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2:00PM Water Cooler 3/16/2021 | naked capitalism
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By Lambert Strether of Corrente.
Query: Readers, for my post stomping the CDC, I’m looking for an epidemiological study on Covid transmission in the schools that I
know I linked to, whether in Links or Water Cooler. It was a primary source, not from the Guardian or Deustche Welle or whatever. It was from Europe, and had one of those nice diagrams showing the index case, and I may even have included a tweet with that diagram. But Google being what it is, I can’t find it. Can anyone help? I didn’t run it this month, and it might have been as far back as October. Thanks!
“Moonstruck sleep: Synchronization of human sleep with the moon cycle under field conditions” [Science]. “Our results show that sleep starts later and is shorter on the nights before the full moon when moonlight is available during the hours following dusk. Our data suggest that moonlight likely stimulated nocturnal activity and inhibited sleep in preindustrial communities and that access to artificial light may emulate the ancestral effect of early-night moonlight.”
Health Care
“Single Dose Administration, And The Influence Of The Timing Of The Booster Dose On Immunogenicity and Efficacy Of ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 (AZD1222) Vaccine” (preprint) [The Lancet]. “ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 vaccination programmes aimed at vaccinating a large proportion of the population with a single dose, with a second dose given after a 3 month period is an effective strategy for reducing disease, and may be the optimal for rollout of a pandemic vaccine when supplies are limited in the short term.” The M
>I would enjoy finding out why so many rioters thought taking videos and selfies of themselves in the Capitol and putting them up on Parler or Facebook was a good idea.
Some combination of total, deluded confidence there would be no consequences for their actions (whether because they sincerely thought they were doing what Trump wanted, or white privilege, or whatever) and simple stupidity.
Acacia
At first blush it certainly looks like delusion or stupidity w.r.t. the obvious consequences, but I can’t escape the sense that we’re getting a glimpse here of some deeper truth about what happens to political action when it becomes completely mediatized. I like Lambert’s choice of the word “riot” to describe what happened, with its clear connotation of disorganized, unfocused anger, and personally find the hyperbole of words like “insurrection” or “coup” to be laughable.
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