News blues
Omicron – forecast as “milder” – is pushing the US to the brink of collapse:Dire shortages as U.S. nears record for COVID-19 hospitalizations But it may get much worse. Already struggling hospitals could house about 300,000 covid patients later this month if models, which even researchers say are difficult to forecast, are correct.Read “U.S. breaks record with more than 145,000 covid-19 hospitalizations” >>
Additionally,
The United States surpassed its record for covid-19 hospitalizations on Tuesday [January 10], with no end in sight to skyrocketing case loads, falling staff levels and the struggles of a medical system trying to provide care amid an unprecedented surge of the coronavirus.Read more >>
[January 10’s] total of 145,982 people in U.S. hospitals with covid-19, which includes 4,462 children, passed the record of 142,273 set on Jan. 14, 2021, during the previous peak of the pandemic in this country.
But the highly transmissible omicron variant threatens to obliterate that benchmark. If models of omicron’s spread prove accurate — even the researchers who produce them admit forecasts are difficult during a pandemic — current numbers may seem small in just a few weeks. Disease modelers are predicting total hospitalizations in the 275,000 to 300,000 range when the peak is reached, probably later this month.
It’s not just the US. World Healthy Organization suggests more than half of Europe could be infected in next 2 months >>
Healthy planet, anyone?
“One of the hardest things to grasp about the climate crisis is the connectedness of all things.” Add to that, the interconnectedness of biomes, ecosystems, and environments that, out of balance, lead to pandemics such as this coronavirus. We still have very little idea of the genesis of this virus. We do, however, know far more about what we can expect if we do not address environmental imbalance. Resistance to address these real issues is endemic. Take what we know about burning coal and the roots of climate change.Senator Joe Manchin, West Virginia, aka King Coal, represents a powerful person bought and paid for by Big Coal. With Manchin’s help the dying coal industry is pulling one final heist — and you and I and our planet may pay the price >>
Meanwhile, back at the ranch…
Hunkered down from assorted coronavirus variants, socially distancing from potential human “vectors” - plus dealing with cold winter, I’ve delved into many – oh, let’s call them – obsessions.Reading? ✔
Always a reader. My online library tracker, Reading Insights, states I’ve read every day for 181 weeks.
Baking? ✔
Rediscovered baking. I make my own bread. I cook. I even gather online recipes for future tasting treats. I’ve watched most episodes of the Great Baking Shows - British, and Kiwi, and Canadian….
iPhone’s battery charging graphs? ✔
I create “designs” from these graphs. I like capturing the “red zones” – below 20% charge remaining – as accent color. The intensity of this obsession ebbs and flows but hasn’t evaporated. As we see with this latest version.
Exercise? ✔
Too cold to swim but encouraged by my Steps app, I reach my daily goal of 6,000 steps/2 miles each day. Overseen by the pitiless Steps app, it’s either walk or delete the app as I do not want a “forever” record of not walking on my phone.
My latest obsession?
Drum roll … American serial killers. ✔
Specifically, Netflix documentaries on American serial killers Ted Bundy, Wayne Williams, Henry Lee Lucas….
This trio was operating within the US when I first arrived in the country. I heard about them peripherally, but was busy adjusting to my new life, new country, new family, and new friends to pay attention. Registering serial killers was at the bottom of a long list of more important adjustments – and, as Goete suggests, I may not have had the imagination to cope with such activity.
Ponder Goete’s words: “Few people have the imagination for reality.”
Indeed.
Superficially “knowing about”/watching fictionalized versions of the violence and horror that humans inflict upon one another is different to focusing on this human psychological phenomenon. Different, too, from traveling in a war zone. (Been there, done that .)
TV, movies, and online media “neutralizes” horror by normalizing it, making it ubiquitous therefore superficial, merely entertaining background to TV’s main role: advertising and selling goods and services.
Today, soaked in the reality of these three serial killers’ actions, I’m re-evaluating Goete’s words and also allowing my imagination to grapple with the heretofore unthinkable: Civil war in the United States of America.
With lack of effective pushback from “leaders” in a position to pushback – the Department of Justice, the duly-elected current president, sane members of the US Congress, concerned (and sane) Americans – Trump/Trumpies ongoing insurrection and slow-moving but real coup endangers the country and We the People.
Information to imagine this reality:
- Christiane Amanpour interviews Prof Robert Pape and his new study shows the single biggest motivation for the Jan. 6 rioters (17:40 mins)
- Prof Robert Pape’s report as Powerpoint pdf >>
- Insurrectionist movement in U.S. is larger and more dangerous than expected, research finds >>
- Prof Barbara Walter on likelihood of another US civil war? (14:45 mins) If none of the others, do watch this interview!
***
New information on this mural first mentioned December 19, 2021 post. Back then I didn’t know who was the artist. I suspected, incorrectly, a local muralist I know as Michael who lives and paints in this island town. Rather, this Webster Gateway Mural – aka From Land and Sea, was created by Oakland muralist Dave Young Kim and Reno, Nevada artist Erik Burke.
It is 34 x 110 ft / 10.36 x 33.5 meters.
Sunrise: 7:23am
Sunset: 5:10pm
Howick, South Africa:
Sunrise: 5:11am
Sunset: 7:03pm
Still raining….
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Bay Area, California:Sunrise: 7:23am
Sunset: 5:10pm
Howick, South Africa:
Sunrise: 5:11am
Sunset: 7:03pm
Still raining….
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