Swine flu, eh? Well, that one’s new. By Monday morning, as it became clear an unprecedented pandemic was spreading northward, the first apocalyptic reference rang out. A clueless local radio anchor cried out “This is like ‘The Stand,'” referring to Stephen King’s great post-apocalyptic novel. A friend of mine, who’d spent the weekend in bed with a nasty case of salmonella, spent the afternoon worrying he might have swine flu. My dad e-mailed me advising me to wash my hands more frequently than usual, proving he considers “swine flu” and “a cold going around” to be functional equivalents.
In the clearest evidence yet that fears of swine flu are keeping
And, as they always must, our UW administrators sent out a stoic e-mail assuring us they were “actively monitoring reports of swine flu affecting
Good grief. This is really not “The Stand.” There will be no weary bands of plague refugees stumbling cross country towards
Yes, swine flu may have caused up to 149 deaths in
Here’s where “critical thinking” comes into play. Why might swine flu be killing people in poor regions of
There comes a point in any democratic society where enough is enough — where citizens must trade a false stoicism for a real one. The former insists constant vigilance is a virtue, that there is no amount of nanny-state coddling unwarranted if it saves a few lives or — the furthest removed — makes a few people feel comfortable. If we could waterboard the swine flu, some of these people would be running to fill up the bucket.
Real stoics are different. We accept our absurd fates, whatever they may be, and trust the all-stars in the background to postpone the inevitable as long as possible. We don’t crouch around short-wave radios (or Gmail inboxes) waiting to know whether we’re safe. The surefire way to make our world a threatening place is to treat it like one, ad nauseam. Shit will happen, swine-created or otherwise.
And if our campus administrators want to overfill our inboxes, the occasion should be proportionate to the inbox blitzkrieg. Swine flu is not worth a single campuswide e-mail. A quasi-epidemic, fully treatable in the
Eric Schmidt ([email protected]) is a senior majoring in political science.