Sunday, March 8, 2020

Sign of Things to Come?

COVID-19 is a new disease caused by the novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2). The mutation may not be directly related to climate change, but epidemics are becoming more frequent under new environmental conditions. Crises will emerge for which governments are not prepared. Misinformation will spread in an era of "fake news" that can only make things worse.

Update (March 13):  It's getting very hard to keep up with the news. My anxiety is skyrocketing. Heather Digby Parton expands on the dangers of this political failure.
This crisis makes it obvious that America can try to retreat from the world all it wants, but it won't work. We share this planet and it gets smaller every day. If we are to deal with massive disruptions like global pandemics and the existential threat of climate change, we cannot afford to have leaders who fail to understand that.
And Amanda Marcotte points to Republican "aversion to the very concept of a common good".
For decades, GOP strategy has been consistent: Whenever they get power, they slash regulations and gut spending, with the goal of making government less effective. This is a deliberate strategy to make the public broadly distrustful of government, and therefore increasingly open to shifting more and more power to the wealthy individuals who control the private sector.
This ideological commitment to an every-man-for-himself ideology, which is terrible in any circumstances, is exposed as particularly dreadful in the face of a pandemic. Disease is a reminder that humans are a herd species, wholly dependent on each other for survival, and that government must be a way to formally organize that joint survival pattern. It's not some villain in a racism-inflected right-wing morality fable about the importance of "personal responsibility".
Update (March 15):  Bob Hennelly argues this crisis could "help us muster the will to make the lifestyle and economic changes required to face up to the challenge of global warming" but the recent history of capitalism doesn't bode well.
[V]ital spheres, from the environment to the public health, [have been] secondary to the private pursuit of profit.
In an interview with Paul Rosenberg, Dr. Timothy Brewer emphasizes that we're all in this together.
The most important question is, "How do we all get through this?" And we get through this by focusing on what we know, and what we need to learn, and taking care of each other — so not by discriminating, not by panicking, and not by trying to isolate ourselves with our 500 rolls of toilet paper.
Update (March 17):  A British report finds that up to two million Americans could die from COVID-19 if strong action isn't taken. Jacek Debiec notes that fear contagion can be mitigated when we cope with threats together.

Update (March 18):  John Vidal explains how loss of habitat and biodiversity makes diseases like COVID-19 more likely.
In 2008, [Kate Jones, chair of ecology and biodiversity at University College London,] and a team of researchers identified 335 diseases that emerged between 1960 and 2004, at least 60% of which came from non-human animals.
Increasingly, says Jones, these zoonotic diseases are linked to environmental change and human behavior. The disruption of pristine forests driven by logging, mining, road building through remote places, rapid urbanization and population growth is bringing people into closer contact with animal species they may never have been near before, she says.
The resulting transmission of disease from wildlife to humans, she says, is now "a hidden cost of human economic development. There are just so many more of us, in every environment. We are going into largely undisturbed places and being exposed more and more. We are creating habitats where viruses are transmitted more easily, and then we are surprised that we have new ones."
Jones studies how land use change contributes to the risk. "We are researching how species in degraded habitats are likely to carry more viruses which can infect humans," she says. "Simpler systems get an amplification effect. Destroy landscapes, and the species you are left with are the ones humans get the diseases from."
Update (March 20):  Gideon Lichfield thinks some aspects of life will never go back to "normal".
The world has changed many times, and it is changing again. All of us will have to adapt to a new way of living, working and forging relationships. But as with all change, there will be some who lose more than most, and they will be the ones who have lost far too much already. The best we can hope for is that the depth of this crisis will finally force countries — the U.S., in particular — to fix the yawning social inequities that make large swaths of their populations so intensely vulnerable.
Update (March 21):  Zach Carter points out that political failure cuts both ways.
An endless parade of centrists vied for the 2020 Democratic nomination not by talking about ideas, but by talking about competence, leadership and other intangibles while warning that candidates that did talk about ideas were too dangerous and scary.
A party that doesn’t really believe in anything will have a hard time putting up serious proposals in a crisis.
Update (March 22):  Efforts to contain the virus are having a massive economic impact. Bob Hennelly suggests American capitalism is poorly suited to handle this kind of crisis.
This is what happens when you organize every aspect of your society to promote wealth accumulation and nothing else.
[O]ur vaunted American health care system — which is designed to maximize shareholder profits and discourage patients from using it — turns out to be antithetical to promoting the public health. This for-profit model is based on scarcity, which rations access to care, ventilators and personal protection equipment for medical staff, all to feed the insatiable bottom line.
Works great until that doomsday scenario when everybody needs it.
Our whole socioeconomic framework was predicated on the notion that our society could function and feed off vast inequality, and that the day-in and day-out misery of tens of millions of American families was their problem.
Update (March 25):  Ken Orphan hopes a lesson can be learned.
[T]here are signs that Covid-19 is changing the way humanity looks at the way society is arranged. ... [T]here are questions emerging about how our species has treated the delicate balance between us and the natural world. Indeed, many are realizing that there is no "us and the natural world" at all. Covid-19 might be the biosphere’s last and desperate warning to our species that the status quo is a one-way ticket to extinction. The only question that remains is how we will respond to its urgent message.
Amy Westervelt contrasts responses to COVID-19 and climate change.
At its root, climate change is the result of too much political and economic power being placed in the hands of too few people. Absent those power dynamics, a rational society would act when a majority of global scientists warned of certain catastrophe.
Update (April 1):  Heather Digby Parton slams the bullshit emanating from Dear Leader's mouth.
He's good at being the center of attention. ... The celebrity PR strategy is obvious. After downplaying the virus as no worse than the flu and insisting that life should go back to normal immediately, he's now calling himself a hero for saying no to the people who said it was the flu and wanted life to go back to normal. Anything less than 200,000 dead will be proof of his genius. You have to give him points for chutzpah, if for absolutely nothing else.
Republicans have said for years that we need to run the government like a business because people in the private sector know how to get things done. Unfortunately, the businessman they picked to take this on was the owner of a vanity business dedicated to selling his phony "brand" as a self-made billionaire. When faced with a serious managerial crisis and a demand for real leadership, he didn't have the faintest idea how to do it.
Update (April 6):  Here's a thought: maybe everyone who voted for this fucking asshole has blood on their hands.
Americans braced for what the nation’s top doctor warned Sunday would be "the hardest and saddest week" of their lives while Britain assumed the unwelcome mantle of deadliest coronavirus hot spot in Europe after a record 24-hour jump in deaths that surpassed even hard-hit Italy’s.
There are fights in the White House over unproven treatments and Heather Digby Parton points out how the Administration would rather promote a rightwing agenda than confront the health crisis.
His administration is now entirely staffed by embedded ideologues, fringe players and loyalists who will just keep swinging the wrecking ball, no matter what else is going on. Not even a deadly global pandemic will stop them from fulfilling their pledge to fulfill the president's whims and desires. If they can sneak in some longstanding right-wing extremist goals while nobody's looking, that's just frosting on the cake.
Update (April 12):  I'd like to ask a supporter sometime how they feel to have a president who doesn't give a shit whether you live or die.
In his haste to jumpstart the economy, [Fuckface] posed a frightening scenario to Dr. Anthony Fauci during a task force meeting in the Situation Room. No COVID-19 countermeasures would be taken so that people would quickly become infected, with some recovering to create a protective herd immunity.

"Why don’t we let this wash over the country?" [he] asked, a question others told the [Washington Post] the president has raised repeatedly in the Oval Office.
Fauci realized with surprise that [Dear Leader] was serious. "Mr. President, many people would die."
Update (April 14):  Amanda Marcotte blasts our pitiful excuse for national leadership.
This is what [Dear Leader] clearly wants people to believe: That he has total authority, but absolutely zero responsibility.
The reality is straightforward: [Manbaby], by refusing to take this seriously until it was too late — and also by continuing to undermine efforts to test and treat people — caused this disaster. Many of the people he's now trying to blame, such as governors, journalists and public health officials, are doing the work to clean up the mess he made, though they can only do so much.
And the thanks these people get for trying to save the nation, which could well have the unwelcome but unavoidable consequence of rescuing [this asshole's] chances at re-election, is to hear [Dear Leader] bellow at them about how he's the king of everything and they need to do more bowing and scraping. ... But all those folks will keep on doing their job, even though that might aid the orange monstrosity who is making their lives miserable, because ultimately helping the public is their job. Taking responsibility and getting the job done is what real leaders do, and that's something [Fuckface von Clownstick] will go to his grave without understanding.
Update (April 25):  Marcotte is fed up with the daily propaganda shows.
[W]hat happened on Thursday was exactly what it looked like: A man who thinks he knows everything but actually knows nothing, who only halfway absorbed a presentation about how disinfectant and sunlight can kill the virus. He used this tidbit of information to bullshit wildly, saying stuff that was painfully dumb and dangerous because he is too lazy and stupid to have learned that household cleaners are poisonous.
And Heather Digby Parton notes that Senator Mitch McConnell is all too happy to punish "blue" states in a crisis.
It's unclear exactly how McConnell hopes to thread the needle of only helping red states while leaving the blue states twisting in the wind. But he'll have to find a way, because plenty of red states are going to need the same kind of help. Perhaps he thinks he can hold any further aid hostage until blue-state governors agree to eliminate public employee pensions, but that's a tricky business when his own voters will be hostages as well. But McConnell doesn't gleefully call himself "the Grim Reaper" for nothing. If anyone's willing to risk his own constituents' lives to score political points, it's him.
This upcoming campaign should be one for the books. The incumbent president and his party have decided that their best bet to win over the country during an unprecedented crisis will be to give as much money as possible to big business, force states into bankruptcy and destroy the pensions of cops, firefighters and teachers as the pile of dead bodies gets higher and higher
Update (April 26):  In an interview with Chauncey DeVega, John Gartner argues Dear Leader "is not just incompetent. He is actively engaging in sabotage".
People such as [Fuckface] are malignant-narcissist sadists because they, at some deep level, are driven to cause harm to other people. [His] life is proof of this. He enjoys ripping people off and humiliating people. He does this manically and gleefully. He has lied more than 16,000 times. He threatens people online and elsewhere. I believe that [von Clownstick] is also a sexual sadist, who on some basic level enjoys and is aroused by watching people be afraid of him. In his mind, [he] is creating chaos and instability so that he can feel powerful.
Update (April 28):  Amanda Marcotte explains how Fuckface defends himself by employing the "gaslighting" technique.
Under [Dear Leader's] administration the term has ventured into politics. It's become a way to talk about how [this asshole] and his defenders won't merely tell lies, but will stand by even the dumbest and most obvious lies, holding their ground until the defenders of reality simply give up fighting.

With garden-variety lying, the liar tends to assume the target doesn't know the truth and so can be made to accept the lie as if it were truth. Gaslighting differs dramatically in that the target actually knows what's true. They experienced it, heard it or witnessed what really happened themselves. So what the gaslighter must do is convince the target to reject the evidence of their own eyes and ears.
[W]e should call out these kinds of diversionary tactics, which are meant to force us into a debate about whether our minds are broken and whether we can literally perceive anything at all. That's not the issue. The issue is that our president is a lazy, arrogant moron who went on TV and spewed fatuous bullshit about how maybe doctors should look into shooting up patients with poisonous chemicals because, y'know, it's worth a shot.
Update (May 5):  Bob Cesca reminds us there's only one thing Dear Leader cares about.
[T]he most awful aspect of this latest display of convulsive ineptitude is that he's not just making things worse for himself, he's making things worse for everyone else, especially the additional thousands of souls that'll be lost because [Fuckface] is terrified of losing the election.
During this harrowing episode in our national history, we're faced with two unprecedented calamities: an economic crisis and a health care crisis. Each one is being aggravated by a garishly costumed villain in the White House who lacks any interest in a rational, sustainable resolution.
Update (May 6):  Heather Digby Parton says the Administration has decided it's best to "live and let die".
[O]fficials [have] flailed around, unable to perform even the most basic tasks one would expect of the federal government in a disaster, while frantically running in circles trying to look as if they were doing something. Now, since they cannot do the job, they have apparently decided to let the virus "wash over the country" as [Dear Leader] wanted to do from the beginning. If some governors can manage to mitigate the worst of it in their states, good for them. The president has gone back to his full-time job of running for re-election.
"Kill your co-workers, friends and family to save the American way of life!" doesn't sound like a winning campaign slogan to me. But what do I know?
Update (July 28):  Public health experts were discussing COVID-19's potential impact back in January.