Friday Fun Link – Nice Lights! @HawksleyWorkman

Shea and I took the kids for our annual “Twinkle Tour” around Regina tonight and funny to think how Covid has even influenced this simple tradition…

– immediately noticing a higher amount of traffic at the “starred” houses on the Sparkle Tour web site, likely because there are fewer other entertainment options – no work Christmas parties at restaurants, no school concerts, not even house parties with families and friends.

– wondering if any driveway with extra cars in it signalled illegal visits of extra guests?

“Candy Cane Lane” is a heavily decorated street in Regina which has always had one house with a walking tour of giant inflatables, accepts donations for the food bank and even a temporary shack selling hot chocolate and snacks.  Obviously, none of that this year. 🙁

– getting home and immediately rushing to wash hands even though we never left the vehicle the entire time when normally we’d get out at some houses to stand on the sidewalk or try out the candy cane dispensing machine (also a no-no this year!) or chat with others enjoying the NICE LIGHTS!

Throwback Thursday – #tbt – Rural Sask Wedding (August 2008)

I keep looking at old pictures and thinking about how much has changed due to Covid.

Here’s another example:
– more than 30 people gathered
– dancing
– singing
– drinking
– communal meal
– close together
– no masks

On and on…

Happy Cha-Noo-Kah!

For a small fee, Cameo is a site that allows people to book celebrities to record short personalized messages for birthdays, anniversaries, etc.

Cameo blew up during quarantine as people weren’t able to celebrate milestones in the usual way.

This one of Smokey Robinson recording a message for someone has gone viral for being both funny and sweet as he mispronounces the name of a well-known but many-varied spelling Jewish holiday…

Covid 19 Vaccine Arrives in Saskatchewan!

Have to admit Shea and I both had tears in our eyes watching the first two healthcare workers be vaccinated this evening in Regina (in the very hospital Shea works in and has worked in all year without a break) after what has been a long, strange, stressful year.

There are a lot of reasons I feel frustration with the small but vocal strain of idiotic anti-maskers:

* their lack of knowledge of everything from science to law to basic hygiene
* their innate selfishness
* the unnecessary risk they’re creating, especially for the elderly and at risk
* their smugness 
* the way they bleat all over social media

…but more than anything, it’s their outright hostility towards healthcare workers that I take *very* personally.  I remember a thread in a local group dedicated to Costco of all things where a small minority of anti-maskers were making their “free speech” arguments about their “rights” when a nurse posted simply about how tired she was.

The group’s admins had already said that it was a private group and they would ban anyone who posted anti-mask sentiments.  But some fucking idiot couldn’t help himself and posted the laughing emoji in reaction to this nurse’s comment.

Step back from that for a second – a healthcare worker who shares how tired she is after what is likely the craziest year of her working life and that sad sack of jelly’s first reaction is to laugh at her?

At that point, this isn’t about differences of opinion anymore (though it many ways, it never was – it’s about facts, not opinions), it’s about a sickness of a different sort that doesn’t seem to have a vaccine unfortunately.

Music Monday – “But that world is gone/It’s all disappeared/It’s just me and the ponies/For Christmas this year”

With the announcement of stronger Covid restrictions for Saskatchewan, just in time for Christmas, this song has been going through my head non-stop…

Just Me and These Ponies (For Christmas This Year)” – Corb Lund

Secular Sunday – When Was Jesus Born? Almost Certainly Not On December 25

Christmas is a cultural construct in a number of ways including the alleged birthdate of the “reason for the season.

For that reason, if Covid restrictions are ruining your Christmas plans this year, why not plan a “Christmas in July” (or August or October or whenever you get vaccinated next year?”

Saturday Snap – My Christmas Cards Look A Bit Different This Year!

Friday Fun Link – What Life Is Like In Countries Without Pandemics

For various reasons ranging from geographic isolation to stronger health measures to more compliant populations, there are actually countries in the world where life continues almost as if there isn’t a worldwide pandemic still affecting the majority of the planet.

People are going to restaurants, attending concerts & sporting events, having family gatherings and much more, all because they had strong leadership that minimized the economic and social impacts of the coronavirus.

Imagine…

Throwback Thursday – #tbt – Where The Buffalo Roam (April 2007)

Earlier this summer, we heard that Shea’s cousin’s herd of bison had gotten out and were in a nearby farmer’s field.

We knew that previously when only one animal had gotten out, her uncle had been able to guide him back into the pasture using a front-end loader tractor he used to feed them which it followed thinking it was lunch time.

But since so many got out, it would be impossible to herd them all with a tractor like they did for a single one before.  So we had no idea how (or if!) they’d be able to cajole the bison back to their fenced area.

We later heard they had a stroke of genius – they got a local who happened to have a private plane to take off and he was able to herd them from the air!

Anyhow, here’s one of the bison from her uncle/cousin’s herd in earlier times, possibly plotting an escape route…

Healthy Skepticism vs. Conspiracy Thinking – Where’s The Line?

I’ve long been an advocate for the importance of being skeptical as a generally useful approach to life.

But, as the coronavirus has spread around the world over the past year, it’s also been fascinating (and alarming!) to see how often that line from genuine questioning crosses the line (and often goes completely off the cliff) towards distrust, inability to adjust firmly held positions and, at the extreme, conspiratorial thinking where literally nothing that is said by an expert and/or authority can be trusted.

This is all super-charged by the raucous, worldwide virtual “Speaker’s Corner” that social media has become which, as one person observed, has seen the “Information Age” becoming the “Disinformation Age”.

Beyond endless frustration with the stupidity and angry in social media comment sections, in the past year, I have been directly involved in conversations with:

– a person who has a background in healthcare who believes that Bill Gates will be planting microchips in their body via a covid vaccine (never mind that this conversation happened with a person who was speaking into a cell phone – talk about a digital tracking device!)  (And eerie coincidence – as I type this blog post, I see a headline on CNN that Melinda Gates has pledged 250 million towards funding Covid vaccinations.  So, instead of thinking this is a good headline, should I start wondering – is my TV reading my thoughts?) 😉

– someone skeptical about the vaccine since it has only been tested by the vaccine maker who stands to benefit the most by its use (without acknowledging that if the vaccine ended up being harmful it would likely also damage this company significantly.  Or the reasons why it doesn’t need outside testing given the circumstances.)

– A woman who has a background in science but points out that science has misled us in the past, from the health benefits of smoking to thalidomide.  (Hard to refute this argument to be honest!) 😉

– Someone who is concerned about giving the vaccine to their children since the long term effects on the reproductive and other health aspects of the vaccine aren’t known (I would counter that the long-term effects of Covid on young people are also unknowable right now and though young people tend to be the lowest risk group overall, there is also documented evidence that many people who have covid end up with a range of vascular and neurological health issues that may cause permanent health problems as well, even in young people, so given the choice, I’d roll the dice on a scientifically sound vaccine than a harmful disease that has not only affected the health of, but also killed people of all ages around the world.)  (This discussion may be moot at this point anyhow as my understanding is that the vaccine hasn’t been approved for use on children under 16 yet anyhow.)

– I had a chat with a doctor who made the good point that inherently, because science’s goal is to disprove things, not prove things (if science makes a discovery, other scientists come along and try to show that the original scientist was wrong), this creates a distrust of science when it should be heralded as why science is so open-minded and self-critical.  To put it another way, “science isn’t about an end point, it’s about a constant evolution.”  (Er, pun intended.)

– He also expressed his frustration at the way he’s studied medicine for eight years and though the first to admit he’s not a trained epidemiologist (another sign of intelligence is admitting what you *don’t* know), his advice is regularly questioned by members of his extended family who have no higher education at all in any field, let alone a science-based one.

Anyhow, I literally had a screenshot of one of the worst examples of conspiratorial thinking I could find ready to include in this post.

But then I realised that a lot of people get their “learning” from memes and since this blog post also has a lot of words which means people are less likely to read it, some people would just see the graphic, believe it, and think I’ve either gone over to the dark side and/or was sharing legitimate information.

So instead, I’ll leave off with this to be absolutely clear where I stand: