Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Corona Daily 166: The Ship Slaughterhouse


Alang.

Have you heard of this place? No? But for my pandemic research, I wouldn’t have either, though it is less than 500 km from Mumbai. It is a stretch of muddy beach in North-west India. The biggest passenger and cargo ships are dismantled and demolished in Alang, the world’s largest graveyard for ships. On the Alang beach, once-glimmering royal vessels lie crumbling, their bowels exposed, their glory days over. Like slaughtering a beautiful cow, then dismembering her for human consumption.

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In the pandemic, cruise liner companies are going bankrupt. Countries like Canada have banned cruises this year. Normally, ships live longer than thirty years. Now even younger ships are sent for scrapping. Carnival corporation, world’s largest cruise operator, recently retired 17 ships, including two Fantasy Class liners. Most of these ships are demolished at Aliaga in Turkey.

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In January 2021, two UK ships, the Marco Polo and Megellan, landed at Alang. UK laws prohibit sending ships to developing countries for taking apart. The bankrupt owners auctioned the ships. One was supposed to become a floating hotel in Dubai, another in Liverpool. Instead, they were both beached in Alang for breaking. I suppose all parties knew this was a modus operandi to bypass the UK laws. Marco Polo was sold for £2 million at the auction, but later fetched £4 million as scrap.

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Alang (India), Chattogram (Bangladesh) and Gadani (Pakistan) together scrap more than half of the world’s ships. But the EU and America ban sending ships there for demolition.

The ships are valued in the Indian continent because they contain large amounts of steel. But they also contain hazardous materials, like asbestos (banned in developed countries). Workers, often exploited migrants, including children, are exposed to huge risks. Injuries or deaths can happen by fire, gas explosions and falling steel plates. Labourers and local communities become sick by the exposure to toxic fumes and substances, and air pollution. Since 2009, more than 400 workers have died. Like nuclear rubbish, ships are dumped on developing countries.

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Instead of listening to the world’s top economists, it is enough to visit the Alang Shipbreaking Yard to understand the state of the world economy. When the economy is healthy, cruises and cargo ships do well, and Alang sees a slump in its business.

In the last two months, there is a queue of luxury liners waiting to be broken. In 2010-11, the global freight market was in crisis. A record 415 ships came to Alang to be dismantled. When imports and exports decline, container ships are idle. In 2018, during a slump in the global oil market, every third vessel reaching Alang for scrapping was either an oil rig or an oil tanker.

It takes fifty labourers about three months to break down a normal-sized cargo vessel of 40,000 tonnes.

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Steel is the backbone of the shipbreaking business. Cruise liners have less steel than oil tankers, bulk carriers or container ships. The salvaged steel is sent to re-rolling mills in different states.  

In the second quarter of 2020, Alang came to a standstill because of India’s strict lockdown. Workers were not available, and ships were not allowed to land. The steel prices collapsed and still remain low. But from July onwards, the business picked up, and now it is booming.  

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Just before the pandemic, India passed an act to join the Hong Kong convention. This convention offers certificates for compliance with green recycling standards for the safe and environmentally sound recycling (euphemism for breaking) of ships. Reportedly, 90 out of 120 working plots at Alang are now certified for such compliance. Bangladesh has only one green facility and Pakistan none. Following the certification, America and Europe will be able to send ships to India for breaking. India’s market share in the global shipbreaking industry is expected to go from the current 30% to 60%.

One hopes that the green certificates will also bring in better working conditions and safety standards for the workers and community at Alang.

Ravi 

Monday, March 1, 2021

Corona Daily 167: The Sixth Continent Slumps


Yesterday, Lotte duty-free and Shilla duty-free shut their stores in Seoul’s terminal one. Seoul’s Incheon airport is known as the biggest airport shop in the world. DF2, an ever busy section before the pandemic, stopped selling perfumes and cosmetics. In 2020, the renowned Seoul airport held three auctions to sell empty store space. Not a single buyer came forward. With an 83% fall in passengers, the airport incurred a net loss of $384 million.  

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Duty-free, also known as the sixth continent, was an $86 billion industry in 2019. Even before the pandemic, certain trends were noticeable. It was moving away from cigarettes and booze. Perfumes and cosmetics accounted for two thirds of the sales. Duty-free sales were rapidly moving in the direction of China and its wealthy customers.

Worldwide duty-free sales collapsed by 70% in 2020.

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In the old days, passengers travelled by international ships for weeks, sometimes months. “Duty-free” was an allowance for whatever they “consumed” on the ship. Because during the international voyage they were not taxable in any land. During the journey, they actually could smoke 200 cigarettes and drink two liters of whiskey. As a matter of historical inertia, the same quotas continued even after people began flying.

Modern airport duty-free began in 1950. International travel had just started after WWII. Shannon airport in Ireland was one of the hubs. Brendon O’Regan, a catering accountant, noticed people liked to shop at the airport. Why not incentivize them by making the shopping tax-free, he thought. The Irish government found a way to do it by declaring Shannon airport to be not part of Ireland. That was the beginning of airport duty-free.

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In 2020, China did something similar by declaring Hainan, an island, as a duty-free port. Hainan is called China’s Hawaii, and is looked at as a potential substitute for Hong Kong. Hainan has beaches for swimming and surfing, but its bigger attraction is shopping. Chinese shoppers are now allowed to buy up to $15,500 worth of tax-free goods. This is three times the allowance pre-pandemic. China is wooing its rich citizens, who unfortunately can’t travel abroad, to visit Hainan and experience international travel. The initiative was vastly successful. Visitor numbers were down 22% due to the pandemic, but the duty-free sales went up by 127% year-on-year.

Last year, China managed to overtake Dufry (Switzerland) as the largest seller of tax-free luxury goods. Dufry sold a stake to Alibaba to acknowledge this.

China Duty Free is focusing on merging online and offline duty free. The idea is that the passenger “window-shops” online (before), off-line (at the airport), online (after reaching home). Fancy videos and livestreaming programmes have been a great success.

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Flights to nowhereare a pandemic special. Last October, a seven-hour flight took off from Sydney, and after flying all over Australia, reached… Sydney. Day before yesterday, Korea started a two-hour flight that enters Japanese airspace, but returns to Korea. Japan, Singapore, India and Ukraine are selling tickets for flights to nowhere. The scenic flights fly low, at 3000 feet or whatever is the legal minimum, allowing passengers to watch the scenery (new term flightseeing). Dining is an attraction on some flights. Ukraine has the cheapest flights at $95, probably because the route shows Chernobyl.

One key purpose of these flights is to promote duty-free sales. Different governments have prescribed tax-free allowances as part of the flying experience.    

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Duty-free has been criticized as immoral. It promotes consumption of high excise items like cigarettes and booze. It is a tax-avoidance scheme for the rich. When you look at the original concept of consumption on the ship, duty-free on arrival, and duty-free online are nonsensical.

With international travel reeling from pandemic shock, it is likely the duty-free concept will be re-defined in the future.

Ravi 

Sunday, February 28, 2021

Corona Daily 168: Epidemiological Whodunnit: Part Final


The third suspected reason for the low cases and deaths in Asia and Africa is underreporting. Are poor countries hiding the deaths? They are known to report only about 5% of Malaria deaths. Indian villages may be cremating people without reporting them. In Lusaka, Zambia; in an interesting experiment, postmortem was conducted on 364 people. Only five of them were tested for coronavirus when alive. The postmortem found 70 people had coronavirus.

Like in a murder investigation, one needs to look for a motive. Ghana and Nigeria received billions of dollars to fight the virus. Politically, they should be interested in over-reporting.

There are at least two ways to probe this issue. One is the all-cause mortality or excess mortality statistics. It is very difficult to hide bodies, even murderers can rarely do it successfully. Most civilized countries keep reliable death records. Natural deaths have a smooth, predictable graph. They don’t jump suddenly.

If you look at the excess deaths table by The Economist (till 18 Feb), other than South Africa, all countries are from Europe and America. Between 1 April- 31 Dec 2020, Russia reported 56,250 deaths. But excess deaths were 367,880 during the same period. Russia defines a covid death only if covid-19 is written as the cause on the death certificate. In the first ten months, USA reported 360,370 covid deaths, and 448,550 excess deaths. If there is under-reporting, it is universal, not just in poor countries.

The other way to judge if official trends are right is the empirical evidence. My doctor friends tell me the situation in Bombay hospitals is fine now. Last August, some hospitals were exclusively set aside for covid patients. This year, I have heard of new cases in my neighbourhood, but no deaths.

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The fourth factor is the government action and its willingness to enforce it. USA was an excellent example of what not to do. I believe at least half of the American deaths can be attributed to Trump’s recklessness and denial. In the best prepared nation, those deaths were avoidable. In rich nations, freedom of mind and expression, the ultimate test of democracy, was confused with liberty to ignore a health emergency.

Countries like Rwanda, on the other hand, were very clear with decisive control measures, strict curfew. And the Rwandan population listened. Now restrictions are lifted, and applied strictly only at a local level to suppress an outbreak.

Bombay’s Dharavi was another good example. Perseverant contact tracing, quarantine and disinfection measures managed to contain the virus in this supremely crowded giant slum.

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The fifth factor is the acquired differences in human immunity. The citizens of the poor countries believe their immunity is stronger.

B-cells and T-cells are part of acquired immunity. B cells make antibodies against viruses, T cells hunt for cells infected by a virus. Mukherjee compares B cells to a sharpshooter, and T cells to a detective. Some studies found that the novel coronavirus was triggering a T-cell response, based on a different infection earlier. The T-cell memory recognized this new foe, without meeting it earlier. In that sense, the novel coronavirus was not novel for everybody.

This cross-reactivity, the ability of immune system to protect against one pathogen based on another, appears to be stronger in Africa and Asia. A Mumbai doctor says in India people had really high levels of antibodies, the levels don’t decay even among old people, and the antibodies stay for a long time.

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Finally, the sixth hypothesis talks about the viral load. Indian cases have unusually low virus levels. Warm weather and open ventilation may be resulting in low-dose exposure. This hypothesis could also explain the large number of asymptomatic cases in India. Many serosurveys in Indian cities found more than half the population carrying antibodies.

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Mukherjee says it would be ideal to find a single cause, a single murderer for the murder. However, with so many hypotheses, he equates the case to Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express. Poirot realizes the murder to be a pre-planned collective act.

The strange matter of the coronavirus crippling rich nations may similarly be due to a combination of causes.

Ravi 

Saturday, February 27, 2021

Corona Daily 169: Epidemiological Whodunnit


SARS-CoV-2 presents several mysteries. A disease of such scale and severity is expected to affect the poorest countries most. They have the worst doctor-patient ratios, poor public health infrastructure, high pollution levels. What has happened during the pandemic has baffled even the experts.

North America with 7% of the global population accounts for 30% of the cases and deaths. Same with Europe. Asia with 60% of the world population suffered only 15% deaths, and the African continent less than 4%. Dharavi, Asia’s largest slum, experienced only one tenth of the expected deaths. It hasn’t had any since December. On the other hand, Los Angeles has no spare ICU bed.

Malaria, Typhoid, Diphtheria and AIDS, as a rule, hit the poorest countries. Deaths per million is possibly the best measure for comparison. The top countries include Belgium, UK, Italy, Portugal and USA, each of them having lost more than 1500 people per million. India’s death rate is ten times lower. Nigeria’s is one hundredth that of the USA.

Some diseases are called rich man’s diseases. Covid is not that, because lots of poor people in rich countries have died. But I won’t hesitate to call it a ‘rich nation’s disease’.

What is the cause of this mystery? This week Siddhartha Mukherjee, in an excellent article in the New Yorker discusses this. Mukherjee is the Pulitzer winner for his book “The emperor of all maladies: a biography of cancer.” I will cover the key points from his article over today and tomorrow.

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First factor is the median age. Please note all the factors are hypotheses at this stage. They suggest rather than prove anything.

In India, the median age is 28, in USA 38, UK 40. Italy at 47, Germany 48, and Japan 48 are some of the oldest countries. Nigeria’s median age is 18. Most African countries are very young.

Virologists and number crunchers have stated a rule of thumb: After thirty, the chance of dying with covid-19 doubles every eight years. (No need to apply the rule to yourself, can be depressing). If true, it is only logical that countries with a high number of elderly residents will suffer the most covid casualties. Good so far. However, questions remain. For example, Mexico’s median age is like India’s. But it has lost ten times more people to covid.

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The second possible factor is the family composition. Who lives with whom and the human interaction. Usually, the richer the country, smaller is the size of the household. In UK, the average household size is 2.3, in Africa’s Benin 5.2. However, in the context of the pandemic, this statistic can be deceptive. In the UK and USA, a large number of elderly people live in long-term nursing homes. In fact, around one third of the covid deaths in the USA happened in care homes. The question then is whether an Indian or African living in a three-generation household is more at risk than the 80+ Americans or British living together in a nursing home?

Covid vulnerabilities are of two types: intrinsic (age, obesity), or extrinsic (household size, medical professional). In the morbid trade-off question, one wonders if it is better to be young in a crowded house, or old in a large house?

The statistical models base their forecasts by answering such questions. Epidemiologists were brilliant in forecasting deaths in the rich world. In the USA, the actuals almost match the projections. But the models went abysmally wrong in the poor world. As per the model, Pakistan was expected to have 650,000 deaths so far, they have had 12,000. Cote d’Ivoire lost fewer than 200, instead of the projected 52,000. Epidemiologists, last March, were certain Nigeria would suffer 418,000 deaths in a year’s time. Nigeria lost 1300, and most cases are mild.

*****

(Continued tomorrow)

Ravi

  

Friday, February 26, 2021

Corona Daily 170: Tokyo 2020: Here We Go


Japan last year reluctantly postponed the Tokyo Olympics by a year. It will still be called “Tokyo 2020”. Euro 2020 will also happen this year, Dubai Expo 2020 will happen from October 21 to March 22. Rebranding expense is one consideration. If we can accept Covid-19, why not Tokyo 2020?

If the Olympic happens, the first medals will be given on 24 July. The medals this time are made from recycled cell phones. After two dazzling weeks, the event will conclude with the men’s marathon on 8 August.

Before that, the Olympic torch relay will start on 25 March. The flame will travel through 47 prefectures before reaching Tokyo for the 23 July opening ceremony. The organisers may modify routes to avoid crowds. Usually being a torchbearer is an honour, this time it’s a punishment. Torchbearers are asked to take utmost care for two weeks before, no eating out, no mixing with people, minimum exposure. Celebrities are asked not to reveal their route. Comedian Atsushi Tamura withdrew because he and other celebrities were asked to carry the torch through rice paddies to avoid spectators.

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If the Olympic happens, 11,000 athletes from 200 countries, their coaches, officials, and 25,000 journalists are expected to arrive. The number of foreign tourists will depend on the virus performance in the coming weeks.

A 32-page playbook has been issued for athletes as well as fans. Spectators can clap, but not shout or sing. Vaccines are not necessary, because fit young sportsmen shouldn’t take them at the expense of the vulnerable population. But masks, covid tests, temperature checks will be a norm. Special fever clinics and reserved hospital space will be available. Everyone should stay at least one meter away from visitors, and two meters away from an athlete.

The Olympic village, normally a great joy for the Olympians, will be different. Sportsmen and their entourage are encouraged to come to Japan not earlier than five days before their event. And leave soon after their event is over, please.

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Laws prevent the Japanese government from announcing lockdowns. The Japanese can only “encourage” people to do things. For visitors, no quarantine is required. But for 14 days from arrival, they will be encouraged not to use public transport, not visit any bar or restaurant, not go to any health club, nor visit any tourist destination. Thank you.

To reduce exposure, athletes the world over were allowed to reduce or cancel doping tests, a pre-requirement for all Olympians. For organized doping, Russia is banned for four years, and will not take part. There will be no Russian flag, no Russian anthem. However, Russian athletes who are clean will participate under the banner of ROC (Russian Olympic committee).

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In case an athlete tests positive, everyone he/she came in contact with will have to withdraw. This is a risk for team sports like water polo, field hockey, basketball and soccer. This adds a new exciting dimension, in case the Olympic happens. This month, 65 Sumo wrestlers and 51 table tennis players had to withdraw from Japan’s national championships.

The cost of delaying the Olympic was $6 billion. Cancelling would cost $42 billion and Japan’s reputation. Though 80% of the Japanese population is in favour of cancellation. Coca-Cola and Toyota, the sponsors, and Lloyd’s, Munich Re, Swiss Re, the insurers are all praying the games happen as scheduled.

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As if this was not enough, Yoshiro Mori, former president of Japan, who headed the Olympic committee, had to resign this month. He said he felt annoyed because “women talk too much”. He has been replaced by a woman.

The weather in July-August promises to be awful. It is predicted this will be the hottest and most humid Olympic on record. As luck would have it, 2020 summer was cooler because of lockdowns, but this year promises to be very hot. Outdoor athletes, where they can, have included heat training. Heat stress and heat strokes are a real risk. Organisers have rescheduled the start times for certain events and enhanced medical support.  

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Japanese government confidently says Tokyo 2020 is definitely going ahead; unless cancelled.

Ravi   

Thursday, February 25, 2021

Corona Daily 171: The Purest and Strangest Oscars


On 28 February, the coming Sunday, millions would have watched “the Oscars” on TV. Thanks to the pandemic, the 93rd academy award ceremony will now take place two months later, on 25 April. The Academy Awards were given first time in 1929, when the entire ceremony lasted for fifteen minutes. Since then, this is only the fourth time the Oscars are delayed. In 1938, flooding in Los Angeles postponed the date. In 1968, the date was shifted following the assassination of Martin Luther King. In 1981, President Reagan survived, but the assassination attempt was scary enough to delay the Oscars.

Funnily enough, the name “Oscars” is not official. In 1930 or thereabout, when the Academy librarian Margaret Herrick saw the statue, she said it resembled her uncle Oscar. The famous statue weighs eight-and-a-half pounds and stands 13 and a half inches tall.

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In a normal Hollywood year, winter is the award season. Los Angeles, London and New York are busy with hundreds of screenings, ceremonies, panel discussions and lavish cocktail receptions. Pandemic has put an end to all that. Some panel discussions are held on Zoom, but without cocktails to follow, few people are interested in them.

Theatrical release was mandatory for eligibility. That has been relaxed to modify the condition as “intention to release in theatres”. Films released via password-protected or transactional video-on-demand are eligible if originally meant to be shown in cinema halls.

This year a record 9362 academy members will vote to decide the nominations and winners in twenty-four categories. They are reduced to watching the films in their living rooms. Voters opening up the official screening app have 177 films to consider. With no guidance and no cocktails, voters will have to actually watch the movie and assess.  

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Rules prohibit the movie producers or studios to send to voters anything other than a DVD of the film. However, there are enough ways to bypass the rules.

The season usually begins with the Toronto film festival in September and culminates with Oscars in February. Between them are four televised ceremonies, all of them postponed this year. Golden Globes (this year 28 Feb), Critics choice (7 March), SAG (14 March) and BAFTA (11 April) lead up to Oscars.

Earlier, big Hollywood studios did everything to wine and dine the voters. Now online platforms like Netflix compete with the studios. Last time, for the Critics Choice awards, Netflix received 61 film and TV nominations. Netflix had flown some 400 journalists, from the voting body, to Los Angeles and New York, on expensive trips. They were booked in the high-end hotels, had private encounters with filmmakers and stars, were gifted promotional items such as premium alcohol bottles.

For big films, the cost of a campaign to win awards is over $20 million per film. There are specialized agencies and consultants that work exclusively on marketing and lobbying the voters. Even an actress in the supporting category requires personal styling for every look she sports on the campaign trail, including a designer for outfits to be worn at airports.

Just like without a billion US dollars as the campaign money it is not possible to become the president of the USA any more, it is difficult to win an Oscar unless substantial money has been invested in winning the voters. None of the practices are ethical, but they are based on loopholes in the existing laws. In a normal year, there is the box office boom following an Oscar win. This year, that is unlikely to happen.

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The pandemic year may create the purest and strangest Hollywood awards season. Without the glittering events and posh marketing campaigns, we may witness some surprises. On the coming Sunday, for the Golden Globes the Kate Hudson drama “Music” has been nominated, a movie hardly any film connoisseur had heard about before the nomination.

Ravi 

Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Corona Daily 172: Wanted: Monkeys


Monkeys are in short supply. We have heard of vaccine trials. Before testing vaccines on humans, they had to be tested on monkeys. Bioqual was one of the companies responsible for supplying monkeys to Moderna and Johnson and Johnson. The company lost their contract mid-way because it couldn’t supply enough monkeys.

Monkeys are ideal for vaccine trials, because they share nearly 90% DNA with us. Their biology is similar. They can be tested with nasal swabs, administered intravenous injections and their lungs can be scanned. While drugs such as dexamethasone were tested on hamsters, scientists say it is nearly impossible to test vaccines without monkeys. Millions of human lives depend on monkeys.

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With scientists around the world desirous of developing vaccines clamoring for monkeys, the demand shot up. The cost of a single monkey went from $10,000 to more than $20,000. The situation was aggravated because a year ago China announced a ban on export of wildlife.

Though Trump had started a trade war with China, for over a decade the American scientists had a close association with the Chinese monkey suppliers. In 2019, out of the 34,000 primates imported by USA, over 60% came from China. The type of monkeys exported by China are mostly cynomolgus macaques.

China may lift the ban once the pandemic is over. However, with the skyrocketing demand for lab animals, Chinese researchers have announced they face a shortage themselves. The government stockpile in China has 45000 monkeys, a number barely enough for domestic research.

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Not surprisingly, India and China have the highest population of monkeys. It is estimated India has over half a million. For 22 years, until 1978, India was the major supplier of monkeys for research. India supplied some 30000 Rhesus monkeys every year to the USA.

The world’s largest supplier of monkeys suddenly banned its export following disclosures in the Indian press that the USA was using some of the monkeys for testing military weapons. This was a violation of the international agreement signed by the two states.

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Animal right groups have been active and aggressive in opposing the use of monkeys for scientific research. Because most monkeys are hurt or die during the experiments. Some succumb to fatal diseases or injuries. Most are killed because their tissues must be examined in autopsies to determine results.

PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) has succeeded in lobbying with the airlines. Major airlines now ban transport of research animals, including monkeys. Animals can be transported for other purposes, such as taking them to zoos or sanctuaries, but not for experiments. Scientists are unhappy about such discriminatory practice.

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The choice for the USA was to home-breed monkeys, although Chinese and Indian monkeys are much cheaper than American or European monkeys. The USA maintains seven primate research centers, where before research, the animals live in colonies. The facilities are affiliated to research universities and funded by the National Institutes of Health. Animal rights activists accuse the centers of abuse, including separating babies from their mothers.

In the last two decades, those centers always wanted to expand the monkey population. Unfortunately, their budgets kept contracting. The scientists, in fact, had to give the female monkeys birth control. Every year fewer babies were born.

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Scientists believe monkey research remains vital for developing vaccines, understanding the basic biology of the brain, neurological and communicable diseases, and certain aspects of fertility and ageing.

The instinctive reaction of most humans is to think of animal rights activists as fanatics. If monkeys are so useful in saving millions of human lives, why not facilitate their breeding and export for the benefit of science?

Ethically speaking, though, what right does the human race have to inflict pain on monkeys for experiments? Nazis had used the same argument when conducting medical experiments on Jews.

Ravi 

Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Corona Daily 173: Principles of Selection


Most people know Parkinson’s Law: Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion. Parkinson’s Law, the book, is a masterpiece by C. Northcote Parkinson. Despite serious subjects and practical insights, his prose and style make me roll on the floor laughing every time I read it. In a chapter called “the short list, or principles of selection” Parkinson discusses the British and Chinese methods to select candidates. For a single vacancy, hundreds or thousands of applicants, everyone thinking he or she is most suited for the job, apply. How to select that one candidate?

*****

United States of America is by most counts the best place for college education. Harvard, MIT, Stanford, Ivy colleges in general attract the best youth not only in America but from around the world. Despite the high costs, interest is huge. For years, standardized tests called SAT and ACT were used to assess students. The scores in such tests contributed in a big way to enrolling or rejecting students.

Due to the pandemic, SAT and ACT are now waived or made optional. This is a revolutionary change.

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SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test) is a major source of competition and student stress. Unfortunately, the SAT scores were highly correlated with wealth. The higher the family income, the higher the SAT score. Well-off families use private test-prep courses and tutors. Places like Manhattan have tutors charging $1000 per hour for one-to-one tutoring. As the competition for college admissions has intensified, tutoring and SAT preparation have become a billion-dollar industry.

A study suggests that if you come from a family with an annual income greater than $200,000, your chance of scoring 1400 (out of 1600) was 20%. If you came from a poor family (less than $20,000), your chance was 2%. At Yale and Princeton, only one student in fifty comes from a poor family.

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Wherever demand exceeds supply, educational institutions conceive clever ways of eliminating students. Mathematics is a good example. That subject is universally used not necessarily because it is useful in the course the student is planning to study, but to eliminate students from the competition. SAT served a similar function. It allowed a quantitative measure that could legitimately throw applications out.

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Now with the cancellation of standardized tests, suddenly thousands of students think they have a chance to get into the top universities. “The Common Application”, an online portal, reported that one million students applied ahead of January deadlines. Harvard has got 42% more applications this year. Cornell received 17,000 extra applications. Colgate in New York, a lesser-known college, got 103% more applications.

Small universities and colleges less famous have their mailboxes empty. Many of them have lost all additional sources of revenue such as food or athletic events. Programs are slashed and faculty laid off, creating a vicious cycle making the college less attractive.

Faculty and administrators at Cal Poly Pomona spent December calling students who had saved applications but not submitted. They also called students they had rejected in the past. Cal Poly Pomona had already lost $20 million in state funding.

Among the applicants, low-income and minority students show the largest declines. Pandemic has forced many of them to consider work first. Some of them lack online access.

*****

Higher education at the elite institutions was always a sort of scam. Harvard, Cambridge, or Indian IITs use cutthroat competitive exams to intake the cream, the brightest of the bright. The success of the student in academics and life can in large measure be attributed to this selection process rather than the academic institute. The virtuous cycle further enhances the reputation of the university.

With the disappearance of the standardised tests in the pandemic, it will be curious to see how the college admission process will be handled this year.

Ravi 

Monday, February 22, 2021

Corona Daily 174: Dear Comrade Kim Jong-un


Kim Jong-un, the 38-year-old Supreme Leader of North Korea, is perhaps the most paranoid ruler in the world. A terrible historical accident after WWII split Korea into two parts, the democratic South later becoming one of the world’s most prosperous economies and the cult-driven autocratic North, an impoverished country.

How to find out the pandemic’s effect on this secretive country? Well, some institutes share satellite images. Occasionally, Dear Comrade Kim Jong-un (that is how he must be addressed every time) releases a video, or there are foreign ambassadors who may offer candid interviews.

*****

North Korea’s border with China is porous. Chinese tourists can visit Pyongyang easily. Though North Korea has denied it, it is likely the virus had entered the nation early. It became among the first nations to close all borders in both directions. Reportedly 180 North Korean soldiers died in Jan-Feb, and 3700 soldiers were under quarantine. Schools were shut on 20 February, and a year later, still remain shut.

In early March, missile tests were conducted, the military fired five missiles. The supreme people’s assembly was announced in April. These measures were meant to show confidence that the nation was handling the virus well.

In March, the Royal United Services Institute shared satellite imagery that showed the illegal traffic of coal and other goods had stopped. Commercial vessels were seen idle at the ports. In March, the official export to China was $610,000, down 96% from the previous year.

Between April and June, three months combined, Dear Comrade was seen only seven times. On average he had made 46 appearances during that period in the past years.

In August, an official who tried to bring goods to Sinuiju from across the Chinese border was executed for violating covid-19 restrictions. On 22 September, the crew of a North Korean patrol boat killed a South Korean fisheries officer who, by chance, came close to the coast. They torched his floatation device. Both these acts were as prescribed by the covid-19 emergency orders. On television, Kim Jong-un expressed regret for the death. The incident should not have happened, he was disappointed, he said.

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It is difficult to imagine further isolation of North Korea, but it was managed; by the ruler himself. China offered 110,000 tons of rice which never left China’s port of Dalian because North Korea feared the coronavirus could enter with the shipment.

Alexander Matsegora, the Russian ambassador, trapped inside the Russian embassy in Pyongyang now for more than a year, confirmed even basic items such as soyabean oil, sugar, flour, pasta have not been supplied. North Korea doesn’t produce, but imports them from China. Where available in black markets, the prices have gone up at least four times.

In rural areas, households get two hours of electricity a day. Fertilizer shortages could aggravate the food situation further. Typical of communist States, North Korea believes in specialized giant factories. Many of them rely exclusively on China for spare parts. For want of spare parts, many factories are closed, including the nation’s largest fertilizer plant. Power plant output has become unreliable. Production is halted at coal mines and other mines.

*****

 In the winter of 2020, Kim Jong-un introduced a new law against “reactionary thought”. It made listening to, recording or distributing foreign radio broadcasts, videos, books, music illegal. Those caught can be sentenced to death. Any citizen using South Korean expression or speaking with a South Korean accent will be sent for two years to a hard labour camp.

An official State TV footing from 11 February showed an angry Kim yelling, finger pointing and striking the podium as he addressed the ruling party’s plenary meeting. He fired Kim Tu Il, the Economic Director.

Dear Comrade, however, continued to declare North Korea’s victory by claiming the nation didn’t have a single covid-19 case.

Ravi 

Sunday, February 21, 2021

Corona Daily 175: Sound of Music (2020)


The Marsh family is from Faversham, Kent, about fifty miles to the east of London. Dr Ben Marsh, 44, is a professor in American history at the University of Kent. If you read his biography, he comes across as a serious researcher and academic. He met his wife, Danielle, 42, at the University of Cambridge where they were both students. She is now also a professor at the University of Kent. Alfie, 13, Thomas, 12, Ella, 10, and Tess, 8, their four children attend school or rather did before the start of the lockdown in March 2020.

In March, Danielle’s mother had a birthday. It was impossible to meet or to celebrate the day with her. The family decided to send her a virtual gift. Children had no schoolwork; the professors didn’t have any papers to mark. Music became a welcome distraction for the family.

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Their living room became the stage, flowery curtains and family photos the stage background. Bathrobes and pajamas were the costumes. The six-voice musical ensemble was born.

Dad Dr Ben picked up “One Day More” from the musical Les Misérables and wrote lockdown lyrics where the parents complain about online grocery shopping, and the children lament: “Our grandparents can’t Skype, we’re brokenhearted,” and “watch our daddy drink, see our mummy sigh”.

Their clip posted on FB attracted 400,000 views in the first week. (Only the children’s grandfather protested saying he can Skype and Zoom).

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This was just the beginning of a long journey. By day six of the lockdown, the Marshes sang a song dedicated to the NHS, teachers and community heroes. It was the remake of “When will my life begin” from Disney’s Tangled, praising workers for all the chores they were doing.

On Twitter, Bonnie Tyler herself admired the family’s rendition of the reworked “total eclipse of the heart”.

So far, the family has posted twenty videos. The latest video, “have the new jab” (to the tune of Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah) has been watched four million times. The lyrics encourage listeners to go and get the vaccine. Several TV channels interviewed them on Zoom. Jimmy Kimmel invited them to appear on “Good morning America”.

Fans compared them to the Von Trapps made famous by the Sound of Music. Danielle Marsh objected to the comparison saying she is definitely not a nun, neither can she make dresses out of curtains.

In the clips, the family not only sings and plays on the instruments, the children have dramatic moments of bickering and improvised dances.

All proceeds raised from the videos are directly donated to the WHO’s Covid Relief Fund.

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Though none of them have music as a profession, reworking lyrics was a family hobby even before the pandemic. In the car, they usually sang songs.  For a non-professional family, their performances are of a pretty decent quality. Now that they have become a global sensation, would they consider turning this into a profession? Not really. The parents are keen to get back to the university, the kids to the schools. Schools in England are expected to begin on 8 March.

But Dr Ben says with a straight face they want to leave their options open. “Nobody’s job is secure in the post-pandemic world.” He explains.

Ravi