Sad But True
#truth
At the Risk of Endangering My Own Karma…
…I'm not going to voice what I hope happens to everyone in that crowd. But then, I don't think I have to, do I?
This is what a cult looks like. They view everything through the lens of whether it's good or bad for @realDonaldTrump, instead of whether it's a good idea, a bad idea, or just plain insane. They reject facts & believe #COVID19 is a hoax. And they are likely spreading the virus. https://t.co/wvJaaJ1oJ5
— Ted Lieu (@tedlieu) May 5, 2020
Mask for Mask
While getting supplies at Safeway yesterday and noticing that only about half the people there were wearing face masks, I said to Ben, "You know how to get everyone wearing masks? Convince them it's sexy."
ESPECIALLY gay men. Make it the new look and they'll mask up faster than a restroom hookup the basement of the Union Square Nieman-Marcus in 1992. (Oddly specific, I know, but just run with it, okay?)
Our next door neighbor/landlord made a couple of masks for us, and in addition I ordered several additional cute and sexy ones for the two of us last week, as I suspect masking up in public is going to become expected—if not required—especially if there's a second or third surge in Coronavirus cases (as there undoubtedly will be because of the premature "opening" of the states) as the year progresses.
If I am forced to return to work sooner than what I feel is reasonable and prudent based on facts, not the bloviating gibberish coming out of the White House, I have already notified my supervisors that I will be masking and gloving up the entire time I am back in the workplace. They were all on board with that and said they'd be doing the same. While the gloves will protect you against the virus, the mask really doesn't, but it does help lessen the chance you'll infect someone else and it's a good, constant reminder not to touch your face.
Those same supervisors have already let us know that regardless of what the state decrees as "open," we are going to ease back in, probably going to a rotating schedule where we're one or two days in the office and the remainder working from home. While there are some things we do that require a physical presence on site, we've proven that we can do the majority of our work from home, so why not integrate that into a new work paradigm?
Geek Humor in the Age of COVID
Maybe This Will Help Put Those Numbers in Perspective
I Know…
…this is going to be a very unpopular opinion for bleeding heart liberals like myself, but after making a trip to the local Target for groceries today, I'm beginning to think that maybe the herd needs to be culled and humanity needs a purge after all.
Except for the store employees, myself and a very few others, no one was wearing masks. No one (including Target employees, who seem to insist on stocking the shelves when the store is busiest and blocking aisles in the process) was observing the 6-foot rule. I tried, but it seemed no matter where I stopped to look at my list or answer a text, some yahoo was standing next to me within a matter of seconds. And people were touching everything.
I asked three different employees the location of a particular item. I got three different responses, all incorrect. It was only when I opened up the Target app on my phone and searched myself did I find what I was looking for.
Like last weekend, the amount of Saturday traffic was near normal, indicating the people are not staying home except for essential trips out of the house. And it seems that during the four (six?) weeks of stay-at-home orders, most of the population has forgotten how to fucking drive.
If it takes a pandemic to rid the species of the willfully ignorant, then so be it. Let them congregate in their churches. Let them gather together on statehouse steps and scream that businesses be reopened. Hell, let Trump's lickspittle Republican governors open their states and ensure that when a second wave of Corona hits in October, it will further reduce the number of the Orange Baboon's voters; his "very fine people."
1, 2, 4, 5, 7
Too Cute
For fans of Good Omens.
A Gentle Reminder
If you must leave your home to go shopping, grab a coffee, pick up meds, or just because you're going stir-crazy, please do it responsibly. Wear a mask. If you're putting gas in your car, carry wipes or gloves in your trunk and wipe down those germ-infested filler handles before you touch them. If cabin fever has set in and you need to take a road trip (a highly-recommended cure, BTW), minimize your exposure to other people, and if you do need to come in contact with your fellow humans, wear a mask and practice the six-foot rule.
Look, this ain't rocket science, and I realize it sucks for everyone involved, but since the the government's (i.e. Trump's) response to this pandemic has been such a monumental clusterfuck, a few weeks—or a couple months—of isolation to prevent this virus from killing even more of the population is worth it.
And I realize this is coming from a position of white, thankfully-still-employed privilege. All this Is annoying for Ben and I; staying at home is a manageable inconvenience—but I can't even imagine the level of stress that anyone who isn't in that position is experiencing right now and my heart goes out to them.
Let Me Try and Make This Simple for You
Submitted Without Comment
Freedumb!
Quote of the Day
Nothing could be worse than a return to normality. Historically, pandemics have forced humans to break with the past and imagine their world anew. This one is no different. It is a portal, a gateway between one world and the next.
We can choose to walk through it, dragging the carcasses of our prejudice and hatred, our avarice, our data banks and dead ideas, our dead rivers and smoky skies behind us. Or we can walk through lightly, with little luggage, ready to imagine another world, and ready to fight for it." ~ Arundhati Roy
She gets it. And it makes my heart flutter.
Finding Solace in Uncertainty
I've been meaning to write this for several days but all my ideas hadn't really jelled yet. I'm not sure they're even all there now, but the graphic above is a definite jumping off point.
As I stated above, this pandemic isn't just some blip; it's the catalyst that is bringing about a fundamental change in the human society functions. I mean, let's face it: we've all known for some time now that things (and by "things" I mean pretty much every aspect of our human existence on this planet) have been broken. It's something that personally I have been unable to specially identify, but more of a feeling that things were not right. It felt almost as if we'd slipped into some other reality. This has been especially prevalent these past three years, and the phrase, "This planet needs an enema!" has graced my lips more than once.
Along the same lines, as I wrote a little more than a month ago, I've often joked that someone needed to find the planetary reset button and push it. Now I'm thinking, "Well asshole, you got what you wanted. It's been pushed. What now?"
It's hard to provide an answer for that question, being as we are unfortunately I fear, in the very early days of the actual transition. But fifty, a hundred years from now, people will be able to look back and see this for what it was and say, "Yes, this is the point that x-happened" with a clarity we presently lack.
And yet—despite recent mood swings that have caught me unawares—I fundamentally remain an optimist, and the optimist in me is clinging to the belief that this period is what sends human civilization on a path that eventually leads to the future Gene Roddenberry visualized fifty years ago. Maybe it won't be a nuclear war that sends us to the stars; perhaps it will be a global pandemic that allows us to reorder our priorities and set things right for all the residents of this tiny rock.
San Francisco Had the 1918 Flu Under Control, and Then It Lifted Restrictions
History repeating…
From NBC News:
When the clock struck noon, the masks came off.
It was Nov. 21, 1918, and San Francisco residents gathered in the streets to celebrate not only the recent end of World War I and the Allies' victory, but also the end of an onerous ordinance that shut down the city and required all residents and visitors to wear face coverings in public to stop the spread of the so-called Spanish flu.
A blaring whistle alerted gratified residents across the city and, as the San Francisco Chronicle reported at the time, "the sidewalks and runnels were strewn with the relics of a torturous month," despite warnings from the health department to maintain face coverings. As celebrations continued and residents flocked to theaters, restaurants and other public spaces soon thereafter, city officials would soon learn their problems were far from over.
Now, amid the coronavirus pandemic, as President Donald Trump urges the reopening of the country and some states, such as Georgia, move to resume normal business even as new cases emerge, how officials acted during the 1918 flu pandemic, specifically in cities such as San Francisco, offers a cautionary tale about the dangers of doing so too soon.
Alex Navarro, the assistant director of the Center for the History of Medicine at the University of Michigan, which detailed historical accounts of the 1918-19 flu pandemic in 43 cities, told NBC News in a phone interview that officials often acted quickly at the time but restrictions were eased to varying degrees.
"There was a lot of pressure in pretty much all of these American cities to reopen," said Navarro, whose research was done in conjunction with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "When they removed those restrictions too soon, then many cities saw a resurgence in cases."
The center's research found that cities that used "early, sustained and layered" practices such as social distancing, closing public events and stay-at-home orders "fared better than those that did not."
'A lot of stock in masks'
Just two months earlier, in September, the first case of the so-called Spanish flu was identified in San Francisco and city health officials sprung into action.
Dr. William C. Hassler, the city's health officer, ordered the local man who apparently brought the disease to the city after a trip to Chicago into quarantine to stop the disease from finding another human host, according to the center's research of reported accounts.
But it was too late as the virus had already begun to make its way through the city. By mid-October, the cases jumped from 169 to 2,000 in just one week. Later that month, Mayor James Rolph put in place social distancing practices and met with Hassler, other health officials, local business owners as well as officials from the federal government to discuss a plan to close the city.
Some officials demurred at the idea, worried about damage to the city's economy and the risk of causing public panic. Eventually, on Oct. 18, the city voted to shut down "all places of public amusement."
City officials also strongly advocated for face coverings, which were at first optional and soon required by a mayoral order — the country's first at the time, Navarro said.
"They were the one city that put a lot of stock in masks," he said.
With the pandemic still raging across the globe during World War I, the mask also became a symbol of "wartime patriotism."
"The man or woman or child who will not wear a mask now is a dangerous slacker," a public service announcement from the American Red Cross said at the time, according to Navarro's research.
That, however, did not stop people from defying the order — 110 people were arrested and given a $5 fine in one day in October shortly after the measure went into place, improperly wearing a mask or not wearing one entirely, according to the center's research. Over time, the jails were overcrowded with people failing to adhere to the rules. However, most cases were later dismissed.
By the end of October, there were 20,000 cases and more than 1,000 deaths. However, as the days went on, the city saw a dip in newly reported cases, which prompted officials to begin to reopen the city and rescind the mask order. By the end of November, officials believed the city had stabilized.
ey were flattening that curve'
But three weeks after that celebration of removing their masks, the city saw a dramatic resurgence. Officials at first rejected the idea of reopening the city and suggested residents could voluntarily wear face coverings.
But shortly after the New Year in 1919, the city was hit with 600 new cases in one day, prompting the Board of Supervisors to re-enact the mandatory mask ordinance. Protests against the mandate eventually led to the formation of the Anti-Mask League. The detractors eventually got their way when the order was lifted in February.
San Francisco's ambivalence to quarantine measures ran counter to other U.S. cities, though. Navarro said Los Angeles, for instance, implemented strict social distancing and face coverings about a week before San Francisco did and its measures stayed in place for weeks longer.
Navarro said that many cities often became complacent once they saw a dip in cases, and when a resurgence happens residents often question the public health guidance.
"They were flattening that curve; they just weren't realizing it," Navarro said. "A lot of people thought, 'Well, what did we go through that for? It did have an impact, they just didn't know it."
As Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert, put it in March, "If it looks like you're overreacting, you're probably doing the right thing."
Back during the Spanish flu, San Fransisco's failure to take swift action and the decision to ease restrictions after only a few weeks had huge ramifications. With 45,000 cases and more than 3,000 deaths, the city was reported to have been one of, if not, the hardest-hit big city.
Roughly a century later, the San Francisco Bay Area imposed the nation's first stay-at-home order and other restrictions when coronavirus cases were rapidly growing, placing a spotlight on its pandemic response again. Those aggressive actions are credited with saving lives, avoiding the scale of the tragedy found in New York City.
Mayor London Breed said she took heed of history and implemented an order last week requiring anyone setting foot on the streets of San Francisco, outside their homes, to wear a face covering.
Breed told MSNBC's Chris Hayes in an appearance in mid-April that she has considered the city's history with past pandemics, such as the HIV/AIDS crisis and the Spanish flu when deciding to ease restrictions.
"Just because San Francisco is being praised for flattening the curve, we're not there yet," she said. "And so we cannot let up just because for some reason we believe that we're in a better place."
[Source]
It's Amazing, Isn't It?
Does This Really Surprise Anyone?
I mean really?
Exactly.
Not All Heroes Wear Capes
Yup.
Fuckwits
Fuckwits with firearms
Fuckwits with flags
Fuckwits in pickups with Confederate flags
Gov. Whitmer's order for Michigan citizens to stay home, they said, was tyranny (SPOILER: if you can gather in public and accuse the government of tyranny without fear of arrest, it's not tyranny).
They repeated Ben Franklin's claim that 'security without liberty is called prison' (SPOILER: if you can drive your pickup to Lansing, Michigan, you're not in prison and you have liberty).
They chanted "Lock her up!" and "Keep America Great!" (SPOILER: if your nation was warned a pandemic was coming and didn't bother to prepare for it, your country isn't all that great, and a populace that wants to lock up a governor for trying to mitigate that pandemic isn't particularly great either).
They also gathered to block traffic in front of a hospital. Seriously, during a goddamn pandemic, these fuckwits thought it was cute to block the emergency entrance to a hospital.
Jesus suffering fuck. —gregfallis.com
I Just Can't
Oh Sah-NAP!
#truth
Quote of the Day
When a society laments the loss of an economy more than it laments the loss of human life, it doesn't need a virus. It is already sick."