68 today. About this place in each decade there are a couple of
years where it's not immediately obvious to me which birthday I'm
having. 2020 being what it is and will likely continue to be, I
have had no trouble remembering that this is my 68th
birthday.
A lot of this is the virus, which from the demographic stats
clearly has a target on my forehead. (See
this compendium of stats as of June 23.) My age
bracket represents 21% of COVID-19 deaths, and COVID-19 represented
9.4% of total deaths from all causes in my age bracket between
February 1 and June 17. Them's bad odds, at least from where I sit.
So we're staying home, and the most human contact we've had in a
couple of months is talking to the neighbors out in the middle of
the street.
I have some bitches about the numbers. In a lot of places,
anyone who dies with tested SARS-CoV-2 in their bodies is listed as
dying of the virus, even if they died of cancer,
alcohol poisoning, car accidents, or lots of
other unrelated conditions. Granted, it's often hard to tell what
actually causes death. So although I'm willing to accept the huge
numbers of newly identified cases (where a "case" is anyone who
tests postive for the virus) the mortality numbers are almost
certainly higher than they would be if people who caught the virus
but died of something else were not counted.
Bit by bit the numbers improve, especially now that tests are
easy to come by. An awful lot of young people are carrying the
virus, but an awfuller lot of those are completely asymptomatic.
Whether they're contagious is still under heated discussion.
Catching the virus outdoors is unlikely. I'm not one of those
who blame the protests for the rising number of cases in young
people. Oh, I'm sure it helped raise the case numbers a little. But
in watching the appalling videos of the riots, what I see is a lot
of people in fast chaotic motion, outside, probably with a light
breeze. What this means is that the spreaders are unlikely to be in
close proximity to the same people for more than a few seconds.
This is not what happens at choir practice, really.
A lot of the protesters were wearing masks. Forgive me for
thinking that a lot of them weren't worried about acquiring the
virus half as much as a police record.
Oh--masks. Let's talk about masks. What I'm seeing in recent
weeks is a peculiar psychology of constant harping about masks that
does two things:
1. It makes a certain number of otherwise reasonable people
annoyed enough to refuse to wear masks in public.
2. It makes a larger number of reasonable but naive people feel
that with a mask on, they're invulnerable and cannot catch the
virus. This is major magical thinking.
I wear a mask to keep peace in the valley, mostly. Getting
yelled at by every uberkaren in the supermarket is not on
my bucket list. Nonetheless, I am under no illusions that the masks
will prevent me from either catching or spreading the disease.
There is plenty of research showing that SARS-CoV-2 spreads in
aerosol form. (That is, as free particles rather than inside mucus
or saliva droplets.) The masks available to the public will
not stop isolated virus particles drifting in the air. For
that you need properly fitted N95 masks or better, and I'm among
those who think that front-line health care personnel should get
them before the rest of us.
Consider
this article, by a skeptical MD with 36 years of
clinical experience. He knows medical masks. Woodworking masks
or cowboy bandanas are of zero effectiveness, and even surgical
masks are not effective in filtering aerosols. The virus itself is
120 nm in size; basically, a tenth of a micron. Your workaday
snotrag is not gonna stop that. Droplets, possibly--at
least big ones. But let me ask you this: What happens when a
droplet that was stopped by your bandana dries out? It seems to me
(I've seen no research on this issue) that absent their droplets,
individual viruses can be inhaled through the cloth, or blown out
into the invironment again by exhaled air.
Especially here in Phoenix, where the humidity is often in
single digits, those droplets will dry out fast. Maybe
they'll remain stuck to the cloth fibers. Maybe. Bet your
life on it? Not me.
So, again, we're staying home. I'm trying to work out how to get
the ball rolling on my new novel The Molten Flesh. The
first chapter is a flashback, to twelve years before
The Cunning Blood takes place. We're
focusing on a different nanotech society this time: Protea, which
is designed to optimize the human body. Sangruse 9 can do a little
of that, but Protea literally rebuilds the interior structure of
the body to make it much more resistant to trauma, radiation,
cancer, infectious microorganisms and aging. It's not as smart as
Sangruse 9, nor as good with physical chemistry. Still, once you
understand the full reality of what it can do, it's a pretty scary
item. And that's the canonical Protea. In 2354, Protea was
forked. A renegade Protea Society member breaks with the others and
starts tweaking the device. The story emerges from that.
I'm trying to put together an action scene where renegade Ron
Uhlein steals the 1Earth starship Vancouver. He succeeds
(with Protea's constant assistance) and in the process demonstrates
to Sophia Gorganis that starships can be stolen. What she
does with that knowledge is told in The Cunning Blood.
I need to catch up a little on Contra entries here. I have one
partly written involving my
All-Volunteer
Virtual Encyclopedia of Absolutely Everything idea, and another
about the COVID-19 coin shortage. Really. Remember: The universe is
stranger than you can imagine...and I can imagine a
lot.