NASA
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A Sense of Doubt blog post #2979 - Virus - alien life form?
Dug down deep into the archive for this one when I postponed what I had planned due to needing something already ready, done.
Interestingly this post was originally dated 04/07/20.
This is an intrriguing share.
Thanks for tuning in.
https://time.com/5793520/coronavirus-alien-life/
In a story in Arizona’s Cronkite News, affiliated with the local Public Broadcasting System, Wei
Li, a professor of Asian Pacific American Studies at Arizona State University,
lamented the history of this kind of bias. “It was happening during SARS and
people racialized Asian Americans and during Ebola with Africans and African
Americans,” Li said. “People lump an entire group and blame them for
contaminating our nation and people.”
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- Bloggery committed by chris tower - 2304.15 - 10:10
- Days ago = 2843 days ago
- New note - On 1807.06, I ceased daily transmission of my Hey Mom feature after three years of daily conversations. I plan to continue Hey Mom posts at least twice per week but will continue to post the days since ("Days Ago") count on my blog each day. The blog entry numbering in the title has changed to reflect total Sense of Doubt posts since I began the blog on 0705.04, which include Hey Mom posts, Daily Bowie posts, and Sense of Doubt posts. Hey Mom posts will still be numbered sequentially. New Hey Mom posts will use the same format as all the other Hey Mom posts; all other posts will feature this format seen here.
This is an intrriguing share.
Thanks for tuning in.
https://time.com/5793520/coronavirus-alien-life/
MARCH 2, 2020
You know what?
Maybe we ought to reconsider this whole thing about looking for life on other
worlds. It would be nice to find it, of course. But that doesn’t mean we could
handle it—biologically, epidemiologically and most important, emotionally.
We are
currently in the midst of a global near-panic over what, in some respects, is
its own alien, or at least previously unknown, life-form: the SARS-CoV-2 virus,
which causes the disease known as COVID-19. As of this writing, there have been
close to 90,000 confirmed cases around the world, in 68 countries, leading to
more than 3,000 deaths. Flights have been grounded, international business
conventions canceled, the Tokyo Olympics are threatened, and a global recession
looms. Last week in the U.S., the Dow Jones Industrial Average had its worst
week since the recession of 2008 and 2009, shedding a third of its gains since
the 2016 election, most of that due to fears of the impact of COVID-19.
Humanity as a
whole is suffering the effects of the disease but the Chinese are taking a
particular kind of heat. The virus emerged in Wuhan, China and around the world,
an ugly kind of pitchforks and torches behavior has surfaced. An Asian-American 16-year-old was assaulted at a
California high school and accused of carrying the virus. In South Korea,
latent anti-Chinese sentiment has surfaced, with shops reportedly posting signs reading “No Chinese.” In
Vancouver, a Chinese boy on a school playground was taunted with cries
of, “Yo, virus-boy! Don’t infect us!”
COVID-19 is an entirely
terrestrial problem, one that has not a lick to do with space, and yet consider
that even as the virus rages, NASA is poised to launch a new rover to Mars in
July that will look for microbial life and gather up some rock and soil samples,
which will be brought back to Earth—potentially containing that
microbial life—on a later mission. So: how do you think that’s going to work
out?
On the one hand, there is
almost no likelihood of any risk of contagion. As a column in Space.com pointed out
last week, NASA has a long history of working to protect the Earth from
biohazards from other planets and to protect other planets from biohazards from
Earth. The space agency even has an entire division dedicated to that goal,
formally known as the Office
of Safety and Mission Assurance (OSMA), but more commonly and descriptively
known as the Planetary Protection Office.
As OSMA puts it, its mission is to “carefully control forward
contamination of other worlds by organisms and organic materials carried by
spacecraft” and to “rigorously preclude backward contamination of Earth by
extraterrestrial life.” If you have any question about which of those mission
statements is the more important one, just consider the difference between a
promise to “carefully control” something and to “rigorously preclude” it.
NASA’s most extensive
experience with the risk of backward contamination was during the Apollo era
when both lunar samples and humans who had been on the moon came back to Earth.
For the first three landings, no sooner had the crewmen opened their hatch
after splashdown than frogmen handed them biohazard suits to wear for their
trip back to the Naval recovery ship. From there they were flown to Houston,
where they were kept in three weeks of isolation. The crews were—as might be
expected after having visited an airless, waterless world—carrying no lunar
pathogens at all, and the quarantine procedure was dropped for the last three
lunar missions.
Mars will be a very different matter, because Mars, which was once awash
with water, might once have been fairly churning with life too—and some of it
may well linger in spots in which the water endures. As the Space.com piece
points out, it is possible that Earthly life and potential Martian life are
even related: Meteorites from Mars that struck Earth billions of years ago
could well have harbored microorganisms that survived the journey within
water-bearing pockets in the rocks, giving rise to life here. If that’s the
case, not only have we found Martians, we are Martians. But any
relationship between current Earthly and Martian life could increase the risk
that Martian microbes find us hospitable hosts.
The odds of finding life on
Mars are unknown and unknowable. The odds of being able to scoop it up and
bring it back to Earth intact add a further degree of uncertainty. And the risk
of a pathogen escaping and a pandemic ensuing, while not impossible, feels far
more the stuff of a screenplay than a journal paper.
Still, the risk exists. Even in Level 4 labs—the strictest kind of
bio-containment facilities—there is always a non-zero chance that something
could escape. So, imagine it did and people did become infected. Put aside for
a moment the impact on their health, would they not merely be racialized, but
extraterrestrialized—as somehow not even fully human anymore?
The search for life on other worlds is a manifestation of our consuming
interest in other living things and in some ways our love of other living
things. The battle against SARS-CoV-2 is a mark of the unified face we can show
when one of those living things threatens us all—a collectivism that is among
our highest qualities. The racializing, the othering, directed at people of
Chinese descent is a mark of one of our lowest.
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- Bloggery committed by chris tower - 2304.15 - 10:10
- Days ago = 2843 days ago
- New note - On 1807.06, I ceased daily transmission of my Hey Mom feature after three years of daily conversations. I plan to continue Hey Mom posts at least twice per week but will continue to post the days since ("Days Ago") count on my blog each day. The blog entry numbering in the title has changed to reflect total Sense of Doubt posts since I began the blog on 0705.04, which include Hey Mom posts, Daily Bowie posts, and Sense of Doubt posts. Hey Mom posts will still be numbered sequentially. New Hey Mom posts will use the same format as all the other Hey Mom posts; all other posts will feature this format seen here.
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