Hi from my quarantine hotel in Taipei. Here's the view for the next couple weeks....
Been following Taiwan's success at keeping covid-19 largely at bay — 7 deaths, 799 cases on an island of nearly 24 million. Getting to see firsthand how they've been doing it.
704 out of 799 confirmed covid cases in Taiwan have been "imported" by patients who'd come from abroad.
A NZ pilot created a tizzy this month by apparently infecting a Taiwanese woman, breaking a 253-day streak of no local transmission. taipeitimes.com/News/front/arc…
Rightfully, Taiwan is strict about who it lets in. Americans haven’t needed visas to enter til now. You also have to produce a neg PCR test & fill out an online health declaration required by the health ministry. It explains quarantine violations ➡️ fines as high as +$35K
The pandemic has really cut down travel to Taiwan. China Airlines doesn’t run flights on wknds. Even so, my plane couldn’t have been more than a 1/3 full. No one in my surrounding rows.
Flight attendants wore protective gowns & goggles. Good number of passengers w/face shields
Soon after you land at TPE, you're asked if you have a phone that works in Taiwan. If not, you have to buy a SIM card so authorities can location-track you & make sure you’re sticking to quarantine.
For $35, you get 30 days unlimited 4G data. Sales rep promises "no throttling"
If you don't have a ride, you're not allowed on public transit. But you can use taxi companies authorized to take quarantining travelers.
Before I got in my cab, the driver Mr. Wang sprayed my luggage down with alcohol — and then me!
In the cab, Mr. Wang tried to grasp from me how badly things were going in LA. We passed by kids going to school. He raised his chin toward the window: "Life's normal here." He said lately tho ppl have been wearing masks more bc of covid surge in US & the new strain found in UK
Speaking of masks....They're not even controversial bc ppl wear them when they have the common cold to keep others safe. Masks are also the norm for Taiwan's many scooter riders to keep out exhaust fumes.
Also Taiwanese saw how masks helped to control the spread of SARS in 2003
Anywho, cherished talking to Mr. Wang for almost an hour. may have come off as a tad clingy. That was my last in-person convo for a while
I was instructed to enter thru the side of the hotel (in the Zhongzheng district of Taipei) to avoid mingling with the regular guests in the lobby.
A hotel staffer gave me shoe covers and directed me to another door. This was either really undercover rock star or side piece-y
Just had to walk up a flight of stairs to my room.
On the desk was a digital thermometer so I can take my temp every am and pm and message the hotel front desk through LINE. I was late doing that this morning and I got a slightly-panicked call asking Are u ok
Brought enuf clothes for 2 wks bc no one will touch your laundry (in case you're sick!)
The hotel provides detergent so you can wash your clothes in the sink dry them on a retractable clothesline.
There’s also dishwashing liquid and a dustpan & brush that’s mine to keep 4ever
130+ hotels are participating in the "Epidemic Prevention Quarantine" program, most of them in Taipei.
Think I got very lucky with mine. Found a special rate of just under $100/night that comes with 3 big meals. I'm mainlining nutrients like I haven't in years
Gasp it’s late here. Happy new year from Taiwan. Pls enjoy these fireworks set off at Taipei 101 filmed off a hotel tv
Wow this New year scene of thousands in Taipei enjoying a concert just got me. One of the performers just told her fans to “sing loudly through your masks”
Taiwan’s Central Epidemic Command Ctr isn’t messing around. I missed their daily morning text asking if I’m showing covid symptoms bc I was in the shower and they text again 14 mins later like ‘hello’?
When I respond, the command ctr sends a thank u text saying it cares about me
Feeling sad about brutal news coming out of LA County and the contrast w/Taiwan, which has 2x the people.
To date, 7 deaths in Taiwan, 802 cases. When a case is confirmed that makes national news. Media reports refer to Case #790 and Cases #792-794, etc
My hs bud Joyce dropped by my quarantine hotel with snacks and we laughed and took pics across Jinshan Rd. She brought boba of course
Joyce brought impt stuff like melatonin tabs and surgical masks but she has strong snack game so the stash has red bean dorayaki, choco puffs, dried red guava and London fish & chips-flavored Pringles which ok I’m game
Fellow quarantiners out there, here's a playlist of non-aggressive uptempo tunez to help you break 1,000 steps in your hotel room. (Yes, I've entered quarantine stage of making very important playlists) open.spotify.com/playlist/6rg3o…
Big day. Put out the trash. Nothing like never leaving a room to see how much waste you generate. Had a bag for recyclables, another for food.
Food bag was getting rankish so I set it out on a tray labeled “pollutant." An outside contractor, not staff, picks up trash btw 3-3:30
Taiwan seems to look for every chance to do public health messaging.
After this trash truck rolls up, announced by tinkly classical music, people come out to hand-deliver their bags as is the practice.
A message plays over speakers reminding folks of pandemic safety measures
My Mandarin is a nightmare so I asked my friend Grace for the exact translation of the trash truck message. (She also happens to work in public health)
Meanwhile.....in LA, a mandate to 'self-quarantine'
There's never been a complete list of the people of Japanese descent incarcerated during WWII.
So a team of scholars & volunteers scoured 10's of 1000's of historical documents to come up with all the names — a way to give them back their identities. laist.com/news/wwii-monu…
In news stories, we use the estimate "more than 120,000" when describing the number of Japanese Am's and nationals incarcerated during WWII.
The team has now confirmed 125,284 people by name. The list is printed in a 1,000-page book that will be @jamuseum for the next year.
The team thinks they've got the list 99.5% right but to get it to 100% they're asking survivors and descendants to offer any corrections/omissions.
Aside from the "Book of Names," there's a searchable database going live this weekend: ireizo.com.
Dr. John Cheng, the 52-yr-old man killed in the Laguna Woods shooting yesterday, had tried to disarm the gunman. Other parishioners were able to then hogtie the suspect. "W/o the actions of Dr. Chang, it is no doubt that there have been numerous additional victims in this crime."
OC Sheriff say it's believed the suspect David Chou "was upset about political tensions between China and Taiwan" when he attacked the Taiwanese American Presbyterian congregation in Laguna Woods on Sunday, killing 1 and wounding 5.
FBI has opened a federal hate crimes investigation into Laguna Woods shooting to determine what type of fed'l charges can be brought against David Chou b/c "we have discovered evidence that the individual was motivated by some type of hate."
Up until several years ago I didn't know one of the worst massacres of Chinese people happened in downtown LA.
So many times without knowing it, I've walked past spots where people were strung up and shot. Apparently, I wasn't alone. laist.com/news/la-histor…
LA's 1st Asian Am councilmember Mike Woo is part of a group trying to get a memorial built for victims of the 1871 massacre.
Hard to say where. The attacks played out across LA. But they started on Los Angeles Street, near El Pueblo. Only marker now is a sidewalk plaque.
On Oct. 24, 1871, there was a gunfight btw 2 Chinese men. A white rancher who entered the fray was shot dead. That led a mob to form around a building (no longer there) where many Chinese men were seeking refuge. They were shot at and dragged outside to be hung.
CA has $5.2 BILLION to give out in rent relief. You can get 100% of back rent paid from April 2020 thru this Sept if you've struggled financially bc of covid & are income-eligible.
Applying can be hard if you don't know English well. Here’s ways to make it easier:
If you text “rent” to 211211, you can get help figuring out if you qualify in one of 11 languages.
Aid is available to those who earn no more than 80 percent of the median income for their area. For a family of 4 in the LA area, that’s just under $95,000.
You can also call for interpreter help: 1-833-430-2122. It’s available for Vietnamese, Mandarin, Spanish, Korean, Tagalog and Cantonese.
San Gabriel Valley is coming out big tonight for the victims of the Atlanta shootings. I’d estimate 1000+ btw 2 vigils.
People feeling the loss hard in this swath of LA Cty, which has 1 of the country’s largest concentrations of Asian residents. 10 cities have Asian majorities.
Leaders from these Asian-majority cities - Arcadia, Rosemead -- kick off a vigil in downtown San Gabriel.
Emotions run strong.
San Gabriel’s mayor Chin Ho Liao shouts “We have to stop the hate! We are Americans!”
Crowd in San Gabriel is older, more immigrant (I hear Mandarin and Cantonese being spoken) than those attending another vigil happening next door in Alhambra.
That one is being put on a 22 yo first-time organizer Betty Hang. Will come back to hers.