Tag Archives: politics

Covid booster: Data shows third shots ‘not appropriate’ at this time, scientists say

13 Sep

An expert review of data concludes Covid vaccine boosters are not needed at this time for the general public, a group of U.S. and international scientists said.
— Read on www.cnbc.com/2021/09/13/covid-booster-shots-data-shows-third-shots-not-appropriate-at-this-time-scientists-conclude.html

Good!!!!

Excess of COVID-19 cases and deaths due to fine particulate matter exposure during the 2020 wildfires in the United States | Science Advances

26 Aug

Excess of COVID-19 cases and deaths due to fine particulate matter exposure during the 2020 wildfires in the United States | Science Advances
— Read on advances.sciencemag.org/content/7/33/eabi8789

Talk about intersectionality!!! Crap! Synergistic crises!!… humanity (unequally) sure knows how to make things harder on itself!!

Mirror, Mirror 2021: Reflecting Poorly | Commonwealth Fund

26 Aug

The United States trails far behind other high-income countries on measures of health care affordability, administrative efficiency, equity, and outcomes.
— Read on www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/fund-reports/2021/aug/mirror-mirror-2021-reflecting-poorly

USA! USA! We’re number…uh… oh, forget it!!

Talk about pandemic preparedness!

Intriguing Correlations… btw, data is beautiful!

26 Aug

Here’s an interesting correlation! This map looks pretty similar to maps of covid infections, hospitalizations and deaths now. I wonder why…

Friends, Family & Covid vaccines

24 Jan
Tweaked photomicrographs of SARS-CoV2

Dear friends and family I know & have yet to meet,

The video below comes about from a convergence amongst relationships in my life.

The convergence begins with my sister Susana Morales MD. She has been on the front lines of the Covid crisis confronting the devastation wrought by this virus (SARS-CoV2) in a Manhattan Hospital.  She is clear-eyed about the importance of vaccination in getting Covid under control. Her clarity extends to the responsibility those of us with training and expertise have to our communities. We are bound to help them benefit from advances in biomedicine by overcoming legitimate historical concerns and current-day misinformation.  Since she knows we’re in complete agreement, and that I’ve done this kind of work before, she asked me to prepare a scientific presentation that would be directed to the public.

Continuing, my prima (Lisa Brandon Colon) and I were communicating for some time about the need for educational materials about vaccines in her hospital.  In her front line position in Training & Volunteer Services in a Bronx Hospital, she also had growing disquiet about how to help the community deal with their concerns and misinformation.  After various discussions, I realized the best way for her to have good materials was to make them myself.  

Lastly, when many of my friends in texts and calls were asking questions about the Covid vaccine, it was clear I had to act. Therefore, given my responsibility as a scientist of color and equipped with my education, experience, and research, I made this short video of a presentation I prepared about SARS-CoV2 and the vaccines.

The way I see it, it’s also MY job to help get our communities vaccinated to combat the Pandemic.  My job description also includes combating the rampant misinformation and anti-science attitudes in our public discussions.  Lastly, I must help our democracy by providing people with accurate scientific information so that they may make wiser decisions about government pandemic policies currently being enacted.

Arguably, Covid is THE issue facing humanity today (although Climate change might disagree!).  As many have noted, the many-headed hydra that is Covid has brought forward many social issues and injustices that have been long incubating in our society.  These issues have particular importance given the burdens of illness and death borne by the Black and Brown communities of New York City and beyond. We must do what we can to take on these dire challenges.

Thus, I present to you this short video that shares info about the virus and two of the vaccines currently available.

The 51st State & Diagnosing Maladies in Puerto Rican Status Activism.

13 Nov

INTRODUCTION

I think we might have entered into a notable moment in history for Puerto Ricans. Unlike most of the last 120 years, the current US political situation may the main driver for a change in the status of Puerto Rico and Puerto Ricans. I have noticed this so much in the lead up to and after the latest presidential election that I have really wanted to talk about it to my friends and see what they thought. Unsurprisingly, these current events are just the latest developments in our centurial issue … the political status of Puerto Rico.

I recently had a text exchange with a friend that started with this uptick in the discussion about Puerto Rico and then moved into my general thoughts about the status issue and some critical observations I’ve made in Puerto Rican activism in general and independence activism in particular. While this critique might be obsolete given the significant length of time away from these circles, it might still have some relevance regarding Puerto Rico and climate change. I have edited my statements to increase readability and have paraphrased my friend’s comments in line with the choice of anonymity.

EXCHANGE

José:   Hey, I wanted your view. I’ve been reading and hearing Puerto Rico statehood mentioned a lot these days! So much so that I propose that if Biden wins, the likelihood of Puerto Rico statehood goes way up. It appears to part of possibleDemocrat actions to bury the Republicans. What do you think?

Friend: There’s never been as much discussion of statehood in the last 50 years!

José: I agree.

Friend: Apparently, Florida Boricua voters don’t wield the power they could, because those who have recently arrived remain unregistered due to a lack of information. Some evangelicals, on the other hand, vote for the anti-abortion candidate aka Trump.

José: I’d be interested in seeing the statistics for Florida.

Friend: Here is something else….LINK

José:  Hmmm….Given the link, I can agree with the authors that PR’s status is central to this issue. However, I think the statement’s argument has weaknesses. For one thing, it’s not very strategic to direct their argument more for Boricuas than whites in the USA. Reading their piece brings to mind a more current version of my long-standing critique of independence advocacyI’d like independentistas to please explain how a sovereign PR will deal with the increased frequency and intensity of hurricanes derived from climate change. There is even a newer version I’ll discuss later.

Friend: Your never-ending optimistic curiosity… haha!!

José: Yep. Skepticism as a way of life.

Friend: Please make an attempt to make your skepticism up-beat! Though maybe baseless, it’ll help our daily lives.

José:  Hmmm…not sure that is necessarily a requirement for me. Anyway, since the group’s statement raised the status question, I’ll make a general comment about my current thinking on this issue. In my view, the whole discussion of PR’s status is really about which “means” or political status, best achieves the desired “end”. The “end” is the optimization of the quality of life of the PR people on the island.

Many years ago, I adopted the independence position not in small part because it was consistent with a larger left perspective in anti-imperialism, anti-colonialism, etc which I identified with. Looking back, I realized that these reasons were not necessarily wrong, but they certainly weren’t a complete look at the issue. Further, I eventually realized that these reasons were mostly ideological, rhetorical, and leaned heavily on emotional appeals.

Those appeals, like any other persuasive enterprise, managed the info presented to further adoption of its message. For example, the appeals effectively deployed elements of history and various facts to bolster the case. I have to say that the appeals worked on me – I loved the ideology, rhetoric, emotions, and messages! That’s why for many years, I identified myself as an independentista.

However, as my critical faculties developed, and I worried less about group acceptance, cracks started to appear to me in the arguments. An important crack centered on describing the objective material basis of PR as an independent nation-state. For some time, literally, no one I knew could articulate that nor could anyone tell me where to find it. Instead, I heard silence, dismissal, or various justifications like – “I’ll leave that to others”. That perplexed me.

I now want to make a detour to a time prior to my detecting the key crack. During this time, as NCPRR activist, I noticed a phenomenon within the organization that resonated with what I was seeing in the independence discourse. In an effort to address the problematic NCPRR issue, I wrote about it dubbing a pair of syndromes I observed as.…”action-addiction” and “life-support phobia”.

Friend: Please explain what “life support phobia” and “action addiction” are. I have to ask… was analyzing this in terms of sickness and illness really necessary?

José: I did that on purpose, because, in my opinion, they ARE activism pathologies. AND illness can be diagnosed and treated!

“Action-addiction” is the compelling need to go to meetings, demos, rallies, marches, pump a fist and chant, make statements and perform the public display of progressive cred (attire, etc), etc. Thus, a key symptom of “Action addiction” is an attraction to the public performance of righteousness. Touching on something I will discuss next, is that these signs correspond with parallel neglect of other activism tasks like fundraising, child care, etc.

Friend: I detect some bitterness

José:  Well, from where I sit, if you are committed to the patient’s improvement, a health provider has to make a diagnosis that precedes treatment. I’m trying to make things better by identifying what’s wrong.

Continuing, this neglect or “Life-Support Phobia” is the repulsion from, avoidance of, de-prioritization of “life support” or the tasks that maintain/reinforce/expand the material basis of activism. As mentioned,Life Support” includes fundraising, stuffing envelopes, managing databases, designing and handing out flyers, keeping the books, paying bills, making copies, phone calls to members, childcare, etc.

Friend: Are there ways to treat these maladies?

José:  I’ll get to that…. After almost 20 years of involvement, this is what I observed. As I see it, this is a factor in movement weakness and ineffectiveness. To be fair, “Action addiction” in many ways is indistinguishable from dedication. However, the tell-tale sign of the addiction is the presence of the other syndrome of “Life Support-Phobia”. In fact, like diabetes and heart disease, the syndromes are co-morbid. Those that are addicts suffer from phobia and vice versa. The more that “Life-Support” is downplayed, the more that the addiction is present.

Now that you know what I mean, I will bring these syndromes back to Puerto Rico’s status.

The fact that the independentistas that I knew and ran across did not articulate the material basis of political sovereignty started pushing my thinking to draw a parallel between the activism in the NCPRR and PR independence.

Friend: Have you contracted any of these illnesses?

José:  I’ll get to that later as well.

I saw that what the independentistas I knew and ran across could do well is organize, attend events, present rhetoric, chant, romanticized heroes and heroines, lay out validating historical events, identify traitors, have flags, t-shirts, and various cultural and historical artifacts. What was not done as well was laying out how PR’s economy would be structured to support and maintain political sovereignty, how island politics would escape the corruption of a neo-colonial two-party system, and other important post-colonial issues.

I came to think that independentistas as I knew them, contain not a few action-addicted individuals. While certainly not all, these people subsist on rhetoric, emotion, display, passion, and belief. Their practice is frequently big on form and little on substance…rich in performance and poor on particulars. Finally, as addiction was present, I suspected that “Life-Support phobia” writ large, was responsible for the absence of an articulated material basis of political sovereignty. Life-Support for the nation was like fundraising for your organization, the last item on the agenda.

To be clear, I don’t want to take anything away from the long-time work, passion, and commitment I have seen in the Puerto Rican activist community. It’s there, it’s real and is to be admired. Never-the-less, I couldn’t help but notice that independence activists frequently overlook the material basis of what makes possible the political status they prefer.

These observations beg the question of WHY? Why do strategic and practical parts of activism so vital get so neglected?

To be fair first of all, it’s not like independentistas are the only activists in more than a few issues, that overlook key components of their politics. That said, here is one hypothesis to answer the “Why” question… generally, it’s the quality and quantity of the strategic and practical work of activism.

To be effective, activism’s strategic work likely requires in-depth reading, study, and analysis of an issue. This work is a LOT of non-trivial intellectual labor. However, it’s probably fair to say that if you’re an activist, that doesn’t necessarily make you a person who reads, studies, and analyzes your issue in depth. Maybe it IS somebody else’s job. Similarly, to be effective, activism’s practical work requires a different kind of work. The work that needs doing after all the marches etc are done… the “boring stuff”. What’s left is the tedious, un-fun, unappreciated, undramatic, unsexy but voluminous practical work of organizing. The kind of tasks that you don’t get chants or poetry about or don’t get you speaking in front of people. The kind of tasks that don’t get you recognized and admired in a movement. This work is like finding volunteers to clean up late into the night after everyone leaves a successful activity. All of a sudden, everyone is gone or has to go.

As people become MIA when it’s clean up time, so it becomes somebody else’s job to do the status strategic work. Consequently, this always made me wonder how firm the foundation of activism’s strategic and practical work actually was. If the goal is effectiveness, I’d guess that I shouldn’t be the only person who wonders this. In sum, the syndromes arise from too much hard, boring work. Unsurprisingly, this diagnosis didn’t get a lot of traction.

Going full circle recently, I then surmised that if independentismo has a high incidence of phobic-addicts, there would be consequences. Here are two examples. Given climate change, I suspect that plans would be hard to come by that lay out how a Puerto Rican nation would manage repeated, increasing category hurricanes. The same can be said of changing infectious disease patterns that will likely result in recurring viral outbreaks. Given Hurricane Maria and Covid-19, this void does little to add credibility to the independence position.

To be fair, this is not to say that pandemic or climate change resiliency plans don’t exist, it’s just that they haven’t been shared with me, talked about, or cited by people I’ve known or come across in atoms or bits. This absence feeds my skepticism. Truth be told since I don’t frequent those circles much, I hope to be surprised. Thus, I remain open to new data.

Friend: So….what about my questions?

José:  OK, I’ll try to answer your questions regarding these maladies. To paraphrase…”Have I contracted these maladies…am I afflicted?” I think I should say YES and NO.

YES, because in my history of involvement, I started out with the exact same diagnoses and maladies for years. As I said earlier regarding addiction, I loved the ideology that inspired and motivated me. I had all the symptoms of a full-blown case. Regarding the phobia, early on, while I didn’t avoid analysis, I didn’t love the boring tasks either.

There is a No as well. Only slowly did my faculties and intellectual sincerity start taking note of things and push me to try to break the habit and get over the phobia. Eventually, I wanted to put my money where my mouth was. An immediate result for me was having more work. Unfortunately, if you’re recognized as a person who’ll do the “menial”tasks, you end up doing them fairly often. One interesting observation is the over-representation of women in these tasks, not unlike what happens in churches, etc.

The lack of support for people who did this work didn’t help to make me want to keep doing it. However, I tried to find areas of work I was interested in to make things less onerous. Ultimately, things changed with me doing more grad school and less activism. Never-theless, I tried to contribute how I could to on-going efforts.

Since time changes all things, I’m generally not involved in activism much these days. Accordingly, while addiction’ideology, passion, rhetoric, and imagery have their place in my psyche, my case is MUCH milder now. Experience has even tarnished my view of ideological positions and revealed vacancies where before I only saw fullness. However, I try to maintain a balance between my earlier fervor and my later cynicism. Regarding phobias, my involvement renders that mostly irrelevant. Never-the-less, I just did Biden phone banking for 350.org, a decidedly un-glamorous activity. Generally, for some years now, as my participation diminished, my critique intensified. Not how I want to continue, but it’s a work in progress.

These thoughts color my interpretation of current events regarding PR as a weapon against the Republican party. Statehood likely has advantages and disadvantages towards our ends as does Independence. Unfortunately, I have not heard much about the future material advantages of independence. There is only one person I know who lives on the island who rose somewhat to the occasion. I remain agnostic as to the best means as I think it likely that I lack data. Never-the-less, I contend that those who are serious about their positions have the responsibility to present the arguments and evidence to would-be allies.

Friend: and treatments?

José:  For starters, one step is to recognize the illnesses. That’s hard as people like their “health” status to remain private… Few like to admit what’s wrong with them. If we can get past that, then there are things to do. That’s for another day.

Friend:  Honestly, your reasoning lacks profundity since it’s restricted to your perceptions and experience. If you post this for the masses, I think you should augment your perspective with multi-disciplinary information, or hide your identity to avoid public shame.

José:  If you would be so kind, I would appreciate you explaining more of what you mean. As for identifying myself, I absolutely will put my name to what I write. Mortification requires someone identifying my errors or carelessness, both of which I largely lack! :) I’d even say that the day this writing’s reasoning is surpassed is the day Trump makes an apology :).

Friend:  Post away if you’re ok with your unsurpassable reasoning. Again, your perspective seems largely psychological. Adding social or historical info or examples in literature, music, philosophy, art, culture would help. You should include quotes by different poets involved in movement activism. You base your opinions on your subjective experience and don’t seem to state that you may be biased by various factors.

José: Thanks for your responses! – it’s very helpful to understand your meaning.

Friend: It would help to jazz up your points as they are lacking in sizzle. I hope you’re not offended.

José: No worries. However, I think my points, such as they are, will bear scrutiny by those with experience and objectivity.

Friend: My points are the most enlightening parts of this exchange! HA!

José: Well, of course!

Friend: I hope you understand that you’re as influenced by colonialism as all other Puerto Ricans are.

José: While I don’t disagree, I’d prefer it if you were more straightforward with the point your making.

Musings on Masculinity

23 Jul

I’ve been wanting to write about masculinity for some time. I have a bunch of thoughts as a man myself, as a son, as a brother and as partner to a woman. 

I will share some thoughts I’ve had about women (Latinas) as well. These thoughts include a history based ambivalence I observe they have.

I have a lot to say about my relationship with my Dad.  He had an outsized role in my life. I worked hard on that relationship.  

These musings have to do with male gender conditioning as I know it.  This is the cultural side of masculinity.  However, as a biologist, I know that there is a biological side as well. I will do a bit of gathering info as Its something I’ve wanted to do for a long time.

I will mention some thinking about transgender identity…The most fuzzy area of my thinking.

All that said, I want to start out the discussion lightly with an idea that my friend and I came up with….THE MACHO GOD.  

I think it’s a funny but useful idea to show the way men adhere to a swirling set of masculinity ideas.  Masculinity as religion illuminates a lot of features of men’s lives.  Its over the top, but purposely so.  

Next post — the graven image of THE MACHO GOD!!!

Boricua Futuristics Part 2

3 Jul

OK mi gente,

Here is my strategic suggestion… Boricua activists out there have their hedge fund hit list….

• Fir Tree partners
• Appaloosa Management
• Paulson & Company
• Blue Mountain Capital
• Fundamental Advisors.
• Whoever Paulson sold to
• Charles Blitzer a former IMF official is advising the hedge funds

We find out all we can about them. Find out if there are Boricuas/Latinos,as in every level from partner to janitor. See if we can get intelligence about them. We can reach out to our Occupy Wall Street friends to get intel on how to do the corporate protests.

Then we have Teach ins about the Puerto Rican situation and about debt, municipal, state and national in general. There is the Greece, Argentina, Detroit, Naomi Klein forum.

Get our congressmen and women to hold hearings on these guys to get them into the light of day. Get our city council representatives to hold hearings on them to get them into the light of day.

Same time, start fleshing out the future. For example, get a congressional agenda together of all the measures that would benefit Puerto Rico in dealing with the crisis.

Then you get the presidential candidates starting with the Dems to come out publicly with their positions re the congressional actions and what they would do vis a vis executive orders.

Remember, this is really about the 1%!!

Then the butt activists target each of these Hedge Fund villains and hold demonstrations against them. Protest them in the hearings as well.

Then we get our sustainability friends & allies (WEACT, Rocky Mountain Institute etc.) to come up with alternative energy plans for Puerto Rico to replace in the market place the fucked up power authority with distributed wind and solar alternatives.

What do ya’ll think?
J

Boricua Futuristics…. Part 1

3 Jul

Hello all,

I have didn’t write new posts for my blog for some time. I haven’t gotten back to flowers in a while due to the exigencies of my work life. HOWEVER, I feel compelled to put out some thinking on what I am calling Boricua Futuristics or how to think about the future of Puerto Rico and Puerto Ricans. I am compelled because of the dire situation that Puerto Rico is in.

In a “Back to the Future” kind of way, I reflect upon this, thinking of some young man and some woman who, because of economic hardship, are or are planning to leave Borinquen. They may come to meet here in the USA and they may have children. Those children may come to have children. Amongst those children of children, there may be a boy who grows up and dreams.

I am speaking as that boy. A person that is the child of a child of a migrant. My abuelos came to this country 91 years ago because of an economic crisis in those days. An economic crisis that happened 26 years after the invasion of Puerto Rico by the United States in 1898 and 8 years after the USA legislated that all Puerto Ricans were US citizens. A child that was born in the year 1898 and a citizen in 1917 could have been the parent of my grand parents and probably were. There was very few opportunities for them in those days because of a vast economic transformation grinding poverty was rampant and they came to NYC to make a better life. Their child was born about 17 years before another upheaval caused the big wave of Boricuas to come to NYC and other destinations.

91 years later I am observing a similar situation. A vast economic transformation is causing migration. People are leaving in droves. The economics calls upon us to contemplate the politics and sociology and indeed the future. This is what I’m going to do.

One future I can imagine is a Puerto Rican dystopia where the island is depopulated and non-Puerto Ricans become the majority. You might see it as transnational gentrification, the whites move in to the neighborhood the original residents can’t afford anymore.

This would be the beginning of the end of Puerto Ricans…with no cultural anchor…the culture will disintegrate and pass into the dustbin of history. Kind of a cultural extinction event. Cultures, like species can become extinct.

There are other peoples that have been driven off their land. Just ask Palestinians and Native folks. The continuance of their cultures is a real issue. We are talking about glacially slow, but inexorable processes.

This is all happening in the era of the meteoric rise of the 1%…the “Masters of the Universe” that are in control of many more planetary resources than ever before. The city, state and national bankruptcies are just the footprints of the behemoths striding across the globe. The various cities in the USA (in Detroit and other small municipalities, Stockton CA) States such as Illinois and nations such as Puerto Rico and Greece. We have to think, not just about how we got here, but where are we going.

I’m going to try to do a little bit of that.