Weekend
Edition – A weekend version of Rink Rats this
week, our topic routine.
This writer is three weeks without wearing pants, no
problem there, in fact I am getting a nice tan on the old gams. Every day is
the same; 5:45 am make the coffee, read the newspapers, wipe down the kitchen,
and we begin our remote teaching day at 8:00 am.
Online teaching is not new to me but dealing with
students who have never done this before has been an experience. I use all
platforms; Zoom, WebEx, Skype, Jabber, Facetime, enough to make your head spin.
Overall, students have been just great; engaged, attendance has been 100% and
they have maintained their community spirit and sense of humor. I wish I could
say that about my colleagues. The subject of a future blog.
Afternoon has daily office hours, a short walk
around the neighborhood and then back to the remote classroom in the evening.
Honestly, though I despise the circumstances, I enjoy the challenge and look
forward to the effects of the virus to test the future for higher education
serving their various constituents.
This routine is generally the same every day – even
on the weekend there are office hours and prep time for the week ahead and
grading.
But I do miss sports, a tough one. I do miss not
seeing my friends, colleagues and family, a tough one. Not hanging with the boys at the golf club, I
forgot what the inside of my local pub looks like, a tough one.
Hang in there, I miss you all, be well and safe.
COVID-19 NOTES
– Hurricane Katrina killed more than 1,800 people and cost an estimated
$161 billion in current dollars, making it the most expensive natural disaster
in U.S. history. But those affected could find safety and aid outside the
disaster area, and America's economy barely experienced a blip.
For decades, people in the 11 states that seceded
during the Civil War -- America's poorest region -- have suffered from a
scourge of obesity and hypertension, which intensify the danger of the
coronavirus and the Covid-19 respiratory disease that it causes. Four of the
five states with the highest diabetes rates are in the South. And eight didn't
expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, leaving thousands of families
without access to routine care, even as financially troubled rural hospitals
wither away. Those factors give the South a special vulnerability, as did the
haphazard response from some governors as the disease began to course through
the country.
The virus's spread in Louisiana is among the fastest
in the world. Beaches in Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, and the
Carolinas all recently drew crowds of non–socially distant spring breakers.
Reports of raucous partying in Southern cities such as Nashville, Tennessee,
continued long after New York and the West Coast showed just how bad things
could get. And churches remained stuffed with congregants, while some deeply
conservative Southerners swatted away concerns about the pandemic, labeling it
a liberal hoax meant to damage President Donald Trump, who has downplayed the
severity of the pandemic.
Something surprising is unfolding amid the
finger-pointing and war-gaming about the coronavirus threat to America: A
general consensus is forming about the next 60 days of wait and pain:
Virtually every state will be in some form of
quarantine for at least April and likely much of May.
Death tolls will rise high, possibly beyond 100,000.
But the combination of increased testing, social distancing, medical supplies
and public awareness should avert the worst scenarios.
The $2 trillion rescue package will float the U.S.
economy through this month. Unemployment will skyrocket — before the stimulus,
projections topped 30%. But help is on the way to blunt some of the damage,
making the chances of catastrophic collapse much lower than a few weeks ago.
Businesses will still be destroyed, more than most
realize. But the days of either party caring about Fed actions, congressional
spending or simply doing too much are over, for now. Another big rescue package
will be needed as we sort through the wreckage — and it could be bigger than
the first.
College students are home for the rest of the
academic year — and now face questions about employment and internships. And
while it hasn't been made official for all K-12ers, it's hard to see any school
reopening before summer.
America has a chance to return to some semblance of
normal in late May or June, gradually and perhaps geographically. Anything
beyond that would be too catastrophic to consider.
The threat of a post-summer resurgence is real, and
likely. But the country will also be far better prepared to test, isolate and
potentially heal.
A realistic vaccine produced and distributed at
scale likely won’t be a reality until at least 2021, though there is hope
experimental versions will be fast-tracked before.
It will take years, if not a generation, to dig out
of the debt, lives and jobs lost. But those conversations will be punted until
coronavirus is behind us.
One thing to watch: A growing number of Fortune 500
CEOs worry this consensus underplays the danger to the U.S. economy, if America
stays at home beyond April.
If April becomes May, many fear the chances of
America's economy snapping back fades.
TOP FIVE
WORST PANDEMICS –
1. The Black Death
A plague so devastating that simply saying “The
Plague” will immediately pull it to the front of your mind, in the middle of
the 14th century—from 1347 to 1351—the Black Death remade the landscape of
Europe and the world. In a time when the global population was an estimated 450
million, at least 75 million are believed to have perished throughout the
pandemic, with some estimates as high as 200 million. As much as half of Europe
may have died in a span of only four years. The plague’s name comes from the
black skin spots on the sailors who travelled the Silk Road and docked in a
Sicilian port, bringing with them from their Asian voyage the devastating
disease, now known to be bubonic plague.
2. 1918 Spanish Flu
Approximately 90 years before the 2009 swine flu pandemic
killed more than 200,000 people, reports of an especially dangerous form of
influenza began to appear around the world. Kansas was the site of the first
U.S. case, in March 1918. Appearing in multiple countries around the world, the
disease spread quickly, ushered along even faster due to the close living
quarters of troops fighting in World War I. This first instance of an H1N1
pandemic would be dubbed The Spanish Flu (despite the fact that it didn’t
actually come from Spain). It burned out quickly and suddenly, by 1919, with
the explanation still unknown today. But it left the global population
decimated—with a mortality rate as high as one in five and an estimated
one-third of the world population afflicted, as many as 50 million people are
believed to have died. Approximately 25 million of those deaths came in the
first 25 weeks of the outbreak.
3. HIV/AIDS
The HIV/AIDS pandemic is one we’re still battling.
And while medicine has made great strides, making HIV in many ways a chronic
condition that can be managed in many countries, the end of the pandemic still
seems to be a long way away. Originating in Cameroon and first recognized as a
disease in 1981, the earliest documented case is believed to be in 1959 in the
Congo. As of 2011 at least 60 million people had been infected by AIDS and 25
million had died. Today its impact varies widely across the world—while in 2008
an estimated 1.2 million Americans had HIV, Sub-Saharan Africa alone was home
to 22.9 million cases, with one in five adults infected. About 38 million
people were believed to have HIV in 2018.
4. The Plague of Justinian
In the year 541, rats on Egyptian grain boats
brought a pestilence to the Eastern Roman Empire that would ultimately leave
approximately 25 million people dead. The Plague of Justinian quickly tore
through the empire. Even the emperor himself—Justinian I, for whom the plague
was named—contracted the disease. While he lived, many didn’t, with modern
scholars estimating that at one point as many as 5,000 people died per day in
Constantinople, the empire’s capital. By its end, about 40 percent of the
city’s population was dead—so many and so quickly that bodies were left in
piles—joined by about one-fourth of the eastern Mediterranean. Modern experts
believe the outbreak to be the first recorded case of the bubonic plague.
5. The Antonine Plague
The Antonine Plague was named for Roman Emperor
Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, who ruled during the outbreak along with co-regent
Lucius Verus, the outbreak began in 165 and lasted until 180. An estimated five
million people died from what is now thought to have been smallpox. It’s
believed to have begun in the Mesopotamian city of Seleucia (in modern-day
Iraq) and spread to Rome by soldiers returning from the city’s siege. At one
point during the extended pandemic an estimated 2,000 Romans died each day.
This isn’t a plague that discriminated—both emperors mentioned above are
believed to be among its victims.
Honorable mention:
Cholera
There’s no one outbreak of cholera to point to that’s
on the level of any of the above five pandemics. However, since first spreading
from Calcutta along the Ganges Delta in 1817, it has killed millions. The World
Health Organization estimates that each year that passes sees between 3 and 5
million new cholera cases, killing as many as 120,000 people. Untreated, it can
kill in a matter of hours.
Cholera is also notable for the role a specific
outbreak played in the development of modern epidemiology. English physician
John Snow published his “On the Mode of Communication of Cholera” in 1849,
updating it in 1855 with lessons he’d learned the year before. During the 1854
Broad Street cholera outbreak in the Soho district of London, Snow had—based on
his theory that cholera was transmitted by exposure to contaminated water—used
extensive interviews and intricately plotted maps to trace the source of the
outbreak to a single water pump. Disabling the pump ended the outbreak almost
immediately, in a poignant example of an early, effective public health
intervention.
PET PEEVES — The good news: Scientists say there is still no conclusive evidence to
suggest coronavirus can be passed from pets to humans. On that front, a new
Chinese study has shown cats are not a major factor in spreading the disease.
The bad news: Cats can be infected, and they appear to be more susceptible to
Covid-19 infection than dogs, with kittens at possible higher risk than older
cats. Pets in both Belgium and Hong Kong have tested positive. Dogs, pigs,
chickens and ducks in similar experiments have shown low susceptibility, while
ferrets showed similar risk levels to cats. But scientists agree the results
should raise no alarm with pet owners. "Take care of your pets much the
same as you would any other day. If your pet is ill, seek professional
assistance," Beijing veterinarian Edgar Wayne Johnson said.
BIRTHDAYS
THIS WEEK – Birthday wishes and thoughts this week to Russell Crowe (56),
John Madden (84), Dennis Quaid (66)
COLLEGE
CHRONICLES – Two weeks ago, during
the coronavirus pandemic, a group of about 70 students from the University of
Texas at Austin partied in Mexico on spring break. Now, 44 of the students, all
in their 20s, have tested positive for the virus and are self-isolating. More
are being monitored and tested. The Austin outbreak is the latest to result
from a group of college students who ignored social-distancing guidelines on
spring break, many under the impression they were unlikely to be affected.
Look
out for our college students. This has disrupted them at a formative part of
their lives. They're the future and will need a pathway back to campus. Some of
them have shared with me that they just won't go back, at least in the
short-term.
The
readjustment of college kids -- is a very interesting point.
The emergence of digital cash, including
bitcoin and Facebook’s recently announced cryptocurrency, Libra, is about more
than security, privacy and making payments easier. As Finn Brunton writes in
“Digital Cash,” these new forms of money challenge “an implicit set of
assertions about value, time, history, and social structure.” The pioneers of
digital cash didn’t start by simply considering the technical challenges of
establishing currencies outside the established systems of government and
banking. They were guided by “philosophical and social commitments on
authority, sovereignty, and the nature of value.”
The bitcoin story begins with emergence
of low-cost, powerful computers in the 1970s and the communities of academics
and programmers who saw the possibility of new kinds of social organization. As
data became digital and power over information changed hands, governments,
companies and individuals would have the chance to renegotiate their terms of engagement.
At the heart of this change would be money.
For digital cash to work it must satisfy
“a set of seemingly paradoxical and impossible demands: it must be available
but scarce, unique and anonymous but identifiable and reliable, and easy to
transmit but impossible to copy.” One major influence was the “Extropians,” a
loosely affiliated group of crackpot futurists. Their philosophy, which took
shape in the late 1980s, was built on the belief that humans were on the cusp
of technological and scientific advances that would make us immortal, in which
case we would need stores of value that could outlive passing fads like banks
and paper money.
Economists like Friedrich Hayek had
believed in classical liberalism and the value of the individual over the collective.
The Extropians adopted those ideas to bolster their own contempt for the
boneheaded bureaucracy of governments and corporations. To achieve their wild
ambitions would require liberation from established systems, including
traditional money. They experimented with small-scale versions of digital cash
that had names like GhostMarks and DigiFrancs.
You hear echoes of this way of thinking
throughout the history of Silicon Valley. Peter Thiel, one of the founders of
PayPal and later the first outside investor in Facebook, said of PayPal’s
platform that it would enable “the creation of a new world currency, free from
all government control and dilution—the end of monetary sovereignty, as it
were.” Mr. Brunton also describes groups of “crypto anarchists” who believed
that digital money would lead to “global, networked black markets of
untraceable, untaxable commerce, after which governments, of necessity, would
collapse.” Their ideas fed projects like Silk Road, an online black market that
was a popular venue for illegal drug deals for a couple of years, until it was
shut down in 2013 and its founder, Ross Ulbricht, convicted and sentenced to
life in prison.
Bitcoin emerged in late 2008 and early
2009 out of the rubble of the financial crisis, and it solved key problems of
scale and security. Mr. Brunton writes that “the first few years of bitcoin’s
adoption were shaped by the circumstances of contemporary crisis and the
particular fantasies of libertarian escape that provided a framework for its
value: scarce cryptomoney to offset ‘the perils of fiat money,’ emergency
coinage for extraordinary times.”
The mark of bitcoin’s success, though,
has not been widespread adoption but rather the way it has become “suitable for
hoarding, display, begging, conspicuous waste, and status competition.” As Mr.
Brunton writes, “It may well be the purest and most honest expression of a
society that could not figure out what to do with its technological
inventiveness . . . except to squander it in creating new kinds of artificial
scarcity.”
Facebook now hopes to use its global
scale to launch a broadly usable and trusted digital currency, built on a
blockchain technology similar to the one that underpins bitcoin. But given the
beating the company has taken in recent months for its seemingly cavalier
approach to privacy and user data, this may prove a bigger challenge than it
anticipates. As lumbering as the existing system of money may be, it remains
the enemy we know.
The digital currency’s turnaround this
year has offered hope that the worst is over after last year’s steep slump.
When bitcoin first crossed $10,000 in November 2017, it took just 18 days to
hit its all-time high of nearly $20,000 before it came crashing down. The
latest rebound has come with less hype, and perhaps more hope that the market
is showing some signs of maturing.
“There are more reasons to believe in
bitcoin now than there were the last time [bitcoin was at $10,000,] though I’m
still not convinced that the price is sustainable,” said John Sedunov, an
assistant professor of finance at Villanova University who published an
academic paper in December analyzing whether bitcoin was more than just a
speculative asset. Bitcoin has outperformed most traditional asset classes this
year, with investors citing more institutional support for cryptocurrencies and
the blockchain technology that underpins them.
Large investors and corporations now
play a greater role too, as exemplified by Facebook’s plans. JPMorgan Chase is
developing JPMCoin, even though its Chief Executive James Dimon once called
bitcoin a fraud, a comment he later said he regretted. Fidelity Investments has
developed a custody service to store bitcoin. Online trading platforms such as
E*Trade Financial Corp. and Robinhood also offer cryptocurrency trading to
clients.
The industry is still plagued by hacks,
security lapses and fraud. One of the largest exchanges, Bitfinex, tried to
cover up a loss of $850 million in customer funds. The largest Canadian
exchange, QuadrigaCX, collapsed as its founder was using customer funds for
personal expenses.
A bitcoin rally just wasn’t in the
stars, it seems.
As Facebook’s proposed Libra payment
system took its lumps in congressional hearings for a second day, the leading
cryptocurrency already in circulation suffered some serious sympathy pains.
Bitcoin had more than doubled between early May, when the Libra project was
announced, and late June. Since then, as doubts have crept in about Libra, it
has lost nearly a third of its value. While bitcoin may recover, Wall Street is
less confident about Libra generating much revenue for the controversial social
network company.
There’s been a lot of positive trends
and signs, but there are still many negative issues which continue to plague
the industry. My opinion give me a pocket of Sawbucks any time.
MARKET WEEK
- A record-smashing 6.6 million Americans filed for unemployment last week,
thrusting the nation deeper into economic armageddon. Combined with the 3.3
million people from the week prior, roughly 10 million Americans have filed for
unemployment in two weeks. That's the population of Michigan.
The speed and scale of the job losses is without
precedent. Until last month, the worst week for unemployment filings was
695,000 in 1982. By shuttering businesses and forcing vast layoffs, the
coronavirus outbreak has in two weeks wiped out more jobs than the worst months
of the last recession.
The hardest hit? Jobless claims in New Hampshire,
Indiana, North Carolina, Michigan, and Louisiana rose 4,000% or more. In terms
of actual volume, over 878,000 Californians, 366,000 New Yorkers, and almost
406,000 Pennsylvanians filed. Ohio logged more claims in the last two weeks
than it did in all of 2019.
While the pandemic initially whacked sectors like
tourism and hospitality, job cuts are now getting deeper in industries that had
been more shielded, like education, healthcare, law, and tech.
One silverish lining: As part of the rescue package,
the government is allowing more types of workers to apply for pandemic relief
funds, such as independent contractors and the self-employed.
Unemployment numbers could get worse. Just this
week, over 300,000 retail workers were furloughed. And the St. Louis Fed
recently predicted job losses could total 47 million.
The March jobs report will be released this morning,
but it’ll paint an incomplete picture since surveys were conducted the second
week of March (before all those record unemployment claims).
The April report should provide a better indicator
of how the pandemic has affected the U.S. job market. Citi economists told CNN
they predict 10 million lost jobs this month and unemployment rising above 10%.
WHAT’S ON MY iPHONE PLAYLIST? - five songs we are
listening to this week:
1). “Gravity”, 2005: John Mayer
2). “Pick up the Pieces”, 1974: Average White Band
3). “Three Little Birds”, 1977: Bob Marley and The
Wailers
4). “My City Was Gone”, 2006: The Pretenders
5). “Right Place Wrong Time: 1974: Dr. John
OUT AND
ABOUT – Though we do not get out and about these days, before
when we could this writer had the honor of speaking at the memorial service in
January for Pris Schroeder (1956 St. Lawrence). Lennie McKinnon (1958 St.
Lawrence) came all the way from Florida to honor her longtime friend Pris. Here
we are celebrating Pris picture taken from world famous Tick Tock Inn (closed
2018). Lennie looks great, still playing golf, summers in Canton and her children
Mike, Kristy and Kitty are all well.
RINK RATS DAILY QUARANTINE PLANNER – (click
on the link)
Morning workout
Here’s a seven-minute workout that requires nothing but a chair and the
will to keep going when the side plank kicks in.
Work playlists
Poolside
in Your Mind is perfect for those aching for summertime.
Alternatively, Christmas
Peaceful Piano is what I, a person always aching for the
holidays, listen to during work.
Lunch break, but make it productive
Do good: We’ve been writing a lot about people
losing their jobs. Here’s a list
of companies hiring right now.
Level up: Behold this
Twitter thread from Merriam-Webster of “beautiful, obscure, and
often quite useless words.”
Or don’t: Ina Garten makes
a convincing case for “it’s always 5 o’clock in quarantine.” Also,
she makes cosmos.
Correspondence
Write, email, text, at least two friends, co-workers, family a day
and ask how they are doing and you are thinking about them.
Dinner plans
Check out Half
Baked Harvest on Instagram for a mix of both health and hedonism.
I’m eyeing the cheesy herb-stuffed naan, anyone with me?
Evening activities
No screen: Birdwatching has become one
of my favorite socially distanced pastimes. Check out local feeding times
(which often conveniently coincide with cocktail hour), read up on the
dos and don’ts, grab binoculars, and start calling yourself an
amateur ornithologist.
Screen: Settle in for these nine extremely
good, extremely long streamable movies The Ringer rounded up. If
that’s not enough, The Atlantic has the perfect
film for
every stay-at-home mood.
SWAMI’S WEEK
TOP PICKS
– No more sports for a while, The Swami tries his skills elsewhere:
1). Over and
under when we can go back to the workplace – August 1, The Swami likes the
overs.
2). Over and under when I can get a haircut – July 1, The Swami picks
the overs.
3). Over and under on when we pay attention to Dr. Fauci and Bill
Gates explaining the coronavirus management AND not President Trump – June 1,
The Swami says the under on this one.
2020 Season
to Date (3-3)
Next Blog: Leadership
Until
Monday April 13, 2020 Adios.
Claremont,
California
April
3, 2020
#X-16-405
4,030
words, ten minute read
CARTOON OF THE
WEEK – Jon Adams, The New Yorker
RINK RATS
POLL – Last time you visited a barber or hair
salon?
______ last
week
______ last
month
______ two
months
______ last
year
______ I
don’t
QUOTE OF THE
MONTH
– “I long ago came to the conclusion that all life is 6 to 5 against.”
—
Damon Runyon
Rink Rats is a blog
of weekly observations, predictions and commentary. We welcome your comments
and questions. Also participate in our monthly poll. Rink Rats is now viewed in
Europe, Canada, South America and the United States.
Posted at Rink Rats The Blog: First Published – May 3, 2010
Our Tenth Year.
It's a little after 10:30 on Bainbridge Island just across the Sound from Seattle, a few more bourbons than necessary, but it's a good thing cuz the Swami is still doing his thing. An ominous end-of-2019 post by Rink Rats suggested that we might have heard the last from the Molson Gut, and I hate to say that the coronavirus did more than force families to spend time together, trash my 401k, and hurt the Donald when it got ole one ear to blog again. Glad you're alive and kickin.
ReplyDeleteThank you sir, I know you have been a long time reader. May I have your name please.
ReplyDeleteAppreciate the comments.
RR.
My name is Tom Brock, though I've been called worse. And damn autocorrect changed my typing of "Molson Muscle" to "Molson Gut." I am sorry and hope you were not offended.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteTom, sorry I did not recognize your post. No offense, I do have a Molson Gut.
DeleteI hope you and your family are well.
Keep in touch my "old" friend.