This isn’t primarily a medical or biological factors future. Even if we figure out a steady state treatment and management and vaccination regime, the economic and state capacity to run the playbook may not exist within current governance models.
Conversation
For like 70 years our world’s political-economic structure has assumed state+market capacity to manage disease. Countries were admitted to “developed” status green zone primarily on the strength of demonstrating that capacity.
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We’re now in the bizarre condition of the world’s supposedly most developed nation (still true in a dozen important ways) having failed the hardest at this basic state competence test. And for cultural reasons, not technological.
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Cultural as in: broken public+private basic healthcare system, abandonment of the most vulnerable, and a third of the country joining a Trumpist death cult where patriotic courage is defined as giving others disease.
Having the best univs and hospitals can’t fight that.
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Grim thing is: flu watchers expect ~5 dangerous flu pandemics in the next century. This one’s kinda a bonus. Then there’s antibiotic resistance and stuff. A whole empire of other diseases held at bay at gradually increasing cost.
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Need high density for climate change, low density for disease resistance. High globalization for economic growth and standard of living, loa globalization for climate and disease management. Running into some pretty tough trade offs here.
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We’ve lost 2-3 macro degrees of systemic freedom in the last 6 years and not gained on other fronts. Depopulation is the natural way the imbalance might correct itself. That means continuing on current course of world being increasingly ungoverned and ungovernable for decades.
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After Black Death, ungovernable state and depopulation lasted almost 200y. It is not a given that the world is necessarily governable simply because we prefer it. Governance escape is possible just as immune escape is.
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Right now I’d assess Scenario Z at <10%. But last year when this started it wasn’t even in my scenario set.
Scenario Z isn’t post-Covid. It’s the scenario where we never actually get to post-Covid. Just declare victory and give up, shrinking governance to a feasible set.
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Replying to
The "chasing with vaccine being expensive" is also a government problem. It takes a couple of weeks to develop a vaccine, and the basic technology is reliable enough for the worst case risks to be comparable to the disease. Takes governance to embrace it, however.
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Most governments are already at their limit. Brazil seems to have basically given up. First de facto collapse.

