I saw Sweeney Todd, that ain't mutton.Mjl wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 10:52 amMmm, mutton pie...CrimsonNBlue wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 10:47 amBut it is possible that the UK doesn't like food.TraditionKU wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 10:42 am i should also add that the chance of covid jumping back to humans from an intermediate poses a serious enough concern for governmental bodies in the UK to warn about it
COVID-19 - On the Ground
- CrimsonNBlue
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
except that mechanism is essentially why we have the pandemic in the first place
if anything, it should give even more justification for getting vaccinated and pressuring/convincing more people to do the same
i’ll be perfectly honest though, i told my wife more than a year ago that this thing could spiral out of control and kick humanity’s ass. now, i’m fairly well convinced that there is a limit to what covid can actually evolve into, but seeing the US and global response in this case gives me little comfort that the right lessons will be learned to better mitigate the next case (and make no mistake, there are more coming)
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
New corporate communications update regarding return to the workplace. Oh boy.
"With employee and community safety in mind, we are postponing the date to return remote workers to the office – we will not begin after Sept. 6 as previously planned. We will continue to monitor the data and follow up with employees in late October to announce a new anticipated return date. We will not return before Dec. 1".
"With employee and community safety in mind, we are postponing the date to return remote workers to the office – we will not begin after Sept. 6 as previously planned. We will continue to monitor the data and follow up with employees in late October to announce a new anticipated return date. We will not return before Dec. 1".
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
Normal western farming practices is NOT how we ended up with this in the first place. Unsanitary, wet markets with a million of people and various exotic animals smashed together is how we ended up with this.....or it was heing studied in a lab...depending on who knows what....not standard western animal/human interaction.TraditionKU wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:22 amexcept that mechanism is essentially why we have the pandemic in the first place
if anything, it should give even more justification for getting vaccinated and pressuring/convincing more people to do the same
i’ll be perfectly honest though, i told my wife more than a year ago that this thing could spiral out of control and kick humanity’s ass. now, i’m fairly well convinced that there is a limit to what covid can actually evolve into, but seeing the US and global response in this case gives me little comfort that the right lessons will be learned to better mitigate the next case (and make no mistake, there are more coming)
Just Ledoux it
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
That sorta sounds like a winshindig wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:31 am New corporate communications update regarding return to the workplace. Oh boy.
"With employee and community safety in mind, we are postponing the date to return remote workers to the office – we will not begin after Sept. 6 as previously planned. We will continue to monitor the data and follow up with employees in late October to announce a new anticipated return date. We will not return before Dec. 1".
Just Ledoux it
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
It's going to be tough once we RTW. My routine now is so different and I have literally put maybe 1k miles on my car since March 2020. Crazy. I should have sold it and just bought a beater to run errands.TDub wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:33 amThat sorta sounds like a winshindig wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:31 am New corporate communications update regarding return to the workplace. Oh boy.
"With employee and community safety in mind, we are postponing the date to return remote workers to the office – we will not begin after Sept. 6 as previously planned. We will continue to monitor the data and follow up with employees in late October to announce a new anticipated return date. We will not return before Dec. 1".
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
This will change how office staff work for good i think. Goodbye class A office towers.
Just Ledoux it
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
A friend of mine and I spoke at the beginning of all this. He was not overly exercised, as he said he expected us to be done within a handful of generations anyway (why he's not having kids).TraditionKU wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:22 amexcept that mechanism is essentially why we have the pandemic in the first place
if anything, it should give even more justification for getting vaccinated and pressuring/convincing more people to do the same
i’ll be perfectly honest though, i told my wife more than a year ago that this thing could spiral out of control and kick humanity’s ass. now, i’m fairly well convinced that there is a limit to what covid can actually evolve into, but seeing the US and global response in this case gives me little comfort that the right lessons will be learned to better mitigate the next case (and make no mistake, there are more coming)
I laughed it off. "Spicy take, man."
The last 18 months has made me reconsider. I'm not sure I'd go with "handful of generations," but it is impossible to have any confidence right now that people are capable of the collective lift it's going to take on climate change.
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
zoonotic spillover is what i was referring to, not western farming/ranchingTDub wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:33 amNormal western farming practices is NOT how we ended up with this in the first place. Unsanitary, wet markets with a million of people and various exotic animals smashed together is how we ended up with this.....or it was heing studied in a lab...depending on who knows what....not standard western animal/human interaction.TraditionKU wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:22 amexcept that mechanism is essentially why we have the pandemic in the first place
if anything, it should give even more justification for getting vaccinated and pressuring/convincing more people to do the same
i’ll be perfectly honest though, i told my wife more than a year ago that this thing could spiral out of control and kick humanity’s ass. now, i’m fairly well convinced that there is a limit to what covid can actually evolve into, but seeing the US and global response in this case gives me little comfort that the right lessons will be learned to better mitigate the next case (and make no mistake, there are more coming)
and there is ample evidence to suggest that the commercial meat industry may very well be the source of a future pandemic...crowded conditions, irresponsible use of antibiotics, etc
i’m not saying you support that part of the industry (i don’t think you do), but you can’t pretend it doesn’t exist and is a major component
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
rightjfish26 wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:43 amA friend of mine and I spoke at the beginning of all this. He was not overly exercised, as he said he expected us to be done within a handful of generations anyway (why he's not having kids).TraditionKU wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:22 amexcept that mechanism is essentially why we have the pandemic in the first place
if anything, it should give even more justification for getting vaccinated and pressuring/convincing more people to do the same
i’ll be perfectly honest though, i told my wife more than a year ago that this thing could spiral out of control and kick humanity’s ass. now, i’m fairly well convinced that there is a limit to what covid can actually evolve into, but seeing the US and global response in this case gives me little comfort that the right lessons will be learned to better mitigate the next case (and make no mistake, there are more coming)
I laughed it off. "Spicy take, man."
The last 18 months has made me reconsider. I'm not sure I'd go with "handful of generations," but it is impossible to have any confidence right now that people are capable of the collective lift it's going to take on climate change.
and the two (covid and climate change) are more connected than many want to believe
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
We need to do a better job of managing our meat raising. Particularly chicken and pigs. Can be done better with more small farms and leas large corporate operations.TraditionKU wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:46 amzoonotic spillover is what i was referring to, not western farming/ranchingTDub wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:33 amNormal western farming practices is NOT how we ended up with this in the first place. Unsanitary, wet markets with a million of people and various exotic animals smashed together is how we ended up with this.....or it was heing studied in a lab...depending on who knows what....not standard western animal/human interaction.TraditionKU wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 11:22 am
except that mechanism is essentially why we have the pandemic in the first place
if anything, it should give even more justification for getting vaccinated and pressuring/convincing more people to do the same
i’ll be perfectly honest though, i told my wife more than a year ago that this thing could spiral out of control and kick humanity’s ass. now, i’m fairly well convinced that there is a limit to what covid can actually evolve into, but seeing the US and global response in this case gives me little comfort that the right lessons will be learned to better mitigate the next case (and make no mistake, there are more coming)
and there is ample evidence to suggest that the commercial meat industry may very well be the source of a future pandemic...crowded conditions, irresponsible use of antibiotics, etc
i’m not saying you support that part of the industry (i don’t think you do), but you can’t pretend it doesn’t exist and is a major component
Also could open up more, already empty, land for grazing. Spread them out a bit and gain the other benefits that allows...
Just Ledoux it
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
They're still being built. Partially because these things are financed, designed, worked on years in advance and theyve already invested so much getting to the point of construction that it would be a net loss to halt. The actual construction on what you see being built is about 5 years behind what the market is calling for now.
Just Ledoux it
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
you just couldn’t help yourself, could you?TDub wrote: Also could open up more, already empty, land for grazing. Spread them out a bit and gain the other benefits that allows...
i actually thought of our conversation the other day while i was reading this review/perspective paper on biomimetics, and almost posted it in one of the other threads
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals ... E9361760E4
... The high protein and phosphate intake that accompanies the intake of red meat and animal-based foods are likely contributory. A recent study based on the Korean Genome and Epidemiology Study concluded that in the general population, a high-protein diet increases the risk of hyperfiltration and a rapid decline in renal function [99]. Thus, high-protein regimens including meat and other animal-based foods, such as the Atkins diet, to reduce the risk of obesity and diabetes may be bad for kidney health [100]...
humans didn’t evolve eating a constant supply of meat...thinking that we can, or should, have it with every meal is problematic for personal and environmental health
there’s a whole lot more to unpack from that paper, but the main point i took away is that diet, more so than any other factor, is the major contributor to poor health
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
Weve been eating meat as often as possible since we became bipedal. When we had to hunt for every meal it, of course, resulted in less meat consumption....but it wasnt because we didnt want it. Hunter gatherers ate a variety if whatever they could find...but its not like they were turning down meat because they were worried about kidney function.
Just Ledoux it
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
want has nothing to do with it from an evolutionary perspectiveTDub wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 12:12 pm Weve been eating meat as often as possible since we became bipedal. When we had to hunt for every meal it, of course, resulted in less meat consumption....but it wasnt because we didnt want it. Hunter gatherers ate a variety if whatever they could find...but its not like they were turning down meat because they were worried about kidney function.
our bodies evolved to accommodate the resources that were available. meat availability has outpaced our rate of metabolic adaptation
again, i’m not saying we should stop eating meat. i’m saying we need to get over this idea that we need it or have to have it for every meal
it would do our bodies and the environment wonders if we were to have it more sporadically
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
It's weather.com so I'm not sure how much they know about transmission but here is a link.
https://weather.com/health/coronavirus/ ... g-covid-19
https://weather.com/health/coronavirus/ ... g-covid-19
Defense. Rebounds.
- CrimsonNBlue
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
According to friend in KC acquisition/development biz, COVID has not and is not slowing it down. (I still think it will, though).
What was occurring before COVID--people increasingly moving to the cities--who knows if that trend continues after.
- CrimsonNBlue
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- Joined: Thu Nov 15, 2018 11:30 am
Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground
Seems more realistic for the immediate timeline to look at regulations over farming.TraditionKU wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 12:26 pmwant has nothing to do with it from an evolutionary perspectiveTDub wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 12:12 pm Weve been eating meat as often as possible since we became bipedal. When we had to hunt for every meal it, of course, resulted in less meat consumption....but it wasnt because we didnt want it. Hunter gatherers ate a variety if whatever they could find...but its not like they were turning down meat because they were worried about kidney function.
our bodies evolved to accommodate the resources that were available. meat availability has outpaced our rate of metabolic adaptation
again, i’m not saying we should stop eating meat. i’m saying we need to get over this idea that we need it or have to have it for every meal
it would do our bodies and the environment wonders if we were to have it more sporadically
I have no idea what to do about climate change from a practical standpoint. What a huge problem that will take a global coalition.