PARADIGM SHIFT BY PANDEMIC
April 12, 2020 – 5:26 amHOW TO DONATE
Our costs will always be there. So readers who can donate towards the cost of the site, please open a Skrill account. Readers who wish to contribute to BigO will now have to use Skrill (click here). We are no longer able to use PayPal to receive donations. Register an account at Skrill. To make a payment, use this e-mail address as recipient’s e-mail address in Skrill: mail2[at]bigomagazine.com. Looking forward to hearing from you.
+ + + + +
JUST TO LET YOU KNOW
To reduce spamming, the BigO website is going through Cloudflare. What it does is scan your browser to ensure the visitor is not a spam. Do not be alarmed as this usually takes only a few seconds. Email us if you still have difficulty accessing the BigO site; or playing or downloading the tracks. If you know a better way of reducing spam, do let us know.
+ + + + +
Pandemics have to be taken seriously and money must now be budgeted to protect nations from the ‘Big One’. By Joel McCleary and Mark Medish.
Nobel-winning biologist Joshua Lederberg warned “the single biggest threat to man’s continued dominance on the planet is the virus.” The Covid-19 pandemic is a wakeup call to this existential truth.
The reality of the novel coronavirus pandemic must now usher in a paradigm shift in the way we think about and prepare for global security threats, whether natural or human-engineered.
The revolution in biology, including genomics and gene editing, makes it possible for state and non-state players to design microbes and viruses for civilian medical research or biological weapons. The dual-use nature of biotechnology makes it difficult to determine the intent of an adversary.
Contrary to online rumors, to date there is no evidence that Covid-19 is the product of a state laboratory experiment deliberately or accidentally released in Wuhan. Nor is there evidence that infected carriers traveled from China to intentionally spread the contagion. To insinuate foul play without evidence is irresponsible, whether the charges come from Russia, China, or US.
If a country intentionally unleashed such a virus, there would be grave implications. As a deterrent, the 2018 Nuclear Posture Review envisions US nuclear retaliation in extreme circumstances of biological or cyber attack.
The Covid-19 outbreak is most likely a natural occurrence, but this does not diminish the import of the wakeup call for the US.
This is the seventh emergent coronavirus known to afflict humans. As a zoonotic infection, it crossed to humans from wild animals presumably through proximity. Covid-19 is less lethal or incapacitating but far more contagious than the genetically similar Sars-2003. There is no guarantee that the next evolutionary version - a successor is almost inevitable - will be less infectious or lethal than Covid-19.
Covid-19 is less lethal or incapacitating but far more contagious than the genetically similar Sars-2003. There is no guarantee that the next evolutionary version - a successor is almost inevitable - will be less infectious or lethal than Covid-19.
As national security analysts and former White House advisers, we see several important lessons that should comprise a paradigm shift for our national preparedness.
First, precisely because of its severity, we must embrace the implication of this pandemic. As bad as this global outbreak is, Covid-19 is not of the scale that it could have been and might be, especially if the virus mutates towards greater lethality.
If we learn lessons from it - if we understand the need for deep changes - we might be better prepared for the big one.
A bi-partisan 9-11 style commission should be formed to study what events led to this pandemic and what policies need to be improved or pioneered to respond to future threats.
Second, 2020 is a wake-up call for massive public investment in systemic resilience. We must go beyond previous false starts. During brief periods after the 2001 anthrax attack, the 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic, and the Sars-2003 outbreak, there were bursts of funding and new policies. But the interest of political leaders faded. Robust policies that could have saved lives and prevented such economic chaos were tragically not implemented.
Indeed, until this pandemic, major budget cuts were being made to basic scientific research and preparedness. Our governmental preparedness infrastructure was being gutted. This strategic retreat must be reversed even beyond the bold steps taken in the unprecedented Covid-19 emergency funding measures of 2020.
Third, we must think big. Very big. We should set clear moonshot goals for bio-forensics, diagnostics, detection, contact-tracing, data-sharing, countermeasures, medical training, telemedicine, basic science, and genomics - in short, a national anti-crisis operating system. The Manhattan Project and the Space Program are useful reference points in terms of urgency and scale.
We should set clear moonshot goals for bio-forensics, diagnostics, detection, contact-tracing, data-sharing, countermeasures, medical training, telemedicine, basic science, and genomics - in short, a national anti-crisis operating system.
In pursuing these goals, our leaders must embrace evidence-based science and assiduously avoid anti-science political rhetoric and denial, whether relating to the threat of disease or global warming, which is linked to the coming age of the great pandemics.
Fourth, there is no strategic trade-off between our nation’s health, security or the economy. We must bolster all three together. Our objective is to reap long-term dividends through resilience.
Just as the US economy has been driven by the birth of the digital economy, so will the next economic leaps be driven by biology and artificial intelligence. In both these areas, the Chinese have launched Manhattan-scale projects of their own, which we must compete with for economic, strategic, and humanitarian reasons. Both the Chinese and Russians believe that the nation that wins the scientific race in these areas will control the world.
Fifth, we must strive to control our own destiny in terms of strategic supplies. Put America first. This is not in derogation of free-trade or vitally needed multilateralism, but because supply chains can break down in crisis, as they have in this case. At this juncture China produces 90 per cent of our antibiotics and over 70 per cent of the ingredients needed to produce drugs in the United States. This must change.
Sixth, intelligence gathering on biological threats is hard but essential. Mistakes during the Iraq war have made intelligence agencies wary of the area. We recommend forming an interagency center for tracking and forecasting biological threats.
Seventh, on the multilateral front, we must strengthen the Biological Weapons Convention of 1975 to force greater global transparency into biological research. Our own research facilities must be open to inspection. We must insist reciprocally on seeing inside secret labs in China, Russia, North Korea, Iran, and elsewhere.
Eighth, the current pandemic proves this is not just a job for governments. As in addressing climate change through R&D and deployment of renewable energy technologies, the private sector has a central role to play in creating solutions to withstand biological threats.
At this juncture China produces 90 per cent of our antibiotics and over 70 per cent of the ingredients needed to produce drugs in the United States. This must change.
Ninth, we need to devise plans for the continuity of both government and business functions in a pandemic. The current crisis is showing us the impact of public and private shutdowns whether due to a virus of nature or one created by biological or cyber hackers.
Tenth, we must build a comprehensive and resilient nationwide infrastructure. Moving towards a more dispersed population and revitalizing rural America with universal broadband, good healthcare through telemedicine, and improved education will make us a more resilient society.
Just as President Eisenhower invested half a trillion dollars (2020 dollars) for the national highway system which revolutionized the country’s economy and demographics, so would investment to build cyber highways to all America decentralize the current vulnerability of our economic base.
The good news is that we met existential challenges during the nuclear standoff in the Cold War. The bad news is that we have taken our success for granted and ignored the gathering storm of natural and man-made threats. We must re-learn lessons from the nuclear age, build a resilient system against cyber or biological threats - ensuring the continuity of government and society.
When physicist Robert Oppenheimer witnessed the first nuclear test, he quoted a line from the Bhagavad-Gita: “Now I become death, the destroyer of worlds.” This image conveyed his awakening to the raw power of both nature and science.
The imperative before us today - as a modern society newly woke by pandemic - remains to lead in science as we have since 1945. But to do so we must heed Albert Einstein’s advice, “We shall require a substantially new manner of thinking if mankind is to survive.”
Note: Joel McCleary, an expert on biodefense, served in the Carter Administration. Mark Medish served on the National Security Council in the Clinton Administration. The above article was posted at CounterPunch.
+ + + + +
11 Responses to “PARADIGM SHIFT BY PANDEMIC”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Le_rfTdayLs&list=FL8jHkqPO9P-uMQjXNMAZzvA&index=3&t=0s
By Tom on Apr 12, 2020
I believe this virus is man made , either by ISIS , and or China to bring us to our knees , . The fact that China creates almost all pharmaceuticals in the world is scary.
By HHH on Apr 14, 2020
China practically owns the US already.
By HHH on Apr 14, 2020
Also the US government did nothing to prevent the virus over here as part of their plan to create a police state. Soon Power hungry cops will be throwing people in cages and shooting people on sight for being out of their homes. Some of that is starting already.
By HHH on Apr 14, 2020
Go to the link Tom left and watch the investigative piece . You’ll be convinced China is behind this . Also eat nothing from China and that includes seafood. The piece implies China experimented on their own people before it exploded worldwide
By Don on Apr 14, 2020
I’m curious as to how much food sold in US supermarkets actually come from China.
By Don on Apr 14, 2020
what silly (and dangerous) american nonsense
By jazza on Apr 18, 2020
Im with you HHH
By Derrick on Apr 19, 2020
Racism is for only the dull and ignorant. Appreciation of the arts is not at all possible by those so ignorant as to embrace racism, homophobia and misogyny. Your type is not welcome here. Go Anti, Derrick and HHH, and never return. You are not welcome here ever again. There are other cesspools for your kind to swim in.
By Darwin on Apr 22, 2020
My all time favorite movie is Superfly. not that fucked up new one but the original from 1972. the soundtrack by the amazing Curtis Mayfield still stands as the greatest of all time in my opinion. you know Shaft was amazing, too and I have always worshiped Issac Hayes but my man Curtis really outshines him for Superfly. I love the pimp styles and I still have my Freddie hat and purple plush coat. when I throw on the old vinyl and dance to it lately I can’t to do it without my walker because I still get angina and sometimes I gotta pop a nitro tab under my tongue to finish my routine.
By THE ANTICHRIST on Apr 22, 2020
My all time favorite movie is “Hey Sailor Boy”. not that fucked up new one but the original from 1972. the soundtrack by the amazing Elton John still stands as the greatest of all time in my opinion. you know “Big Shaft Up My Ass” was amazing, too and I have always worshiped big black peckers but my man Curtis really outshines him for “Hey Sailor Boy”. I love the gay styles and I still have my Faggy hat and purple plush coat. when I throw on the old vinyl and dance to it lately I can’t to do it without my walker because I still get angina and sometimes I gotta pop a nitro tab up my ass to finish my routine.
By THE ANTICHRIST on May 2, 2020