TFA reminds me of this story (which reminded me of the situation sketched by TFA when I had read it, except perhaps for the ratio of leavers to left behinds) but I cannot recall its name?
One of my favorite book. I read it every 5 years or so.
"The fine article" also sounds weird to me.
1) Recruit 22 orphaned boys
2) Inject two of them with the cowpox virus (which is the actual smallpox vaccine)
3) Put all the boys on a ship leaving Spain for Venezuela
4) Scrape material from the two boy's pustules (appearing after a couple of days) and inject two more boys with that - the first two boys recover
5) Continue this daisy-chain approach until reaching Venezuela
6) Go on with people in Venezuela, arm-to-arm
7) Continue to Mexico and other places
8) Go global
And that's how you transport vaccines without fridges and airplanesAt some point it got swapped, maybe a milk maid actually got it off a horse and assumptions were made.
No current smallpox vaccine stock is molecularly likely to come from cowpox as I understand it.
[0] https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13...
My trust in institutions is limited, but I got vaxxed without hesitation, because it's a specific decision, the kind of decision that has been made many times, where the relevant institutions have a track record and every incentive to get it right.
I sometimes get the impression that people want to sell trust in institutions as an all-or-nothing package. Institution will not discuss when to trust institutions and when not to.
1) Turns out those heartless capitalists could be producing vaccines in ~2 years. The tech is there, the regulators aren't ready for the level of risk in the COVID response as a routine thing.
2) Turns out that people aren't going to inject themselves with uncertain technologies, to the point of irrationality. Contrast this to one of the usual response to "we need less medical regulation" which is that people are stupid and will hurt themselves with unproven products. My suspicion is that over the long term this irrational looking swarming behaviour actually turns out to be pretty good at managing risk no matter how crazy the individuals in it are behaving.
The problem in building, construction, technology and mining is pretty consistent. We see the strategies that work in Asia and maybe eventually in Africa - if you let capitalism happen it has powerful enough results at a such speed vs. central planning that it can be rightly called a miracle.
https://media.nature.com/lw767/magazine-assets/d41586-020-03...
That doesn't have anything to do with mRNA per se, the Uk vaccine AstraZeneca was ready even faster.
COVID appeared in March, they had the vaccine in clinical trials by April. The technical aspects aren't a factor here - the time taken to develop a vaccine is basically instant.
Are patients ready for that level of risk? Are children ready for that level of risk? Outside of emergencies, does anything justify that level of risk?
"We see the strategies that work in Asia and maybe eventually in Africa - if you let capitalism happen it has powerful enough results"
So Asia is capitalist? But other countries are not capitalist? This sentence seems to imply that America is not capitalist but Asia is capitalist. I've seen this kind of writing before. Without a rigorous definition of "capitalism" then this kind of thing quickly becomes "capitalism is all the stuff that I agree with and socialism is all the stuff that I disagree with."
"if you let capitalism happen it has powerful enough results at a such speed vs. central planning that it can be rightly called a miracle"
This suggests that capitalism is the opposite of central planning, but we could clearly design a highly decentralized version of Communism:
https://demodexio.substack.com/p/how-to-build-a-pragmatic-co...
Actual title? Are they testing out titles.
Things of the genre “everything is going to shit and here’s what to blame” are not worth reading. Exposing “The decline” of whatever the target audience cares about sure is good for attention but it’s just a toxic emotional manipulation and not useful to actually enlighten anyone.
It comes down to things always changing and having a bad attitude about the present and an unreasonable positive attitude about the past is very prevalent.