by Surly1, Doomstead Diner
“Who needs four horsemen when one will do just fine?”
. . ― Charlotte Hale, Westworld
Updated 18 March 2020, 7:51pm EDT.
There are two schools of thought as to the consequences of the current coronavirus pandemic:
- This is the BIG ONE.
- This is NOT the BIG ONE.
Please share this article – Go to very top of page, right hand side, for social media buttons.
Expanding on the two schools meme:
1) This is the BIG ONE. The US is still in “no data, no problem” mode. Ten days behind Italy. Watch for a near-vertical spike when testing begins and denial ends.
2) This is NOT the BIG ONE. While the “infectability” factor of the disease is ten times greater than the flu, its lethality is relatively low, aside from the elderly, the sicks, and the poors. Making the disease a gift to the capitalists by way of reducing overhead. “Buy the fucking dip, ‘cuz nothing matters.”
Most of us who frequents sites like Doomstead Diner would agree that whether you’ve been personally touched by coronavirus or not, one is well-advised to be prepared with essentials to weather an interruption of several weeks in business-as-usual (BAU.) But many people do not, and have neither the interest nor means to prepare for much except tomorrow.. Homeland Security’s emergency and disaster prep site, ready.gov, suggests: “Store a two-week supply of water and food,” Prepper types think in terms of months – two, six, 12 months. The site also advises checks of any prescription drugs to ensure a continuous supply and a refill of nonprescription drugs, which is Prepping 101.
So with my son-in-law arriving and our household down to its last sixpack of TP, I decided to make a Costco run – one of the most desperate actions of my life. It was absolutely shithook berserkers. I had no idea I was about to take my life in my hands until an overweight woman on a motorized shopping cart decided that I was an unnecessary obstacle between her and the tinned chicken. I escaped with my skin intact, but a couple of old folks left in my wake may have be hurt.
I didn’t look back.
When people fail to develop a plan about what they actually need in advance, a natural response is to snap up things they don’t need and will never use as a hedge against future uncertainty. So there is a great deal of unplanned panic buying. Costco is crowded on weekends, and I had been there amidst crowds, but had never seen it as crowded as March 13. Many cleaning supplies were also completely plundered and not on offer. There is also sheer price gouging opportunism, as you’ll see below.
Now I have a better idea why.
After six weeks of denial, dithering and deception, Fat Orange has found that you can’t bully, intimidate or gull a novel coronavirus as easily as, say, a US Senator.
In the absence of clear leadership frorm an administration who views the pandemic as a distraction from its re-election marketing message, the states have taken the lead. We’ve decided to Cancel Everything. The effort is to limit exposures, meaning avoiding crowds and preventing the sort of spike in exposures and sicknesses that overwhelms hospitals and health care systems, as in Italy. “Social distancing” is the new watchword, and it overlays perfectly with my preferred lifestyle, which is heavy on “leave me the fuck alone.”
Here’s a reasonably complete list of Coronavirus closures: List of events, sports, and more canceled amid COVID-19 fears. Even NASCAR postponed a couple of events, which may sink in with the doorknob-lickers.
Covid-19 is everywhere. It will be everywhere it has not yet reached. As a “novel” virus, we have no built-in “herd immunity.” And it will change our lives in ways we cannot predict.
How did it come to this?
The approach of the Trump regime to date has been, “no data, no problem.” Trump’s approach from jump has been to minimize the problem, mock the sufferers, game the numbers, and blame Obama. (If you’d like to check that assertion, someone already has: A Complete List of Trump’s Attempts to Play Down Coronavirus. You’re welcome.) You are quite correct to note that any lead time the US may have had has been squandered in fecklessness. Countries from Singapore to South Korea are managing to test large portions of their populations, but in the US we’ve administered 11,000+ and turned away God knows how many more.
The other day, I heard the governor of Ohio say they probably had 100,000 active cases working in that state alone. Today, the Ohio Department of Health believes 100,000 Ohioans are carrying coronavirus, confirmeing that. In Virginia, within a week we’ve gone from two reported cases to 45 reported cases and one death. There is even a case now in RE’s Alaska, The Last Great Frontier.
For his part, Trump tells a nation terrified of coronavirus that none of this is his fault. At a news conference last week, Trump lied, insulted reporters, and explicitly refused to take responsibility for his own actions when directly asked.
.At one point, Trump was asked about the admission of Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, that our lag in testing was “a failing.” And he was asked if he takes responsibility for this failure.
Trump’s response: “I don’t take responsibility at all.”
The president claimed that “we were given a set of circumstances and we were given rules and regulations and specifications from a different time,” and this existing legal infrastructure “wasn’t meant for this kind of event with the kind of numbers that we’re talking about.”
It’s an astonishing claim, and it’s astonishing because Trump has spent the better part of his term dismantling the federal government’s pandemic fighting infrastructure.
And why can’t you find your bleach, wipes, and cleaning supplies? The Hand Sanitizer You Can’t Find Is In This Putz’s Garage. Because someone decided to make a market out of your misery. “Retail arbitrage” has created individuals who have found in this global panic a route to becoming real jerks, inspired by news of the potential for over 1 million American deaths to turn a handsome profit.
The current pandemic isn’t one specific person’s fault, but there are individuals who have found in this global panic a route to becoming a real jerk.
Chief among them is Tennessee’s Matt Colvin who, with the aid of his brother Noah, was inspired by news of the potential for over 1 million American deaths to turn a handsome profit.
The retired Air Force technical sergeant is the new face of price gouging, thanks to a profile in Saturday’s New York Times. Beginning March 1st, Colvin, whose primary income is reselling collected goods on sites like Amazon, hit the road and bought as much hand sanitizer as he could find. For a while, the money was rolling in. But when his prices soared, Amazon, eBay and other marketplaces rightly shut him and his fellow panic profiteers down. He estimates he now has 17,700 bottles of the virus-killing ooze, as well as hand wipes and all the other highly sought after materials you can’t find in a store right now. The cleaning products are collecting dust.
This is the kind of behavior you get when so-called “conventional morality” is replaced by worship of the free market. “Retail arbitrage” sounds so much classier than “rapacious price gouging” and “disaster capitalism.”
Karma, your table is ready.
A Movement to Stop the COVID-19 Pandemic
The absence of Federal leadership and the resultant blamestorming has failed us in preventing the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic. Slow reactions, public appeasement policies, and an urge to stabilize the economy to preserve re-election prospects (to say nothing of the need to impose “message discipline” via Mike Pence on the experts) are keeping them from taking the measures it takes to protect millions from this disease. It is time for us, and up to us, as citizens to take action now and do our part to “flatten the curve” and fight COVID-19.
Putting it bluntly: #Stay The Fuck Home! Wash your hands frequently! And stay away from Costco.
Stay safe.
.
include(“/home/aleta/public_html/files/ad_openx.htm”); ?>