But instead the western response too often has been “what about us?”. The Bloomberg Businessweek carries an alarmist Ebola Is Coming front cover. This is a nonsense. Ebola is a disease of poverty. It is very difficult to spread, and depends on direct contact with the bodily fluids of the infected, rather than being an airborne (and thus catastrophic) illness. If Liberia had a functioning public health system, the epidemic would be shut down. It needs trained health workers, isolation wards and protective gear to combat it – infrastructure that, in our grossly unequal world, simply is not there in a countries like Liberia or Sierra Leone. In Nigeria and Senegal, where there is a far more effective public health system, the countries appear to have put a stop to the onward march of Ebola. The disease has no real chance of spreading in western countries, because any victims would be quickly isolated and treated.
The sad reality is that African victims will continue to suffer an excruciating death, denied of basic dignity, drowning in their own fluids. As they do so, they will remain nameless and forgotten, except to their forever mourning relatives. Westerners, on the other hand, will be flown out, treated and become near-celebrities. Perhaps some are resigned to such a disparity, believing that this is the inevitable way of the world. I tend to differ: it is perverse, and it is unjust.
via The focus on first US Ebola case shows how cheaply we value African lives | Owen Jones | Comment is free | The Guardian.
rePost::Did My Brother Invent E-Mail With Tom Van Vleck? (Part Five) – NYTimes.com
Origins of Computer Science!
ERROL MORRIS: My brother was getting a degree in electrical engineering because there was no degree in computer science.
ROBERT FANO: I know. I started it.
ERROL MORRIS: You started it?
MIT Museum
Robert Fano
ROBERT FANO: That’s right. When I started Project MAC, I wanted at the same time to build up computer science as part of the electrical engineering department. It was a double mission. First, that’s where the money was. Second, that’s where the future was. And eventually, the higher-ups understood that computer science was going to stay. And over the years, the curriculum in computer science kept developing. So much so that in 1971, after I stopped being director of Project MAC, I was asked to be the first associate department head for computer science in the electrical engineering department. A little later, a new department head changed the name of the department from electrical engineering to electrical engineering and computer science. And shortly thereafter, Project Mac became LCS, the Laboratory for Computer Science.
via Did My Brother Invent E-Mail With Tom Van Vleck? (Part Five) – NYTimes.com.