When this is all over, the question will be how to beef up things that collapsed under the stress. There will be calls to: Nationalize things that fail Privatize things that fail Distribute manufacturing more Distribute inventory more Distribute money more Distribute time more
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This is the generic resilience debate that’s long overdue, via a “case study” that’s somewhere between a fire drill and the real SHTF thing. This is almost like the world itself is being administered a vaccine in the form of a partially deactivated crisis trigger.
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There will also be narrower conversation around pandemic response innovation: Touch-free built environment Rapid testing Agile vaccine development and deployment Social distancing based culture
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Conversations that are possible but unlikely to happen First-response acute mental health management Chronic stress management at population scale Ultra-wealthy flight/exit culture (cost of billionaire bunkerism, which is unfortunately totally a real thing) “Microgrid” economics
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I’m trying really hard to make a fair comparison to what I remember of SARS etc. Especially discounting for the effect of apocalypse larping by we the Very Online. This does feel different. It’s like living through a milquetoast Michael Crichton novel.
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Replying to @vgr
The attenuated feeling of this crisis is uncanny, hollow. It’s a pandemic. But just a cold. But it may kill millions of people. Masks don’t work. You’ve been washing your hands wrong. Cancel your travel plans. The president is a paper mache masked carnival king. Stay calm. Worry.
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