Covid and Politics

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Re: Covid and Politics

Marcus G. Daniels
What if it is like the cold?

On May 28, 2020, at 7:12 AM, cody dooderson <[hidden email]> wrote:



I had what I think is a great idea for herd immunity. What if the government were to open overnight summer camps, and even pay for every kid to spend 1 month canoeing, camping, and most importantly catching covid. This way they could gain a herd immunity so that school could safely open in September.



On Wed, May 27, 2020, 2:05 PM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:
Cody -

Nothing in my search will be ready for the September deadline. Where did this deadline come from?

I think September is a placeholder for: 

  1. Return to School (and the social mixing implied at all grade levels)
  2. Acutely (equinox) shortening days of sunlight (UV on outdoor surfaces and time spent out/indoors/close quarters)
  3. Cooler weather (not sure that is anything but a proxy for 2?).

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Re: Covid and Politics

Steve Smith

Marcus wrote:

What if it is like the cold?

I assume you mean by this, "what if there is only limited residual immunity?"

cody  wrote:

I had what I think is a great idea for herd immunity. What if the government were to open overnight summer camps, and even pay for every kid to spend 1 month canoeing, camping, and most importantly catching covid. This way they could gain a herd immunity so that school could safely open in September.

And issue t-shirts that say:  "I survived COVID19 Camp 2020!" and maybe a tattoo in a visible location?  (I'm wondering if recently back to work tattoo artists are beginning to fulfill tattoo commissions on a COVID19 theme?)

Yours was my first instinct when the college crowd was passing it around at Spring Break early in the curve....   keep the beach-towns open and provide lots of free/inexpensive services to those who commit to staying in place and going through their infection cycle in-place.   At the time, it looked like that demographic was not particularly prone to strong symptoms requiring hospitalization.   They could all nurse one another through like they do for hangovers... a 2 week hangover I guess... and then as they demonstrate that they've been through the full cycle and are (very likely) no longer infectious then they can return to their communities with an obligation to pick up the high-risk-of-infection tasks that other more vulnerable people should/might not.    

Huge number of unvalidated assumptions here of course!

My dystopian version of your (Cody) idea would align with deep-state conspiracy theorists who might liken this to the kinds of Nazi "brown-shirt" exercises back in the day, enlisting children to (sometimes) turn their parents/family in for questionable behaviour/talk/associations.   A month of "programming and propoganda into a neofascist liberal agenda!!!!!!".     Although at this point, it is *more* likely that Red State/Red Hatters would be the ones to send *their* kids to Christian COVID Camp with all of the same features my dystopian view suggests but with a couple of bits flipped.   I can now see pitched canoe battles in the middle of the lake between the red-team and blue-team camps... it might help with mixing the COVID strains (tongue-in-cheek) that might be evolving in these two otherwise mutually isolating populations.

bumble,

 - Steve



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Re: Covid and Politics

Marcus G. Daniels
Here is a literature review..



Sent from my iPhone

On May 28, 2020, at 8:05 AM, Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:



Marcus wrote:

What if it is like the cold?

I assume you mean by this, "what if there is only limited residual immunity?"

cody  wrote:

I had what I think is a great idea for herd immunity. What if the government were to open overnight summer camps, and even pay for every kid to spend 1 month canoeing, camping, and most importantly catching covid. This way they could gain a herd immunity so that school could safely open in September.

And issue t-shirts that say:  "I survived COVID19 Camp 2020!" and maybe a tattoo in a visible location?  (I'm wondering if recently back to work tattoo artists are beginning to fulfill tattoo commissions on a COVID19 theme?)

Yours was my first instinct when the college crowd was passing it around at Spring Break early in the curve....   keep the beach-towns open and provide lots of free/inexpensive services to those who commit to staying in place and going through their infection cycle in-place.   At the time, it looked like that demographic was not particularly prone to strong symptoms requiring hospitalization.   They could all nurse one another through like they do for hangovers... a 2 week hangover I guess... and then as they demonstrate that they've been through the full cycle and are (very likely) no longer infectious then they can return to their communities with an obligation to pick up the high-risk-of-infection tasks that other more vulnerable people should/might not.    

Huge number of unvalidated assumptions here of course!

My dystopian version of your (Cody) idea would align with deep-state conspiracy theorists who might liken this to the kinds of Nazi "brown-shirt" exercises back in the day, enlisting children to (sometimes) turn their parents/family in for questionable behaviour/talk/associations.   A month of "programming and propoganda into a neofascist liberal agenda!!!!!!".     Although at this point, it is *more* likely that Red State/Red Hatters would be the ones to send *their* kids to Christian COVID Camp with all of the same features my dystopian view suggests but with a couple of bits flipped.   I can now see pitched canoe battles in the middle of the lake between the red-team and blue-team camps... it might help with mixing the COVID strains (tongue-in-cheek) that might be evolving in these two otherwise mutually isolating populations.

bumble,

 - Steve


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Re: Covid and Politics

thompnickson2
In reply to this post by cody dooderson

Interesting, Cody.  

 

I think if a vaccine weren’t within a year or so, such a policy might be entertained, unlike my suggestion of white vans plus shooting everybody who tries to come up la bajada.

 

Who would staff it?  The staff would have to be isolated in the camp, too.

Medical Staff would have to be really good.  A really good hospital would have to be quickly available.

Parents would have to sign releases. 

 

Other than that, I can’t see why that doesn’t work.

 

Nick

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of cody dooderson
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 8:12 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

 

I had what I think is a great idea for herd immunity. What if the government were to open overnight summer camps, and even pay for every kid to spend 1 month canoeing, camping, and most importantly catching covid. This way they could gain a herd immunity so that school could safely open in September.

 

 

 

On Wed, May 27, 2020, 2:05 PM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

Cody -

 

Nothing in my search will be ready for the September deadline. Where did this deadline come from?

 

I think September is a placeholder for: 

  1. Return to School (and the social mixing implied at all grade levels)
  2. Acutely (equinox) shortening days of sunlight (UV on outdoor surfaces and time spent out/indoors/close quarters)
  3. Cooler weather (not sure that is anything but a proxy for 2?).

 

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Re: Covid and Politics

Frank Wimberly-2

... to come up la bajada...

That's funny to a Spanish speaker.  "La bajada" means the descent.  But I guess any descent is an ascent if you turn around.

---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Thu, May 28, 2020, 9:58 AM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Interesting, Cody.  

 

I think if a vaccine weren’t within a year or so, such a policy might be entertained, unlike my suggestion of white vans plus shooting everybody who tries to come up la bajada.

 

Who would staff it?  The staff would have to be isolated in the camp, too.

Medical Staff would have to be really good.  A really good hospital would have to be quickly available.

Parents would have to sign releases. 

 

Other than that, I can’t see why that doesn’t work.

 

Nick

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of cody dooderson
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 8:12 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

 

I had what I think is a great idea for herd immunity. What if the government were to open overnight summer camps, and even pay for every kid to spend 1 month canoeing, camping, and most importantly catching covid. This way they could gain a herd immunity so that school could safely open in September.

 

 

 

On Wed, May 27, 2020, 2:05 PM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

Cody -

 

Nothing in my search will be ready for the September deadline. Where did this deadline come from?

 

I think September is a placeholder for: 

  1. Return to School (and the social mixing implied at all grade levels)
  2. Acutely (equinox) shortening days of sunlight (UV on outdoor surfaces and time spent out/indoors/close quarters)
  3. Cooler weather (not sure that is anything but a proxy for 2?).

 

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Re: Covid and Politics

Steve Smith
In reply to this post by thompnickson2

Nick -

I think Cody's question is a good example of what *I* have tended to think of as a "Strawman" (other thread) but now will try to call maybe a stickman or an armature .   I don't think he posited it as a literal "I can't see why we just don't go do this tomorrow, it is a watertight idea that needs to be implemented *this instant*" but rather a general thrust of an idea that *invites* criticism and discussion.  

Marcus' point might have been a "show stopper" invalidating the whole idea, or I would prefer to frame it as providing a good complementary 'criticism'... a simple and direct reason for which such an idea *might not* be relevant at all.   Your own response takes Cody's idea more seriously than mine does...  you are looking to "flesh out" when and how it *might* make sense.   The nut of your observation here seems to be that in a year (or so) we will A) become desperate enough to risk harming our children deliberately (think measles parties in the 50s?) and B) we will have resolved questions as implied by Marcus (maybe the immunity is not strong or long lasting enough to be worth the risk, or maybe it is); and C) by then we will know how effective of a vaccine or alternative therapies will be available.

Your own "white van" example I also take as a deliberately nearly-absurd example to draw fire, to find the complement to, to build-from-as-if-an-armature.   I'm not fully sure what all you gesture at with your white van and fortified la-bajada image, but I take it to suggest B) la-bajada: Isolating a community (like Gunnison CO did in 1918) and A) relaxing civil rights laws/regulations/expectations/standards to the point that anyone implied to be infected can be snatched by a biohazard-suited swat-team in a white van and tested and either released (with a thin or fat apology and maybe even reparations) or incarcerated in a gilded cage with lots of luxuries and top medical care until the infected becomes recovered and then released to "go forth and prosper"

- Steve


Interesting, Cody.  

 

I think if a vaccine weren’t within a year or so, such a policy might be entertained, unlike my suggestion of white vans plus shooting everybody who tries to come up la bajada.

 

Who would staff it?  The staff would have to be isolated in the camp, too.

Medical Staff would have to be really good.  A really good hospital would have to be quickly available.

Parents would have to sign releases. 

 

Other than that, I can’t see why that doesn’t work.

 

Nick

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam [hidden email] On Behalf Of cody dooderson
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 8:12 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

 

I had what I think is a great idea for herd immunity. What if the government were to open overnight summer camps, and even pay for every kid to spend 1 month canoeing, camping, and most importantly catching covid. This way they could gain a herd immunity so that school could safely open in September.

 

 

 

On Wed, May 27, 2020, 2:05 PM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

Cody -

 

Nothing in my search will be ready for the September deadline. Where did this deadline come from?

 

I think September is a placeholder for: 

  1. Return to School (and the social mixing implied at all grade levels)
  2. Acutely (equinox) shortening days of sunlight (UV on outdoor surfaces and time spent out/indoors/close quarters)
  3. Cooler weather (not sure that is anything but a proxy for 2?).

 

-- --- .-. . .-.. --- -.-. -.- ... -..-. .- .-. . -..-. - .... . -..-. . ... ... . -. - .. .- .-.. -..-. .-- --- .-. -.- . .-. ...
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Re: Covid and Politics

thompnickson2

Steve,

 

Well, why not articulate the metaphor and start a new usage, to “stick-man” an argument,, i.e., to offer a highly simplified structure that others can flesh out. 

 

But I am much more serious about the white van program that perhaps I ought to confess to a coven of gun-toting libertarians.   And I take Cody to be about that serious about his summer camps.  As things presently roll along, we are slated to have 1k deaths a day, more or less indefinitely into the future.  That’s 400k deaths by the end of the year and at least a million before we get the vaccine, as the economy alternatively chokes and gasps for air under chaotic loosening ups and lock downs. .    The white van policy, cartoonishly represented I admit, is very close to  what we do with syphilis and used to do with TB and it will work..  We have started to think of ourselves as somehow in a post pandemic world and that we do not “deserve” to be quarantined.  The virus does care for deserts.

 

n

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Steve Smith
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 2:30 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

Nick -

I think Cody's question is a good example of what *I* have tended to think of as a "Strawman" (other thread) but now will try to call maybe a stickman or an armature .   I don't think he posited it as a literal "I can't see why we just don't go do this tomorrow, it is a watertight idea that needs to be implemented *this instant*" but rather a general thrust of an idea that *invites* criticism and discussion.  

Marcus' point might have been a "show stopper" invalidating the whole idea, or I would prefer to frame it as providing a good complementary 'criticism'... a simple and direct reason for which such an idea *might not* be relevant at all.   Your own response takes Cody's idea more seriously than mine does...  you are looking to "flesh out" when and how it *might* make sense.   The nut of your observation here seems to be that in a year (or so) we will A) become desperate enough to risk harming our children deliberately (think measles parties in the 50s?) and B) we will have resolved questions as implied by Marcus (maybe the immunity is not strong or long lasting enough to be worth the risk, or maybe it is); and C) by then we will know how effective of a vaccine or alternative therapies will be available.

Your own "white van" example I also take as a deliberately nearly-absurd example to draw fire, to find the complement to, to build-from-as-if-an-armature.   I'm not fully sure what all you gesture at with your white van and fortified la-bajada image, but I take it to suggest B) la-bajada: Isolating a community (like Gunnison CO did in 1918) and A) relaxing civil rights laws/regulations/expectations/standards to the point that anyone implied to be infected can be snatched by a biohazard-suited swat-team in a white van and tested and either released (with a thin or fat apology and maybe even reparations) or incarcerated in a gilded cage with lots of luxuries and top medical care until the infected becomes recovered and then released to "go forth and prosper"

- Steve

 

Interesting, Cody.  

 

I think if a vaccine weren’t within a year or so, such a policy might be entertained, unlike my suggestion of white vans plus shooting everybody who tries to come up la bajada.

 

Who would staff it?  The staff would have to be isolated in the camp, too.

Medical Staff would have to be really good.  A really good hospital would have to be quickly available.

Parents would have to sign releases. 

 

Other than that, I can’t see why that doesn’t work.

 

Nick

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam [hidden email] On Behalf Of cody dooderson
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 8:12 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

 

I had what I think is a great idea for herd immunity. What if the government were to open overnight summer camps, and even pay for every kid to spend 1 month canoeing, camping, and most importantly catching covid. This way they could gain a herd immunity so that school could safely open in September.

 

 

 

On Wed, May 27, 2020, 2:05 PM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

Cody -


 

Nothing in my search will be ready for the September deadline. Where did this deadline come from?

 

I think September is a placeholder for: 

  1. Return to School (and the social mixing implied at all grade levels)
  2. Acutely (equinox) shortening days of sunlight (UV on outdoor surfaces and time spent out/indoors/close quarters)
  3. Cooler weather (not sure that is anything but a proxy for 2?).

 

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Re: Covid and Politics

Frank Wimberly-2
Hey, I'm very familiar with the deserts of NM particularly those where I lived as a kid.  I'll take my .30-30 down there and just live on rabbit meat until this is over.

^straw man^.   I think.

---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Thu, May 28, 2020, 2:52 PM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Steve,

 

Well, why not articulate the metaphor and start a new usage, to “stick-man” an argument,, i.e., to offer a highly simplified structure that others can flesh out. 

 

But I am much more serious about the white van program that perhaps I ought to confess to a coven of gun-toting libertarians.   And I take Cody to be about that serious about his summer camps.  As things presently roll along, we are slated to have 1k deaths a day, more or less indefinitely into the future.  That’s 400k deaths by the end of the year and at least a million before we get the vaccine, as the economy alternatively chokes and gasps for air under chaotic loosening ups and lock downs. .    The white van policy, cartoonishly represented I admit, is very close to  what we do with syphilis and used to do with TB and it will work..  We have started to think of ourselves as somehow in a post pandemic world and that we do not “deserve” to be quarantined.  The virus does care for deserts.

 

n

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Steve Smith
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 2:30 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

Nick -

I think Cody's question is a good example of what *I* have tended to think of as a "Strawman" (other thread) but now will try to call maybe a stickman or an armature .   I don't think he posited it as a literal "I can't see why we just don't go do this tomorrow, it is a watertight idea that needs to be implemented *this instant*" but rather a general thrust of an idea that *invites* criticism and discussion.  

Marcus' point might have been a "show stopper" invalidating the whole idea, or I would prefer to frame it as providing a good complementary 'criticism'... a simple and direct reason for which such an idea *might not* be relevant at all.   Your own response takes Cody's idea more seriously than mine does...  you are looking to "flesh out" when and how it *might* make sense.   The nut of your observation here seems to be that in a year (or so) we will A) become desperate enough to risk harming our children deliberately (think measles parties in the 50s?) and B) we will have resolved questions as implied by Marcus (maybe the immunity is not strong or long lasting enough to be worth the risk, or maybe it is); and C) by then we will know how effective of a vaccine or alternative therapies will be available.

Your own "white van" example I also take as a deliberately nearly-absurd example to draw fire, to find the complement to, to build-from-as-if-an-armature.   I'm not fully sure what all you gesture at with your white van and fortified la-bajada image, but I take it to suggest B) la-bajada: Isolating a community (like Gunnison CO did in 1918) and A) relaxing civil rights laws/regulations/expectations/standards to the point that anyone implied to be infected can be snatched by a biohazard-suited swat-team in a white van and tested and either released (with a thin or fat apology and maybe even reparations) or incarcerated in a gilded cage with lots of luxuries and top medical care until the infected becomes recovered and then released to "go forth and prosper"

- Steve

 

Interesting, Cody.  

 

I think if a vaccine weren’t within a year or so, such a policy might be entertained, unlike my suggestion of white vans plus shooting everybody who tries to come up la bajada.

 

Who would staff it?  The staff would have to be isolated in the camp, too.

Medical Staff would have to be really good.  A really good hospital would have to be quickly available.

Parents would have to sign releases. 

 

Other than that, I can’t see why that doesn’t work.

 

Nick

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam [hidden email] On Behalf Of cody dooderson
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 8:12 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

 

I had what I think is a great idea for herd immunity. What if the government were to open overnight summer camps, and even pay for every kid to spend 1 month canoeing, camping, and most importantly catching covid. This way they could gain a herd immunity so that school could safely open in September.

 

 

 

On Wed, May 27, 2020, 2:05 PM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

Cody -


 

Nothing in my search will be ready for the September deadline. Where did this deadline come from?

 

I think September is a placeholder for: 

  1. Return to School (and the social mixing implied at all grade levels)
  2. Acutely (equinox) shortening days of sunlight (UV on outdoor surfaces and time spent out/indoors/close quarters)
  3. Cooler weather (not sure that is anything but a proxy for 2?).

 

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Re: Covid and Politics

Marcus G. Daniels

http://www.wildlife.state.nm.us/rabbit-hemorrhagic-disease-cause-for-rabbit-mortality/

 

And wouldn’t a 0.22 suffice?

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> on behalf of Frank Wimberly <[hidden email]>
Reply-To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Date: Thursday, May 28, 2020 at 2:07 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

Hey, I'm very familiar with the deserts of NM particularly those where I lived as a kid.  I'll take my .30-30 down there and just live on rabbit meat until this is over.

 

^straw man^.   I think.

---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

 

On Thu, May 28, 2020, 2:52 PM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Steve,

 

Well, why not articulate the metaphor and start a new usage, to “stick-man” an argument,, i.e., to offer a highly simplified structure that others can flesh out. 

 

But I am much more serious about the white van program that perhaps I ought to confess to a coven of gun-toting libertarians.   And I take Cody to be about that serious about his summer camps.  As things presently roll along, we are slated to have 1k deaths a day, more or less indefinitely into the future.  That’s 400k deaths by the end of the year and at least a million before we get the vaccine, as the economy alternatively chokes and gasps for air under chaotic loosening ups and lock downs. .    The white van policy, cartoonishly represented I admit, is very close to  what we do with syphilis and used to do with TB and it will work..  We have started to think of ourselves as somehow in a post pandemic world and that we do not “deserve” to be quarantined.  The virus does care for deserts.

 

n

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Steve Smith
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 2:30 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

Nick -

I think Cody's question is a good example of what *I* have tended to think of as a "Strawman" (other thread) but now will try to call maybe a stickman or an armature .   I don't think he posited it as a literal "I can't see why we just don't go do this tomorrow, it is a watertight idea that needs to be implemented *this instant*" but rather a general thrust of an idea that *invites* criticism and discussion.  

Marcus' point might have been a "show stopper" invalidating the whole idea, or I would prefer to frame it as providing a good complementary 'criticism'... a simple and direct reason for which such an idea *might not* be relevant at all.   Your own response takes Cody's idea more seriously than mine does...  you are looking to "flesh out" when and how it *might* make sense.   The nut of your observation here seems to be that in a year (or so) we will A) become desperate enough to risk harming our children deliberately (think measles parties in the 50s?) and B) we will have resolved questions as implied by Marcus (maybe the immunity is not strong or long lasting enough to be worth the risk, or maybe it is); and C) by then we will know how effective of a vaccine or alternative therapies will be available.

Your own "white van" example I also take as a deliberately nearly-absurd example to draw fire, to find the complement to, to build-from-as-if-an-armature.   I'm not fully sure what all you gesture at with your white van and fortified la-bajada image, but I take it to suggest B) la-bajada: Isolating a community (like Gunnison CO did in 1918) and A) relaxing civil rights laws/regulations/expectations/standards to the point that anyone implied to be infected can be snatched by a biohazard-suited swat-team in a white van and tested and either released (with a thin or fat apology and maybe even reparations) or incarcerated in a gilded cage with lots of luxuries and top medical care until the infected becomes recovered and then released to "go forth and prosper"

- Steve

 

Interesting, Cody.  

 

I think if a vaccine weren’t within a year or so, such a policy might be entertained, unlike my suggestion of white vans plus shooting everybody who tries to come up la bajada.

 

Who would staff it?  The staff would have to be isolated in the camp, too.

Medical Staff would have to be really good.  A really good hospital would have to be quickly available.

Parents would have to sign releases. 

 

Other than that, I can’t see why that doesn’t work.

 

Nick

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam [hidden email] On Behalf Of cody dooderson
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 8:12 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

 

I had what I think is a great idea for herd immunity. What if the government were to open overnight summer camps, and even pay for every kid to spend 1 month canoeing, camping, and most importantly catching covid. This way they could gain a herd immunity so that school could safely open in September.

 

 

 

On Wed, May 27, 2020, 2:05 PM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

Cody -

 

Nothing in my search will be ready for the September deadline. Where did this deadline come from?

 

I think September is a placeholder for: 

  1. Return to School (and the social mixing implied at all grade levels)
  2. Acutely (equinox) shortening days of sunlight (UV on outdoor surfaces and time spent out/indoors/close quarters)
  3. Cooler weather (not sure that is anything but a proxy for 2?).

 

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Re: Covid and Politics

Frank Wimberly-2
Yes. I have a few of those too.  When you shoot a rabbit with a .30-30 not much is left to eat.  Also, the rabbits around here a suffering from a Tularemia epidemic.  If a strawman argument is meant to ridicule an opposing point of view you can say preposterous things.

That's not what I was doing.

Frank

---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

On Thu, May 28, 2020, 3:10 PM Marcus Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:

http://www.wildlife.state.nm.us/rabbit-hemorrhagic-disease-cause-for-rabbit-mortality/

 

And wouldn’t a 0.22 suffice?

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> on behalf of Frank Wimberly <[hidden email]>
Reply-To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Date: Thursday, May 28, 2020 at 2:07 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[hidden email]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

Hey, I'm very familiar with the deserts of NM particularly those where I lived as a kid.  I'll take my .30-30 down there and just live on rabbit meat until this is over.

 

^straw man^.   I think.

---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz,
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

 

On Thu, May 28, 2020, 2:52 PM <[hidden email]> wrote:

Steve,

 

Well, why not articulate the metaphor and start a new usage, to “stick-man” an argument,, i.e., to offer a highly simplified structure that others can flesh out. 

 

But I am much more serious about the white van program that perhaps I ought to confess to a coven of gun-toting libertarians.   And I take Cody to be about that serious about his summer camps.  As things presently roll along, we are slated to have 1k deaths a day, more or less indefinitely into the future.  That’s 400k deaths by the end of the year and at least a million before we get the vaccine, as the economy alternatively chokes and gasps for air under chaotic loosening ups and lock downs. .    The white van policy, cartoonishly represented I admit, is very close to  what we do with syphilis and used to do with TB and it will work..  We have started to think of ourselves as somehow in a post pandemic world and that we do not “deserve” to be quarantined.  The virus does care for deserts.

 

n

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Steve Smith
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 2:30 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

Nick -

I think Cody's question is a good example of what *I* have tended to think of as a "Strawman" (other thread) but now will try to call maybe a stickman or an armature .   I don't think he posited it as a literal "I can't see why we just don't go do this tomorrow, it is a watertight idea that needs to be implemented *this instant*" but rather a general thrust of an idea that *invites* criticism and discussion.  

Marcus' point might have been a "show stopper" invalidating the whole idea, or I would prefer to frame it as providing a good complementary 'criticism'... a simple and direct reason for which such an idea *might not* be relevant at all.   Your own response takes Cody's idea more seriously than mine does...  you are looking to "flesh out" when and how it *might* make sense.   The nut of your observation here seems to be that in a year (or so) we will A) become desperate enough to risk harming our children deliberately (think measles parties in the 50s?) and B) we will have resolved questions as implied by Marcus (maybe the immunity is not strong or long lasting enough to be worth the risk, or maybe it is); and C) by then we will know how effective of a vaccine or alternative therapies will be available.

Your own "white van" example I also take as a deliberately nearly-absurd example to draw fire, to find the complement to, to build-from-as-if-an-armature.   I'm not fully sure what all you gesture at with your white van and fortified la-bajada image, but I take it to suggest B) la-bajada: Isolating a community (like Gunnison CO did in 1918) and A) relaxing civil rights laws/regulations/expectations/standards to the point that anyone implied to be infected can be snatched by a biohazard-suited swat-team in a white van and tested and either released (with a thin or fat apology and maybe even reparations) or incarcerated in a gilded cage with lots of luxuries and top medical care until the infected becomes recovered and then released to "go forth and prosper"

- Steve

 

Interesting, Cody.  

 

I think if a vaccine weren’t within a year or so, such a policy might be entertained, unlike my suggestion of white vans plus shooting everybody who tries to come up la bajada.

 

Who would staff it?  The staff would have to be isolated in the camp, too.

Medical Staff would have to be really good.  A really good hospital would have to be quickly available.

Parents would have to sign releases. 

 

Other than that, I can’t see why that doesn’t work.

 

Nick

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam [hidden email] On Behalf Of cody dooderson
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 8:12 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

 

I had what I think is a great idea for herd immunity. What if the government were to open overnight summer camps, and even pay for every kid to spend 1 month canoeing, camping, and most importantly catching covid. This way they could gain a herd immunity so that school could safely open in September.

 

 

 

On Wed, May 27, 2020, 2:05 PM Steve Smith <[hidden email]> wrote:

Cody -

 

Nothing in my search will be ready for the September deadline. Where did this deadline come from?

 

I think September is a placeholder for: 

  1. Return to School (and the social mixing implied at all grade levels)
  2. Acutely (equinox) shortening days of sunlight (UV on outdoor surfaces and time spent out/indoors/close quarters)
  3. Cooler weather (not sure that is anything but a proxy for 2?).

 

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Re: Covid and Politics

Marcus G. Daniels

Frank writes:

 

< If a strawman argument is meant to ridicule an opposing point of view you can say preposterous things. >

 

My experience is that people that use strawman arguments may *not* be acting in bad faith.  Rather they don’t know how to argue.   To argue is nothing more than to hurt the opponent once emotions are elevated.

 

Marcus


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Re: Covid and Politics

jon zingale
In reply to this post by Merle Lefkoff-2
Cody, Nick, et al.

Part of my concern with a white van or relying on herd immunity approach
is the side-effect health risks associated with Covid-19. From a Johns
Hopkins article:


"People who survive ARDS and recover from COVID-19 may have lasting pulmonary scarring."

In analogy with some arguments made about an individual's right to control
their personal data, individuals should have the right to control their own
health. When we volunteer to risk our future health, there is room for a
compensatory argument. Even if Covid-19 is like data in that it wants to be
free, we ought to recognize that such a sacrifice should be rewarded and with
full disclosure as to the potentially lifelong health risks.

Jon

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Re: Covid and Politics

Gary Schiltz-4
Jon, I keep seeing the term "white van" tossed around. Would you enlighten me? Google didn't unambiguously help.

On Sun, May 31, 2020 at 12:41 PM Jon Zingale <[hidden email]> wrote:
Cody, Nick, et al.

Part of my concern with a white van or relying on herd immunity approach
is the side-effect health risks associated with Covid-19. From a Johns
Hopkins article:


"People who survive ARDS and recover from COVID-19 may have lasting pulmonary scarring."

In analogy with some arguments made about an individual's right to control
their personal data, individuals should have the right to control their own
health. When we volunteer to risk our future health, there is room for a
compensatory argument. Even if Covid-19 is like data in that it wants to be
free, we ought to recognize that such a sacrifice should be rewarded and with
full disclosure as to the potentially lifelong health risks.

Jon
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Re: Covid and Politics

thompnickson2
In reply to this post by jon zingale

Jon, Gary

 

Gary, the “White Van Approach” is not googlable because I invented it to tease the libertarians on the list.  The idea is that every contact of every case is scooped up on the street by a white van and popped into to a comfortable motel room at government expense until she/he can prove non-infection.  If they are a breadwinner or caregiver, their responsibilities are taken over by others.  Such a policy would permit normal life to continue and would minimize cases Because it minimizes cases,  I don’t think Jon’s objection applies to it, right? 

 

The herd immunity approach is where we are headed now, although in a stumbling, bumbling way.   

 

If you read down in the article that Jon sends, it appears that the lung damage is reversible, although not fun to live through.  As an 82-year old, offered the choice (we 82 year olds are always offered the choice) I’ld probably opt for rehab. 

 

By the way, I am copying in below an extraordinary article from England about a doctor who claims that the epidemic was self limiting and about to be over.  I am copying it in because the original was behind a paywall.  I think this was the original Boris Johnson approach which I think is being tried out in Sweden and perhaps Brazil?  Havn’t looked at the numbers recently. 

 

Nick  

 

Interview

Sunetra Gupta: Covid-19 is on the way out

The author of the Oxford model defends her view that the virus has passed through the UK's population

Freddie Sayers 

Freddie Sayers is the Executive Editor of UnHerd. He was previously Editor-in-Chief of YouGov, and founder of PoliticsHome.

Add to Favourites Add to favourites

May 21, 2020


It’s the biggest question in the world right now: is Covid-19 a deadly disease that only a small fraction of our populations have so far been exposed to? Or is it a much milder pandemic that a large percentage of people have already encountered and is already on its way out?

If Professor Neil Ferguson of Imperial College is the figurehead for the first opinion, then Sunetra Gupta, Professor of Theoretical Epidemiology at the University of Oxford, is the representative of the second. Her group at Oxford produced a rival model to Ferguson’s back in March which speculated that as much as 50% of the population may already have been infected and the true Infection Fatality Rate may be as low as 0.1%.

Since then, we have seen various antibody studies around the world indicating a disappointingly small percentage of seroprevalence — the percentage of the population has the anti-Covid-19 antibody. It was starting to seem like Ferguson’s view was the one closer to the truth.

But, in her first major interview since the Oxford study was published in March, Professor Gupta is only more convinced that her original opinion was correct.

 
As she sees it, the antibody studies, although useful, do not indicate the true level of exposure or level of immunity. First, many of the antibody tests are “extremely unreliable” and rely on hard-to-achieve representative groups. But more important, many people who have been exposed to the virus will have other kinds of immunity that don’t show up on antibody tests — either for genetic reasons or the result of pre-existing immunities to related coronaviruses such as the common cold.

The implications of this are profound – it means that when we hear results from antibody tests (such as a forthcoming official UK Government study) the percentage who test positive for antibodies is not necessarily equal to the percentage who have immunity or resistance to the virus. The true number could be much higher.

Observing the very similar patterns of the epidemic across countries around the world has convinced Professor Gupta that it is this hidden immunity, more than lockdowns or government interventions, that offers the best explanation of the Covid-19 progression:

“In almost every context we’ve seen the epidemic grow, turn around and die away — almost like clockwork. Different countries have had different lockdown policies, and yet what we’ve observed is almost a uniform pattern of behaviour which is highly consistent with the SIR model. To me that suggests that much of the driving force here was due to the build-up of immunity. I think that’s a more parsimonious explanation than one which requires in every country for lockdown (or various degrees of lockdown, including no lockdown) to have had the same effect.”

Asked what her updated estimate for the Infection Fatality Rate is, Professor Gupta says, “I think that the epidemic has largely come and is on its way out in this country so I think it would be definitely less than 1 in 1000 and probably closer to 1 in 10,000.” That would be somewhere between 0.1% and 0.01%.

Professor Gupta also remains openly critical of the Government lockdown policy:

“The Government’s defence is that this [the Imperial College model] was a plausible worst case scenario. I agree it was a plausible — or at least a possible — worst case scenario. The question is, should we act on a possible worst case scenario, given the costs of lockdown? It seems to me that given that the costs of lockdown are mounting, that case is becoming more and more fragile.”

She recommends “a more rapid exit from lockdown based more on certain heuristics, like who is dying and what is happening to the death rates”. She does not believe that the R rate is a useful tool in making decisions about government policies, as an R rate is “principally dependent on how many people are immune” and we don’t have that information.

She believes that deaths are the only reliable measure, and that the number of cases should not even be presented as it is so reliant on the amount of testing being done.

She explains the flare-ups in places like New York, where the IFR seems to have been higher than 0.1%, through a combination of circumstances leading to unusually bad outbreaks, including the infection load and the layout of the population:

“When you have pockets of vulnerable people it might rip through those pockets in a way that it wouldn’t if the vulnerable people were more scattered within the general population.”

She believes that longer-term lockdown-style social distancing makes us more vulnerable, not less vulnerable, to infectious diseases, because it keeps people unprotected from pathogens:

“Remaining in a state of lockdown is extremely dangerous from the point of view of the vulnerability of the entire population to new pathogens. Effectively we used to live in a state approximating lockdown 100 years ago, and that was what created the conditions for the Spanish Flu to come in and kill 50m people.”

Commenting on the Government response to the virus, she suggests it erred on the side of over-reaction not under-reaction:

“I think there’s a chance we might have done better by doing nothing at all, or at least by doing something different, which would have been to pay attention to protecting the vulnerable, to have thought about protecting the vulnerable 30 or 40 years ago when we started cutting hospital beds. The roots of this go a long, long way back.”

And she believes it is a “strong possibility” that if we return to full normal tomorrow — pubs, nightclubs, festivals — we would be fine, but accepts that is hard to prove with the current evidence:

“So what do we do? I think we weigh that strong possibility against the costs of lockdown. I think it is very dangerous to talk about lockdown without recognising the enormous costs that it has on other vulnerable sectors in the population.”

On the politics of the question, Professor Gupta is clear that she believes that lockdowns are an affront to progressive values:

“So I know there is a sort of libertarian argument for the release of lockdown, and I think it is unfortunate that those of us who feel we should think differently about lockdown have had our voices added to that libertarian harangue. But the truth is that lockdown is a luxury, and it’s a luxury that the middle classes are enjoying and higher income countries are enjoying at the expense of the poor, the vulnerable and less developed countries. It’s a very serious crisis.”

 

 

 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

[hidden email]

https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Jon Zingale
Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2020 11:41 AM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Covid and Politics

 

Cody, Nick, et al.

Part of my concern with a white van or relying on herd immunity approach
is the side-effect health risks associated with Covid-19. From a Johns
Hopkins article:


"People who survive ARDS and recover from COVID-19 may have lasting pulmonary scarring."

In analogy with some arguments made about an individual's right to control
their personal data, individuals should have the right to control their own
health. When we volunteer to risk our future health, there is room for a
compensatory argument. Even if Covid-19 is like data in that it wants to be
free, we ought to recognize that such a sacrifice should be rewarded and with
full disclosure as to the potentially lifelong health risks.

 

Jon


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Re: Covid and Politics

jon zingale
In reply to this post by Merle Lefkoff-2
Nick,

Thank you for the clarification. It does appear that my objection
is non-applicable. That said, I hope that the spirit of my comment
is maintained throughout the policymaking process.

Jon

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