Space, Money, Bison and more-a weekly round up

Hi and welcome to our weekly round up of news stories and other feeds which didn’t make it into the rest of the week.

How badly has the world economy been hit by covid-19? Dreadfully, according to the Mail. Here Ryan Morrison estimates the hit at $3.8 trillion. That is an enormous red hole in the world balance sheet.

But, never forget, it is just money. Everything we need to make a successful economy function is still there. All the ships, farms, planes, factories, IT systems, malls, roads and people haven’t gone away. They are the same ones we had before the virus struck. The job now is to get them running again.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-8506463/Covid-19-pandemic-cost-worlds-economy-3-8TRILLION.ht

One way to get an economy running is to look for new markets. The obvious place to go is space-it is limitless. Up to now, space exploration has been the province of visionaries like Arthur C Clarke, or cold war warriors. Sensible people say, understandably-“there’s no money in it!” The only profitable bit is near earth satellites. Now all that may be about to change. NASA hope to explore an asteroid out in the belt between Mars and Jupiter that seems to carry inestimable mineral wealth. Here’s Ryan Morrison again, for the Mail. Oh and by the way, it was visionary Arthur C Clarke who dreamed up the idea of geostationary earth satellites back in 1947. Try to live without them now!

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-8509871/NASA-starts-building-spacecraft-explore-metal-rich-asteroid

We at LSS support every possible step in re wilding. It’s not about cuddly animals. it is about creating stable habitats which can soak up carbon dioxide. That contain chemical riches, like new antibiotics, in their plants and fungi. That may provide the basis for a new, sustainable economy, to replace the mess we’re in. Here is a lovely story from The Guardian, by Damian Carrington, about the return of wold bison to Kent in the UK

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/jul/10/wild-bison-to-return-to-uk-kent

Still wandering in the shadowy borderlands between science and political economy, we come again to the idea of a universal basic income. Before the corona virus pandemic, it was dismissed as a hopeless idea by the experts. The only way to universal prosperity was to make as many people as possible work for as long as possible, for the lowest wages it was possible to pay them. And, anyway, the poor are always hopelessly lazy, so it was good for them. Suddenly governments around the world are shelling out astronomical sums to ensure the common good. So let’s at least consider-if it works once, could it work always, at some level? Here Nature briefings looks at Spain’s experiment.

Spain’s epic economics experiment

Last month, Spain launched a website offering monthly payments of up to €1,015 (US$1,145) to its citizens to spend however they choose. Economists welcomed it as the largest test yet of an idea called universal basic income (UBI). The government estimates that the scheme will cost at least €3 billion per year. Evidence from smaller trials of UBI indicates that the benefits could include better health and higher school attendance. But the scheme is not truly universal — it’s only for 850,000 of the nation’s poorest families. Critics worry that the income limit will create a disincentive to earn more that would act as a ‘poverty trap’ and tarnish the natural experiment. Nature | 6 min read

Well, that’s it for this weekend. Thanks for reading, we hope we have given you food for thought at Saturday Night Dinner. Drink responsibly!

#universalbasicincome #asteroids #rewilding

Boeing and Brooks Brothers-more than just another business decision

When you are at the top, everyone else wants to be like you. That’s because what you do every day. without really thinking about it, gives them something they want. So we believe the news that Boeing is going to end production of its iconic giant 747 and that Brooks Brothers has filed for section 11 Bankruptcy are more than just business decisions. They represent the passing of an age.

When the Boeing 747 was launched in 1970, it represented the epitome of the American idea. Huge and powerful like the engines of a Saturn V rocket. Brash like rock or soul music. Democratic, like the Constitution, opening the skies to everyone. And whatever livery was on the plane you knew this was America. The huge shadow loomed low in the skies over airport approaches throughout the world. Who can forget that funny hollow sound on take off as the early models pulled out of Heathrow in the sunny far off skies of fifty years ago? When President Reagan wanted a new Air Force One at the height of his imperial powers, what else would he order but a 747?

And if you were in the first class lounge, the chances were you were wearing a classy suit and tie from Brooks Brothers, the tailor of choice for rich and powerful white American men who peopled the world beating corporations of the time. Esso, IBM, ITT, all had the look and feel of future success. Even off duty, your Brooks Brothers polo and chinos signified you weren’t quite as relaxed as the others. Something might come up-perhaps a decision to invest a billion dollars, or approve the rum punch at a party in Martha’s Vineyard. It was ,and is, good stuff, perhaps a little expensive.

The trouble for the Brothers and Boeing was that things were changing. More and more women, with very different ideas on dress were entering the corporate world. Brooks Brothers introduced a women’s section in their catalogue, and doubtless it was good. But someone else had got to the ladies first. And modern styles in biotech and IT start ups don’t always lend themselves to preppy button downs and fine jackets, however good the design and manufacture. As for the poor old 747, well apparently it’s a bit of a gas guzzler, like the cars of the seventies, no longer fit for a world of melting icecaps and growing deserts.

Boeing is far from finished, because they still make superb aircraft. Brooks Brothers is far from finished, because they still sell superb clothes. But the brand they in turn represent, Brand America, is itself now struggling to adapt to a fast changing world. And what follows may not be quite as democratic.

Personal note: On a trip to America, to buy our very first Brooks Brothers shirts, we had the honour to be invited onto the flight deck of Virgin Atlantic 747. We have never forgotten the kindness of all the staff from the Captain downwards, nor the interest of the occasion. The date? September 11 2000.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8503979/For-50-years-Boeing-747-carried-4billion-passengers-Space-Shutt

https://edition.cnn.com/2020/07/08/business/brooks-brothers-bankruptcy/index.html

#brooksbrothers #boeing747 #virginatlantic

How the Polynesians discovered America. Or the other way round?

How vast the Atlantic must have seemed in the time of the Romans or the Middle Ages. Huge, dangerous and absolutely unnavegable with the ships of the time. How very much bigger then must the Pacific have seemed to people in the tiny scattered islands. Or to the peoples who lived along its coast in places we now call Peru or Colombia.

Yet it now seems somebody did cross the Pacific, centuries before Europeans like Columbus and Magellan made their epic voyages. It looks as if, some time around 1200 AD either a group of Polynesians crossed to South America, or some Americans went the other way. The clue has always been there in sweet potato fields in places like Tonga (sweet potato comes from South America). But now a team led by GA Ioninnidis and his colleagues have used a sophisticated DNA technique to not only confirm the hypothesis but give an approximate date-probably between AD1130 and AD 1220. We have to link to two articles here, if only because the pictures are so good. We have chosen Nature and El Pais.** We’ll leave the story to them, but must wonder in amazement.

Before modern transport, astronomy and communications (in fact any time before about 1520AD) the world was so big that it must have felt almost infinite. And there is nothing bigger than the Pacific. Up to Easter Island, islands are pretty few and remote. Beyond Easter Island there is nothing at all. What sort of boat did they use? How did they navigate? Above all, why keep going, if you don’t know what’s at the other end? We stand in awe, gentle readers, at the implications of this research, and the people who were on those boats. Any budding novelists out there?

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-01983-5

https://elpais.com/ciencia/2020-07-08/los-nativos-americanos-y-los-polinesios-entraron-en-contacto-siglos-an

#earlyvoyages #polynesiaamericacontact #dna #nature

The Killer lurking in your shower drain

There’s a dangerous killer lurking inches from you feet as you stand in your shower. No it’s not a new type of spider, or even rats. It turns out that drains, dishwashers, shower pipes and all the other outflows are perfect breeding grounds for all sorts of antibiotic resistant bacteria. Writing in New Scientist, Alice Klein reports on a recent German study which found antibiotic-resistant bacteria in no less than 82% of the sites they sampled.* The outfalls are ideal breeding grounds because they are warm, shady and supply endless nutrients in the form of your dead skin and your organic products. Yeech! The cause seems to be that manufacturers are pouring antibacterial agents into soaps and cleaning products, so giving a carte blanche to all those nasty little organisms in the pipes to develop their resistant ways.

Why does all this worry us? Because as they breed, super-resistant bacteria and their genes will get into the food chain and start to spread. According to John Naish in the Mail,* two new genes called MCR-1 and NDN-1 ,which confer the ability to resist the strongest antibiotics available, are now spreading rapidly. They can spread between different types of bacteria. They are potentially lethal.

The death toll from antibiotic resistant infections is now rising at 10% a year. last year in the USA there were 35000 such deaths. There were 800 000 world wide. By 2050 there will probably be 10 million a year. We will be back to the days when even a sore throat could kill you, depending of course on things like your age and other health factors.

We post your links below, and also one to that excellent charity antibiotic research uk, who are trying to contend with this terrible problem. Before modern medicine as we know it literally goes down the drain

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2246672-our-shower-drains-are-a-breeding-ground-for-drug-resistant-bacteri

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-8495545/Superbugs-pose-grave-threat-Britains-cancer-patients-experts-f

#antibioticresistance #antibioticresearchuk #superbugs

A Riddle in the Bat Cave

Long term followers of LSS will recall several blogs discussing the prevalence of coronavirus strains in wild populations. (LSS passim). We relayed the thoughts of those far more erudite writers at places like Nature and New Scientist, which pointed to a fascinating ecosystem of viruses, small mammals and dank dirty caves along the wild borderlands of China, Laos and Myanmar.

Fascinating for the scientist; but now things down there may suddenly have global geopolitical significance, gentle readers. As you know, there is a massive blame game going on as to whose fault all this is. At the moment, the two chief protagonists are the United States of America and the Peoples Republic of China. And the following story, which today we source from Mail writer Sam Blanchard, will only add fuel to the fire.

Back in 2012 (that’s seven years before the outbreak, gentle reader) Chinese scientists became aware of a virus in bats in a place called Mojiang in South western China. It was a coronavirus. It produced nasty symptoms, some of which were lethal. It was 96.2% similar to SARS-CoV-2. They wrote it up in a paper, giving it the catchy name of RaBtCoV/4991,and you can-should, actually-read the rest in Sam’s story.

Our aim at LSS is always to stand back from the stories, and ask questions. As this has explosive political significance, we think all citizens need answers to the following questions

1 What does “96.2% similarity “mean? Where are the differences in the other 3.8%? Is it in the spikes? Or the RNA-or what?

2 How many other viruses are in wild bat populations? What about other mammals? How much time and money will it take to find out?

3 Did any samples from Mojiang travel to other parts of China-or elsewhere? Under what conditions of storage, transport and security?

4 How can the rest of us stop the two most powerful nations in the world from playing and endless blame game, and instead show leadership on this as well as many other problems, like antibiotic resistance and climate change?

Don’t send your answers to us, send them to the governments of those countries. Oh yeah, postcards are a bit passe now-try a social media platform.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8491491/Coronaviruss-closest-ancestor-SEVEN-YEARS-ago-bat-infested-Chi

#bats #coronavirus #SARS-CoV-2 #covid19 #PRC #USA

Reading this could change your view of Coronavirus forever

The story that Spanish scientists may have found a sample of SARS-CoV-2 in a sample of wastewater from March 2019 is awesome indeed, if it is confirmed. It’s breaking across the mainstreams, but in case you missed it, here goes.*

Following the new trend to look for the virus in sewage and wastewater, a Spanish team from the University Of Barcelona decided to start looking through samples from the city’s sewage system. Quite soon they found a sample dated 15th January 2020 that was positive for SARS-CoV-2, a full 41 days before the the first reported case in the city. It was what happened next that changed everything we know, potentially. Albert Bosch and his teams started to check out samples from as far back as January 2018. And they found one from 12th March 2019 which was positive, Nine full months before the first reports from Wuhan in China.

Now we know that readers of LSS like their stories as scrupulous as we can make ’em. And as good scientists, we know a few things have got to happen before we can draw really firm conclusions. Firstly, there has to be a peer review, the benchmark of real science. But the sooner the better, we say. And a one off result is never, on its own, enough for science. You have to find another one of anything. What about Madrid, Sevilla and Zaragoza? It would be nice to see a precise map of the virus in their sample, to get some ideas on its evolution and development in the last eighteen months or so.

All that said, hats off to the Barcelona team for their supreme demonstration of the virtues of curiosity, open-mindedness and solid devotion to technique. Those are the values that will one day pull us through.

Our Thanks to Mr Gary Herbert of Buckinghamshire for first alerting us to this story.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-spain-science/coronavirus-traces-found-in-march-2019-sewage-

#reuters #universityof barcelona #covid19 #coronavirus #sarscov2

What the readers saw

A weekly round up of stories we think you ought to know but didn’t have time to feature

Avid readers of LSS will recall our June 13th article in which we looked at testing sewage for the presence of Sars-CoV-2 virus. Real aficionados will recall that it was at the behest of Mr Peter Seymour of Hertfordshire. Well, Nature Briefings (Sewage based surveillance system) are running with this. If true, it could help local health organisations get significantly ahead of outbreaks, with all the benefits that implies.

Testing wastewater samples for the coronavirus could help local authorities to identify and tackle COVID-19 outbreaks sooner, scientists say. Studies in the United Kingdom suggest that this approach could help to detect infection spikes up to ten days earlier than existing medical-based tests. “By sampling wastewater at different parts of the sewerage network, we can gradually narrow an outbreak down to smaller geographical areas, enabling public-health officials to quickly target interventions,” says pollution scientist Andrew Singer. “It seems obvious that we should be doing this.”
BBC News | 5 min read
Read more: How sewage could reveal the true scale of the coronavirus outbreak (Nature | 4 min read, from April)

We at LSS are firm believers in the principle of innocence until proven guilty in a trial. So our question about Prince Andrew is not his innocence, but how did a man with born with all his advantages land in this mess? Certainly his siblings have had their ups and downs, but no one can doubt their commitment to service and good works, or imagine them in such a fix as this. Nigel Cawthorne thinks he has the answers in his recent biography of the Prince. We post a link from the Mail‘s summary of the book, from which you can find a way to buy it if you want. But is the answer much simpler? Andrew served bravely for his country in a war. There are many examples of men who, having put their life on the line, just glad to enjoy life they get home, and not take things too seriously. Is this one such case?

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8324925/The-making-Prince-Andrew.html

“It’s time something was done about the climate crisis” is a grumble we hear more and more. To be fair the Democrats in the United States do seem to be centering it in their forthcoming election manifesto. Here’s Nature Briefings again:

A Democrat-led US government committee charged with coming up with a detailed climate plan has released its recommendations for saving the world. One of the report’s overall targets is net-zero carbon-dioxide emissions in the United States before 2050. To get there, the report offers 12 ‘pillars’, including investing in green-technology industries and strengthening support for climate-science research. “I am very heartened to see the detail and ambition that the committee has put forward,” says energy-policy researcher Leah Stokes, who kindly broke down the 500+-page report in a Twitter thread. How much of the plan will be implemented comes down to the outcome of the imminent US elections in November.Vox | 10 min read
Reference: Solving the Climate Crisis report (or just the 2-page summary)

And finally..happy fiftieth birthday to Germaine Greer‘s The Female Eunuch. Still fondly remembered as a landmark text in feminism and to all of us who think that the emancipation of women everywhere will give all of us better lives

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Female_Eunuch

#covid19 #coronavirus #climatechange #globalwarming #princeandrew #germainegreer #thefemaleeunuch

Friday Night: Cocktails and thanks

Before our regular Friday night cocktail feature, we would like to thank ALL of our readers and visitors and followers, be they on the main site, twitter, or Facebook. They are now too numerous to mention individually, so apologies.

On then to cocktail night. Many readers have written in crying “oh Cocktailmeister, you have advised us of music to play with our cocktails. Trouble is, we’ve played it so often that we have worn out the grooves on our Oscar Petersen CD, can’t you recommend something else?” Well, thanks to the kind suggestion of Mrs Hazel Inglese of Berkshire, we now have a strong recommendation. It is the well known Latin musician Tito Puente (1923-2000) and his composition Oye como va.* Thanks to the wonders of modern technology, we can post a link to it below, you no longer have to listen to us singing it.

Puente was an American of Puerto Rican descent. If you like his work, think of him as a bridge to a whole world of Latin sounds, including rumba, mambo, salsa, cha cha and many others of the hot tropical belt which runs from Peru up all the way up into Florida. That erudite musicologist and composer Howard Goodall waxes lyrical on the rhythmic accomplishments of this genre in his series How Music Works.* Some British readers may recall him as the man who wrote the scores for the stunning BBC historical drama series Blackadder. But a glance at his oeuvre * reveals a lot more.

And the cocktail? Oh yes, the cocktail. We have chosen a Cuban No 2, the recipe for which is taken from Diffords.* We urge all thirsty readers to visit this site, a must-go-to for recipes, background information and anything else you might want to set up a perfect party, cocktail or otherwise. All of it so beautifully presented and designed that it falls easy on the eye and brain.

https://www.diffordsguide.com/cocktails/recipe/605/cuban-cocktail-no2

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_Goodall

#howardgoodall #diffords #cocktails #latinmusic

Trophy Hunting-time to call it a day

We at LSS have always been mightily impressed by living things. Their complexity, their intricacy, and the beauty of their design. The medieval cathedrals of France are glorious, but not one of them is as precious and complicated as the smallest beetle scurrying up its walls. We flatter ourselves however, that most of our readers would take a dim view of anyone who gratuitously destroyed the cathedral or the insect, just for the fun of it.

It is in this light that we try to understand the mindset of those trophy hunters who set out to kill the breathtaking megafauna of Africa and other places on their holidays. We don’t know anyone who has told us “I’m off to Italy this year to smash up a few Renaissance masterpieces.” Or “we went to Cornwall last year, boy what a mess we left on those beaches!” So went to the websites of companies that offer these safaris, to look at the testimonials of their clients. (We at LSS always want to hear from both sides, and these were their words) Frankly it was all a bit depressing. Nearly all of the pictures were of middle aged to elderly gentlemen posing with their enormous weapons next to the corpse of their vanquished victims. It reminded us of those pictures from wars you see in history books where soldiers pose next to the corpses of dead enemies. Except people like the Vietnamese had guns, and could shoot back. Frankly, it was a waste of time. There was nothing on the level of LSS readers, just endless litanies about themselves and their pleasures. We wonder-is that where they are coming from?

It is the very starting point of LSS that humans are a deeply imperfect species. That learning will never be finished in our lifetime. But also that learned and thoughtful people can achieve something, sometimes. Gladiatorial games were abolished-eventually. So was slavery. And we also know there are many, many other pressing causes. However, if you want to do something to end trophy hunting, get in contact with these organisations

humane society international

one kind planet

born free foundation

https://www.bornfree.org.uk/trophy-hunting

#trophyhunting #ecology #endangeredspecies

If Trump loses in November, will he go?

That’s the title of a book by Professor Laurence Douglas-and frankly, we can’t believe that we’re writing this. Up to now, the handover of power has usually been peaceful in the United States, even when the party changes. Think Bush- Clinton, Bush-Obama. But, because of the chronic hyperpartisanship now afflicting the United States, Professor Douglas thinks it is possible that President Donald Trump may try to hang on if he loses. Especially if the result is close. And there are precedents, none of them pretty. Think Hayes-Tilden 1876 or Bush-Gore 2000. We post a fascinating interview piece with Douglas and Sean Illing of Vox below.*

If the worse happens, there could be three Presidents by January-Trump, Biden, and Nancy Pelosi, who by law must try to hold the ring as acting commander-in-chief. But we’ll leave that to the Americans. The point for foreigners is that our own stability and economies ae still very dependent on them. The dollar is still the world’s reserve currency, and a sudden vertiginous drop could wreak untold havoc on world currency markets. If that happened, equities would be close behind. More worryingly, the enormous power and stability of the US has so far meant that Treasury Bonds are the safest thing you can buy. They act like an enormous sponge for the world economy, soaking up loose money in times of surplus, releasing it when times are bad. Real constitutional meltdown would instantly jeopardise their safe haven status. What turmoil then?

Since about the time of President Nixon, America’s power has rested more on its financial status than its industrial. Many larger powers are waiting for this moment to step in. Russia, China and India are the obvious giants, with the EU as a possible contender. But America has smaller, closely allied client states as well. Three obvious examples are Taiwan, the UK and Israel. Up to now, the relationship has been beneficial to these states. But what do you do if your patron suddenly runs out of money?

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2020/6/3/21257133/trump-2020-election-meltdown-lawrence-douglas

https://www.forbes.com/sites/stevedenning/2014/06/03/why-financialization-has-run-amok/#12c1e2423d7d

#donaldtrump #joebiden #nancypelosi #willhego? #usconstitution