I came down with something… 

It was on my penultimate day in Nicaragua. It began with a dry cough and progressed to a wet cough. I’m fatigued. Otherwise, okay. I’m treating it by drinking liquids and resting. It feels like it will be over in a few more days.

What I haven’t done is get a COVID test. And I’m wondering why. If I had the same symptoms a year ago – even six months ago – I would have been tested. But I don’t feel the need to be tested now. I don’t feel in mortal danger. Nor do I believe I’m a danger to anyone else. When I’m with other people, I take the precautions I have always taken when sick. I bump fists and keep my distance. I stay away from old people and sick people.

Is it a cold? What is a cold? Is it the flu? Isn’t the flu a virus? And aren’t most viruses coronaviruses? I don’t know. What I have feels very much like an ordinary cold or flu. Nothing much to worry about. But is that true? Should I take a test? I don’t know. I’ll see how I feel tomorrow. In the meantime, I’m continuing my research on how we responded to the initial COVID outbreak, and on all the “facts” we were told that just weren’t true. (See “Worth Considering,” below.)

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Slight Uptick in GDP, but Pink Slips Are Up, Too! 

There has been a bit of positive news on the economy recently. GDP is up slightly. And inflation is slightly down. Neither is significant. It feels temporary to me. On the negative side, US companies continue layoffs. I listed about a dozen examples on Nov. 22. Here are some more:

* Meta is backing out of a major New York office deal as it prepares to cut budgets across the company.

* DoorDash will lay off 1,250 employees.

* Crypto firm Kraken is letting go of 30% of its workforce.

* The mainstream media is doing it, too. CNN slashed more than 200 jobs, Gannett (owner of USA Today and dozens of local newspapers) cut 6% of its news staff, Paramount Global laid off 30 employees, and NPR is cutting more than $10 million from its budget and freezing hiring.

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The Hunger 

Directed by Tony Scott

Starring Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie, and Susan Sarandon

Released in theaters Apr. 29, 1983

Available on various streaming services, including The Criterion Channel and Amazon Prime

The blurb from The Criterion Channel promised a “sensual slice of modern gothic horror” with Catherine Deneuve and David Bowie as “cinema’s most stylish vampires.”

That, The Hunger delivered. And more. There was Susan Sarandon, early in her career, and a host of compellingly odd secondary characters, including a brief Christopher Walken cameo. (See if you can find him.)

The movie is based on a book of the same title, written by Whitley Strieber. I liked it. The plot is engaging. The direction and cinematography are artsy-fun and experimental. The style is high-David-Bowie. The music is great. And the sensuality – well, we are talking about Catherine Deneuve and Susan Sarandon enraptured in bloodsucking lust!

Critical Reception 

This is not a movie for your basic horror movie fan. It was panned by almost all the critics when it came out.

* “The Hunger is an agonizingly bad vampire movie, circling around an exquisitely effective sex scene. Sorry, but that’s the way it is, and your reporter has to be honest.” (Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times, Oct. 2004)

* “The movie reeks with chic, but never, for one minute, takes itself too seriously, nor does it ever slop over into camp.” (Vincent Canby, New York Times, Aug. 2004)

Later reviews were better. Some much better. One called it “a cinematic work of art that has stood the test of time.”

You can watch the trailer here.

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The COVID Response. What We Got Wrong.

Part IV: Shutting Down Outside Activities

Do you remember that, beginning in March of 2020, on the advice of the WHO and the CDC, the US began issuing mandatory stay-at-home orders? California was first, on March 19, and was soon followed by 42 states and territories.

We were all so terrified of COVID, and knew so little about it, that almost nobody objected.

And do you remember that, although we were allowed to go shopping for “essentials,” there was a total ban on outdoor activities, including concerts and sporting events?

I was a bit surprised by that. Being outdoors – even in a crowd – seemed safer than being in a small indoor space with people you didn’t really know.

But what seemed absolutely insane to me was when they closed down the beaches and parks. Being surrounded by people in an outdoor stadium felt like it had some level of risk. But being outside on a beach or in a park, where it was easy to distance yourself from others? What was the point in that?

There was no point because it never did make sense.

Yet, the mandates were issued and enforced without a shred of evidence that they worked. On the contrary, studies done soon after the outbreak – early in 2020 – showed that being outside greatly reduced the risk of infection. And by a very significant degree.

But those studies were ignored. They were ignored by the CDC. And they were ignored by the mainstream press. Instead, we were shown hypothetical, mathematical models of the virus spreading outdoors at alarming rates.

And then, just like the other falsehoods we were told to believe, the obviously idiotic lie about the danger of being in outdoor spaces was no longer front-page news.

Beaches and parks were gradually and quietly opened, though outdoor venues continued to be shut down in most places. That seemed somewhat sensible, despite the fact there had been evidence since the beginning that the risk of attending outdoor concerts and sporting events was actually quite low.

For example, a study of 64 college football games during the 2020 season involving 1,190 athletes found zero spread of COVID during game play based on three postgame PCR tests over the course of a week – likely because of the outdoor setting and short duration of close contact, researchers said. And another study published in Nature magazine in November of that same year showed that the vast majority of transmissions were happening indoors.

Those studies were conducted early in the pandemic. Why didn’t we hear about them then? And why did we continue to keep outdoor activities shut down for more than two years? (California, the first state to do it, was also the last one to open them up again in March of this year.)

Looking at the 2020-2021 mandates now, it’s obvious that they were not just unnecessarily severe, but also irrational.

And yet we accepted them.

But the truth will out, as the Bard said. And when the public began to be aware of the facts, what did the CDC and the government and the major media do? Did they correct the inaccuracies? Did they investigate how and from where the misinformation had come?

No. They simply stopped talking about it. And we stopped hearing about it.

If you check the CDC’s COVID guidelines now, you will find no mention of the danger of going to parks and beaches or attending outdoor events. Instead, you will find a recommendation to “spend time outside when possible, instead of inside,” advice they should have published two years ago. “Viral particles spread between people more readily indoors than outdoors,” they now say, “because the concentration of viral particles is often higher [indoors] than outdoors, where even a light wind can rapidly reduce concentration…. You are less likely to be infected with COVID-19 during outdoor activities because virus particles do not build up in the air outdoors as much as they do indoors.”

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The Future Looks… Connected 

According to Peter Diamandis, by 2032, “every person on earth will have access to the web with speeds and capabilities far beyond what heads of nations and Fortune 500 CEOs had just a few decades ago. This revolution in connectivity will ignite a renaissance of innovation, and once again transform our planet.” Read more here.

Mental Telepathy Is Coming Soon 

Elon Musk is amazing. Rockets. Electric Cars. And now Neuralink, which will connect human thought to computers. Click here for details.

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In the Nov. 4 issue, I told you what I think of kale… the latest trend in Hollywood style eating. BJ, a golf buddy, agrees. He sent this handy tip for the next time you have kale for dinner.

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A paraprosdokian – from the Greek para (“beyond”) and prosdokia (“expectation”) – is a figure of speech in which the latter part of sentence or statement has an unexpected twist. The twist is often humorous. Here are some examples of how it’s been used:

* Winston Churchill: “You can always count on Americans to do the right thing – after they have tried everything else.”

* Groucho Marx: “Outside of a dog, a book is a man’s best friend. Inside of a dog, it’s too dark to read.”

* Homer Simpson: “If I could just say a few words… I’d be a better public speaker.”

* Fran Lebowitz (in an essay from The Fran Lebowitz Reader: “Any child who cannot do long division by himself does not deserve to smoke.”

* Douglas Adams (in The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy): “The [alien] ships hung in the sky in much the same way that bricks don’t.”

* Henny Youngman: “Take my wife – please!”

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More Dumb Students 

As I pointed out on Tuesday, college students today know lots about white male privilege. How do they do when asked some basic academic questions, like the kind you’d expect a 6th grader to know?

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