I had one post of my own this week for subscribers to The Athletic, on my disdain for MLB’s proposal to keep expanded playoffs beyond 2020. I also did a Q&A with our Royals writer Alec Lewis and answered some questions for our Nats writer Britt Ghiroli on each of those teams’ farm systems.
My guest on The Keith Law Show this week was my friend and former colleague Adnan Virk, talking about the season to date and some upcoming movies of interest to him (he hosts his own movie podcast called Cinephile). My own podcast is now available on Amazon podcasts as well as iTunes and Spotify.
Over at Paste, I ranked the five best board game reboots I’ve played, as a companion to last week’s review of Nova Luna, itself a reboot of an earlier game called Habitats.
I’ve been keeping up with my free email newsletter better recently; my thanks to those of you who’ve signed up and who’ve sent kind notes in response to some recent editions.
The holidays approach! My books The Inside Game and Smart Baseball make excellent gifts, or so I’m told by my editor and publicists.
And now, the links…
- Longreads first: The most likely way to get infected with COVID-19 is coming into airborne droplets that contain the virus – that is, breathing in what infected people breathed out. All of your Lysol wipes and closing schools/workplaces for “deep cleaning” is hygiene theater: You get COVID-19 from being in an enclosed space with someone who has it and isn’t wearing a mask.
- The New York Times looks at the strange case of Ed Buck, who appears to have killed multiple gay Black men by overdosing them with meth. Buck pitched himself as a major Democratic donor in southern California, but the evidence is that he talked a big game but really wasn’t a big deal.
- NPR exposes how “Big Oil” sold U.S. consumers on the lie that plastics would be recycled.
- This Washington Post story highlights the dangers of medical misinformation by showing how one 26-year-old film editor fell prey to online conspiracy theories about COVID-19, masks, and vaccines. By the end of the story, he’s gone completely off the rails.
- A former Facebook data scientist alleges that the company has ignored blatant manipulation by autocratic governments or other political parties, including those in Honduras, Azerbaijan, and Ukraine, and says she was fired for spending time on these matters.
- Scientific American has endorsed Joe Biden for President, the first time in the publication’s 175-year history that it has endorsed a Presidential candidate.
- A second Washington Post story highlights the battles over the US Postal Service and how the Trump Administration scotched a plan to distribute hundreds of millions of masks to Americans.
- Dividing athletes into male and female groups requires imposing a clear binary on a messy reality. So says David Epstein, writing for Slate on the decision to ban Castor Semenya from women’s track unless she agrees to suppress her natural testosterone production. Vonnegut called this one in “Harrison Bergeron.”
- Shere Hite, a pioneering sex researcher who first rose to prominence with her 1976 book The Hite Report, which discussed female sexuality and sexual experiences, died earlier this month at 77.
- Another woman has accused Donald Trump of sexual assault and his adherents do not care…
- …because so many of them care only about ending a woman’s right to choose.
- The group “Democrat Voters Against Joe Biden” doesn’t have any actual Democrats in it.
- Meanwhile, Turning Point USA, a pro-Trump cult led by Charlie Kirk, is paying teenagers to tweet disinformation on COVID-19 and mail-in voting or post similar information on Facebook. I’m not clear why those sites haven’t banned Kirk and TPUSA for running de facto troll farms.
- Trump’s legal strategy to suppress the vote is continuing apace in Wisconsin and other swing states, right in plain sight of everyone who should care.
- A nurse who worked at an ICE detention center alleged that women held prisoner there were being given hysterectomies without their consent. Some women who were in that camp have alleged that the nurse was complicit in those forced sterilizations.
- Climate change is killing Americans and destroying our physical infrastructure, but the Republican Party says we can’t afford to try to stop it.
- The UK government’s chief scientific advisor revealed that he was strongly rebuked for arguing for a stricter lockdown earlier this year.
- This New England Journal of Medicine editorial advises us how to build trust in an eventual COVID-19 vaccine. Hint: It’s not by promising one will be out before the election.
- Two more white women revealed (or were exposed) in the last week that they’ve been posing as Black. I feel like this is a bigger problem than the salacious coverage implies – this isn’t just a scandal, but it’s a serious case of fraud, as these women all have taken jobs or academic positions that should have gone to Black women, and thus probably slowed or derailed other women’s careers as a result of their fraud. The news coverage focuses more on the scandalous part, which leads to pointless claims about “racial dysphoria” or other nonsense, when these women are just frauds.
- My friend and colleague Lindsay Adler wrote about Dak Prescott and her own experiences with depression (for subscribers to the Athletic).
- The NYC bookstore Kitchen Arts & Letters, which sells books about cooking, food, and drink, has a GoFundMe up to try to help them survive the pandemic’s drastic effects on their business.
- There’s a fight going on within Spotify over the company’s new, exclusive deal with Joe Rogan, because of many transphobic comments he’s made over the years, and appearances by guests who engage in transgender denialism.
- Board game news: Embarcadero, a 2021 game co-designed by the designer of Scoville, is on Kickstarter and already well past its modest funding goal.
- Infinity Gauntlet, a new variation of the fast-playing deduction game Love Letter, is now out from Asmodee.
- Dire Wolf announced the forthcoming game Dune: Imperium, an officially licensed property with art from the new movie version of Frank Herbert’s novel.
- This about sums things up for 2020.
I’m not sure “hygiene theater” is the right way of putting wipes and deep cleans. Early on, we weren’t sure how it spread, so we (well, some of us anyway) took moves to guard against all types of ways viruses are transmitted. Now we know better, but I don’t think earlier caution was unjustified.
“All of *your* Lysol wipes…”
Now Keith is chastising folks for following what were considered best practices as we made sense of a novel virus. Sheesh.
The entire paragraph is in present tense. It’s clearly not referring to what we did or thought in March.
Fair. But this report came out how recently?
Keith has laid in to anyone he thought was acting in a risky manner. To now be flippant about folks being overly cautious is hypocritical and just smug.
The article acknowledges that it’s possible (although unlikely) to get the virus from a surface. So if I can reduce that chance from, say, 0.5% to 0.25% by wiping my groceries, why wouldn’t I? Who am I harming by doing this? The coat and time spent are both negligible.
For you, no the costs aren’t that great whatever the odds are. But for a school or workplace? Those costs are high. You’re looking at a couple thousand dollars for every deep clean. A local high school says they have $40,000 set aside in the budget for deep cleaning the school. Their thought at this point is deep clean twice a week. If they do that, they have enough for about 4-6 weeks worth of deep cleaning. Their original budget probably allowed them to do it once a month.
Some schools are also closing one day per week to allow for cleaning between groups. Or otherwise devoting time and resources to these deep clean procedures between groups.
My school is requiring us to clean materials between groups. My director is actually not concerned about surface contact spread BUT the DOH requires it. So whether it is hygiene theater or not, many of the institutions engaging in these practices are not doing so out of choice. Hopefully, the regulations shift with this new understanding coming to light. We shall see.
While the financial / time costs to wipe your groceries may be negligible, shouldn’t a mental health aspect be considered as well? While I am in complete favor of reasonable practices (wearing a mask, making an effort to keep a distance), normalizing hypochrondria could bring some unintended consequences.
@chris – I can’t say I really give any mental energy to it at all. The food gets delivered (which, by the way, has been a HUGE bonus that I never would’ve explored without COVID) and I wipe it down. I don’t obsess about it, I don’t think about it, it just happens. No mental health impact whatsoever that I can reckon.
I feel like COVID is either going to mess you up mentally or it’s not. I don’t think Lysol wiping is going to be the straw that breaks the camel’s back on that topic.
I don’t understand the connection between not caring about a woman’s claims of sexual assault (which seems indefensible) and being pro-life (a topic about which reasonable minds can disagree).
Trump supporters do not care how many women he assaulted as long as he appoints judges that will overturn Roe v. Wade.