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Noam Scheiber, Nelson D. Schwartz, Tiffany Hsu: ‘White-Collar Quarantine’ Over Virus Spotlights Class Divide (NYT)
Noam Scheiber, Nelson D. Schwartz, Tiffany Hsu: ‘White-Collar Quarantine’ Over Virus Spotlights Class Divide (NYT)
Child care options, internet access and extra living space leave a gulf between rich and poor in coping with disruptions to school and work. --- Still, a kind of pandemic caste system is rapidly developing: the rich holed up in vacation properties; the middle class marooned at home with restless children; the working class on the front lines of the economy, stretched to the limit by the demands of work and parenting, if there is even work to be had.
·nytimes.com·
Noam Scheiber, Nelson D. Schwartz, Tiffany Hsu: ‘White-Collar Quarantine’ Over Virus Spotlights Class Divide (NYT)
Jess Zimmerman: This Is All My Fault (Electric Literature)
Jess Zimmerman: This Is All My Fault (Electric Literature)
I can't stop thinking about a sci-fi novel where a woman has to choose between personal and global ruin. --- What if I, like Patricia, was at some point unwittingly asked to choose between my own contentment and global peace? If that happened, it’s clear which one I went for, and it’s ultimately no surprise; personal comfort over the greater good is a calculation I make again and again. If the question were posed again explicitly, I don’t even trust myself to choose a different way. I want all this to be over, to be better, for everyone; I want wrongs righted that I didn’t even realize were wrong six years ago, or that I understood were wrong but didn’t really think about because I didn’t have to. But would I give up everything good in my own life? Would I give up my partner, our home together, whatever I’ve made of my career? I want to say yes, but no. In reality, of course, that question is purely academic. I couldn’t fix everything with one grand sacrifice, even if I wanted to. I couldn’t even fix it with a lifetime of smaller ones. Most of the world’s ills are created from the top down, and can only be truly addressed from the top down. We tend to overestimate the role that individual choices can play, partly because that overestimation gives us an opportunity to be self-important or scoldy, but mostly because people like to feel as if it matters what they do. Tip well, call your senators, eat less meat, buy reusable replacements for your single-use papers and plastics; these efforts make us feel helpful, and they are helpful, to a point. At the same time, though, they will always be eclipsed by the inaction of the people who could really make a difference: the policymakers protecting the corporations and the corporations protecting themselves. You can’t flatten that curve on your own. […] I’m not cruel, but I’m privileged and weak, and that’s enough to add up. And so when I think “this is all my fault,” I am wrong in every reasonable way except the one that matters. It would be such a comfort to fully dismiss this self-blame as self-delusion. I obviously did not directly and single-handedly cause a pandemic, or global warming, or Fox News. Trump didn’t get elected because I didn’t knock on enough doors. But he might have gotten elected because everybody didn’t knock on enough doors, and one of those people was me. I stayed home when I should have been canvassing, emailed when I should have been calling, donated $25 when I could have afforded $50, said I would look for a volunteer gig and did not. And I’ve been given chance after chance to reconsider, disaster after disaster that could have shocked me from complacency into sacrifice, and every time I have chosen the easy way, and every time it gets worse. […] The fantasy of being wholly to blame for everything is also a fantasy about being able to make it stop. Most of us will never get that chance—to choose the peaceful timeline or the content one, to make the brave sacrifice that saves the world, to warn the public in time or make a million bucks on insider trading. This is the purview of protagonists and villains. My purview is sitting inside, being more scared than I have a right to be, sending Venmos that will never be enough, watching people die anyway and not ever knowing whether it might otherwise have been just a tiny bit worse.
·electricliterature.com·
Jess Zimmerman: This Is All My Fault (Electric Literature)
Scott Berinato interviewing David Kessler: That Discomfort You’re Feeling Is Grief (Harvard Business Review)
Scott Berinato interviewing David Kessler: That Discomfort You’re Feeling Is Grief (Harvard Business Review)
The coronavirus pandemic has led to a collective loss of normalcy. --- Anticipatory grief is the mind going to the future and imagining the worst. To calm yourself, you want to come into the present. […] Your work is to feel your sadness and fear and anger whether or not someone else is feeling something. Fighting it doesn’t help because your body is producing the feeling. If we allow the feelings to happen, they’ll happen in an orderly way, and it empowers us. Then we’re not victims.
·hbr.org·
Scott Berinato interviewing David Kessler: That Discomfort You’re Feeling Is Grief (Harvard Business Review)
Tricia Wang: You Can Learn Something From The People Of Wuhan (BuzzFeed News)
Tricia Wang: You Can Learn Something From The People Of Wuhan (BuzzFeed News)
Media has focused on the top-down, authoritarian response in Wuhan. But the way ordinary citizens handled the crisis should be replicated across the world. --- Federal and state responses to coronavirus are becoming more organized, but the magnitude of this crisis requires massively sustained bottom-up efforts too. This is why mutual-aid networks, caremongering, local delivery for at-risk populations, and neighborhood slack groups are being activated like wildfire across the US.
·buzzfeednews.com·
Tricia Wang: You Can Learn Something From The People Of Wuhan (BuzzFeed News)
David Roth: America’s Diseased Politics (The New Republic)
David Roth: America’s Diseased Politics (The New Republic)
The Republicans are confronting the coronavirus with nihilism—and the Democrats are responding with impotence. --- Metaphors fail daily: Trump really would sooner risk the lives of a million strangers than do his job, and his party is quite willing to go along with it. In the absence of an opposition party willing and able to point any of that out or call it what it is, the nation is more or less left to take him at his word. Where and when the media takes up the challenge of doing the basic civic work that Democrats can’t or won’t, it lets Trump spin a once-in-a-generation crisis as Another Media Thing. And that renders the whole episode as just another argument to have on television. […] At this moment, erring on the side of saying or doing too little instead of too much would be not just infuriating in the typical Democratic ways but devastating and damning in essential ones: The crystalized threat presented by this crisis and this moment requires a clear and commensurate response in both words and deeds. Strategically lying low or working the angles—such as gaming the outcomes within the denser stretches of mundane appropriations bills—doesn’t work terribly well in comparatively normal circumstances. But the Democrats’ usual tactics are terrifyingly insufficient when they’re deployed in response to business interests and reactionary politicians opting into a holocaust in the best interests of a market. It is ghoulish in the most contemporary of ways that this sort of thing is even up for debate, but it’s most important to see the effort to counter it as what it is: not a political campaign but an existential one, and so not the sort of thing that you get to do twice.
·newrepublic.com·
David Roth: America’s Diseased Politics (The New Republic)
Siva Vaidhyanathan: The economy v our lives? It's a false choice – and a deeply stupid one (The Guardian)
Siva Vaidhyanathan: The economy v our lives? It's a false choice – and a deeply stupid one (The Guardian)
Calls to reopen America have disturbing intellectual roots. And the millions of deaths that could ensue would fuel a depression beyond our imagination. --- Economism is a belief system that leads people to believe that everything can be simplified to models and curves, and that it’s possible to count and maximize utility in every circumstance. What economism misses includes complexity, historical contingency and the profound, uncountable power of human emotion. […] Anywhere in the world, positing this problem as a tradeoff between the economic interests of the young and the lifespan of the old is a terrible error. As the US Centers for Disease Control explains, those vulnerable to serious or fatal cases of the infection include not just the elderly, but anyone who is obese, diabetic, has high blood pressure, is HIV-positive, has undergone cancer treatment, suffers from asthma or smokes. Those factors are more common among poorer Americans as well as older Americans. And poor Americans occupy all age ranges.
·theguardian.com·
Siva Vaidhyanathan: The economy v our lives? It's a false choice – and a deeply stupid one (The Guardian)
Joe Pinsker: The Four Possible Timelines for Life Returning to Normal (The Atlantic)
Joe Pinsker: The Four Possible Timelines for Life Returning to Normal (The Atlantic)
The coronavirus outbreak may last for a year or two, but some elements of pre-pandemic life will likely be won back in the meantime. --- Come summer, Americans might get restaurants but no music festivals, offices but no crowded beaches, bars with spaced-out seating. Projecting when each facet of daily life will be restored would be easier if public-health authorities had an omniscient view of who is infected, who has recovered and become immune, and who is still susceptible—this is the information that would emerge from widespread testing, which the United States is terribly behind on deploying. […] “Once the [current] wave is dealt with, then some things might relax—a little,” Hanage said. More out-of-the-house working and socializing might take place, but this would still be a world with rigorous hand-washing, well-smothered sneezing, and generous amounts of hand sanitizer (and suspicion of anyone who disregards these public-health norms). In all likelihood, people who can work remotely or order food via delivery would still do so instead of leaving the house.
·theatlantic.com·
Joe Pinsker: The Four Possible Timelines for Life Returning to Normal (The Atlantic)
COVID-19 Tracker
COVID-19 Tracker
COVID-19 tracker generates summary visualizations of COVID-19 testing results in the US to help inform and communicate the current situation. All testing data are retrieved in real time from the COVID Tracking Project. Their database is updated daily by 5 PM EST, and so are the plots on this page. Resident population of the US in 2019 by state was obtained from Statista.
·khuang.io·
COVID-19 Tracker
The Service Relief Project
The Service Relief Project
Use these instructions to get up and running with helping your community! Kick off your city's relief efforts as we all learn to cope with COVID-19 with this starter powered by Gatsby, Airtable, and community efforts. This project is aims to make it as easy as possible to launch and manage an index of resources in your city during the COVID-19 pandemic.
·servicerelief.us·
The Service Relief Project
91-DIVOC
91-DIVOC
An interactive visualization of the exponential spread of COVID-19. --- A few interesting bits I found interesting to explore: In nearly every country in the world, when the virus reaches 100 people the number of cases begins to increase by 35% daily. • At that rate, a country would reach 1,000,000 cases just 31 days after reaching 100 cases. • The curve flattens with social distancing -- check out Japan, South Korea, and China over time. There are two different ways to view the exact same data: • The logarithmic scale shows a great comparison of the magnitude of growth between countries, but less of the human impact. • The linear scale shows the real human impact -- a growth twice the size is twice the number of real people infected.
·91-divoc.com·
91-DIVOC
While at Home
While at Home
Stay up to date on tools, resources, and supports made necessary during this time. #WhileAtHome is a clearinghouse for credible information and action steps.
·whileathome.org·
While at Home
Max Böck: Emergency Website Kit
Max Böck: Emergency Website Kit
In cases of emergency, many organizations need a quick way to publish critical information. But existing (CMS) websites are often unable to handle sudden spikes in traffic. Like so many others, I’m currently in voluntary quarantine at home - and I used some time this weekend to put a small boilerplate together for this exact usecase. Here’s the main idea: • generate a static site with Eleventy • minimal markup, inlined CSS • aim to transmit everything in the first connection roundtrip (~14KB) • progressively enable offline-support w/ Service Worker • set up Netlify CMS for easy content editing • one-click deployment via Netlify The site contains only the bare minimum - no webfonts, no tracking, no unnecessary images. The entire thing should fit in a single HTTP request. It’s basically just a small, ultra-lean blog focused on maximum resilience and accessibility. The Service Worker takes it a step further from there so if you’ve visited the site once, the information is still accessible even if you lose network coverage. The end result is just a set of static files that can be easily hosted on cloud infrastructure and put on a CDN. Netlify does this out of the box, but other providers or privately owned servers are possible as well.
·mxb.dev·
Max Böck: Emergency Website Kit
Aaron E. Carroll and Ashish Jha: This Is How We Can Beat the Coronavirus (The Atlantic)
Aaron E. Carroll and Ashish Jha: This Is How We Can Beat the Coronavirus (The Atlantic)
Mitigation can buy us time, but only suppression can get us to where we need to be. --- All of the difficult actions we are taking now to flatten the curve aren’t just intended to slow the rate of infection to levels the health-care system can manage. They’re also meant to buy us time. They give us the space to create what we need to make a real difference. […] Some Americans are in denial, and others are feeling despair. Both sentiments are understandable. We all have a choice to make. We can look at the coming fire and let it burn. We can hunker down, and hope to wait it out—or we can work together to get through it with as little damage as possible. This country has faced massive threats before and risen to the challenge; we can do it again. We just need to decide to make it happen. […] All of the difficult actions we are taking now to flatten the curve aren’t just intended to slow the rate of infection to levels the health-care system can manage. They’re also meant to buy us time. They give us the space to create what we need to make a real difference.
·theatlantic.com·
Aaron E. Carroll and Ashish Jha: This Is How We Can Beat the Coronavirus (The Atlantic)
Caroline Chen: How Many Americans Are Really Infected With the Coronavirus? (ProPublica)
Caroline Chen: How Many Americans Are Really Infected With the Coronavirus? (ProPublica)
Health care reporter Caroline Chen dug into the projections to learn what to make of them. Forecasts are fuzzy, but the takeaway is clear: Stay home. --- Trying to get clarity on exactly how many people are infected in your city shouldn’t be your goal, if you’re a regular member of the public. Rivers and Majumder agreed on this: There’s no difference in what action you need to take, whether the models say there will be 10,000 or 20,000 infections in your state within a certain number of days or weeks. There isn’t a single expert I’ve talked to who said case counts won’t continue to soar. There are two reasons for this: As testing becomes more available, cases that already exist will be revealed. Secondly, of course, the virus is continuing to spread. The trends are crystal clear, and the call to action is indisputable. ”If your state has reported community transmission, the message is the same no matter the number of cases: engage in social distancing immediately,” Majumder said.
·propublica.org·
Caroline Chen: How Many Americans Are Really Infected With the Coronavirus? (ProPublica)
David Roberts: The moral logic of coronavirus (Vox)
David Roberts: The moral logic of coronavirus (Vox)
Why helping people victimized by forces outside their control is a good idea. --- The only villain is an impersonal natural force; everyone with a face is a victim, an Us to be tended. In the face of a virus, only the conventionally feminine approach of mutual care is useful. That leaves the lens through which the authoritarian sees the world (domination and submission) blind, and the tools available to him (scapegoating, exclusion, retribution, violence) impotent. There is no one to punish, no one to make suffer. Without that, the authoritarian is scarcely able to process the threat as a threat at all. A threat without an Other is like a wavelength of light that is invisible to him. […] Trump, his administration, and his coalition are in politics to help friends and destroy enemies. All they know is zero-sum competition, domination, and submission — and with no one to dominate, no one upon whom they can impose ritual cruelty to appease the bloodlust of their base, they are ... adrift. They simply aren’t confident, or competent, in expressing, organizing, and administering care. Many thousands of lives will likely be lost as a result. […] All across America, millions of people live in precarity, one step ahead of financial ruin, with lives that can be upended overnight by a health or employment twist entirely outside of their control. Metaphorically speaking, this country is full of viruses — poverty, poor health care, inequality, systemic discrimination, loneliness, and isolation — that infect innocent victims every day by the thousands. Those victims deserve care as well, and not churlish, moralistic, “means-tested” care. Just care, enough to get by and to live a life of dignity.
·vox.com·
David Roberts: The moral logic of coronavirus (Vox)
Leslie Goldman: The rules of social distancing (Vox)
Leslie Goldman: The rules of social distancing (Vox)
A lot has changed since this went out, with more and more areas of the country being put on shelter-in-place orders, but this is helpful nonetheless. Staying home will stem the coronavirus outbreak, but what if you’re healthy — and bored? Is it ethical to go to the gym, get your hair done, or order delivery?
·vox.com·
Leslie Goldman: The rules of social distancing (Vox)
Coronavirus Checker
Coronavirus Checker
Check your risk for COVID-19 based on best clinical practices, CDC guidelines, illness severity and risk factors like age and pre-existing conditions.
·c19check.com·
Coronavirus Checker
Thread by @FaithNaff: THREAD: Let's talk about morality and the "job" of being a landlord. There's been a lot of talk during this COVID-19 situation about rent freezes.
Thread by @FaithNaff: THREAD: Let's talk about morality and the "job" of being a landlord. There's been a lot of talk during this COVID-19 situation about rent freezes.
Having a thing and making someone pay you to use that thing does not in-and-of-itself constitute a job. […] No human being will ever go a day in their life not needing shelter. At no point do you not need a place to live. The need for shelter in a specific area may be temporary, as in the case with hotels, but we always have to have somewhere to call home.
·threadreaderapp.com·
Thread by @FaithNaff: THREAD: Let's talk about morality and the "job" of being a landlord. There's been a lot of talk during this COVID-19 situation about rent freezes.
Drew Millard: Time for some completely unhelpful game theory (The Outline)
Drew Millard: Time for some completely unhelpful game theory (The Outline)
Historical precedents and doomsday projections serve their purpose, but focusing on the worst-case scenario is a great way to make yourself sick with anxiety right now. --- Reading about the worst-case scenarios at a time like this is about as helpful as licking the handle of a shopping cart. […] I’m not saying that we should not be concerned about coronavirus. We most undoubtedly should be. But at a time like this, worst-case scenarios are not your friend, unless you like being friends with things that give you nightmares. It can be easy to catastrophize, to let your mind wander into doom and gloom, to feel like you have no control over events shaping your life, when you’re stuck inside seemingly watching the world crumble around you. It’s important to remember, though, that just as the coronavirus has enjoyed such a rapid spread because we live in such a physically connected world, our digitally connected world may just mitigate it. […] Just stay inside, stay safe, and stay away from that really scary coronavirus story, and the next one, and the one after that.
·theoutline.com·
Drew Millard: Time for some completely unhelpful game theory (The Outline)
Miranda Bryant: Is there a right way to worry about coronavirus? And other mental health tips (The Guardian)
Miranda Bryant: Is there a right way to worry about coronavirus? And other mental health tips (The Guardian)
The coronavirus is taking a toll on our mental and our physical health. So how do we make sense of it? We asked some experts. --- 1. Acknowledge your anxiety. First, she recommends acknowledging that anxiety, which is a normal evolutionary reaction to a perceived danger or threat. 2. Schedule worrying. The Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies (ABCT) says setting a daily half-hour “worry period” at the same time and place helps to stay in the present moment the rest of the day. During the allotted slot it recommends “distinguishing between worries over which you have little or no control, and worries about problems you can influence.” 3. Reframe the situation. You are not “stuck inside”. No, you are indulging in a long-awaited opportunity to slow down, focus on yourself and your home. 4. Set quarantine rituals. This could entail a walk first thing in the morning, starting a journal, or speaking to a family member every morning on FaceTime. 5. Exercise. 6. Small acts of altruism. Helping others can give you a sense of purpose and control. Do you have an elderly or sick neighbor you can offer your services to? 7. Physical distancing, not social distancing. It goes without saying, but “loneliness is bad for humans,” says Duckworth. Have a coffee over FaceTime. Call your parents or kids every day. While in some ways coronavirus is isolating, Bhatia says it is worth remembering that it’s a shared global experience. “Everybody’s affected to different degrees, but the bottom line is that everybody’s in it together, and scientists all over the world are trying to work on it together to find a solution quickly.”
·theguardian.com·
Miranda Bryant: Is there a right way to worry about coronavirus? And other mental health tips (The Guardian)
Philip Sherburne: How Coronavirus Is Bringing the Global Club Scene to a Standstill (Pitchfork)
Philip Sherburne: How Coronavirus Is Bringing the Global Club Scene to a Standstill (Pitchfork)
Electronic artists and agents talk about the potentially catastrophic ramifications of the current health crisis on the world of dance music. --- But as club cancelations and postponements pile up, DJs and electronic musicians are left facing the prospect of a month or more without earnings. And a global patchwork of measures—the UK has resisted banning large events, for instance, while San Francisco has temporarily prohibited all non-essential gatherings of 100 or more—means that many DJs are still uncertain as to which events they can still expect to play.
·pitchfork.com·
Philip Sherburne: How Coronavirus Is Bringing the Global Club Scene to a Standstill (Pitchfork)
Meghan McCarron: As Restaurants Go, So Goes Everything Else (Eater)
Meghan McCarron: As Restaurants Go, So Goes Everything Else (Eater)
To fight the pandemic, restaurants are shuttering across America with no aid in sight. What will happen to the rest of us? --- The boldest action on the parts of government includes eviction bans and more funding for paid sick leave and relaxed liquor regulations. What do these regulations offer an undocumented dishwasher who just got laid off, beyond the hope that his landlord might not demand four months’ back rent in due time? What do they offer business owners trying to keep their employees employed, beyond hope for a fraction of the revenue needed to pay for rent, supplies, and staff? Restaurants are suffering from this pandemic because they’re the center of communal life in America, but the awful cascade of consequences lays bare how broken American life has become. American restaurant culture is a glorious public-works project, like a train station or a bridge, built during more prosperous times; its rusting supports and cracked concrete would have been tough but possible to fix oh, any time, for decades. But no one did. And now, the earthquake has come. Without major and unprecedented government intervention and responsible community support, independent food culture could go the way of the neighborhood pharmacy and department store in the wake of this pandemic. In high-rent neighborhoods in American cities, the transition is already underway, with high-rent blight stuffing neighborhoods with chains, fancy and otherwise. And as restaurants go, so will independent stores of all kinds, whether it’s repair shops or clothing stores or bookstores like the one I worked in, which are now struggling to survive and temporarily laying off staff. Any retail that’s not a grocery store is in serious danger. In the aftermath of the Great Shuttering, without help, the only operators with capital to reopen will be the same massive corporations whose irresponsible treatment of their workers is threatening to worsen the outbreak.
·eater.com·
Meghan McCarron: As Restaurants Go, So Goes Everything Else (Eater)
Grant Sanderson (3blue1brown): Exponential growth and epidemics
Grant Sanderson (3blue1brown): Exponential growth and epidemics
While the intent here is to give a lesson on exponential and logistic growth as general phenomena, with epidemics as a timely case study, there are a few notes worth adding when it comes to epidemics themselves. Probably the most important, mentioned only as a small on-screen note, is that these models should account for the amount of time someone with the virus remains infectious. Those who recover (or die) are no longer able to spread it, and so don't factor into the growth equation. The faster the growth, the less this matters, since at each point on the curve most people with the virus will have only contracted it recently, but especially in the long run or with slower growth, any realistic model has to consider this. The other factor, which I was hesitant to even get into here, is the extent to which reported cases reflect real cases. Generalizing away from epidemics, though, the key upshot is to be aware of phenomena where the rate of growth is proportional to the size of the thing growing. Compound interest, technological progress, population growth, and many other things fit this pattern, and it's shocking how bad our intuitions can be at recognizing what it means.
·youtube.com·
Grant Sanderson (3blue1brown): Exponential growth and epidemics
Covid Childcare Co-op Calculator
Covid Childcare Co-op Calculator
The CCCC is a simple tool that allows groups of parents and other caregivers to automatically generate a fairly distributed cooperative childcare schedule. Don’t miss the explainer, which explains why collective childcare is vital even in times of social distancing: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1UmfWCSgtZPR6o3B1lfsqi51bADjnDvMrDLg1M2fTIt4/mobilebasic
·childcarecoop.org·
Covid Childcare Co-op Calculator