Here's a baker's dozen list of the reasons for vaccine hesitancy in the United States:
Fear of side effects. This is the #1 reason.
Needle fear.
Cost. For reasons both reasonable and otherwise, a lot of low-income people are afraid they will end up being charged for their vaccination.
Young people who think they're invincible. And in fairness, their risk from the coronavirus is pretty low.
Distrust of the medical establishment among Black people.
Fear of fertility problems among women of childbearing age. This is straight-up disinformation, but it's still fairly common.
Religious objections. In some case, this is about religious doctrines that oppose putting foreign substances into the body. In others, it's an almost fatalistic attitude that God decides who lives and who dies, so vaccination is pointless.
Distrust of new ideas or "outsiders telling us what to do" among rural residents.
Right-wing hostility to the whole idea of masks, social distancing, vaccines, and anything else that they code as "liberals trying to take away my freedom."
General opposition to all vaccines among anti-vaxxers.
Concerns about the long-term safety of the vaccines.
Lack of concern about COVID-19 from people who think it's been over-hyped.
"Wait and see," a catch-all category for people who haven't been vaccinated and have only vague reasons for it.
Every one of these requires a different approach. Some are probably hopeless, including religious objections and right-wing paranoia. Others, like the fertility urban legend, might be amenable to plain informational campaigns. Concerns about long-term safety are a tough nut, since obviously we can't honestly say for sure that we know this is unjustified.
In any case, the lesson here is to forget about the partisan noise. Let right-wingers do what they want and instead focus our attention on all the other vaccine-hesitant groups. They're far more likely to be persuadable.
This is a surprisingly difficult number to get a handle on. The CDC provides us with the following approximate figures since vaccinations started through April 26:
By the end of this period, about 100 million people were fully vaccinated and 200 million remained unvaccinated. This means that as an average over the entire period, 50 million people were fully vaccinated and 250 million remained unvaccinated.
Put this together with the hospitalization figures and the final tally tells us that 548,000 out of 250 million unvaccinated people were hospitalized vs. 2,000 out of 50 million vaccinated people.
This means that about 0.22% of the unvaccinated population ended up in the hospital with COVID-19 compared to 0.004% of the vaccinated population. That's a difference of 55:1.
In other words, if you are unvaccinated, your odds of getting a case of COVID-19 serious enough to require hospitalization are 55 times higher than they are if you get the vaccination.
Why such a big difference? There are two factors. First, the vaccines prevent infections by a factor of about 10-20:1. Second, if you are infected, the vaccines help to prevent you from getting a serious case. Put those two things together, and you get the 55:1 difference in serious infections.
Are you wondering why the "accidental lab release" theory of the coronavirus has been getting more attention lately? It's not because there's more evidence in its favor. Just the opposite: It's because the evidence of a zoonotic origin has been getting harder and harder to sustain.
As you may recall, the initial theory for the origin of the coronavirus had to do with transmission via wet markets in Wuhan. That theory was abandoned pretty quickly when it turned out that several of the very first victims had no connection to the wet markets.
The work after that centered on bats, which are huge reservoirs of coronaviruses. However, since there are no bat viruses that are good candidates to be a SARS-CoV-2 precursor, scientists began searching for intermediate hosts. You probably remember this. Palm civits were candidates at first. Raccoon dogs were on the list. Or pangolins. Or minks. Or ferrets.
For various reasons, all of these intermediate hosts had problems that made them unlikely candidates. At first this wasn't a big issue: it was early days and the search continued.
But eventually days turned into months and then into more than a year. And still no likely intermediate hosts had been identified. We're now at a point where it's been nearly a year and a half and we still have no good theory of zoonotic origin.
That doesn't mean the lab release theory is correct. It just means that it's natural for it to get more attention as the zoonotic origin theory becomes more and more difficult to find evidence for. One problem, though, is that even if a bat virus did escape accidentally from the Wuhan lab, it would still need an intermediate host to evolve into something transmissable to humans. So the lab theory faces the same problems as the zoonotic theory.
There's much more to the story, of course, including the fact that the SARS-CoV-2 virus is unusually efficient at infecting humans. However, this cuts against both theories. Even given the fast mutation rate of coronaviruses, it's difficult to figure out how it could become so good so fast in the wild. On the other hand, any lab release theory that assumes the virus was good to begin with implies not just that the Chinese were careless, but that they were deliberately engineering a coronavirus with a spike protein that was designed for maximum harm to humans. There's strong genomic evidence against that, and in any case it requires you to believe that the Chinese were both unbelievably careless and were engineering a bioweapon of some kind. That's kind of hard to swallow.
In other words, it's worthwhile keeping an open mind on this. On the one hand, the Chinese have been so aggressively uncooperative that it's hard to believe they don't have something to hide. This favors the lab theory. On the other hand, we shouldn't let the current lack of success on the zoonotic front provoke us into giving up out of frustration and turning to simpler theories featuring well defined enemies that we never liked much in the first place. Science runs into tough roadblocks all the time, and in another year maybe some genius will have a lightbulb moment and we'll finally have a fleshed-out theory of zoonotic origin that makes perfect sense. This calmer mode of thinking favors the zoonotic theory.
This whole thing might remain a mystery forever. Alternatively, maybe some lab worker from Wuhan will escape to the West with concrete evidence that the virus was manmade. Or else someone will finally come up with a convincing zoonotic story. Stay tuned, and in the meantime don't get too attached to either side.
POSTSCRIPT: Just to be absolutely clear here, my point is that expert opinions about the origin of the SARS-CoV-2 virus haven't just changed for no reason. They've changed because the evidence has changed. The only tricky part is that what changed isn't evidence for the lab theory getting better, but evidence for the opposing theory getting worse.
My mother and I were up at the Farmer's Market on Saturday, and this little cutie pie was at the table next to us. He was very well behaved, but obviously interested in all the delicious food being eaten around him. I'm not so good at dog breeds, however, so I'm not sure what kind of dog this is.
UPDATE: The best guess from comments is that this is a Shiba Inu, a "superb hunting dog" according to the world's finest reference sources.
Tom Friedman says that Joe Biden can win a Nobel Prize if he just manages to broker permanent peace between Israel and the Palestinians. I don't doubt that for a second. Hell, you could rename it the Biden Peace Prize if he did that.
But as the Beatles said, we'd all love to see the plan. It's just a lot of hot air unless you can offer up a proposal that, even in theory, both sides are willing to accept. So go ahead. I promise not to laugh.
Startup chief executives are turning a cold shoulder to SPACs....So-called blank-check companies, which go public with no assets and then merge with private companies, exploded in popularity last year as a mechanism for startups to raise a lot of money with more speed and fewer regulatory hurdles than a traditional initial public offering.
More recently, startup CEOs have watched many of their peers endure stock slides and earnings calls with disappointed investors in the weeks after finishing a SPAC deal. For many, it has been a bitter reality check that public-market investors might not be as generous as SPAC creators have been with early-stage companies with unpredictable revenue and growing pains.
Did these clowns think that just because they took a trendy shortcut to going public that investors would automatically fall in love with them? That lousy earnings growth or missed targets would be cheerfully ignored? What galaxy are they from?
A word to the wise: Once you're public, you're public. If you don't perform, you get hammered. End of story.
The New York Times says that the LA police department is ramping up patrols:
All of this necessary, some city leaders believe, because violent crime is up sharply — last year murders were up 36 percent in L.A. — and the city is awash in new guns....“We’ve lost more than a decade of progress,” Chief Michel Moore of the Los Angeles Police Department said in an interview, referring to the significant drops in crime in the years before the pandemic.
I am so tired of this crap. How hard is it for reporters to look up the latest crime data?
Homicide is up in Los Angeles, as it is in many large cities. This is a serious problem and its roots are not well understood—nor is it something to be played down. But violent crime more generally? In 2020 it was down 2% over the previous year. Property crime was down 10%.
If you're concerned about being caught in the middle of a gang war, then Los Angeles is a little less safe than it was a year ago. But that's not a real danger for most people. If you're truly concerned about your overall personal safety, then violent crime is the stat to look at. On that score, Los Angeles is safer than it was pre-pandemic.