13 July, 2021 In the headlines The Covid "exit wave" could lead to more than 200 deaths per day as UK restrictions end on July 19, according to new modelling by government scientists. "Freedom … " says the Daily Mail, "but for how long?" England football star Tyrone Mings has accused home secretary Priti Patel of pretending to oppose the racist abuse of England footballers, tweeting that she had "stoked the fire" by undermining the team's anti-racist stance of taking the knee before matches. David Cameron was paid $1 million a year by disgraced finance firm Greensill for just 25 days' work, reports the Financial Times.
Comment of the day Tamarama Beach, Sydney. James Gourley/Getty Images Fortress Australia is a pandemic disaster It will be looked on as "one of the great policy disasters of the pandemic", say Marc Stears and Tim Soutphommasane in the New Statesman. As London and New York open up, Sydney has gone into lockdown while Australia deals with an outbreak of the Delta variant. The country's early Covid response was "magnificent" – it locked down and shut its borders while other countries "dithered" – but success led to "devastating" hubris. When the rest of the world began to vaccinate, "Fortress Australia" thought it could afford to dawdle. By the end of June, Australia had fully vaccinated just 5% of its population, one of the lowest rates in the developed world. Australia was undone by its blind faith in becoming a "hermit kingdom". Many of its people have been barred from moving around the country and more than 30,000 of them are still stranded overseas. But it's a trading nation, the prosperity of which depends on international connections. "A global pandemic cannot be defeated by wishing not to be part of the globe." Read the full article here (paywall).
The millennials are a "lost generation" "Culture wars are long wars," says Tanner Greer on his blog The Scholar's Stage. It takes time to transform a culture – "usually two to three generations". Ideas "fester" among the young, but their impact is often limited by the "inability and inexperience of youth". Then the young grow up and older generations suddenly find themselves outnumbered – "swept up in a flood" that previously seemed a "mere trickle". To see this process "in real time", just look at the Democrats' socialist wing. Older party leaders see socialists as "spoilers and madmen" that should be kept at arm's length. But Democrats under 40 take socialism "very seriously". All that stops them from furthering their ideology is "the power of their elders" – which cannot last. It won't be long until "America's most popular party will be openly run by socialists". The millennials are a "lost generation", with a doomed radical ideology, but for the majority of the next two decades, they will be in charge. Read the full article here.
Thoughts on England's defeat by Marcus Rashford A defaced mural of Marcus Rashford being repaired yesterday. Alex Livesey/ Danehouse via Getty Images "I don't even know where to start and I don't even know how to put into words how I'm feeling at this exact time. I've had a difficult season, I think that's been clear for everyone to see and I probably went into that final with a lack of confidence … I felt as though I had let my teammates down. I felt as if I'd let everyone down. A penalty was all I'd been asked to contribute for the team. I can score penalties in my sleep so why not that one? It's been playing in my head over and over since I struck the ball and there's probably not a word to quite describe how it feels. Final. 55 years. 1 penalty. History. All I can say is sorry. ... I've grown into a sport where I expect to read things written about myself. Whether it be the colour of my skin, where I grew up, or, most recently, how I decide to spend my time off the pitch. I can take critique of my performance all day long, my penalty was not good enough, it should have gone in but I will never apologise for who I am and where I came from. I've felt no prouder moment than wearing those three lions on my chest and seeing my family cheer me on in a crowd of 10s of thousands. I dreamt of days like this … The communities that always wrapped their arms around me continue to hold me up. I'm Marcus Rashford, 23 year old, black man from Withington and Wythenshawe, South Manchester. If I have nothing else I have that." This is an abridged version of Marcus Rashford's statement, posted yesterday on social media
Zeitgeist It's handshake "bedlam" out there, says Pilita Clark in the FT. "The uneven state of vaccinations, plus wildly divergent views about what safe behaviour looks like, has divided us into an awkward mix of shakers, bumpers and fist knockers." The results can be excruciating. A colleague of a friend was fist-bumping acquaintances at a bar when a committed handshaker joined the group. The result was the newcomer shaking his "protruded arm stump like a ball and socket joint".
Data update Stealth taxes could give millions of overweight Brits more years of healthy life "without people even noticing", says Ravi Gurumurthy in the Financial Times. When a UK sugary drinks tax was introduced in 2018, Coca-Cola reformulated its drinks ("except chancellor Rishi Sunak's beloved classic coke") to contain less sugar and thus avoid the tax. It worked: sugar consumption from fizzy drinks fell by 30%. Good news for the 64% of the UK classed as overweight or obese.
Eating in The best way to eat a chocolate digestive is with the chocolate side down, an Oxford University study has found. But for maximum pleasure, first bring the biscuit towards your mouth chocolate side up, so that your brain can register the coating. Then turn it over so the chocolate melts on your tongue.
Tomorrow's world Wildlife authorities in Utah are dropping thousands of young fish from aeroplanes to restock more than 200 high-altitude lakes that are inaccessible by road. Officials at the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources say the fish, which are 1-3in long and released in batches of up to 35,000, "flutter down slowly to the water", and that their survival rate is "incredibly high".
Staying young Don't drink your coffee first thing in the morning, says Leigh Weingus in HuffPost. Cortisol, the body's main stress hormone, spikes when we wake up, giving us energy and focus. Supplementing that with caffeine is a "waste" and can leave many people feeling jittery. Hold off on the espresso for an hour or so and allow each source of alertness to do its stuff, which will leave you with "a prolonged period of calmer energy".
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July 13, 2021
Beware your early morning coffee ☕️
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