Monday, May 11, 2020

thoughts on the coronavirus crisis (part 6)

For my previous posts on the coronavirus crisis

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/03/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis.html

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/04/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-2.html

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/04/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-3.html 

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/05/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-4.html 

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/05/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-5.html




1.)  Quiet Waikiki


Last Thursday (5/7/2020) was my visit to Waikiki since the start of the coronavirus lockdown.  

Waikiki at night is usually a very festive atmosphere with crowds of people from all over the world. 

But now, it's a ghost town. The sidewalks are nearly empty. The shops are closed (except for the ubiquitous ABC Store, the chain of local convenience stores on nearly every corner of Waikiki).  The bars & clubs are closed. Even the street musicians aren't even around.

I remember being in Waikiki a week after 9/11. It was quieter than usual but nowhere even close to being as quiet as now.


But I did see some hearts lighting out of the hotels


Pablo Wegesend
Hearts on Waikiki hotels




2.) Missing the simple joys


Restaurants are currently open for take-out only. But I really miss being able to sit down and eat in the restaurant.

I also miss being able to workout at the YMCA.  I don't have any weights at home and therefore haven't lifted weights in 2 months. There's no room for them in my tiny apartment.

Sometimes I pass by houses and notice people working out with weights in their garages. I'd like to join in, but obviously, people are going to be suspicious of strangers walking up to their houses.

Yeah, I know there's fitness apps and workout videos online, but for me, exercise is a time to get away from screens. I already spend too much on screens. 


3.) Work conditions for essential workers

There has been much appreciation for the essential workers.

Sadly,  it's not always the employers that are giving the appreciation.

Too many employers are treating this as "business as usual", ignoring social distancing and PPE guidelines and forgetting that in the era of social media,  bad working conditions aren't secret anymore. 

The most notorious violator is Amazon, a company many people use to order stuff online. 


Jason Koebler, “Amazon Vp Resigns, Calls Company ‘chickensh**’ for Firing Protesting Workers,” Vice, May 4, 2020,



Amazon’s strategy throughout the coronavirus crisis has been to fire dissenters and disparage them both in the press and behind closed doors. There have been dozens of confirmed coronavirus cases at warehouses around the country, and workers have repeatedly said the company isn’t doing enough to protect them. Last week, Amazon ended a program that allowed workers to take unlimited unpaid time off if they fear getting sick from the coronavirus. Last Friday, Amazon workers together with Target, FedEx, Instacart, and Whole Foods workers, went on strike to protest their working conditions.
In statements to Motherboard, Amazon has said its own protesting workers are “spreading misinformation and making false claims about Amazon,” and that it “objects to the irresponsible actions of labor groups.” Last month, Amazon fired Chris Smalls, an Amazon worker in New York City. In a meeting, Amazon executives said that they believe Smalls is not “smart or articulate,” and that publicly they would focus on “laying out the case for why the organizer’s conduct was immoral, unacceptable, and arguably illegal,” according to leaked notes from that meeting obtained by VICE News




The issue is so bad that one of the company's vice-presidents, Tim Bray, is resigning in protest of what the CEO, Jeff Bezos is allowing to occur

Tim Bray, “Bye, Amazon,” Ongoing by Tim Bray, April 29, 2020,


Fast-forward to the Covid-19 era. Stories surfaced of unrest in Amazon warehouses, workers raising alarms about being uninformed, unprotected, and frightened. Official statements claimed every possible safety precaution was being taken. Then a worker organizing for better safety conditions was fired, and brutally insensitive remarks appeared in leaked executive meeting notes where the focus was on defending Amazon “talking points”.

Warehouse workers reached out to AECJ for support. They responded by internally promoting a petition and organizing a video call for Thursday April 16 featuring warehouse workers from around the world, with guest activist Naomi Klein. An announcement sent to internal mailing lists on Friday April 10th was apparently the flashpoint. Emily Cunningham and Maren Costa, two visible AECJ leaders, were fired on the spot that day. The justifications were laughable; it was clear to any reasonable observer that they were turfed for whistleblowing.

Management could have objected to the event, or demanded that outsiders be excluded, or that leadership be represented, or any number of other things; there was plenty of time. Instead, they just fired the activists.

Snap! · At that point I snapped. VPs shouldn’t go publicly rogue, so I escalated through the proper channels and by the book. I’m not at liberty to disclose those discussions, but I made many of the arguments appearing in this essay. I think I made them to the appropriate people. ¶

That done, remaining an Amazon VP would have meant, in effect, signing off on actions I despised. So I resigned.

The victims weren’t abstract entities but real people; here are some of their names: Courtney Bowden, Gerald Bryson, Maren Costa, Emily Cunningham, Bashir Mohammed, and Chris Smalls. 
I’m sure it’s a coincidence that every one of them is a person of color, a woman, or both. Right?



For a head of a tech-oriented company, Jeff Bezos is sure ignorant of the power of social media. He is ignorant of the fact that working conditions NEVER stay secret for long!

And this could be the start of a reinvigorated labor movement!


Learn more at
Jamelle Bouie, “Another Way the 2020s Might Be Like the 1930s,” New York Times, April 28, 2020,
------




4.)  People wanting to be unemployed for the sake of benefits



While some people have been fighting for more respect at work, some people have actually asked to be laid off because they found out they could make more money from Unemployment benefits than from working


Hans Bader, “Workers Are Asking to Be Laid Off, Because Covid-19 Unemployment Benefits Pay Better Than Work,” Foundation for Economic Education, April 27, 2020,
Scott Horsley, “Bitter Taste for Coffee Shop Owner, as New $600 Jobless Benefit Drove Her to Close,” National Public Radio, April 21, 2020,
But the extra money can create some awkward situations. Some businesses that want to keep their doors open say it's hard to do so when employees can make more money by staying home.
"We basically have this situation where it would be a logical choice for a lot of people to be unemployed," said Sky Marietta, who opened a coffee shop along with her husband, Geoff, last year in Harlan, Ky.

 and more

The very people we hired have now asked us to be laid off," Marietta wrote in a blog post. "Not because they did not like their jobs or because they did not want to work, but because it would cost them literally hundreds of dollars per week to be employed."
With the federal government now offering $600 a week on top of the state's unemployment benefits, she recognized her former employees could make more money staying home than they did on the job.

If I was the employer, I would tell those slackers "No"  and also "I could report you for fraud". Unemployment benefits are meant for those who have lost their jobs through no fault of their own, not for slackers who want to game the system.    There's a limit of money available for unemployment benefits, and those slackers are a drain on those who really needed the money. 

Though in Hawaii's case, the backlog in the Unemployment Insurance is so well publicized that a person has got to be really stupid to ask to be laid off to get unemployment benefits here! 

What is more common is people desperately clinging on to jobs they don't like knowing that even if they applied for Unemployment Insurance, it might be weeks (or months or even forever) before they get any money coming in.

Which brings us to.........


5.) Technological negligence in Hawaii's state government 


Computer technology moves so fast that even something a decade old is considered outdated.

Hawaii's state government takes being outdated to a whole new level.


The computer mainframe system used by Hawaii's Unemployment Insurance office was set up in the 1980s, before the existence of the World Wide Web. Not only that, but it was also before the use of the mouse.

Marcel Honore, “How an Antiquated It System Failed Thousands of Hawaii’s Unemployed,” Honolulu Civil Beat, May 6, 2020,

The nearly quarter of a million unemployment insurance applications that Hawaii has received during the COVID-19 pandemic are being processed on a government mainframe that was installed in the early 1980s, back when Pac-Man was a cutting-edge video game.
It’s fragile and slow, with technology so obsolete that it predates using a mouse, officials say.
There’s no Microsoft Windows or anything resembling it. The dozens of state workers now assigned to field unemployment calls mus instead use a keyboard to move the cursor across a basic, Atari-era screen as they try to help thousands of out-of-work applicants who urgently need payment.

and this

The mainframe was never designed to be a web service,” Kunstman said last week. “It was like, before the web. 

Any private company that is that negligent in updating its computer system would've been out of business a long time ago.

For Hawaii's state government, this negligence is business as usual.

more from the article


Local open-government advocates, however, point to the broader, years-long neglect by various high-ranking officials to overhaul Hawaii’s state IT systems. Doing so would have made the government more transparent — and vital programs more accessible for residents in need, they say. 
At one point, coming out of the Great Recession, several key agencies including DLIR, the Department of Human Services and the Department of Health considered creating a shared, user-friendly portal that would have allowed residents to apply for multiple benefits and services, as well as to file unemployment claims. 
Ultimately, the initiative fell through when it failed to get the needed buy-in across all agencies, those involved say.

So let's summarize this! A system was proposed that would've integrated information from multiple state agencies to make it user friendly for the general public, but the agencies refused!  It's like some people in the state government just love being inefficient!  The people in the state bureaucracy are just notorious for being on a power trip, and this inefficiency gives them this power. 





People who assume government operates better than private businesses often neglect to take the following  into account

  • business usually keep their computer systems updated in order to continue to satisfy costumers.
  • if those customers aren't satisfied with the business online system, revenue stops coming in
  • The government usually gets its revenue no matter what. Yes, some years the government gets less revenue (especially this one), but if you're unsatisfied with the government's services, too bad, you still got to pay taxes.  Or else!
  • Voting for politicians usually requires waiting every 2-4 years to vote. Choosing a service from the private sector means you can make the choice anytime you want.  

  • What incentive does the government really have to update its computer system? 
  • People usually only find out how bad a government agency is working when an urgent crisis happens. That means for most people, the Unemployment Insurance office's crappy computer system was "out of sight, out of mind" until they needed it
  • Because the issue was "out of sight, out of mind" for a long time, there was no real incentive for the government to update the computer system until it got massive bad publicity this year. 




6.) The predicted decline of cities


I love the city life. 

I love being able to walk, bike, or bus all the city has to offer. The malls, the parks, the entertainment centers, and more. 

I'd rather live in an apartment than a big house. I really don't want to bother with taking care of lawns. 

I hate the long suburban commutes.

But because viruses spread easily throughout crowded cities, and especially within public transportation, people have predicted a decline of urban life.

New York City has nearly half the coronavirus cases in the US.  It is a very crowded environment where a large proportion of people live in apartments and ride public transportation. 

People in the mostly rural red states live in wipe open spaces and rely on their car for transportation. They can't relate to the fear of the pandemic because they just don't experience crowds that often. 

The increase in people doing "work from home" and teleconference could mean that fewer people will feel the need to move to cities. They can stay in the suburbs and not have to worry about long commutes. 

However, there would always be the appeal of the big city, no matter what bad has happened. 9/11 didn't stop New York's shine, And even past epidemics like the Black Plaque and the 1918 flu didn't eliminate the appeal of large European cities like London, Paris, or Milan. 

Learn more about urban demographic trends at 

ReasonTV. “Will New York Ever Recover from COVID-19? ” YouTube video. Posted April 21, 2020. 


Sabrina Tavernise and Sarah Mervosh, “America's Biggest Cities Were Already Losing Their allure. What Happens Next?” New York Times, April 19, 2020,


6. Law enforcement during the coronavirus crisis


The reason I don't take this whole "right-wing" and "left-wing" seriously is because of their inconsistencies. Law enforcement is one example



  • The Right-Wing demands respect for the police, calls their critics "snowflakes" and ridicules legit concerns from ethnic minorities about abusive policing. But when the law has shut down businesses that European-American conservatives use, all of a sudden, they're concerned about how far law enforcement would go
  • The Left-Wing thinks the police, in general, are racists, but yet, they think only police should have guns. They forget to realize that the same police they call "racist" are enforcing bans on gun possession, putting ethnic minorities at risk for being racially profiled, stopped and frisked all in the name of "getting illegal guns off the streets"


I understand those are over-generalizations. However, those patterns do exist in some form.

Here are some examples.

The first one from a right-wing pundit Kurt Schlichter, who usually ridicules those who are concerned Trump's immigration enforcement policies.

Kurt Schlichter, “Dumb and Corrupt Cops Risk Losing Our Support,” Townhall, May 7, 2020
https://townhall.com/columnists/kurtschlichter/2020/05/07/dumb-and-corrupt-cops-risk-losing-our-support-n2568260


Many won’t play stupid games and they simply blow off dumb orders. I’ve witnessed police officers ignore all manner of Karen crimes, as they should. Bravo! We’ve seen a number of sheriffs stand up and refuse to enforce illegal and immoral orders from political hacks. Three cheers! 
But then there are the Barney Fifes who, instead of saying “Hard pass” when ordered to dragging off some tattoo artist, comply instead. And that’s how we got a viral vid of two tubby constables hauling a guy to the pokey for trying to feed his family. Is that what LEOs signed up for? If so, we’re in trouble. 
It’s a sad truth. Far too many of our LEOs are gutless drones who go along to get along, and it’s a disgrace.

That last sentence is exactly what many civil libertarians have been saying about  Law Enforcement Officers (LEOs) for years and why many want a reduction of laws. This is the root of criticisms of right-wing laws regulating drug use, immigration, and sex work. This is the root of criticisms of police who treat people with non-European ancestries as suspects. But such criticisms are heavily ridiculed in right-wing editorials, podcasts & more.

But when law enforcement policies inconvenience European-American conservatives, all of a sudden, they all of a sudden become civil libertarians and become the white version of the Black Panthers walking to state capitols literally armed for battle.


======

and here's another example of a right-winger finally learning the truth about law enforcement! This time by John Dempsey

John Dempsey, “Law Enforcement Should Not Enforce Health Guidelines - Now the Damage Is Done,” Townhall, May 7, 2020,
https://townhall.com/columnists/bronsonstocking/2020/05/07/law-enforcement-should-not-enforce-health-guidelines--now-the-damage-is-done-n2568359

It is often said that law enforcement officers, if ever faced with the unfortunate task, would stand up for the rights of citizens and refuse to violate the Bill of Rights. However, the edicts declared from the thrones of Democratic governors have some wondering if that is true. 

Really? 

Only now you figured that out?

Only now you figured out that law enforcement would violate your rights when ordered by their superiors to do so?

Activists in the African-American, Latino, and Muslim communities have been saying that for DECADES! 

Civil libertarians and anarchists have been saying that for DECADES! 

But only now, when European-American conservatives are inconvenienced by laws, they figure out that the police could care less about their rights?

John Dempsey also said this

It will take years for LEO’s to recover from this. They are being used as boots for a political agenda. At this point, when will police chiefs and sheriffs stand up to politicians who use them as pawns to keep businesses closed and the American dream suppressed? 

Really, John Dempsey? Only now you figured out that LEO's have ALWAYS been used as boots & pawns for a political agenda?

When the agenda was to use LEO's to stop & frisk people of non-European ancestries in the name of "stopping drugs", "getting illegal guns off the streets" or "stopping terrorism". that was an example of LEOS's being used as boots & pawns for a political agenda!

But now you because European-American conservatives feel inconvenienced because the laws have closed churches and salons, only now they're worried about LEO's being pimped to enforce a political agenda?  


and more from John Dempsey

Law enforcement’s reputation is severely damaged now. The problems and mistrust that have developed from enforcing health guidelines, instead of honoring their oath, will take years to heal.

Reputation severely damaged? Mistrust due to enforcement procedures? 

How do you think many in the African-American, Latino, and Muslim communities have been feeling all these decades? 

We've been telling you this in so many ways! 

Protest on the streets! 
Tweets! 
Through Songs!
 Through  Kneeling During a Song! 

But now John Dempsey feels oppressed because his favorite places are closed! 



If Kurt Schlichter and John Dempsey feel oppressed during the lockdown, they should also speak up for the African-Americans being abused by the NYPD who claimed they were enforcing social distancing (nevermind the same NYPD was very lenient towards European-Americans who weren't social distancing in public parks). 

Zuri Davis, “The NYPDs Violent Covid-19 Arrests Show It Hasn't Learned Much in the 6 Years Since Eric Garner's Death,” Reason Magazine, May 7, 2020,
https://reason.com/2020/05/07/the-nypds-violent-covid-19-arrests-show-it-hasnt-learned-much-in-the-6-years-since-eric-garners-death/


The NYPD, on the other hand, still seems intent on violently cracking down on nonviolent crimes. In a single week, at least three violent arrests for social-distancing violations have gone viral:



In those 3 videos, not only were the NYPD brutal to those not social distancing, but they were also threatening and even pushing those who were filming them. 

As of this time, the allegedly pro-liberty writers Kurt Schlichter and John Dempsey are silent. They're only pro-liberty when it comes to European-Americans. 


==========

On the Left, there is a Democrat state representative from Michigan named Sarah Anthony.

She usually wants the government to make gun laws stricter.

But when she feels threatened, what does she do?

Call on people with guns to protect her.

But isn't that why so many people don't want more restrictions on guns.

I get that Sarah Anthony feels inadequately protected when a bunch of European-American militia types stormed the state capitol!

So she asked some African-Americans with big guns to protect her!

It was very powerful imagery! 

It was like the Black Panthers coming back to life with big weapons protecting African-Americans! 

Lois Beckett, “Armed Black Citizens Escort Michigan Lawmaker to Capitol After Volatile Rightwing Protest,” The Guardian, May 7, 2020,
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/may/07/michigan-lawmaker-armed-escort-rightwing-protest?CMP=oth_b-aplnews_d-1


Sarah Anthony was quoted with this 

Anthony said it had been meaningful to receive a personal offer from constituents to help ensure her safety. But, she said, “the thing that I hope does not happen with this photo is that this creates an environment that would feel like more guns are needed in order to protect ourselves.”


But guns can be necessary for self-defense.   They may not be for everyone (I personally prefer to carry pepper spray), but if used properly, guns are a powerful tool for self-defense.  

Other African-Americans can definitely use the same protection Sarah Anthony got. Most will not have access to a well-armed posse to bodyguard them 24-7. But those with less prestigious jobs in less protected neighborhoods and also feel unsafe when commuting to and from work should also have the right to carry a pistol/revolvers/tasers/spray/etc for self-defense. 



7. ) Back to Hawaii

On social media, many people are sharing photos of empty beaches in Hawaii.  Especially popular is the photo of empty Hanauma Bay.

Those who don't like tourists or don't like crowds are filled with joy.

However, local sourpuss Jennifer Fiedler feels that we shouldn't share such photos because they might encourage tourists to return and give us the coronavirus

Jennifer Fiedler, “Please Stop Posting Photos of Tourist-Free Hawaii,” Honolulu Civil Beat, May 7, 2020


I think Fiedler needs to chill. People taking photos of now empty beaches are documenting history in the making.

You can't just lie via omission just because it might inspire a bad idea in someone's head.

 It reminds me of all this worry about news reports about crime & homelessness would scare tourists away from Hawaii.

But now, someone is in panic mode because photos of empty beaches might attract too many tourists.

You just can't win with some people.

Look, we should be documenting history in the making, regardless of whether it may attract or repel tourists.

As the common hip-hop phrase goes, We Need to Keep It Real! 


8.) My latest video (this one on the coronavirus crisis)


In the last year-and-a-half, I haven't had as much time to film vlogs (I usually call them "YouTube speeches).

But last Saturday, I finally got around to making one on the coronavirus crisis.

This one is more focus on my life during these times.

Here's the video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0umfMyH0dTU





Wednesday, May 06, 2020

thoughts on the coronavirus crisis (part 5)

For my previous posts on the coronavirus crisis

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/03/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis.html

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/04/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-2.html

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/04/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-3.html 

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/05/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-4.html 





image by Alissa Eckert, MS, Dan Higgins, MAMS,


1.) Grieving of Lost Opportunities


Nearly every high schooler looks forward to the final quarter of their senior year!  For some, it is the last time together on their sports teams or other student organizations.  For many, it is Prom Season. And of course, graduation!

Sadly, all of that would be canceled for the Class of 2020!

Everything they looked forward to is gone!

One of my Facebook friends thinks that this new generation of graduates should just get over it and move on. 
 
IT IS NOT THAT SIMPLE! 


For every setback, there are stages of grief!  There is denial, sadness, anger, and eventually acceptance! 

The road to acceptance TAKES A LOT OF TIME! It doesn't happen overnight! 

In fact, telling people "get over it and move on"  PROLONGS THE GRIEVING PROCESS! 

That may sound counter-intuitive, but LIFE IS COUNTER-INTUITIVE!

Let the kids grieve and leave them alone! 

======

Grieving over lost opportunities isn't limited by age.


South by Southwest, a popular festival in Austin that showcases many emerging artists, filmmakers, and musicians was canceled early in the coronavirus.

This video shows interviews with independent filmmakers who were so excited that their films will debut at the festival until it was canceled.  The interviews discussed their grieving process post-cancellation. 

The Atlantic “What Filmmakers Lost When SXSW Was Cancelled”. YouTube video,  Posted Apr 28, 2020





2.) Elections under the coronavirus crisis


In the 2nd part of the coronavirus crisis blog series, I did mention about this crisis leading to more demands for all-mail voting. I also did mention the flaws of such a system.

https://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2020/04/thoughts-on-coronavirus-crisis-part-2.html


I did remember this opinion article by Hawaii's Lee Cataluna published in February (before the virus hit our shores) mentioning the same flaws of an all-mail voting system

Lee Cataluna, “New Election Means Being Vigilant for Old Tricks,” Honolulu Star-Advertiser, February 26, 2020,
https://www.staradvertiser.com/2020/02/26/hawaii-news/lee-cataluna/lee-cataluna-new-election-means-being-vigilant-for-old-tricks/ 

The possible downside is depressing to consider, though, and it goes something like this:

>> “I’m in charge in this family, and I’ll fill out all the ballots in this house!”

>> “You want to keep your job, you show me your ballot with the right names checked on it.”

>> “This nice politician came to the day room this morning and helped all the kupuna fill out their ballots and took them to be mailed. Isn’t that sweet?”

>> “Hey, man, I hear there’s a guy who is paying 30 bucks for every blank ballot you get for him.”

>> “Voters in one district are complaining that no ballots were delivered to their mailing addresses. In other news, neighbors have reported a suspicious vehicle that showed up on their street moments after the postal delivery.”

>> “Oh, babes, sorry. I filled out yours when I filled out mines. And then I filled out mines. I figure save you the trouble, yeah?”


But we can't conduct an in-person election during an epidemic, can't we?

There was controversy over how primary elections were conducted in Wisconsin last month.  It was past the deadline to apply for absentee voting, some polling places did close and therefore causing long lines in the polling places that were open. 

But we can learn from how Liberia conducted elections in 2014 when the Ebola virus was going around.


Photo by: REUTERS / James Giahyue
Bystanders read the headlines illustrating the battle over holding the election amid the Ebola crisis in Monrovia, Liberia. 



Anthony Banbury, “Elections and Covid-19 — What We Learned from Ebola,” Devex, April 8, 2020
https://www.devex.com/news/opinion-elections-and-covid-19-what-we-learned-from-ebola-96903#

First, elections are possible in dangerous public health conditions if election officials cooperate with health, security, and other key authorities. Second, elections are imperative to protect democratic rights at a time when significant state power is being concentrated in the executive branch through the exercise of powerful emergency measures. And finally, elections must be preserved in times of crisis, as they anchor public trust in national institutions and hold public officials accountable.

Elections are possible even in the direst of public health environments. At the height of the Ebola epidemic in Liberia, the International Foundation for Electoral Systems worked with the National Elections Commission and medical experts to integrate a range of practical health measures, such as social distancing and revised processing, to ensure the safe exchange of ballot papers, ID cards, pens, and other common voting materials. During poll worker training, we incorporated an unprecedented focus on the role of queue controllers and testing the temperatures of voters. And we supported an aggressive voter education effort — built upon an extensive public health campaign — which proved critical to changing citizens’ behavior.
As a result of these measures, the election proceeded without disruption or significant public health consequences. Liberia’s democracy, at a critical stage in its evolution, was able to take a step forward rather than be beaten back by the threats presented by Ebola.
At a time of national crisis, elections are essential because they reinforce democratic institutions and the rule of law. Their postponement can have significant implications for democracy, power, and governance, especially when governments are authorized to use exceptional authorities. Mishandling or manipulating elections during such a crisis can drive the long-term decay of fundamental freedoms, solidify state capture, and feed corruption. As James Madison, the architect of the U.S. Constitution, wrote, "Where … elections end, tyranny begins.''


If Liberia can do this, so can the United States. We have a big election coming up this November! It's time election officials to properly prepare so that in-person voting can go smoothly without too many problems.



3.) Race Relations


 The spread of the virus hasn't been equally distributed among racial groups. 

In the beginning of the coronavirus crisis, there have been rumors that African-Americans would have a stronger immunity to the disease. Sadly, it turned out that African-Americans would have higher rates of infections.  Some of it has to do with higher rates of poverty, as well as higher percentages working in service sector jobs in which "work from home" is nearly impossible. 

Learn more at 
Charles Blow, “Social Distancing Is a Privilege,” New York Times, April 5, 2020,
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/05/opinion/coronavirus-social-distancing.html


U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams and CNN commentator  Van Jones, both of whom are African-Americans, have also encouraged other African-Americans to practice more healthy habits (eat healthy foods, exercise more, avoid drugs, alcohol & smoking). 


For saying this, both have been accused of "blaming the victims of a racist society". 

U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams

Public Domain
Van Jones


The Van Jones article
Van Jones, “I'm Someone Covid-19 Could Easily kill. Here Is What I'm Doing About It,” CNN, April 24, 2020,
https://www.cnn.com/2020/04/24/opinions/creating-a-pandemic-resistant-black-community-jones/index.html



the responses to Van Jones' article
Royce Dunmore, “Van Jones Slammed for Saying Black People Must Change ‘lifestyle Choices’ Amid Coronavirus Pandemic,” NewsOne, April 24, 2020,
https://newsone.com/playlist/van-jones-slammed-black-people-change-lifestyle-choices-amid-coronavirus/item/10/



Van Jones has long been an advocate of social justice. He is dedicated to educating others about how the effects of racism are still hurting the African-American community.  But because he also mentions that sometimes people have unhealthy habits that make them more vulnerable to illnesses, he gets accused of "blaming the victim" and "ignoring the harms of a racist society"?

This is ridiculous.

We can multi-task! We can be aggressive against racism AND promote healthier habits.

I mean, Michelle Obama has been doing both of that for years. She wrote about how felt she felt socially isolated while being an African-American student at Princeton University. She introduced Barack Obama to community organizers in Chicago's Southside.  She also advocated for healthier meals at school cafeterias. 


U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams also addressed the Latino community in his comments, being that he does have Latino relatives. Yet PBS reporter Yamiche Alcindor abused the race card in her tweets while Adams' speech was still going on.

Townhall writer Julio Rosas had a classic response to all this

Julio Rosas, “PBS' White House Reporter Irresponsibly Tries to Gin up Racial Controversy Against Us Surgeon General,” Townhall, April 13, 2020,
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/juliorosas/2020/04/13/pbs-white-house-reporter-irresponsibly-tries-to-gin-up-racial-controversy-against-surgeon-general-n2566799

As a Latino myself, I did not find the appeal to be problematic at all because I know of the unhealthy habits that are common within the Hispanic community. Likewise, Adams knows how devastating COVID-19 can be to people with underlying conditions or whose bodies are not in the best of shape because of unhealthy habits, which in turn can be harder for their immune system to fight off the virus.

As for myself, even I have to remind myself to get off the computer, take a walk or ride a bike. And also to reduce my junk food intake and eat more fruits and veggies. This isn't "blame the victim", it's about self-improvement. 


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In other race relations news, there has long been a stigma towards face coverings that comes with stereotypes regarding criminal activity. 

But now people of all races are encouraged to wear face coverings.

But the previous stigma doesn't go away overnight.

Dr. Oz was using a red bandana to demonstrate how to properly cover your mouth & nose.

screenshot via Jing
Dr. Oz holding a red bandana

The problem is, the red bandana is associated with the Bloods gang.  Wearing that could get you killed by rival gangs or harassed by the police who would just assume you are a gang member.


Aaron Thomas responded to suggestions to wear face coverings in an article that went viral.

Aaron Thomas, “Why I Don’t Feel Safe Wearing a Face Mask,” The Boston Globe, April 5, 2020,
https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/04/05/opinion/why-i-dont-feel-safe-wearing-face-mask/

On Saturday I thought about the errands I need to make this week, including a trip to the grocery store. I thought I could use one of my old bandanas as a mask. But then my voice of self-protection reminded me that I, a Black man, cannot walk into a store with a bandana covering the greater part of my face if I also expect to walk out of that store. The situation isn’t safe and could lead to unintended attention, and ultimately a life-or-death situation for me. For me, the fear of being mistaken for an armed robber or assailant is greater than the fear of contracting COVID-19
These are the fears that Black Americans have to constantly face. Where we can go, how we can show up, what we can wear, what we can say — it never ends. The world is upside down right now with the coronavirus pandemic, and we are living in a dystopian nightmare come to life. Still, we are living in an America where history dictates that, even in the most absurd times, hatred and bigotry continue to reign. We are still judged, convicted, and sentenced by race, by gender, sexual orientation, and class.
and more

I will not be covering my face until I am able to obtain a face mask that is unmistakable for what it is. Let me be clear: This is not because I do not trust the advice of the CDC — I do. I believe in science, and I have followed all of its guidelines up to this point. I know masks work, and I trust the CDC’s recommendation.
What I do not trust are the innate biases and lack of critical thought about the implications of these decisions. I do not trust that I can walk into a grocery store with my face covered and not be disturbed. I do not trust that I will not be followed. I do not trust that I will be allowed to exist in my Black skin and be able to buy groceries or other necessities without a confrontation and having to explain my intent and my presence. I do not trust that wearing a make-shift mask will allow me to make it back to my home.



The issue was commented further on this article
Annie Reneau, “A Black Man's Viral Commentary On Face Masks Shows Why It's Not an Easy Choice for Everyone,” Upworthy, April 6, 2020,
https://www.upworthy.com/black-man-wearing-face-masks-coronavirus



4.)  Education


As mentioned in previous posts on the coronavirus crisis, many critics of traditional schools were gloating that this era of mandated distance learning would be the beginning of the end of traditional schools. 

But in reality, this mandated distance learning is making many people MORE appreciative of traditional schools.

It is a major source of stress for families to be doing teleconferences for work, while also homeschooling their multiple children.  

Elizabeth A. Harris, “'It Was Just Too Much': How Remote Learning Is Breaking Parents,” Yahoo, April 28, 2020




With teachers relegated to computer screens, parents have to play teacher’s aide, hall monitor, counselor and cafeteria worker — all while trying to do their own jobs under extraordinary circumstances. Essential workers are in perhaps the toughest spot, especially if they are away from home during school hours, leaving just one parent, or no one at all, at home when students need them most.
Kindergartners need help logging into Zoom. Seventh graders need help with algebra, last used by Dad circa 1992. “School” often ends by lunchtime, leaving parents from Long Island to Dallas to Los Angeles asking themselves the same question: How bad am I if my child plays “Fortnite” for the next eight hours?

and more

Other families have reached out to McIntyre to say that they are too overwhelmed with their own work to help with the lessons at home. And some have told her they are trying but that their children won’t cooperate.

“She gets frustrated every time we start,” one mother emailed her last week, “and then I get irritated and she gets irritated and it usually ends in me saying we should take a break and then the cycle repeats. One or both of us typically ends up in tears by the time it’s all said and done and no work is completed.”

Even parents who describe running tight ships at home say they are anxious about what months away from classrooms will mean for their children. They are also finding it hard to accept that 25-minute Zoom classes or lessons sent by email is what school has been reduced to.
The litmus tweet of the moment came from Sarah Parcak, an archaeologist at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

“I told our son’s (lovely, kind, caring) teacher that, no, we will not be participating in her ‘virtual classroom,’ and that he was done with the 1st grade,” she wrote on Twitter in early April. “We cannot cope with this insanity. Survival and protecting his well being come first.”

Yes,  schools with traditional campuses could definitely improve, especially when it comes to protecting student's well-being! 

However, there are also necessary for that not every family is psychologically or economically equipped to do homeschooling. 

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On the other end of the educational spectrum, the coronavirus crisis is creating more fear for college students pursuing a PhD. 

Many have already taken out student loans, and with this economic climate, there would be fewer opportunities to become faculty members on college campuses.

This article by L. Maren Wood encourages current PhD students to start working on Plan B!

L. Maren Wood, “For Would-Be Academics, Now Is the Time to Get Serious About Plan B,” Chronicle Vitae, April 21, 2020,
https://chroniclevitae.com/news/2341-for-would-be-academics-now-is-the-time-to-get-serious-about-plan-b



A lot of graduate students and recent Ph.D.s are in a dire state of limbo now that Covid-19 has brought faculty hiring to a screeching halt. I know how it feels to be a job candidate with spectacularly bad timing through no fault of your own. After all, I earned my doctorate in 2009 — a year after the faculty job market collapsed in the Great Recession of 2008.
Back then I spent three fruitless years on a tenure-track market with very few openings and far too many applicants. So let me offer would-be faculty members some advice that I wish someone had told me early on: Academe may be your Plan A, but this is no time to hold off on creating and pursuing a Plan B
and

 But isn’t leaving academe tantamount to selling out? No, it’s survival. If your advisers or fellow students are disappointed in your decision, then they truly do not understand the depth of the hiring crisis, nor the toll that contingent positions take on people’s lives and health. Their disappointment should be at a system that churns out Ph.D.s with nowhere for them to go, and with little preparation for other kinds of meaningful careers.

I definitely second the necessity of a Plan B!  While I'm currently in a full-time library job, it took YEARS to land one.  If I only focused only on Plan A, I would've been living on the streets while I was waiting to land a full-time library job.

Ignore the idiots who say "focus only on a Plan A"!  Always have a Plan B, as well as a Plan C and a Plan D.