Interesting stuff

Corona-related

  1. Skies over quarantined cities are remarkably clean. Car sales are imploding. Coincidence?
  2. This obscenity-laden analysis of US government failure is dead right.
  3. Nobody predicted C-19 (obvious if you look at the market’s mid-Feb drop)
  4. When assholes embrace social distancing (comedy)
  5. A Marxist hopes workers might rebel against corona-capitalists
  6. The Amish have a better health care system
  7. How BoJo’s government failed to cope with Corona

Non-corona

  1. The transition to clean energy will be neither clean nor easy
  2. China, proving pessimists right, has taken the “low road” in holding back Mekong water for itself. Food security is falling for downstream countries.
  3. Truck pirates are a thing
  4. Listen to this podcast for the China discussion, not the C-19 angles

H/T to NN

Interesting stuff

Corona-related

  1. Department of Ignorance: Arsonists torch cellular towers in NL. They think 5G spreads C-19. NL has not implemented 5G.
  2. Scientists still don’t know if recovered C-19 patients are immune
  3. Female leaders are doing well at protecting their people from C-19
  4. Some clues about what the “1.5 meter economy’ will look like
  5. One American worries “We are destroying the working class to save the elderly,” and American hospitals — accustomed to profiting from “excessive/elective” procedures — are going broke, but the cost of C-19 deaths (based on the value of lost lives) is headed toward $10 trillion.
  6. Are trolls (the same ones that interfered with elections) “helping” Americans die from C-19? Probably… 

Non-Corona (ratio is tipping… a good sign or just bored with C-19?)

  1. Bill Nordhaus, whom I have criticized for missing the boat on carbon pricing, makes a useful proposal on “carbon clubs” as a means of enforcing de-carbonization.
  2. Practice Better writing with common easy words
  3. James Burke on how “scattered” thinking creates new ideas and solutions
  4. “Why the War on Physical Cash Is a War on Freedom

H/T to LS and BW

Interesting stuff

Corona-related (It’s all corona-related!)

  1. This funny video sums up my online teaching nightmares
  2. The Corona-crisis is hitting supply and demand, which is why we’re headed for a recession and perhaps a depression.
  3. How the food supply chain is (not) dealing with corona-hoarding (“hamstering” in the Netherlands 😉
  4. I started Station 11 on a friend’s recommendation before coronavirus brought “global pandemic” the rest of the world’s attention. It’s a good book (no spoilers) for post-pandemic thinking. Here’s a great interview with its author.
  5. Bats’ amazing immune systems make them dangerous to us
  6. Update from Beijing
  7. 30 predictions on how corona will change the world
  8. How many “excess deaths” are statistics missing?
  9. Good sense on coronaviruses and pandemics from an epidemiologist 
  10. Time for social safety net reform in the US? A few ideas.
  11. Post c-19 panic, incumbents will try to fool us into returning to the Old Normal of buying, stressing and consuming the planet. Don’t accept the Old Normal. Time for a new status quo.

H/T to RP

Treating a mild case of C-19

I don’t normally forward copy-pastas, but this makes sense (and has, reportedly, been checked by another nurse

“CORONA Common Sense

Since they are calling on Respiratory Therapist to help fight the Coronavirus, and I am a retired one, too old to work in a hospital setting, I’m going to share some common sense wisdom with those that have the virus and are trying to stay home. If my advice is followed as given, you will improve your chances of not ending up in the hospital on a ventilator. This applies to the otherwise generally healthy population, so use discretion.

1. Only high temperatures kill a virus, so let your fever run high. Tylenol will bring your fever down allowing the virus to live longer. They are saying that Ibuprofen, Advil, Aleve, Motrin, etc. will actually exacerbate the virus. Use common sense and don’t let a fever go over 103 (39C), if you got the guts. If it gets higher than that, take your Tylenol, not Ibuprofen or Advil ( or any type of anti-inflammatory drugs ) to keep it regulated. It helps to keep your house warm and cover up with blankets so your body does not have to work so hard to generate the heat. It usually takes about 3 days of this to break the fever.

2. The body is going to dehydrate with the elevated temperature, so you must rehydrate yourself regulaly, whether you like it or not. Gatorade with real sugar, or pedialyte with real sugar for kids works well. Why the sugar? Sugar will give your body back the energy it is using up to create the fever. The electrolytes and fluid you are losing will also be replenished by the Gatorade. If you don’t do this and end up in the hospital they will start an IV and give you D5W ( sugar water ) and normal saline to replenish electrolytes. Gatorade is much cheaper, pain free, and comes in an assortment of flavors.

3. You must keep your lungs moist. This is best done by taking long steamy showers on a regular basis. If you’re wheezing or congested, use a real minty toothpaste and brush your teeth while taking the steamy shower and deep breaths through your mouth. This will provide some bronchial dialation and help loosen the phlegm. Force yourself to cough into a wet wash cloth pressed firmly over your mouth and nose, which will cause greater pressure in your lungs forcing them to expand more and break loose more of the congestion.

4. Eat healthy and regularly. You’ve got to keep your strength up.

5. Once the fever breaks, start moving around to get the body back in shape and blood circulating.

6. Deep breathe on a regular basis, even when it hurts. If you don’t, it becomes easy to develope pneumonia. Pursed lip breathing really helps. That’s breathing in deep and slow, then exhaling through tight lips as if you’re blowing out a candle. Blow until you have completely emptied your lungs and you will be able to breathe in an even deeper breath. This helps keep lungs expanded as well as increase your oxygen level.

7. Remember that every medication you take is merely relieving the symptoms, not making you well.

8. If you’re still not improving, then go to the ER.

Interesting stuff

Coronavirus

  1. Why you should wear a mask (assuming you can get one!)
  2. Good news: Air pollution is dropping (almost as fast as economic activity)
  3. Be careful what you wish for: Amsterdam tourism crashes, but the streets are cleaner. Will the future bring “sustainable” tourism or a return of unruly mobs?
  4. Americans seem to understand C-19 risks thorough their political beliefs (Rs are taking more risks).. That’s charming but C19 will kill Republicans, Democrats and independents.
  5. Will Peru’s politicians use C-19 to grab power? (Orban already did.)
  6. The Netherlands needs to do more to really be food secure.
  7. Will the quarantine help us reconsider our lives?

Non-Corona

  1. A nice proposal for graduated income taxes that complements my idea for taxing wealth (via property taxes)
  2. National Geographic looks at the bad news/good news futures of the Earth fifty years after Earth Day. Fun fact: No advertisers for the “bad news” side. For the good news side, the advertisers are Dow chemical and the Alliance to Stop Plastic Waste (sponsored by plastic manufacturers).
  3. A really good discussion of the “three languages of politics” that was recorded before C-19 hit. Then, and now, it’s important to consider the different “life perspectives” of conservatives, progressives and liberals.

Interesting stuff

Coronavirus

  1. Poor countries will have a hard time with C19
  2. Sanity in the time of corona
  3. Should we trust experts or politicians? Some tradeoffs
  4. The US faces the worst case of coronavirus. How will it end?
  5. What do infection and death statistics mean in the Netherlands?
  6. Mr Money Moustache says hold steady on your investments
  7. Silicon Valley “techbros” shorten the facemask supply chain

Non-Corona

  1. One man embodies the 52/48% reality of Brexit
  2. How land regulation makes housing unaffordable
  3. Some creative perspectives on legal rights

Interesting stuff

  1. A frenetic, on point, essay on doing GOOD C-19 research and the value of different perspectives in seeking answers
  2. C-19 will scar Millennials (part 2 of their financial crisis scar) in the same way as the Depression hit Boomers’ parents. Government action and personal safety will never be the same.
  3. My risk is not your risk, which is not social risk. When making big decisions (close the borders, spend $trillions, triage who dies), these differences are important.
  4. The Russians are C-19 immune, for obvious reasons
  5. Money vs public health, a look back on cholera
  6. Facemasks protect others from you but may not protect you from others
  7. The fresh-food supply of the US could collapse if farmworkers get C-19. Related: NPR podcast on the same topic.
  8. How can a small, open economy like the Netherlands protect itself from trade and food supply disruptions?
  9. This op/ed has some good advice on “smart quarantine” (let less-vulnerable people out to work; test lots of people; isolate vulnerable populations)

Non-coronavirus links!

  1. Advertisers should pay an escalating tax to discourage mass-manipulation

H/T to DS and RD

Interesting stuff (all C-19 related)

  1. Watch this 30 second video on Trump’s denial of C-19’s exponential growth. Then decide who should lead the United States (now #1 in the world for C-19 cases… and soon to be #1 in deaths). Hopefully #maga stands for Many Americans Getting Angry.
  2. Explaining out 3-tier immune systems. Related: Age/vulnerability advice on protecting yourself from C-19.
  3. “Sudden homeschooling” is testing parental choices
  4. We Live in Zoom Now
  5. C-19: Denmark does the right thing (securing jobs, etc.), unlike the US, where a world-famous epidemiologist predicts damages and gives this opinion on Trump: “Speaking as a public health person, this is the most irresponsible act of an elected official that I’ve ever witnessed in my lifetime.”
  6. Plague economics from 1660 (lots of parallels to C-19)
  7. The view on C-19 from 2022.
  8. C-19 and social collapse
  9. My colleagues on Dutch failures to communicate clearly on C-19
  10. A good summary of Trump’s diplomatic failures, and (related) why trust in leadership (something Trump lacks) is an essential for fighting C-19.

h/t to GH

Interesting stuff

Non-Corona related:

  1. “Corporate persons” are more diverse than just firms
  2. This podcast on uncertainty didn’t change my mind as much as express, with authority and eloquence, the real problems with economists assuming they know probabilities for uncertain events. Related: Americans’ knowledge of science varies a LOT by education and race but NOT political party.
  3. A broken backpack strap… and the circular economy. Related: Targeted advertising is bad for you
  4. How pressure cookers actually work. Semi-related: Food safety and coronavirus

Corona-related:

  1. Freakonomics: how C-19 affects the economy and teaching
  2. C-19 is triggering nostalgia for filthy local hangouts
  3. Economists on C-19: Tyler  & Russ and supply chain disruptions
  4. The Black Death killed 60 percent of Europeans by spreading “quickly” around the continent.
  5. I’ve often said that climate chaos will be like living in the middle of World War II, except forever. The C-19 crisis is giving us a practice run, in good and bad ways: Disasters create a “community of sufferers” that allows individuals to experience an immensely reassuring connection to others. As people come together to face an existential threat, class differences are temporarily erased, income disparities become irrelevant, race is overlooked, and individuals are assessed simply by what they are willing to do for the group.

Interesting stuff

  1. A podcast discussion of extreme economies, i.e., nature people find a way
  2. Bots are getting really good at writing “human” prose. That’s fun for short stories but a disaster for bots that troll, complain or otherwise divert or waste human attention.
  3. The market failures (=financial and psychological damages) of mobile phones and social media
  4. For a private market view of post-apocalyptic living, read this.
  5. The Irish Taoiseach (prime minister) gave a compelling, sympathetic speech on why cancelling St Patrick’s Day festivities was important.
  6. Two Things We Know With High Confidence
  7. What is “knowledge” in an internet world?
  8. A 2006 article on how Chinese factories stole IP from the foreign firms that hired them for contract work (basically by making extra on the side).
  9. The response to C-19 (isolation) is weakening the social glue that helps humanity survive and thrive. Related: The new Cold War has another data point in competing philosophies as China’s “success” with C-19 [wait and see, say I] strengthens its claim to a superior political/social system to Western [classical] liberalism.
  10. Yep: