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    The McMaster Department of Philosophy has now put together the following notice commemorating Barry: Barry Allen: A Philosophical Life Barry…

Three possible futures for COVID-19 in the U.S.

This is an informative (and well-informed) assessment:

In one future, a monster wave hit in early 2020 (the current outbreak of millions of cases and a projected hundreds of thousands of deaths globally by August 1), but is followed by alternating mini-waves of much smaller outbreaks every few months with only a few (but never zero) cases in between.

In the second scenario, the current monster wave is followed later this year by one twice as fierce and even longer-lasting, as the outbreak rebounds after a summer when a significant drop in the number of cases and deaths led officials and individuals to let down their guard, relax physical distancing more than was safe, and fail to heed (or even detect) the early warning signs that a new outbreak was gathering force. After this doubly disastrous second wave, the sea is almost calm, marred only by an occasional wave of cases that number barely one-fifth of what the fall and spring of 2020 saw. [This was the Spanish Flu pattern]

In the third possible future, the current wave creates a new normal, with Covid-19 outbreaks of nearly equal size and, in most cases, duration through the end of 2022. At that point, the best-case scenario is that an effective vaccine has arrived; if not, then the world experiences Covid-19 until at least half of the population has been infected, with or without becoming ill.

What all three scenarios agree on is this: There is virtually no chance Covid-19 will end when the world bids good riddance to a calamitous 2020. The reason is the same as why the disease has taken such a toll its first time through: No one had immunity to the new coronavirus….

Perhaps the greatest unknown involves human and social values. To put it bluntly, how many deaths can a particular country, city, or community tolerate? “Reducing infections to zero is not possible, and would come at too high a cost,” Leung said.

Different countries will decide what “too high” means; Sweden, for instance, has imposed only modest physical distancing steps, such as banning large gatherings, but its schools, restaurants, stores, and workplaces have remained open. It has fewer cases per 1 million people than Spain, Italy, the U.S., France, the U.K., and other countries that adopted stricter measures.

(Thanks to Dr. David Ozonoff for the pointer.)

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One response to “Three possible futures for COVID-19 in the U.S.”

  1. As you have accurately described many times the most influential ideology powering our society is capitalism. Subservient to capitalism are systems of consumerism, marketing, corporatism, etc. As long as capitalism organizes our society the three scenarios described here will be similar in many ways. There will be companies that figure out how to profit in each. Whether it be winning government contracts for contract tracing programs and apps or apparel companies making fashionable masks. Both are happening now. Still, the last scenario likely begins movement towards a future I have feared. It is a permanent surveillance state. Technology used to track, trace and record our every movement, even in our own homes. Under the guise of protecting public health corporations and government will both stand to profit from this new regime. All it takes is acceptance as a condition of employment or citizenry. The playbook from the Mass High Technology Council.

    http://www.mhtc.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/20200430-MHTC-COVID-19-Briefing-Summary.pdf

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