lockdowns

If you ever find yourself on Manitoulin Island by Nathan Jones

Behind the crowd from Gaspésie sat a stretch van, the kind you often see associated with industrial cleaners. I could see the shadow of a man leaning out from the back as he placed a small charcoal BBQ on the sidewalk next to his vehicle. He introduced himself and told me he was from one of the reservations on Manitoulin Island. Here I was in conversation with an Indigenous man who was fiercely proud to be part of the convoy. He showed me his medicine wheel and he pointed to its colours, red, black, white, and yellow. He said there is a message of healing in there for all the human races, that we can come together because we are all human. He said, “If you ever find yourself on Manitoulin Island, come to my reserve, I would love to show you my community.” I realized that I was witnessing something profound; I don’t know how to fully express it.
David Maybury in A night with the untouchables

Follow the science, bruh! by Nathan Jones

Most science is not credible. It’s not true; it’s not believable; it’s not useful; it’s not actionable; it’s done to inflate careers, and often [for] for-profit entities. People who are anxious and afraid and are concerned ... are likely to err in science. People who believe human beings are omnipotent, [that] we’re so powerful we can shape the natural world to our whims and desires, are much likely to make errors because the truth is the world is very complicated and we’re very small. And even though we think we’re so powerful and have a lockdown we may very modestly change human interactions in a space and we’re unlikely to sustain those interaction[s], those changes over time. So it’s very likely to be a very small effect and in the universe of things people have dreamed about for centuries, most of those things didn’t make us better off. They hurt us. They often were self-inflicted wounds.
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Associate Professor, UCSF