What if we never learn whether the virus that causes Covid-19 escaped from a lab or jumped to humans from animals?
The public is still entitled to a closer look at what’s going on in virology labs trib.al/dHZ7Htj
Some scientists worry that laboratory scientists are getting too little oversight on projects that could potentially start pandemics.
Others worry about the global proliferation of labs that work with dangerous viruses and other pathogens trib.al/kwok8bt
SARS-CoV-2’s closest relative appears to be in horseshoe bats — yet there are no horseshoe bat colonies close to Wuhan, China, where the pandemic was first identified.
However, Wuhan hosts a lab holding the world’s largest collection of bat coronaviruses trib.al/kwok8bt
There is no convincing evidence Covid-19 has been genetically manipulated.
But it’s well known that scientists have manipulated other viruses to make them more dangerous trib.al/kwok8bt
In 2003, scientists voiced concerns over the realization that emerging genetic technology might allow people to alter viruses to make them deadlier or more transmissible.
More recently, scientists have been creating genetically-altered coronaviruses.
That research has been done as a collaboration between U.S. labs and the Wuhan Institute of Virology trib.al/kwok8bt
More experiments created new viruses increasingly adept at infecting human cells.
“And so this is, of course, a cookbook for constructing a virus of extremely high pandemic potential,” says biologist @R_H_Ebrighttrib.al/kwok8bt
Ebright suggests that the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy or another independent entity should be responsible for oversight, rather than agencies that do research or fund it trib.al/kwok8bt
Purdue University virologist David Sanders thinks the danger lies less in genetic manipulation experiments and more in the worldwide proliferation of labs that deal in deadly pathogens, natural or engineered trib.al/kwok8bt
After all, some genetic manipulation of viruses can provide valuable insights.
Gene therapy, for example, uses altered viruses to deliver life-saving genetic material into human cells trib.al/kwok8bt
How did SARS-CoV-2 get into humans? We still don’t know.
And it’s perfectly reasonable to keep asking questions trib.al/kwok8bt
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By now, we’ve all heard about the gender gaps in pay and wealth.
But what’s not often spoken about is the ambition penalty, which punishes women who try to close these gaps trib.al/5fl82a0
On average, for every $1 earned and owned by a man, women in the U.S.:
💵 Earn $0.82
💵 Own $0.32
The disparities are even wider for women of color trib.al/5fl82a0
Women themselves tend to be blamed for these gaps. These are examples of real headlines:
“Women don’t pursue high paying jobs”
“Women drop out of the workforce”
“Women let their partners manage their money”
“Women don’t invest” trib.al/5fl82a0
After months stuck at home, many of us are dreaming of a vacation abroad.
But while vaccines will certainly hasten the return of international travel, we'll need more than shots to get back to some kind of normal trib.al/zc4cuvu
The European Union, with its close borders and intergovernmental relationships, can help pave the way.
Testing and travel guidelines for its own region could set a standard for the rest of the world, if done well trib.al/c8czIUE
EU states currently differ over:
📆Quarantine periods
⏳Mandatory testing intervals
💉Treatment of vaccinated individuals
🗝Ability to test out of quarantine
Consistency is likely to improve compliance and lead to better results trib.al/c8czIUE
Warmer temperatures are heralding ice-free summers for the Arctic, opening up all sorts of economic opportunities:
🛢Potential oil and gas riches
🛳New shipping routes
💥Military might
Decades of harmonious exceptionalism may be coming to an end bloom.bg/3wvp3hU
It is still possible to shield the region from rising tensions elsewhere.
That will require rethinking the role of states without polar territory, China among them, and creating an informal venue for security discussions that includes sanctions-hit Russia bloom.bg/3wvp3hU
And the pandemic winner is … Florida and its governor, Ron DeSantis.
Can anyone doubt it? As America tries to recover from the pandemic, psychologically as well as economically, Florida is way ahead of just about every other state in the U.S. trib.al/AR1mgQR
As of March, its unemployment rate was 4.7%, compared with New York’s 8.5% and California’s 8.3%.
The Census Bureau reports that more than 250,000 people moved to Florida last year, second only to Texas trib.al/AR1mgQR
The reason, of course, is that in Florida, the pandemic is being treated as ancient history.
Are Covid-19 victims still dying in Florida? Yes. But the numbers are relatively low: 45 deaths on Wednesday, for instance trib.al/AR1mgQR