| She/ her |
| She/ her |
Let's be clear. SARS-CoV-2 is an atrociously bad virus. It can damage any number of organ systems, increases risk for all kinds of illnesses, and is causing a mass disabling event. And that's just what we know about it so far. You do not want to get it, and if you've had it you don't want it again.
Unfortunately, leaders, public health officials, and the large majority of the population think it's over and have deemed continued mitigation measures to be unnecessary. The most vulnerable have no choice but to be very cautious and they are being left behind. Many others are doing their best in order to protect themselves and others, but are also in an impossible situation.
Things are complex and dynamic, everyone's lived experience is different, and most folks who remain COVID aware are trying to balance many different and often conflicting priorities. We're often the lone masker indoors, or the ones declining to attend crowded events, or asking our kids to keep wearing their masks in school, or monitoring what information we still have available and trying to make evidence-based decisions for our families.
My concern is that all or nothing will mean nothing for all. So in practical terms that means we need to support and empower and encourage the people who are still doing what they can. For that reason, much of what I am saying now is aimed at the people who wonder if they can and should keep being cautious (yes and yes) even if they can't do it perfectly or they have to balance other things (like work, kids, family and friendship, mental health).
Every bit that we each do is important, but ultimately we aren't going to succeed if our approach relies on individual choices. For that reason I am also focused more on the need for structural improvements like clean indoor air (ventilation, filtration, UV, air quality reporting), wastewater monitoring, genomic surveillance, and vaccines that are not just chasing variants.
We won't all agree on strategic priorities, but I do believe we all share many of the big picture concerns and goals.
You’ve heard, of course, that the global average temperature has set a new record high numerous times during the past week. But we’re not breaking those old records by just a little bit. The Earth has a very bad fever and the temperature is soaring.
🚨 We are in a climate emergency. 🚨
#Environment #Climate #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #ClimateEmergency
This is a warning about Meta and Threads.
Please boost this here and outside of Mastodon so that pregnant people in the United States are informed that using Meta/Threads is dangerous.
I'm unlikely to get pregnant but I have ZERO presence on Meta/Facebook/Instagram/Threads as a matter of principle.
So, essentially, the research described below shows that income disparity leading to inequality is *not* a bug of capitalism, but a feature.
The system is working precisely as intended.
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A global study led by a researcher at Columbia University and published in the journal Scientific Reports finds that economic inequality on a social level cannot be explained by bad choices among the poor nor by good decisions among the rich. Poor decisions were the same across all income groups, including for people who have overcome poverty.
While economic inequality continues to rise within countries, efforts to address it have been largely ineffective, particularly those involving behavioral approaches. It has been often implied, but until now not tested, that choice patterns among low-income individuals may be a factor impeding behavioral interventions aimed at improving upward economic mobility.
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FULL STORY -- https://phys.org/news/2023-06-economic-inequality-individual-bad-choices.html
A global study led by a researcher at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health and published in the journal Scientific Reports finds that economic inequality on a social level cannot be explained by bad choices among the poor nor by good decisions among the rich. Poor decisions were the same across all income groups, including for people who have overcome poverty.
"Earth Sees Three Hottest Days on Record"
https://www.axios.com/2023/07/06/earth-three-hottest-days-el-nino
#Environment #Climate #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #ClimateEmergency
#foodhistory Men hunt and women gather? Large analysis says the long-held idea is flat-out wrong