Welcome Cowpokes From Mike's Round-Up! Thanks, Jon!
2020 is the "Desperate Housewives" of years, with writers so addicted to
over-the-top melodrama for its own sake that they'll sacrifice any kind of
meaning for a momentary effect, and you keep dissolving into giggles at the
moment when you ought to be taking it the most seriously. Hurricanes in
Manhattan isn't crazy enough, it's been done before, so they have to have a
tornado watch in Manhattan instead. Give me a break.
In any case, it passed, having done little in my neighborhood other than to
knock down a lot of tree branches, showing a particular hostility to the
locust trees, seen above, in a post-hurricane dappling of late-afternoon sun
(and a very pleasant post-hurricane breeze).
Meanwhile...
Like Things Go Away
by Donald J. Trump
My view is the schoolsshould open. This thing’sgoing away. It will go awaylike things go awayand my view is schoolsshould be open.If you look at children,children are almost —and I would almost saydefinitely, but almost —immune from this disease.I don’t know how you feelabout it but they have muchstronger immune systemsthan we do somehow for this.
(Fox & Friends, 5 August 2020, via
The Wrap.)
OK, so as you know, children are not immune from Covid-19. They are less
likely to get infected than adults, and much less likely to suffer from
severe symptoms (though 10% of infected babies become critically ill, and
children who have been infected are in danger of ending up with a
multisystem inflammatory syndrome resembling Kawasaki disease, which is
pretty scary), but those who do get infected seem to carry a
lot
of virus ("children younger than age 5 may host up to 100 times as much of
the virus in the upper respiratory tract as adults"), and they can
infect others, like adults, including their teachers, and their kindly, beloved
grandfathers like PRESIDENT TRUMP:
Children under 10 were roughly half as likely as adults to spread the virus to others, consistent with other studies. That may be because children generally exhale less air — and therefore less virus-laden air — or because they exhale that air closer to the ground, making it less likely that adults would breathe it in.... And those between the ages of 10 and 19 can spread the virus at least as well as adults do.
Also, I don't know how you feel about it but it DOESN'T MATTER HOW YOU FEEL
ABOUT IT. Facts don't care about President Trump's feelings, as the guy
says. And "like things go away" covers a pretty broad range of outcomes. The
Rockies may crumble, Gibraltar may tumble—they're only made of clay—but
viruses really hang around, though their virulence seems to decline at
different rates and evolves back and forth. "Virulent" (from the Latin
virulentus meaning "full of virus" or poison, which is
what virus meant in pre-microscope days) is a terrific word, I'm
glad it showed up.
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