kmiller wrote:
Covid Omicron Variant BA.2.12.1 Spreading Quickly Across United
States; Related Cases Up Nearly 100% In Past Two Weeks
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/covid-omicron-variant-ba-2-175205925.html
It's probably happening because tweeter blocked the orange goon. Elon!
Quick! Buy Moderna!
Don't worry about it. Fauci said the pandemic was over. Follow the science.
Covid Omicron Variant BA.2.12.1 Spreading Quickly Across United
States; Related Cases Up Nearly 100% In Past Two Weeks
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/covid-omicron-variant-ba-2-175205925.html
It's probably happening because tweeter blocked the orange goon. Elon!
Quick! Buy Moderna!
On 5/3/2022 7:17 PM, bfh wrote:
kmiller wrote:
Covid Omicron Variant BA.2.12.1 Spreading Quickly Across United
States; Related Cases Up Nearly 100% In Past Two Weeks
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/covid-omicron-variant-ba-2-175205925.html
It's probably happening because tweeter blocked the orange goon.
Elon! Quick! Buy Moderna!
Don't worry about it. Fauci said the pandemic was over. Follow the
science.
You Were Right About COVID, and Then You Weren’t
Understanding when to abandon beliefs and when to recommit to them can
help us ride out this pandemic and prepare for the next one.
According to Grant, the best way to keep an open mind in an unclear situation is to do just this: Think like a scientist. (The other,
lesser ways to think are like a “preacher, prosecutor, and politician,†which are what they sound like.) The writer Julia Galef calls this “the scout mindset,†as opposed to the “soldier mindset.†The scout and scientist mindsets are approximately the
same thing: “The motivation to see things as they are, not as you
wish they were,†she writes in her eponymous book.
Thinking like a scientist, or a scout, means “recognizing that every single one of your opinions is a hypothesis waiting to be tested. And
every decision you make is an experiment where you forgot to have a
control group,†Grant said. The best way to hold opinions or make predictions is to determine what you think given the state of the evidence—and then decide what it would take for you to change your mind. Not only are you committing to staying open-minded; you’re committing to the possibility that you might be wrong.
Because the coronavirus has proved volatile and unpredictable, we
should evaluate it as a scientist would. We can’t hold so tightly to prior beliefs that we allow them to guide our behavior when the facts
on the ground change. This might mean that we lose our masks one month
and don them again the next, or reschedule an indoor party until after
case numbers decrease. It might mean supporting strict lockdowns in
the spring of 2020 but not in the spring of 2022. It might even mean
closing schools again, if a new variant seems to attack children. We
should think of masks and other COVID precautions not as shibboleths
but like rain boots and umbrellas, as Ashish Jha, the White House coronavirus-response coordinator, has put it. There’s no sense in being pro- or anti-umbrella. You just take it out when it’s raining.
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2022/05/covid-opinions-school-closures/629736/
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