by Jeffrey K. Walker | Dec 20, 2020 | Blog, Coronavirus Journal |
It’s been an extraordinary few days. Not one, but two COVID vaccines approved and shipped. It’s been one year since doctors identified an odd pneumonia-like illness in China. And now there is a vaccine going into health workers’ arms. In. Twelve.... by Jeffrey K. Walker | Aug 9, 2020 | Blog, Coronavirus Journal |
Don’t know if your Nuclear Family Unit—and now Pandemic Bubble Crew—is like mine, but when my wife, Kay-Kay, and I are coming up on an automobile trip, various Piles of Stuff start appearing. On the bathroom vanity, just inside the door to the garage, on the dining... by Jeffrey K. Walker | May 10, 2020 | Blog, Learning from Other Countries |
I first published this post in June 2017, during one of the endless debates about repealing Obamacare. These issues have become vastly more urgent today, in the midst of a global pandemic in which the USA leads the world in both infections and deaths. Given the fact... by Jeffrey K. Walker | May 3, 2020 | Blog, Coronavirus Journal |
[I’ve decided this will be my last Coronavirus Journal post, having reached a kind of reverse pandemic nirvana. These journal entries were intended to keep me from getting bored to death. Now, writing them is starting to… bore me to death. I hope I’ve provided some... by Jeffrey K. Walker | Apr 26, 2020 | Blog, Coronavirus Journal |
[I’m as confused as you are about why some states are “reopening”—whatever that means—when the USA is still on the upslope with new COVID-19 infections and deaths. We continue to lead the world in both, as the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus website sadly depicts. I’m as...