A Few Readings on the Ebola Outbreak

Greg Laden, writing at ScienceBlogs, addresses the argument that diseases like malaria still pose a greater threat in Africa than the Ebola virus, and whether Ebola is taking attention away from other diseases (at least one person went so far as to call Ebola the “Kardashian of diseases”). Africa is a big place, and while it’s easy to say that malaria is a bigger danger than Ebola in places that have few or no Ebola cases, the same cannot be said in the countries that are directly being affected right now. Laden looked at the annual death rate due to malaria in Liberia, Guniea, and Sierra Leone, divided those numbers by twelve to get an estimated monthly rate, then compared those numbers to the average number of deaths per month in the 3-6 months of the Ebola outbreak:

  • Liberia: 142 malaria, 92 Ebola
  • Guinea: 49 malaria, 67 Ebola
  • Sierra Leone: 145 malaria, 144 Ebola

It’s not the most scientific survey, but it does indicate that while of course malaria is a huge problem, Ebola is a crisis in those countries right this second.

Laden also addresses the question of resource allocation:

[C]onsider the thought experiment where you have $10,000,000 that you want to give to either developing an Ebola vaccine, or a Malaria vaccine. Since billions have been spent on developing a Malaria vaccine and there still isn’t one, your donation would be a drop in the bucket. Retrospectively, it would be equivalent to something like the combined costs of couriers and mail by researchers working on a Malaria vaccine over the last few decades. Or the cost of coffee and donuts in the break room. Or conference travel fees. Or something like that. The point is, a bunch of millions of dollars might actually produce an Ebola vaccine given the starting point we have now, or at least, move us a good deal in that direction.

At Quartz, Gregg Gonsalves writes about people’s tendency, when faced with something unfamiliar and scary, to focus on the personal: Continue reading

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No More Saturday Morning Cartoons

I just learned that this morning was the first Saturday morning in at least fifty years with no cartoons on broadcast television. While I don’t think I have personally spent much time watching regularly-scheduled animated programming on Saturday mornings since we all wondered if the Smurfs had any sort of copyright claim against the Snorks, I can’t help but feel wistful that an era is ending.

I also can’t help but realize that I actually remember the PSAs that ran during commercial breaks better than the cartoons—this is almost certainly due to repetition, since I would’ve seen the “hanker for a hunk of cheese guy” way more often than any one episode of The Herculoids or Turbo Teen. (Okay, seriously, how f—d up was the basic concept of Turbo Teen? What happens if one of the headlights gets smashed? Does he lose an eye???) Anyway, since I don’t seem to have anything else to do this morning—I’m certainly not going to be watching any cartoons!!!—here are a few old memories for my fellow Gen-Xers who maybe thought the nostalgia segments of Reality Bites were ahead of their time.

Of course, we have the “hunk of cheese” guy:

I don’t know if anyone remembers the singing bean and grain of rice: Continue reading

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This Week in WTF, October 3, 2014

– Ironically Eldritch: To kick off the month of Halloween, here are some of the stories of H.P. Lovecraft, presented as rather mundane webcomics (h/t io9).

– N4u6h7y l33t: How does one troll the Peninsula High School class of 2015? A bit of computer-nerd jargon ought to do nicely (h/t Alice).

By CairoSmith, via Reddit, HuffPo

By CairoSmith, via Reddit, HuffPo

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Ebola Quarantine in Dallas

You should not panic over the first reported case of Ebola in the United States, specifically right here in Texas (albeit in Dallas, but that’s still Texas.)

State health officials have reportedly enacted quarantine procedures for members of the person’s family. This could lead to our other favorite subject for freak-outs, some sort of shadowy government takeover under the guise of a communicable disease quarantine, or total government incompetence, or some inexplicable combination of the two. I did a Storify to explain why you shouldn’t worry about that, either.

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Establishing Fox News’ Accuracy

Fox News has an accuracy rate of 18%, according to Politifact branch Punditfact (h/t Jason). This means that of the 83 statements made by the network’s talking heads reviewed by Punditfact, 15 of them were found to be “True.” Another 10% were determined to be “Mostly True,” and 22% were “Half True.” The remainder fell into the “Mostly False,” “False,” and “Pants on Fire” categories.

There are 1,440 minutes in a 24-hour day. A stopped clock is therefore right 0.14% of the time*, if you count whole minutes as single data points.

This means that Fox News is correct more than 100 times more often than a stopped clock.

Jim Champion [CC BY-SA 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/)], via Flickr

“You agreed with me a few hours ago when I said it was 7:42. Why are you trying to change your answer now?”

(That bit of spin is free, Ailes, but the next one’ll cost you.)


* I’m trying to find the source of this saying, to the extent it is knowable. The most likely seems to be Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach, but I’ve also seen it credited to Paulo Coelho, Stephen Hunt, and Patrick Jane. Anyone know where it comes from?

Photo credit: Jim Champion [CC BY-SA 2.0], via Flickr.

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Before “Post-Racial” America…

…the U.S. government implemented an immigration enforcement initiative that was actually called “Operation Wetback”:

Operation Wetback was an immigration law enforcement initiative created by Director of the Immigration and Naturalization Service Joseph Swing. The program was implemented in May of 1954 by the U.S. Attorney General Herbert Brownell, and utilized special tactics to combat the problem of illegal border crossing and residence in the United States by Mexican nationals. Ultimately, the program came as a result of pressure from the Mexican government to stop illegal entry of Mexican laborers in the United States based largely on the Bracero Program. After implementation, Operation Wetback was met with allegations of abuse and suspension of certain civil rights of Mexicans that were captured and deported by U.S. Border Patrol

I wouldn’t go so far as to say we’ve progressed to a more “enlightened” point in our culture, though. I think the main lesson we, as a society at large, have learned is that programs like that shouldn’t have such overtly derogatory names.

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The Statute of Limitations Is Probably Less than 3,000+ Years

So it seems unlikely that any sort of legal claim would succeed here:

There is virtually no evidence outside the Bible that the ancient Jews fled Egypt in an exodus, but one Egyptian political scientist says they fled with gold and treasures and now they must give it all back — with 3000 years worth of interest, of course.

Good luck, I guess, though.

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“I am not my mental illness.”

Quote

Since writing (or being featured in) a number of pieces recently about mental health this week…I’ve had a number of commenters asking why I’m choosing to “air my dirty laundry.” Why, they wonder, do I want to share such personal information on the internet? Don’t I value my privacy? Or am I just hungry for attention?

What these commenters are really asking is: why do you talk about things as shameful and embarrassing as depression, anxiety and suicide?

What these commenters are really saying is: the things that you have written here has made me uncomfortable, although I can’t quite articulate why.

What these commenters are really wondering is: how can she be mentally ill and look so normal – what separates her from me?

The answer to that last question is: nothing. Nothing separates me from you.

***

Of course mental illness affects how I live my life, but I am not my mental illness. Living with depression and anxiety certainly presents its own unique challenges, but those challenges don’t define who I am…As much as I’ve had moments of vicious anguish and misery, I’ve also had too many wonderful experiences to count. I’ve felt so much joy that my weepy little heart could burst. Living with depression doesn’t mean that I never feel the good things. I do. Even if they’re not what I usually write about, I really do.

If I were given the chance to go back and, knowing everything that I know now, decide whether or not I should be born, I would choose to be alive every damn time.

Anne Thériault, “Airing My Dirty Laundry,” The Belle Jar.

See also “#notmymentalillness.”

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We Will Be Assimilated

I’m not sure if “Space Station Earth” looks more like the Death Star (as Gizmodo‘s Darren Orf thinks) or like the Earth a few centuries after the Borg take over. Here’s its take on downtown Austin:

(I took a screen capture in case the map doesn’t embed.)

Regardless, Mapbox Studio seems like a pretty awesome website.

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Bent iPhone Syndrome

Do you know how many people have actually reported a bent iPhone 6 to Apple (according to Apple, anyway)?

Nine.

That’s nine out of over ten million. Even if you only look at the 1.1 million units of the iPhone 6 Plus, Kif Leswing at GigaOm helpfully does the math for me and points out that this is a bending rate of 0.0008%. It’s possible, I suppose, that many more phones have bent, but that none of those people have actually notified the one entity that is in any real position to help them.

Leswing goes on to note:

In fact, the attention around what some have called Bendgate or Bendghazi says more about the media’s insatiable appetite for Apple stories than it does the latest iPhone. The story first picked up steam when a few blogs noticed a single anecdote posted to the Mac Rumors forum. Subsequent calls for other reports turned up two other stories and pictures. But the story really blew up when a popular YouTube channel, Unbox Therapy, posted a video in which the narrator sacrificed his device and purposely tried to bend the iPhone. Not surprisingly, when a grown man actively tries to break a fragile electronic device, he usually succeeds. [Emphasis added.]

Now, to be fair, the iPhone 6 will bend under pressure—Consumer Reports did science to one and found that it can only withstand up to 70 pounds of pressure. I don’t know how much pressure is in your pocket, but 70 pounds sounds like a lot.

The media just love a good tech-fail story, and a story about a phone that bends where it’s not supposed to bend is probably easier to write than one about significant problems with an iOS update.

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