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.
-
-
Again, not being alarmist. This is still a <10% scenario for me. But I’m concerned people who know better aren’t openly worrying enough about the new mutations, taking news from Manaus seriously, etc. This thing is close to escaping control just as we’re congratulating ourselves.
Show this thread -
In a way, Trumpist death cult has already bought into Scenario Z. They seem to have decided this is a desirable cull of weakness out of the species along the way to their restoration of a glorious pre-modern condition of Real Men™ wielding guns, germs and steel for glory of god.
Show this thread -
Several people are pointing out that the correlation between density and disease management is not straightforward. Taiwan and SF have had good records, while LA and NY failed. My take is that density in a disease-risk world demands *good* urban governance which you cannot assume
Show this thread -
ps Don't go around quoting my <10% guesstimate as based on anything at all. I have zero idea how to actually estimate probabilities here. Too many variables in the mix. It's kinda like Drake's equation in the great filter. P(governance escape) = f(clusterfuck)
Show this thread
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
covid is highly mutative not for glitchy transmission within host cell (as usual) but due to incognito spread amongst various MAMMALIAN populations. effective vaccination is just impossible. full stop. we will replace our body's genetic base - which dumbly replicates any agent.
-
we can't and couldn't help being infected with covid, because natural and synthetic immunization is impossible. what we can and will eventually do is replace the dumb machines that builds our body - i.e., genes. it is genes that replicate any agent and allow infection.
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
And doesn't this undermine both your de-urbanization and ungovernability theses? I.e. the drive to urbanization, plus varying degrees of governability, existed way before "victory" over infectious disease. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_Ya_Gonna_Keep_%27em_Down_on_the_Farm_(After_They%27ve_Seen_Paree)%3F …
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
-
-
-
Technology IS (generally) a one way ratchet. Why do you think fighting infectious diseases is any different?
-
As badly as cultural institutions have failed this first test, the total damage caused by covid likely falls well short of catastrophic. Not even in same zip code as Black Plague etc.
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
Would you mind elaborating on the '60' years? Trying to pinpoint the number but I'm probably missing something. Smallpox was eradicated in 77.
-
eradication is not the same as managed... plenty of diseases have not been eradicated, but all but covid are managed
End of conversation
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.