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Showing posts from December, 2020

A Disagreement

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  So, I ought to know better but obviously I don’t. Facebook is a bizarre environment where your “friends” are often not your… well, friends. The story is simple but it prompted me to write this post on my blog rather than directly on Facebook. Here goes. I saw a post on another FB page and copied it to mine. This is it: I am not a religious person. In today’s America, polarized over religion and politics, I thought the message had some importance. The story of Christ is 2000 years old. He was a resident of the Middle East and I am certain he did not look anything like the White appearing person depicted in evangelical Christianity in the United States. In my mind this meme makes sense. We are told that Christ was a proponent of peace and tolerance. I guess socialism is the idea that we all care for each other. No sooner had I posted it than a “friend” commented that Christ wasn’t talking about government. I was told by this “friend” that government defined socialism was different an

Mr. Chaos

  A metaphor for the behavior of Donald Trump since Election Day 2020 might be found in Ernst Haeckel’s biogenetic law of Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny . The lifelong evolution of the phenomenon known as Trump was one of narcissism, sociopathy, and criminality. We may view his obscene actions since Election Day as a reprise. And such behavior has never been seen since the republic was founded. There is of course the constant refrain that he actually won the election, despite the popular vote difference (7 million fewer votes than Biden) and the electoral vote difference . Donald Trump cannot believe he would lose anything, ever. His team of inept lawyers, led by Rudy Giuliani and joined by such miscreants as Sidney Powell, have lost overwhelmingly when they have tried to bring frivolous suits to courts at all levels. When the obvious hit Trump in the face, he went deeper into delusion, inviting Powell, Flynn, and Giuliani into the Oval Office to discuss other methods of overturnin

Dickensian thoughts

  “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.” Charles Dickens opening lines for his novel of the French Revolution A Tale of Two Cities is certainly applicable this year for many reasons. The year 2020 will be remembered as a horror show for the world: pandemic and economic collapse are part of the worst of times but the United States managed to oust Donald Trump in November, even as he and his craven cult of a party refuse to concede the obvious. However, Trump will ensure political bad times for as long as he can. Trump’s latest ploy was to invite Sidney Powell, Michael Flynn, and Rudy Giuliani to the Oval Office for a night time session where Trump pressed to appoint Powell a special prosecutor to investigate election fraud, Flynn wanted m

Two viruses, different vaccines

  Yesterday, 11 December 2020, will probably be remembered in history as one of those tectonic shifts. Two events made the news: the FDA issues emergency use authorization for the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for Covid-19 and the Supreme Court refused to hear the nonsensical suit brought by Texas against four other states (Georgia, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania) to overturn the presidential election and declare Donald Trump the winner. Both represent progress. Both are incomplete answers. First, the vaccine news. After a massive Phase 3 clinical trial and review by the FDA and its advisory panel, the Pfizer-BionTech mRNA vaccine was given the green light for distribution and states will begin vaccinating people next week. General Perna, the Army four-star charged with supervising logistics ensuring the vaccine moves smoothly and safely from manufacturing plants to the states, has compared this job to D-Day in its scope . While historians may quibble with that comparison , there c

Just ruminating

  Margan and I gave a presentation on the Covid-19 pandemic this week to our residents here at MonteCedro and it set me to thinking about my life in medicine and how things have changed -- and how they have stayed the same. To do the presentation we had to do a quick review of what has happened with up-to-date statistics. There are multiple wonderful Internet sites that have those statistics and the people behind them vet the figures and update them daily. We were able to gather that data almost effortlessly and further, make a presentation that was clear and visually appealing.  When I began presenting years ago there was no Internet. I spent many hours in the library searching out sources that were on paper -- and not current by any means. My first efforts to make slides for a presentation were horribly amateurish and I am embarrassed to think about them. My photographic skills were, to put in kindly, rudimentary and the slides showed it. Of course the camera (it was a nice Konica SL