Stick to baseball, 10/17/20.

Just one piece this week for subscribers to the Athletic as I work on the top 40 free agents ranking, which will run a few days after the World Series ends: Nick Groke, our Rockies beat writer, asked me a bunch of questions about Colorado’s farm system, and I dutifully answered them. Klawchat, board game reviews, and dish posts should return next week.

My guest on this week’s episode of The Keith Law Show was my old partner-in-crime Eric Karabell, although Bias Cat did not make an appearance. My podcast is now available on Amazon podcasts as well as iTunes and Spotify.

I’m due to send out a fresh edition of my free email newsletter this weekend as well. We’ll see how that works out for me.

As the holiday season approaches, I’ll remind you every week that my books The Inside Game and Smart Baseball make excellent gifts for the baseball fan or avid reader in your life.

And now, the links…

  • Now some longreads: ProPublica details the fall of the CDC, undermined from above by the anti-science Trump Administration and from within by craven, spineless leadership.
  • Sara Benincasa’s essay “Fred and Me” is just wonderful and I won’t spoil it in the least.
  • Why has Germany handled COVID-19 better than its neighbors? By following the science, including implementing widescale, frequent testing.
  • QAnon, the batshit-crazy hoax embraced by multiple alt-right figures and now our sitting President, is tearing families apart as people become sucked into this utterly false conspiracy theory and alienate family members with their nonsense.
  • Lauren Witzke, the Delaware GOP candidate for the Senate seat currently held by Democrat Chris Coons, appeared on white-nationalist, anti-immigrant hate site VDare last month, not long before saying the Proud Boys provide security at her events. She has no chance to win, but still, Delaware Republicans should revoke their endorsement of her.
  • Draining the swamp update: A former patent litigator became a federal judge and is openly advising patent trolls to come to his court. This lets those trolls abuse the patent system (which has its own problems, but still) for their own profit, and ultimately American consumers will end up paying the cost.
  • The role-playing game designer outfit Roll20 is holding a 3-day virtual gaming con with proceeds to benefit a charity focused on racial justice.

Comments

  1. Keith,
    For your year end music list consideration, check out “Impossible Weight” by Deep Sea Diver, released yesterday.

  2. When did “herd immunity” come to mean “let the virus run its course”? I was taught that vaccination was the key to herd immunity — eliminating potential vectors of spread by immunizing those who can be immunized, to protect those who can’t. Have I been wrong about this?

    • A Salty Scientist

      Broadly, herd immunity just means that enough people are immune to prevent infection and replication by the disease agent. This is key for this particular epidemic to die out, and for things like measles to fizzle out before they become epidemics. Herd immunity can happen “naturally,” in fact this is why many historical diseases without vaccines would have epidemic waves that eventually receded. In modern times and for deadly diseases like COVID-19, vaccination is the key for getting to the herd immunity threshold without hundreds of thousands more deaths.

    • Thanks…everyone currently seems to be employing the term to mean solely in the “natural” sense. I have misinterpreted some people because of this, and have had to recalibrate conversations after the fact.

    • I think that’s because, in this moment, the only current path to herd immunity is exposure and contraction of the disease en mass. Of course, that presumes A) having the disease offers immunity and B) that this moment is the only moment.

      A) seems likely but not necessarily universally true.
      B) is obviously false.

    • A Salty Scientist

      I’m going to circle back to the Nevada man’s case because I think that it’s actually a weak anecdotal argument. It’s weak because even under the best-case immunization scenarios, you’ll have some individuals who fail to become immune. For example, the measles vaccine is amongst the best at 97% effectiveness, so we would expect to observe 3 anecdotal cases amongst 100 vaccinated. Nobody except anti-vaxxers would argue that the MMR vaccine is ineffective based on an anecdotal story about a vaccinated person contracting measles.

      A better argument is that there is uncertainty around the effectiveness of natural immunization (based on antibody titers from individuals with mild vs. severe infections, and based upon what we know about immunity surrounding other coronaviruses), and that vaccination is often more effective than natural immunization. And that based on the R0 of the virus, we would likely need 60-70% of the population to be immune to get to herd immunity, which would likely mean hundreds of thousands more deaths if we get to herd immunity “naturally” vs. through vaccination.

  3. Loved the Sara Benincasa piece and just put a library hold on the Prince book — more than making this week’s roundup worth it just for those two pieces.

    FYI: Open Mike Eagle’s new album is fantastic; don’t remember if you’ve mentioned him before Keith, but I think you’d dig his entire body of work.

  4. The link to your athletic article is off