From Worldometer (new deaths yesterday):
DAY USA WORLD Brazil India South Africa
June 9 1093 4732 1185 246 82
July 22 1205 7128 1293 1120 572
Aug 12 1504 6556 1242 835 130
Sept 3 1094 5886 830 1083 174
9 1208 6222 1136 1168 82
9 1208 6222 1136 1168 82
Oct 8 957 6420 730 967 160
21 1225 6849 571 703 85
Nov 4 1199 8192 276 511 74
11 1479 10178 564 550 60
17 1615 10502 676 472 118
18 1964 10970 754 587 124
19 2065 10758 644 584 115
Summary:
- The USA suffered its all-time high for new cases yesterday at 192,186.
- The CDC could well follow a plan from the National Academy of Medicine for the coming vaccines:
- Phase 1a, 5%: Front-line health workers, ambulance drivers, cleaners and first responders.
- Phase 1b, 10%: Those with serious underlying conditions, with two or more chronic conditions and 65 and older in group living facilities (this would qualify me...but will I want to wait a bit?).
- Phase 2, 30-35%: critical workers in high-risk situations like teachers and child care workers, others with an underlying condition and people under 65 in prisons and similar facilities.
- Phase 3, 40-45%: pretty much everyone else.
- Phase 4, 5-15%: everyone else.
- But what percent will actually choose to be inoculated?
The CDC also recommended:
- The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urged Americans not to travel for Thanksgiving, saying the safest way to celebrate was “at home with the people you live with.” (Here’s what more than 600 epidemiologists are doing. A common theme: staying home.)
From The New York Times this morning:
If you're wondering if there has been any progress with the Blue Revolution, here is something interesting from the Seasteading Institute sent by Seavangelist Joe Quirk:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
- 200 cabins will be auctioned from November 5-28 for $25,000 to $50,000 for residency early in 2021.
- The Satoshi is also known as the Crypto Cruise Ship, where bitcoin and other forms of payment will be accepted.
- Ship is 804 feet long, coming from Mediterranean, and to anchor in the Gulf of Panama, a 30-minute ferry ride from Panama City.
- Capacity of 2,020 people plus crew.
- Multiple restaurants, theater, casino, gym/wellness area.
- An incubator for entrepreneurs, with a goal to create a floating community for the advancement of ocean technology, engineering, sustainable living and experimentation.
- To be connected to an off-grid of SeaPod homes (right) close-by.
- The company, Ocean Builders, where the chief operations officer is bitcoin investor Chad Elwartowski (46-years old), who, you might remember, two years ago--with his girlfriend (Nadia Summergirl or Supranee Thepdet), who serves as chief sustainability officer--on their ocean structure 14 nautical miles off the coastline, fought off the Royal Thai Navy in the Andaman sea off Phuket. If they had built 200 miles away, perhaps he would have been more secure...then again, maybe not...that is the nature of the subject matter.
Blue Revolution Hawaii has formed a partnership with the Seasteading Institute. They handle the today while we develop tomorrow. Here is a talk I provided to them in San Francisco. Last year they published a short article about OTEC and the Blue Revolution.
Song #38 will come from the following list:
- Pictures at an Exhibition: Modest Mussorgsky
- Clair de Lune: Claude Debussy
- Bolero: Joseph Ravel
Pictures at an Exhibition is a suite of ten pieces originally composed for piano by Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky. The composition is based on pictures by Victor Hartmann, a close friend, who passed away at the age of 39 in 1973. The suite was written in 1874 in homage to him. The Scene by the Fountain was expanded into Mussorgsky's opera, Boris Godunov. Maurice Ravel in 1922 upgraded PaaE for a full orchestra.
Clair de Lune, moonlight in French, is the third movement of Suite bergamasque by Claude Debussy, who began writing this piece at the age of 28 in 1890, but only published in 1905. CdL was cut from the original 1940 Fantasia, but restored in 1992 when scored by Leopold Stokowski of the Philadelphia Orchestra.
Bolero was premiered by French composer Maurice Ravel in 1928 as one of his last pieces. Dancer Ida Rubinstein commissioned this work, which he based on the Spanish dance called the bolero. It has been suggested that the constant repetition was caused by his onset of progressive aphasia.
Ravel disapproved of the Toscanini version in 1939 as too fast, increasing the fame of this masterpiece. Ravel wanted around 16 minutes, but Toscanini finished in 13 minutes and 25 seconds.
George Raft and Carole Lombard starred in the 1934 film, Bolero, where the music plays an important role. You know you've arrived when Burger King uses it for one of their commercials.
However, the reason I select Bolero as #38 is because of the film 10, starring Bo Derek and Dudley Moore. I actually talked to her once on a United flight back to Honolulu. Sitting next to her was a grouch, her husband, John Derek, 30 years her senior.-
Comments
Post a Comment