Saturday, June 20, 2020

And So I Got Arrested: May 8/9, 1970 - Part 2

Around midnight on May 8th, several hundred fellow students began our campaign to again urge drivers to “Honk for Peace.” We milled around in the front of the University, just inside the low rock wall which designated its boundary from the rest of the world. The fabled Rotunda framed the area in which we were standing. Across the street were the police.  They had deployed on three different sides. They wore white riot helmets and carried Billy clubs cradled in both hands.  

They were silent. We weren’t. 

They were focused. We were, too, just trying to get folks to honk their damn horns. 

We were dreaming. They were wide awake.

Over a period of time University officials negotiated with designated “student marshals.”  For the life of me, I have no idea how I became part of that group. But I clearly remember the two-part goal of those on-going conversations and what appeared to be an agreement, at last.  We would move out of the area near the street and gather inside on The Lawn -  the grassy quad that centered the University. The Police would pull back away from The Corner – a surreal version of “out of sight, out of mind.” Turns out we were out of our minds thinking it would actually work. And they had us in their sights all along.

We left the meeting and trotted back towards our fellow protesters to share the good news.  It was never delivered. By the time I reached the stone wall, the students en masse began running away in every direction. I had no idea why, so I stopped, turned around and realized that the police were charging  across the street. 

I don’t remember what route I took but I ran into The Grounds and headed towards a friend’s room on The Lawn.  I practically leaped through the door thinking I was at some sort of a free base but screaming for help from the students inside. Lord knows they tried. It just didn’t stop the physical tug-of-war that took place – my friends holding on to both arms trying to keep me in the room and two policemen pulling at my waist dragging me out.

The cops won. 

They yanked me through an exterior pillar, pulled me around it, ripped my shirt, bruised my head, hauled me out to the street and up the ramp into a waiting Mayflower Moving Van. I wasn’t alone. By the end of the night, another sixty-seven assorted souls – none dangerous – were stuffed in. Yes, there were fellow protestors, but also very well-dressed men and their dates pulled from frat houses or off of the nearby streets, a caretaker and a pizza delivery guy on his way, apparently, to the President’s home. I don’t remember the kind of pizza, but we ate it as we waited. It was nervously silent in that van. I honestly thought we would be reprimanded and then sent on our way. I really wasn’t all that worried.

Wrong again.

The doors on the eighteen-wheeler slammed shut and were locked from the outside. I knew that sound quite well. Two years earlier, I spent the summer in Los Angeles with five close friends and worked moving furniture for Bekins Van and Storage. I had spent time riding inside many trucks before, but none of them opened up at the Charlottesville Police station.

            We were herded inside and seated in an area with pew-like rows. Law school faculty members were already there, and I particularly remember the attention and demeanor of Charles Whitebread who would become a famous criminal law expert.  One by one, we dangerous lawbreakers were brought up to stand in front of a designated judicial representative and had arrest warrants sworn out. I still have mine. Here is what it says:

 

“Whereas W. E. Jordan, state trooper of said city, has this day made complaint and information on oath before me, Ethel Irwin a Justice of the Peace of said city, that Arnold J Magid in said city or within 1 mile of said city on the ninth day of May 1970, did unlawfully, (sic) a member of persons being unlawfully or riotously assembled, the sheriff of the county and live deputies and the police officials of the city having gone among the persons assembled and commanded them in the name of the State to disperse, did fail to disperse in violation of the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia 18.1-254.8.”


After the obligatory photographs and fingerprinting, just about everybody was released on bonds of $500-1,000 paid personally or from a variety of different sources. I wasn’t and I have no idea why.  Over a 35-year career as a congregational Rabbi I visited many individuals in facilities ranging from local jails to maximum-security Federal prisons. The sounds that the electronic locks make in them are significantly louder than the ones heard on television or movies. The loudest one I ever heard was in that cell in Charlottesville.

A few hours later, in the early morning, I was released.  I called my parents to tell them the news. My father was furious.  My friends’ responses ranged from concern to congratulatory to teasing. Me? I felt angry and betrayed, not only personally but in some sort of communal way in that “outsiders” had invaded the nominally sacred space that was/is Mr. Jefferson’s academical village. But it was not over, not by a longshot.

We graduated June 7 and “walked the Lawn” but the hearings on the arrests were actually scheduled to take place on June 22nd  when I would theoretically be on my way to Jerusalem to begin my five years in rabbinical school. Somehow, though, the city changed its mind about us. Not only were we free, we were informed that the arrests had been nul pros - not prosecuted – and therefore not a part of our record.

Wrong yet again.

In 2015,  I applied for a federal GOES card which would allow me to avoid passport control upon returning from overseas. As part of the procedure, one needs to have a personal interview with a TSA officer. I made the appointment, waited about two months and eventually found myself sitting in front of uniformed investigator. She entered my name in the computer, quietly read the screen, then turned to me and asked: “Are you the same Arnold Magid who was arrested in Charlottesville on May 9, 1970?”

I actually began to perspire and stammered out a response which ended in something like “but it was nul pros.”

The agent looked back at me and said: “So you are the Arnold Magid who was arrested in Charlottesville on May 9, 1970?” 

“Yes, ma’am,” says I. 

“We’ll get back to you,” she said. “Thanks for coming in.” 

I remember going home and telling Annie that I was never going to get a pass. But, I did. 

Maybe one day my arrest on May 9, 1970 will be erased from digital memory. 

But it will always be a part of mine. Always.

Friday, June 19, 2020

And So I Got Arrested: May 8/9, 1970 - Part 1

NOTE:  I graduated the University of Virginia on June 7, 1970. Recently I was interviewed by two UVA students – Anya Karaman (A&S, 2020) and Caro Campos (A&S, 2022) - who were helping to curate an exhibition for Alderman Library on that transformative time of protest and change known now as “May Days 1970”, a story that has always been part of my historical self. Thanks to them, I know how it became an operative part of my core identity.  

Writers are always told “write what you know” and I know, I got arrested fifty years ago on May 9, 1970, a month shy of graduation from the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. 
Back then - a half-century ago (words that seem impossible to accept) – times were complex, confusing, even desperate. Still deeply affected and confused by three assassinations in a five-year period – John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Bobby Kennedy – icons all, The Grounds[i] already in turmoil about Vietnam, had just begun to enter the social reality of the twentieth century. Integration had  started. Coeducation was coming. On the cusp of everything, we were on the verge of anything.
To a great extent, my day in the slammer started December 1, 1969.  That evening, we fraternity brothers were nervously transfixed by the television watching the first draft lottery for military service in Vietnam, as ghastly a game format ever was. A group of serious looking old folks sat at a long table facing the camera. Next to them was a smaller desk. Stationed upon it was a bingo ball mixer filled with blue capsules. I’m sure there is a technical name for that device, but it doesn’t seem important now and I sure as hell didn’t care then. We all knew that resting within it was the answer to a dreaded question - who would live and who might die? Another old guy turned the crank to spin out our future, and a plastic ball was pulled out at random. In it was a piece of paper listing one of the 366 days of the year representing every draft age man born on that day
September 14th was the first date announced. None of us.  The second was April 24th, my birthday. I have no memory of my response at that moment, but by the end of the night, we all had our numbers and knew what graduation actually meant. The war had always been an ominous presence in our lives. Now it was real.  And it was close. Just as we do now for COVID-19, every night then on CBS, the great news broadcaster Walter Cronkite, totaled up the daily deaths and injuries in Vietnam presenting us with increasing cumulative numbers for that tragic war.  It was the prism through which we saw almost everything.
Over the next five months, life at the U included petitions, rallies, demonstrations, new political parties, coalitions –  serious, intense, sometimes abrasive, but all relatively benign and civil. I remember being cautiously welcomed into homes of pro-Nixon “townie” families willing to talk with antiwar students. Although both sides were direct and impassioned, the evenings  always ended with dessert, coffee and expressions of thanks. We agreed to disagree. 
Starting April 30, 1970, our lives changed. President Nixon announced an “incursion” into neutral Cambodia in an effort to stop North Vietnam from moving war supplies into South Vietnam.  Many Americans and all of my closest friends knew this was a significant expansion of US military power. Those draft numbers loomed even larger, a sense of nervousness hung over The Grounds and life seemed to explode in every direction.  
            Four days later, students at Kent State were murdered by National Guard troops and our growing sense of despair morphed into anger and fear. Everyone learned the lyrics of Neil Young’s song “Ohio”, created as a result of a searing image on a magazine cover -  two students, one murdered and one kneeling hysterically by her side: 

Tin soldiers and Nixon coming,
We’re finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drumming,
Four dead in Ohio.

Gotta get down to it
Soldiers are cutting us down
Should have been done long ago.
What if you knew her
And found her dead on the ground
How can you run when you know?

          The following day, more demonstrations, more petitions, more teach-ins, a march on Carr’s Hill, home of University President Edgar Shannon, ending in an “occupation” of Maury Hall, the ROTC building.  After that, more of the same, this time including a “Honk For Peace” in front of the University. And then an evening  strike rally led by William Kunstler and Jerry Rubin,  another march on President Shannon’s home, a second taking of Maury Hall. There was more, much more.
          On May 8, another “Honk For Peace” began in the late evening.  This time, the situation had changed dramatically. Over the previous few days, the presence of police became larger and more pervasive. There were no confrontations nor were any planned, at least among students. Earlier that day, based on a rumored story, several friends jumped into my car and drove to University Hall, UVA’s basketball arena. We were shocked to discover that the rumors were true. The parking lot was filled with police cruisers and a vehicle that looked akin to a Brink’s bank truck. Policeman in many different uniforms were everywhere. They wore riot helmets. They had dogs. We were scared and worried but also believed that we would never provide a reason for them to invade The Grounds.
          We were wrong.


[i] “The Grounds” is UVA-speak for Campus.

Wednesday, June 3, 2020

What the heck, I like words - A

WARNING:  this posting has a quickly passing R rating

I have always loved words and I mean always.  And now the R rating.  I know this to be the case since I was photographed as a two-year-old sitting buck naked on the big boy toilet reading a book. Still have the photo although for the life of me I can't imagine why. 
Then again, I have no idea why I still have, treasure, and use the dictionary I received for my Bar Mitzvah in 1962 -  Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary (G&C Merriam Co., 1959), which also includes  "Abbreviations" (10 pages),  "Arbitrary Signs and Symbols" (2 pages),  "Biographical Names" (43 pages),  "A Pronouncing Gazetteer" (76 pages),  "A Pronouncing Vocabulary of Common English Given Names" (7 pages),  "Vocabulary of Rhymes" (5 pages),  "Orthography - American and British" (3 pages),  "Punctuation, Compounds, Capitals, Etc." (8 pages), "Preparation of Copy for the Press" (3 pages) and "Colleges and Universities in the United States and Canada" (15 pages).  And all of this squeezed into a 3-inch-thick volume  self designated as having "thin pages" plus letter thumb tabs and gilt edges – still shiny after 58 years. The best part is I still have an interest in actually reading it - but not on the toilet. So, here are a few of my favorites from pages 1-30, meaning that this will be a LONG-term project. Feel free to share which you like.

-A-

Abdominous - having a large belly.

Abecedarian – one learning the alphabet; one teaching the rudiments of learning.

Abreaction – the removal of a complex or suppressed desire, as by talking it out.

Absonant -  discordant; contrary; unreasonable.

Absterge – to clean as by wiping.

Abulia – loss of willpower.

Acidulous – slightly sour.

Adjuvant -  helping; an assistant.

Adz/Adze -  a cutting tool having a blade set at right angles to the handle.

Akimbo – with the hand on the hip and the elbow turned outward.

Algophobia – morbid fear of pain.

Alluvium – soil, sand, gravel or similar material deposited by running water.

Almoner -  one who dispenses alms for another.

Altruism – regard for a devotion to the interest of others.

Amanuensis – one employed to write from dictation, or to copy manuscript; a secretary.

Ambsace -  double aces, the lowest throw at dice; the least thing or particle possible. 

BONUS:
 This actually happened. While we were waiting for some medical tests to be taken, a young office assistant came in and informed us: "the lobotomist will be here shortly." Neither of us said a word.  First time I was glad to have blood taken.

Saturday, May 30, 2020

A Virus Speaks All Languages - Life in a COVID-19 World - Part 4 REDUX

NOTE: I wrote this originally on 5/20/20. It was updated on 5/30/2020 with comments in BOLD CAPS.

I never planned for this to be so heavily COVID-19 focused. This will be my last one on that topic - for a while. Then again, as my great-grandfather said mentchen trach und Gott lach - "humans plan and God laughs."   NOBODY HERE OR IN THE HIGH HEAVENS IS LAUGHING NOW.   

Never could understand, what with all the spells that JK Rowling came up with for Harry Potter and his gang, why someone couldn't just wave their magic wand and abracadabra life's problems away - especially now. I have coveted one of these wands recently after following the COVID-19 numbers from Johns Hopkins. Why did I do that? Morbid curiosity - maybe? In truth, though, it was in order to answer some BIG PICTURE questions that have been bothering me. Here's what I discovered about the four-day period of May 6-10, 2020 NOW UPDATED AS OF 5/30/2020.

Q: Is it a good idea to close the southern border with Mexico?
A: It might make more sense to close the northern border with Canada. Turns out that Canada has 1/4 the population of Mexico, but four times the number of cases. NO LONGER. NOW THE NUMBER OF CASES ARE SIMILAR BUT MEXICO HAS 25% HIGHER NUMBER OF DEATHS.

Q: How good a job has all of North America done in battling COVID-19?
A: Not good.  Over four days, deaths continent-wide increased 20% to a total of 80,000. 117,000 ABOUT 1/3 OF DEATHS WORLD-WIDE.

Q: Don't hear much about South America. What's going on?
A: Reports are in from Brazil, Peru, Chile, and Ecuador. They have been averaging 9% increases every day. Columbia just reached 10,000 cases and made it to the Johns Hopkins list. IT LOOKS LIKE A DISASTER NOW. CASES INCREASED FROM 475K->725K AND DEATHS HAVE RISEN BY 50% TO 36,000.

Q: At least Europe's "flattened the curve," right?
A: Yes, unless you are one of the 5400 new deaths recently added. And welcome Serbia, who also made the list. I SUPPOSE SO. STILL THE EU HAS ALMOST 2 MILLION CASES OVERALL AND 173,000 DEATHS. ADDED TO THE OVER 1,000 CASES “ENTRY LEVEL” LIST ARE: LUXEMBOURG, HUNGARY, GREECE, BULGARIA, BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA, CROATIA, ESTONIA, SLOVENIA, ALBANIA, LATVIA AND KOSOVO.

Q: Won't heat make the virus disappear?
A: Hmmm... NOT. It has been hitting the 100 degrees mark on a daily basis in the Arabian peninsula but UAE has averaged 6% increases in cases, Saudi Arabia hits 9% and Qatar tops them all at 10%. Remember, that's every day for four days. CURRENTLY, THE HEAT HASN’T SLOWED DOWN THE  200,000 CASES OR 930 DEATHS (MORE ABOUT DEATH NUMBERS LATER).

Q: What about Caribbean cruise to get away from it all?
A: Cruise? Really? And let's hear it for Dominican Republic who also made the list. SO HAS CUBA AND JAMAICA.

Q: But, Africa's safe, right?
A: Having been beat the heck up by Ebola and HIV/AIDS, South Africa has managed to squeeze onto the list, as well. NOW BREAKING INTO THE 1000+ LIST INCLUDE: ALGERIA, NIGERIA, MOROCCO, GHANA, CAMEROON, SUDAN, SENEGAL, DJIBOUTI, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO, IVORY COAST, GABON, SOMALIA, KENYA, MALI, TUNISIA, ZAMBIA, WITH MANY OTHERS ON THE DRAMATIC RISE.

Q: Is there a cultural connection?
A: Maybe so. The Romance language countries of Spain, Portugal, France, Italy and Rumania account for 83,000 deaths meaning 31% of the world's deaths. Look for a change in cheek kissing and more "air kissing." TO THIS ADD ANOTHER 7,000.

Q: Is there a cultural connection - part 2?
A: Maybe so. The English-speaking countries of US, Canada and the UK account for 117,000 deaths or over 41%. NOW INCREASED BY 25% TO 146,000

Q: So, how does the world look by continent?
A: 52.3% Europe -> 31%
     31.3% North America –> 28%
      9.0%  Asia                 ]
        .6%  South America    
] -> 36%
      AFRICA               ]

Q: All of which means (at the very least)?
A: Possibly troubles for Africa and S. America. LET’S NOW CALL THAT TRAGEDY A ‘BREWING. Seems hard to believe that India with a population of 1.3 Billion could only have 6600 deaths. ACTUALLY, THEY SHOW THAT NUMBER DECLINED BY A THIRD.

       I'm not planning on doing this again. At least I don't think I am. Just remember that numbers are hard to spin IF they are truthful. We are in deep enough without lying about it. Reality is confusing  now as it is. And yet, one last "compound" question still remains.

Q: What does it mean that the so-called "developed nations" of the world account for over 80% of the deaths? Humbling isn't it?
A: THOSE NUMBERS HAVE DECREASED TO 60% WHICH MIGHT SOUND/LOOK GOOD UNTIL THE GREATER TRUTH EMERGES – COVID 19 IS STARTING TO DEVASTATE EVERYWHERE ELSE.

THE STATISTICS ARE BECOMING HARDER TO FOLLOW WHICH MEANS WE ARE LITERALLY LOSING TRACK OF A VIRAL ATTACK ON THE PLANET. IN THAT CONFUSION DANGER RESIDES IN THE LACK OF TRUTH AVAILABLE FOR US:

1. IT SEEMS TO ME THERE IS SOME LOOSE FORMULA BEING USED BY MORE AUTOCRATIC GOVERNMENTS RESULTING IN DEATH RATES OF <1%.

2. THE “STANDARD” REPORTING SYSTEMS BEING USED BY JOHNS HOPKINS HAVE SUBTLY CHANGED:
            A. THE BASE NUMBER “TO MAKE IT TO THE LIST” INTERNATIONALLY USED TO BE 10,000. NOW IT IS 50,000 WHICH MEANS THAT FEWER NATIONS ARE LISTED CHANGING THE PERSPECTIVE OF COVID 19 IN THE WORLD. 
            B. FOR THE US, THE DAILY PERCENTAGE CHANGE HAS GIVEN WAY TO A PERCENT OVER THE LAST SEVEN DAYS. THAT MAY BE GOOD AS A WAY TO UNDERSTAND THE “FLOW” OF THE DISEASE BUT UNLESS ONE IS AWARE OF THAT CHANGE THE INCREASES LOOK GIGANTIC AND THUS MORE FRIGHTENING.

3. IT DOESN’T TAKE THE MASSIVE “PAUPER” GRAVES OF NYC AND HORRIFIC STORIES FROM MEXICO CITY TO REALIZE THAT FAMILIES HAVE JUST LOST TRACK OF THEIR LOVED ONES AND GOVERNMENTS ARE PLAYING FAST AND LOOSE WITH THE NUMBERS. THIS WILL GET WORSE. WITH THE 1918-20 INFLUENZA, GOVERNMENT SIMPLY LIED ABOUT WHAT WAS GOING ON BECAUSE THEY SIMPLY DIDN’T KNOW.

HAVE WE FIGURED OUT NOTHING IN ONE HUNDRED YEARS?



Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Just because I like it - #1

NOTE: I'm lost - a lot. Yes, I get where I'm going, but even with GPS life can be, well, interesting. I have always claimed that confusion as "part of my charm." Now I know it is a collective charm and reality having discovered a Facebook support group with the scientifically prescriptive name Directional Disorientation aka Developmental Topographical Disorientation. This disorder refers to a lack of the ability to orient intuitively in the world. This group is about recognizing that this is a "real thing," supporting each other, sharing tips and tricks, regaining our self-respect, and educating others that we're not lazy or stupid because we can't find our way around. We will never have our own TV commercial for DD and as a member please know I am not making mock of it. I promise you it isn't funny, except when it is with a story from my group. It is shared here with permission although no one seems to know who the original author was.
_____________________________________

As a singer I sing at many funerals & I was recently asked by a funeral director to play & sing at a graveside service for a homeless man. He had no family or friends, so the service was to be at a pauper's cemetery out in the country. As I was not familiar with the area, I got lost. I finally arrived an hour late and saw that the funeral guy had evidently gone and the hearse was nowhere in sight. There were only the diggers and crew left and they were eating lunch. I felt badly and apologized to the men for being late. I went to the side of the grave and looked down and the vault lid was already in place. I didn’t know what else to do, so I started to sing. The workers put down their lunches and began to gather around. I sang from my heart and soul for this man with no family and friends. 
As I sang “Amazing Grace”, the workers began to weep. They wept, I wept, we all wept together. When I finished, I packed up my keyboard and started for my car. Though my head hung low, my heart was full.
As I opened the door to my car, I heard one of the workers say, “I’ve never seen nothin’ like that before and I’ve been putting in septic tanks for twenty years.” 
Apparently, I’m still lost….

Thursday, May 14, 2020

Dangling - Journal #1

NOTE: Every three weeks I have a procedure for an absolutely non-life-threatening issue. I just do it and it's not a big deal. Recently though, insurance has removed me from the calm of an in-home setting to a new office environment. Seemed appropriate to write about, so I did.

    Sitting in the infusion chair my feet dangle and do not touch the floor.
    Why is that? Is it made for giants?
    I understand why my sweet Annie had the couches made smaller and special for her. Feet on the floor is both grounded and controlling.
    Dangling means dangering. You never know when/if you are going to contact something/anything solid when you finally get out of it. It could also be that the chair's size/dimensions are designed to make clear how we just float in life on our own while it goes on around us. The chair overwhelms us as does the sickness forcing us to give ourselves over to the illness and those who have expertise/skill/desire/empathy to help us.
     Easy to say but difficult that is for me.
    Giving myself and, worse, my self-control to another person is liberation and subjugation, uncertainty and confidence all wrapped up into one. It says life is bigger than me and if I have done right/am lucky someone will be there to help when I find the courage to finally try for the ground.

Monday, May 11, 2020

A Virus Speaks All Languages - Life in a COVID-19 World - Part 4

NOTE: I never planned for this to be so heavily COVID-19 focused. This will be my last one on that topic - for a while. Then again, as my great-grandfather said mentchen trach und Gott lach - "humans plan and God laughs."     

Never could understand, what with all the spells that JK Rowling came up with for Harry Potter and his gang, why someone couldn't just wave their magic wand and abracadabra life's problems away - especially now. I have coveted one of these wands recently after following the COVID-19 numbers from Johns Hopkins. Why did I do that? Morbid curiosity - maybe? In truth, though, it was in order to answer some BIG PICTURE questions that have been bothering me. Here's what I discovered about the four-day period of May 6-10, 2020 - only...

Q: Is it a good idea to close the southern border with Mexico?
A: It might make more sense to close the northern border with Canada. Turns out that Canada has 1/4 the population of Mexico, but four times the number of cases.

Q: How good a job has all of North America done in battling COVID-19?
A: Not good.  Over four days, deaths continent-wide increased 20% to a total of 180,000.

Q: Don't hear much about South America. What's going on?
A: Reports are in from Brazil, Peru, Chile, and Ecuador. They have been averaging 9% increases every day. Columbia just reached 10,000 cases and made it to the Johns Hopkins list.

Q: At least Europe's "flattened the curve," right?
A: Yes, unless you are one of the 5400 new deaths recently added. And welcome Serbia, who also made the list.

Q: Won't heat make the virus disappear?
A: Hmmm... NOT. It has been hitting the 100 degrees mark on a daily basis in the Arabian peninsula but UAE has averaged 6% increases in cases, Saudi Arabia hits 9% and Qatar tops them all at 10%. Remember, that's every day for four days.

Q: What about Caribbean cruise to get away from it all?
A: Cruise? Really? And let's hear it for Dominican Republic who also made the list.

Q: But, Africa's safe, right?
A: Having been beat the heck up by Ebola and HIV/AIDS, South Africa has managed to squeeze onto the list, as well.

Q: Is there a cultural connection?
A: Maybe so. The Romance language countries of Spain, Portugal, France, Italy and Rumania account for 83,000 deaths meaning 31% of the world's deaths. Look for a change in cheek kissing and more "air kissing."

Q: Is there a cultural connection - part 2?
A: Maybe so. The English-speaking countries of US, Canada and the UK account for 117,000 deaths or over 41%.

Q: So, how does the world look by continent?
A: 52.3% Europe
     31.3% North America
      9.0%  Asia
        .6%  South America

Q: All of which means (at the very least)?
A: Possibly troubles for Africa and S. America. Seems hard to believe that India with a population of 1.3 Billion could only have 6600 deaths.

       I'm not planning on doing this again. At least I don't think I am. Just remember that numbers are hard to spin IF they are truthful. We are in deep enough without lying about it. Reality is confusing  now as it is. And yet, one last "compound" question still remains.

Q: What does it mean that the so-called "developed nations" of the world account for over 80% of the deaths? Humbling, isn't it?
A: ........