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oldernow

Member Since 2006

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ready or not...

Mar 12, 2020
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the interesting thing to me is the way various collective cultures are reacting to the unknown. panic basically. when i think of my father, who was a 4-year POW in WWII being told he wouldn't walk any more, it was as though someone had mentioned that today was Thursday... not so much numb or detached as integrated, able to navigate calm or stormy waters with aplomb... of course his wife, my mom, had a complete meltdown, but then she did that when the toast got burned...

so---the point? that in the moment most boundaries and governments in Asia, Europe and North America are believed to be fixed and stable--some are even run by stable geniuses!--or not... Africa and the Mid-East are not so stable, and while there is every reason to believe that this virus is traveling across northern Africa with the same speed as it may traverse Australia, say, there's less hyper-reaction to it--partly, no doubt, to fractured or non-existent infrastructures, or super-efficient suppressive regimes (::cough::SaudiArabia::cough)--but also partly because daily life has been a shitstorm for nigh on to thirty years (centuries?) in those parts... so this virus has to wait its turn to be the focus of fear and unbalanced response. the very fact that things like toilet paper and sanitizers are flying off the shelves while people paw through the display of bulk tomatoes, candies and kids school supplies points to the sheer irrationality of these reactions. but without knowledge what else beside the irrational do we have? faith? that's irrational but with polished shoes (or sandals), the occult? same, only with smelly stuff and maybe some boobs, science? for most of us that's an irrational faith too, since we know fuck-all about epidemiology outside of what a few games and movies tell us...

and to wail or rail against the stupidity of people is just a waste of air, not to say a touch arrogant since a great deal of our daily life depends upon technology we are in no position to maintain, repair or create for ourselves... reading the history of Europe I am struck by how fluid national identities really are, and how often they fragment, rejoin, appear and disappear--and how little we are prepared for such apparently 'seismic' shifts--like the fracturing of America which I am sure will happen, as its boundaries are no more naturally created than were those of the USSR... a long time ago, i discovered, in my role as a counselor, that the poor and the very very rich recognize that their lives and fates are not under their own control... the poor because a store or plant closure can put them on the street without notice, any day of the year, the very rich because, well, things like this can obliterate the stock market and wash away a significant part of their paper empires... it is only the middle class who believe that there is always a solution to every problem, that if 'we' haven't solved the problem we are failures, or 'they' are fucking with us... it never or rarely occurs to people that 'we' might not in fact be in control of this world, of life itself, or even of our own toenails... and that the recognition of this truth does not bring depression or claustrophobia (okay it might, but if it does, that's just the remnants of the middle-class ghost clinging to your soul)... instead, it brings peace... and with that peace one is finally free... free from paralysis and thus able to take action when action can be taken, and to wait and watch with neither despair nor anxiety until that moment comes.

VIEW 3 of 3 COMMENTS
ferkixlll:
As usual an apt song. Back in the '70's Leo Buscallia's lectures used to get PBS air time during pledge week. One of his points ( of several ) that has stuck with me: If you want to see how much of an impression that you make, take a glass of water, stick your finger in & then remove it. ** The problem with T. P. is that the Industry was AT Capacity. The supply for Commercial T. P. Vs. Household T. P. is completely Separate. And now that so many are using their Home Toilet instead of Work or other non-Home locations means that there is a Surplus of Commercial T. P. and increased demand, not hording, of Home T. P.. When I was Over-the -Road there were times that I got a load of T. P. at a Paper Mill and took it to a Grocery Store Chains Distribution Center rather than a Center that all Chains could order from. As time goes on the Keg Beer vs. Bottle Beer devide will show up the same way. And other Commercial vs. Home use Items will track in a similar way. Carry on.
Apr 8, 2020
oldernow:
@ferkixlll you make an interesting point about the TP... my office building is on the other side of my driveway on 60 acres sandwiched between two massive vinyards -- so besides my employees, i am rather isolated to begin with (not counting the wife and cats, that is).  With 8 -- eight!! -- female employees ATM, I go thru TP so much that I switched to commercial supplies some time ago - hence not really noticing the change.  ironically, with all of them now working from home, i have a more than adequate supply for this millennia... or the year anyway.  our work is mostly on computers, so the work continues.... when this all went nuts a few weeks ago my wife went straight to our cleaning supply company and grabbed a few boxes of this and that.  I am on medications for a lung virus that zero out my immune system so--bad lungs plus vulnerable to illness = not good.  hence the employees working from their homes.  our area is moderately hit - about 500 cases in a town of 60,000 so far, but more every day.  the big problem is that all the regional hospitals are taking all kinds of overflow from downstate.  my doctor friend says they can't even get saline solution here, much less medicines, PPE, etc. --all the local eye doctors and dentists have given their stashes of such things to the hospital a while ago.  no medical people have succumbed yet - and that is the biggest worry, really.  50% of the town died in 1918 when the doctors died...
Apr 9, 2020

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