All posts
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On moral outrage.
I was upset about the young people partying during the pandemic. I was wrong.
2022, asymptomatic spread, catching coronavirus twice, catching Covid-19 twice, coronavirus, coronavirus deaths, coronavirus epidemic, coronavirus vaccine, coronavirus versus flu, coronavirus vs flu, Covid-19, Covid-19 data, Covid-19 deaths, Covid-19 model, Covid-19 response, Covid-19 spread, Covid-19 vaccine, Covid-19 versus flu, Covid-19 vs flu, data, David Katz, demographics, demographics of risk, DNR, do not resuscitate, domestic violence, duration of coronavirus immunity, duration of coronavirus protection, duration of Covid-19 immunity, duration of immunity, ending the lockdown, ending the shutdown, epidemic, epidemiology, fading immunity, fading protection, flu, flu vaccine, food insecurity, harm minimization, harm reduction, Harvard, Harvard model, herd immunity, how long does immunity last, how long does protection last, how soon will we have a vaccine, immune system, immunity, immunology, infectious spread, influenza, influenza vaccine, joblessness, Katz, length of coronavirus immunity, length of Covid-19 immunity, length of Covid-19 protection, length of immunity, lockdown, lost immunity, low vaccination rate, Pandemic, PCR test, protecting others, quarantine, response to Covid-19, returning to normal, second infection, self isolation, selfish young people, shelter in place, sheltering in place, shutdown, social distance, social distancing, spread of infections, vaccination, vaccine, vaccine development, vaccine protection, viral spread, virus, virus epidemic, virus panic, waning immunity, waning protection, want healthy young people to get Covid-19, working from home -
A little more about “On testing.”
Here’s a response to some additional questions/comments I’ve gotten on my original essay and the follow-up. 11. “Wait, so what are you saying are the takeaways from that Harvard team’s modeling data?” I’m sorry I wasn’t sufficiently clear when I wrote about the Harvard team’s data. The two big take-aways from the graphs that are…
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Responses to “On testing.”
My spouse posted my previous essay on social media, and I’d like to address some of people’s comments. There were some excellent points! My apologies if I failed to address everything that people said, but I tried my best. Scroll to find my responses to: A shutdown could have prevented the Covid-19 epidemic. We know…
45, access to health care, air pollution, air quality, antibodies, antibody test, antibody testing, asymptomatic, CDC, corona virus, coronavirus, coronavirus immunity, Covid, Covid testing, Covid versus flu, Covid vs flu, Covid-19, Covid-19 antibodies, Covid-19 epidemic, Covid-19 immunity, Covid-19 in children, Covid-19 serum test, Covid-19 testing, cruise ship, demographics, Diamond Princess, domestic violence, Donald Trump, duration of coronavirus immunity, duration of covid immunity, Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, epidemiology, flu deaths, flu vaccination, flu vaccine, Harvard, health care, how many people were infected, immunity, infection, infection rate, influenza, influenza deaths, intubation, Ioannidis, isolation, Italy, John Ionnadis, lockdown, lung damage, modeling, New York Times, PCR, PCR testing, pollution, PotUS, Premier Biotech, quarantine, risk of social distancing, Robbio, sampling, sampling bias, Santa Clara, science, serum test, shutdown, smoking, smoking deaths, smoking rates, social distancing, Stanford, Stanford study, suicide, teaching in jail, Trump, vaccination, vaccination rates, ventilators, viral propagation, viral shedding -
On testing.
With more data, many of us can stop being afraid and start helping our friends & neighbors who are most at risk.
2022, 45, access to health care, age, air pollution, air quality, Andrew Gelman, antibodies, antibody test, antibody testing, ass-hat in chief, asymptomatic, case fatality rate, CDC, CFR, cigarettes, coronavirus, coronavirus immunity, Covid testing, Covid versus flu, Covid-19, Covid-19 antibodies, Covid-19 epidemic, Covid-19 immunity, Covid-19 in children, Covid-19 serum test, Covid-19 testing, cruise ship, demographics, Diamond Princess, domestic violence, Donald Trump, duration of coronavirus immunity, duration of covid immunity, Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, epidemiology, flu deaths, flu vaccination, flu vaccine, Harvard, health care, how many people were infected, immunity, infection, infection rate, influenza, influenza deaths, intubation, Ioannidis, isolation, Italy, John Ioannidis, lockdown, lung damage, modeling, New York Times, PCR, PCR testing, pollution, PotUS, Premier Biotech, quarantine, risk of social distancing, Robbio, sampling, sampling bias, Santa Clara, science, sedentary behavior, serum test, shutdown, smoking, smoking deaths, smoking rates, social distancing, Stanford, Stanford epidemiologist, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford study, Stanford University, suicide, teaching in jail, Trump, vaccination, vaccination rates, ventilators, viral propagation, viral shedding -
On inequality and disease.
Whose lives matter enough that we shut down? Whose matter so little we won’t save them with Gatorade?
45, 77-year-old white man, 78-year-old white man, abuse, age-related disease, age-related immunosenescence, AIDS, Albuterol, Bernie Sanders, cancer risk, CDC, clean water, climate change, climate destabilization, communicable diseases, coronavirus, coronavirus coverage, coronavirus test, coronavirus testing, cost of care, cost of clean water, cost of health care, cost of inhalers, cost of medical treatment, Covid-19, Covid-19 coverage, Covid-19 epidemic, Covid-19 pandemic, Covid-19 stimulus, Covid-19 testing, damage to our economy, deaths of despair, Democratic primary, demographics, diarrhea, dirty water, domestic violence, Donald Trump, drug addiction, economy, election, epidemic, essential business, essential businesses, far right, flatten the curve, Gatorade as medicine, generational privilege, global warming, health care, HIV, HIV epidemic, HIV pandemic, ICU, inequality, infectious disease, infectious diseases, inhaler, inhalers, intensive care unit, intimate partner violence, invasive ventilation, Joe Biden, malaria, New York Times, old white men, Pandemic, PCR testing, PotUS, presidential election, presidential primary, privilege, quarantine, respiratory infection, respiratory infections, school closure, seasonal influenza, seasonal influenza versus covid-19, shutdown, social distancing, social isolation, stay at home, stay at home order, stock market, suicide, suicide risk, top causes of death, Trump, Trump administration, ventilation, ventilators, water-born illnesses, wealth, wealth inequality, World Health Organization -
On sacrifice.
Young people are scared and angry — and they have every reason to be.
45, age-related mortality, AIDS, AIDS epidemic, coronavirus, coronavirus epidemic, Covid-19, Covid-19 pandemic, Covid-19 testing, economic injustice, economic justice, epidemic, gap in education, GBI, global wealth tax, guaranteed basic income, HIV epidemic, insider trading, mortality, Pandemic, PotUS, Republican party, school closure, social isolation, stock market, Trump, U.S. politics -
On the Golden Record.
The Golden Record could be the death of us all. But a vision of death might convince us to live better now.
alien contact, alien life, aliens, archaeology, Carl Sagan, climate change, climate destabilization, conquest, contact, cooperation, cultural collapse, cultural imperialism, extinction, extraterrestrial intelligence, extraterrestrial life, global warming, global wealth tax, Golden Record, Greenland, guaranteed basic income, heat death, human extinction, imperialism, message in a bottle, space travel, The Golden Record, Vikings, Voyager, Voyager spacecraft, wealth transfer, worst pillow talk -
On currency, again
If you’re willing to extend credit — whether in dollars or Honey Buns — you control the money supply.
AIG, bank credit, bank lending, bank loans, banking, barter economy, business cycle, central bank, central banking, commissary, credit, currency, debt, debt spending, deregulation, finance, fiscal policy, government bailout, hair grease, Honey Bun, incarceration, incarceration crisis, inflation, insurance bailout, jail, jail bartering, jail economy, jail mail, jail tattoo, lending, loans, mass incarceration, monetary policy, money, Money and Government, money supply, politics of inflation, QE, quantitative easing, recession, Robert Skidelisky, Ryan-Collins, speculation, tattoo, teaching in jail, The Past and Future of Economics, where does money come from -
On currency
Money is an illusion, but the consequences of not having it are very real.
asset pricing, banking, Bitcoin, Bitcoins, blockchain, Capital, capitalism, central bank, central banking, cum ex, currency, deflation, dentist in jail, dentistry, financial fraud, fiscal policy, fraud, history of money, incarceration, inequality, inflation, investment, investors, jail, jail dentistry, jail poetry, jail poetry class, jail poetry workshop, labor, labor versus capital, monetary policy, money, pulling teeth, QE, quantitative easing, stock market, stock market fraud, tax fraud, tax loopholes, teaching in jail, teaching poetry in jail, teeth pulled in jail, toxic assets, velocity of money, wealth -
On dealing.
For deftly navigating the vagaries of supply and demand, M.B.A. students are praised. Dealers wind up in jail.
A.E. Stalling, Art Monster, Art Monster poem, Bloomington, college town, college town drugs, dealing, dope, dope dealing, drones, drug crimes, drug deal gone wrong, drug dealing, drug laws, drug-related crimes, gentrification, heroin, housing policy, Indiana University, jail poetry, jail poetry workshop, low-income housing, manslaughter, marijuana, meth, methamphetamine, minotaur, minotaur poem, murder, OD, overdose, paranoia, poetry, poetry analysis, police, police policy, policing, pot, Stalling, teaching in jail, teaching poetry, teaching poetry in jail, Vigilante, War on Drugs









