in front of them?
Politicians and leaders are people too, they are just as susceptible to cognitive dissonance as any one else...some more so.
The people in charge of my office waited until this afternoon before deciding to cease ongoing projects and allow us to telecommute...that's probably a very 1st world kind of complaint, but the idea that it took them that long to come to this decision is ludicrous to me and my colleagues.
Re: COVID-19 thread
is it by chance that the Venetian carnival costume looks so much like it and allowed the crown plague to enter the peninsula...
-
- Posts: 682
- Joined: Tue Oct 09, 2018 5:35 pm
Re: COVID-19 thread
This has been confirmed, seemingly, by the German government:
https://www.dw.com/en/germany-and-us-wr ... a-52777990
https://www.dw.com/en/germany-and-us-wr ... a-52777990
I'm a bit mystified why Trump would want an "exclusive" arrangement. Presumably once the vaccine has been developed and tested, mass production should not be a major problem. This just seems like a way to poke your allies with a stick for no good reason.US President Donald Trump is attempting to entice a German lab to develop a vaccine exclusively for the US, a German newspaper reported. Berlin health authorities are in intensive talks with the company.
Re: COVID-19 thread
chris_notts wrote: ↑Sun Mar 15, 2020 7:02 am This just seems like a way to poke your allies with a stick for no good reason.
Hi! I'm POTUS, an incompetent, sub-literate, narcissistic, misogynistic, sociopathic, racist, congenital liar. Nice to meet you.
Re: COVID-19 thread
I'd say falling prey to common logical and psychological fallacies is still a form of incompetence - even if the fallacies in question are very common, and have been scientifically studied and written about in books like Mistakes Were Made (But Not By Me).masako wrote: ↑Sat Mar 14, 2020 7:50 pmbut is it tho...or is it unwillingness to accept the reality in front of them?
Politicians and leaders are people too, they are just as susceptible to cognitive dissonance as any one else...some more so.
The people in charge of my office waited until this afternoon before deciding to cease ongoing projects and allow us to telecommute...that's probably a very 1st world kind of complaint, but the idea that it took them that long to come to this decision is ludicrous to me and my colleagues.
chris_notts: Wow. Just when I thought Trump's handling of the matter couldn't get any dumber, more embarrassing, or more repulsive.
Re: COVID-19 thread
You do all realize that, when this is all over, there will almost certainly be a lot of right-wingers who caught Covid-19, were among the high percentage of people who survived it and recovered, and got even more insufferable as a result, right?
-
- Posts: 1307
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2018 4:19 pm
Re: COVID-19 thread
For me, the word "incompetence" mostly refers to unintentional failure, which is why I initially found your reply to me confusing until I thought about what you meant... Maybe my usage is wrong, but when I refer to someone as incompetent I usually mean they're too unprepared, ignorant, disorganized, etc. to deal with something. I'd normally refer to "willful incompetence" as undermining/thwarting/impairing efforts or sabotaging.
Unfortunately, I have no idea what you mean. Why would they in particular get more insufferable?
-
- Site Admin
- Posts: 2944
- Joined: Sun Jul 08, 2018 5:46 am
- Location: Right here, probably
- Contact:
Re: COVID-19 thread
Here's what happens when a president fundamentally misunderstands the crisis:
That's O'Hare Airport last night. 6 hour lines for baggage, then 2 hours more for customs.
The wait is not the problem, the problem is that large crowds are what we need to avoid. This is a perfect incubator for bringing untold numbers of cases to the country.
Here's how it happens. A 35-year old woman was infected but not tested, at a time when there were only 30 cases in the country. She went to two church services, with a total attendance of 9300. 1200 people got the virus; a few weeks later, her city (Daeju) was the epicenter of the virus in South Korea, with 3600 cases as compared with 98 in Seoul.
The crisis is not "furriners are doing bad things and must be punished." The crisis is "we have a highly infectious disease in this country and need to test to see who has it, and stop it spreading."
That's O'Hare Airport last night. 6 hour lines for baggage, then 2 hours more for customs.
The wait is not the problem, the problem is that large crowds are what we need to avoid. This is a perfect incubator for bringing untold numbers of cases to the country.
Here's how it happens. A 35-year old woman was infected but not tested, at a time when there were only 30 cases in the country. She went to two church services, with a total attendance of 9300. 1200 people got the virus; a few weeks later, her city (Daeju) was the epicenter of the virus in South Korea, with 3600 cases as compared with 98 in Seoul.
The crisis is not "furriners are doing bad things and must be punished." The crisis is "we have a highly infectious disease in this country and need to test to see who has it, and stop it spreading."
Re: COVID-19 thread
After much hand-wringing and indecision, the powers-that-be decided to shut down my workplace entirely. It's not really clear if I'll have to telecommute or not. (I'd rather not. Got two kids to take care of).
For the most part in France it seems we'll be following Italy so we're looking at a few weeks staying at home.
Ha, ha, just kidding. In three months, everyone will have forgotten all about it and the bullshit steering comittees will be back!
For the most part in France it seems we'll be following Italy so we're looking at a few weeks staying at home.
Well, hopefully, the upcoming containment period should be a great opportunity for everyone to sit down and reflect a bit on what's really important. Health. Toilet paper. Pasta. Having loved ones you can endure the presence of for a few weeks.
Ha, ha, just kidding. In three months, everyone will have forgotten all about it and the bullshit steering comittees will be back!
Re: COVID-19 thread
- doctor shark
- Posts: 445
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2018 8:21 am
- Location: The Grandest of Duchies
- Contact:
Re: COVID-19 thread
The timing with this is "excellent", especially since I'm supposed to be moving to the Netherlands at the end of the month! (I've terminated my lease for my apartment and my residence permit will run out on the 7th of April.) The borders are not yet closed, though I'm keeping an eye on things, and I contacted Immigration to see what to do about the fact that I need to leave Luxembourg in three weeks.
Here in Luxembourg, the situation is very much the social distancing, though now with all restaurants closed starting from Monday and highly reduced public transit frequencies. Workplaces are case-by-case, and, as of today, the university is now very highly recommending working remotely unless unavoidable, though the university campus will remain open and the working remotely stuff is quite restrictive and hoop-jumpy. In my case, I think I'll need to go into work at least a few days to take care of experiments and finish cleaning up my stuff, because I have to leave at the end of the month, but... yeah.
Also swung by the grocery store to get a few small things, because I wasn't able to restock earlier this week, and, yeah, it was crazy. No eggs, no potatoes, no toilet paper, most dry pasta was gone, most meats were gone... at least it was civilized.
Here in Luxembourg, the situation is very much the social distancing, though now with all restaurants closed starting from Monday and highly reduced public transit frequencies. Workplaces are case-by-case, and, as of today, the university is now very highly recommending working remotely unless unavoidable, though the university campus will remain open and the working remotely stuff is quite restrictive and hoop-jumpy. In my case, I think I'll need to go into work at least a few days to take care of experiments and finish cleaning up my stuff, because I have to leave at the end of the month, but... yeah.
Also swung by the grocery store to get a few small things, because I wasn't able to restock earlier this week, and, yeah, it was crazy. No eggs, no potatoes, no toilet paper, most dry pasta was gone, most meats were gone... at least it was civilized.
Last edited by doctor shark on Sun Mar 15, 2020 2:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
aka vampireshark
The other kind of doctor.
Perpetually in search of banknote subjects. Inquire within.
The other kind of doctor.
Perpetually in search of banknote subjects. Inquire within.
Re: COVID-19 thread
Weird. I went to the supermarket this morning, and everything seemed... normal. Apart from hand sanitizers and protective gloves, there wasn't any shortage: half the pasta shelf was still full, potatos and TP were as usual.
Re: COVID-19 thread
When I was at my standard supermarket on Friday, things seemed mostly normal, too - almost all meters of all aisles were well-stocked. However, when my Mom went to her standard supermarket on Saturday, there were, according to her, lots of empty shelves and a bit of a buying frenzy. She did manage to buy most of what she wanted, though.
One or two weeks ago (I'm not sure), I was buying pasta at my standard supermarket, and I had the impression that the parts of the shelves dedicated to German noodle/pasta labels were mostly (but not entirely) empty, but the parts of the shelves with Italian pasta labels were still mostly full.
One or two weeks ago (I'm not sure), I was buying pasta at my standard supermarket, and I had the impression that the parts of the shelves dedicated to German noodle/pasta labels were mostly (but not entirely) empty, but the parts of the shelves with Italian pasta labels were still mostly full.
-
- Posts: 682
- Joined: Tue Oct 09, 2018 5:35 pm
Re: COVID-19 thread
Boris' official plan is to not do very much in the UK at the moment. Despite that, my company, a European multi-national, has told everyone to work from home where possible, so I guess I'm doing that from Monday. Based on the mortality statistics by age from China I think I'd be very likely to be OK, but my wife is very worried because she's prone to chest infections and had a bad case of pneumonia a couple of years ago (after visiting China for work, funnily enough!).
I guess for me, the major pluses of not commuting are (a) protecting the other half, and (b) cutting out 1.5 - 2 hours of commuting a day, thus freeing up more time for gardening, writing, and playing with our son (who currently still has to go to school every day). I'm not the kind of person who feels a burning need to go out and socialise every day (or week, or even month).
Regarding supermarket stocks, there have been runs on a few things in the UK. A few days ago the following were very hard to get hold of here:
1. toilet paper
2. pasta and other long-life foods
3. common medicines such as ibuprofen
4. hand sanitisers
I guess for me, the major pluses of not commuting are (a) protecting the other half, and (b) cutting out 1.5 - 2 hours of commuting a day, thus freeing up more time for gardening, writing, and playing with our son (who currently still has to go to school every day). I'm not the kind of person who feels a burning need to go out and socialise every day (or week, or even month).
Regarding supermarket stocks, there have been runs on a few things in the UK. A few days ago the following were very hard to get hold of here:
1. toilet paper
2. pasta and other long-life foods
3. common medicines such as ibuprofen
4. hand sanitisers
-
- Posts: 1746
- Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2018 2:12 am
Re: COVID-19 thread
Raphael: no one who survives a bad flu ever takes disease lightly again. I once stayed perfectly still in bed for two full days because if I sat up to drink water I would vomit. Now I lean on the flu vaccine harder than the guy who cleans the public toilets at Varanasi. If enough rich elderly policy makers get sick, virus testing will become a sacred institution.
On the definition of "incompetence:" I get that there is a distinction between "I have absolutely no idea what I'm doing so I'm going to pull this big red lever and hope for the best," what we could call sheer incompetence, and "I am sold on the idea that light bulbs run on bottled firefly farts, and nothing will ever change my mind," what we might call delusional incompetence. Most politicians show at least some signs of one or the other, but it's a rare treat to see both operating at once.
On the definition of "incompetence:" I get that there is a distinction between "I have absolutely no idea what I'm doing so I'm going to pull this big red lever and hope for the best," what we could call sheer incompetence, and "I am sold on the idea that light bulbs run on bottled firefly farts, and nothing will ever change my mind," what we might call delusional incompetence. Most politicians show at least some signs of one or the other, but it's a rare treat to see both operating at once.
I did it. I made the world's worst book review blog.
Re: COVID-19 thread
Here the main things that seem hard to get are paper products (not just toilet paper, but also paper towel, and wipes - but interestingly not facial wipes) and hand sanitizer...
Last edited by Travis B. on Sun Mar 15, 2020 2:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Yaaludinuya siima d'at yiseka wohadetafa gaare.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.