2020年7月24日 星期五

The Daily: Answering Your Questions About School Reopenings

And a summer mixtape. Because school hasn’t started just yet.
Author Headshot

By Pam Belluck

Health and Science Writer, Science

Kindergarten students at a school in Bangkok returned on July 1, a delayed start to their academic year.Adam Dean for The New York Times

On Wednesday’s show, we spoke to Pam Belluck about the safety behind reopening schools in the U.S. As we enter the last month of the summer, the question of reopening schools continues to be front-of-mind for people around the world. So we asked Pam a couple of follow-up questions based on those we got from you.

In the episode, while explaining a line of thinking about why it may be safer to reopen elementary schools before middle and high schools, you mentioned the growing evidence that children under 10 are less likely to spread the virus than older children. Why is that?

Covid-19 seems to affect little kids differently than most other respiratory viruses, like the flu or cytomegalovirus, which are commonly spread by young children. Scientists are exploring whether young children are less likely to become infected with this new virus or simply less likely to get sick when they are infected. One theory is that younger children have fewer of the proteins that allow Covid-19 to enter lung cells and replicate. Another is that children are protected from developing serious symptoms because of differences in their maturing immune systems or in the cells that line the blood vessels.

Milder symptoms may help explain why young children don’t spread the virus as much. If they aren’t coughing or breathing hard, they might not be propelling viral droplets far enough to reach another person.

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Schools bring together a lot of adults besides teachers. How are communities in the U.S. thinking about adult-to-adult interaction and transmission if schools reopen?

Over half of the employees of public school systems are not full-time teachers — they are bus drivers, custodians, cafeteria workers, aides, substitute teachers and others who fill roles that are vital to making school reopening possible. They serve in jobs that often pay lower wages and provide fewer employee benefits than teachers receive. And some will be asked to take on additional responsibilities when schools open. Custodians will be implementing procedures for extra cleaning and sanitizing; drivers in some districts may be asked to assess the health of children before allowing them to board the bus.

Many school districts are trying to develop plans to protect these workers. Some intend to install plexiglass dividers to protect bus drivers, give them medical-grade face masks and limit the number of children on buses so the children are separated by six feet (steps that serve to protect children as well). Lunchtime will look different in many schools: Some will have individualized box lunches and children eating in their classrooms, so cafeteria workers are exposed to fewer people.

Many of these precautions will take additional resources. And, since these are jobs that can’t be done online, districts will need contingency plans or substitute workers for staff members who get sick or are uncomfortable coming to work.

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You mentioned Israel as a country that’s had less success in reopening its schools. Why did it relax its class size restrictions? Did it see a parallel outbreak in its communities when it relaxed class sizes?

Israel’s Covid-19 case counts have gone up in recent weeks, and it is experiencing a second wave of the pandemic after having largely gotten the first wave under control. It relaxed other pandemic restrictions around the same time as it reopened schools, so it’s not clear exactly what role the schools played and how much of the surge in cases was driven by social gatherings at weddings, parties and bars.

It’s important to note that, while the U.S. can learn from other countries, none of them exactly mirror American circumstances. In Israel, for example, classes are typically large, so when they were divided into small-group capsules, each class still had about 18 students. Also, for a few days in May, the temperature was so hot that the Israeli government waived the mask requirement, and it’s unclear if that spurred disease transmission.

Still, some public health experts in Israel say they recommended against relaxing the restrictions on class size, and they believe that the guidelines were eased because of political pressure and eagerness for the economy to fully reopen. Israeli citizens may also have felt that there wasn’t a great risk to lifting the restrictions, given that the country had successfully tamped down its infection rate in April and May. That’s a cautionary message for communities in the U.S. and elsewhere not to become complacent once they’ve managed to keep the virus in check.

Talk to Pam on Twitter: @PamBelluck.

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“Come now, come dry your eyes, you know you a star, you can touch the sky.” This summer calls for a lot of Lizzo.Amy Lombard for The New York Times

It’s been a strange summer, to say the least. This week, when we asked each member of our team to share a song from their pandemic summer soundtrack, our producer Hans Buetow wrote back: “I am devoid of music or even joy in my life. SUCH IS THE WORLD RIGHT NOW, I CAN ONLY LISTEN TO THE WHISTLING WINDS THAT BLOW THROUGH THE EMPTY CHASM OF WHAT ONCE HELD MY SOUL … Oh, but also I do listen to a lot of Whitney Houston.”

Hans went on to add 25 songs to our team’s summer playlist (we only asked for one).

You can listen to the playlist below, or follow the full version on Spotify, which includes Hans’s 25 favorites, as well as a dubstep version of the “Jurassic Park” theme song, plus a few Taylor Swift bangers in honor of her surprise album. From our team to yours, Happy Listening.

Alexandra Leigh Young: 2NE1, “I Am The Best
Andy Mills: RAC (feat. Louis the Child), “Passion
Annie Brown: Khruangbin, “Time (You and I)
Asthaa Chaturvedi: Stylo G, The Fanatix, Nicki Minaj and Vybz Kartel, “Touch Down - Remix
Austin Mitchell: OutKast, “Aquemini
Bianca Giaever: Eddy Arnold, “Cattle Call
Brad Fisher: Kacey Musgraves, “Lonely Weekend
Clare Toeniskoetter: Empress of, “Not the One
Dan Powell: Blue Magic, “Just Don’t Want to Be Lonely
Daniel Guillemette: Karol Conká, “Boa Noite
Dave Shaw: U2, “Staring at the Sun
Hans Buetow: Brenton Wood, “Oogum Boogum Song
Jake Lucas: Reyna Tropical, “No Me Quieres
Julia Simon: Haim, “Summer Girl
Kelly Prime: Salt Cathedral, “Te Quiero Olvidar
Larissa Anderson: Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell, “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough
Lauren Jackson: Still Woozy, “Window
Lisa Chow: Justin Bieber, “Intentions
Luke Vander Ploeg: Lisa Hannigan, “I Don’t Know
Mahima Chablani: Scatman John, “Scatman (ski-ba-bop-ba-dop-bop)
Marc Georges: Lizzo, “Juice
Michael Simon Johnson: Lianne La Havas, “Weird Fishes
Mike Benoist: The Black Crowes, “Soul Singing
M.J. Davis Lin: Fugees, “How Many Mics
Neena Pathak: Ric Wilson, “Fight Like Ida B & Marsha P
Nora Keller: Molchat Doma, “Судно (Sudno)
Rachel Quester: Angus & Julia Stone, “Big Jet Plane
Rachelle Bonja: L’Impératrice, “Voodoo?
Robert Jimison: Diana Ross, “It’s My House
Sindhu Gnanasambandan: Betty & Oswald, “King of Bohemia
Sofia Milan: Bomba Estéreo, “Mar (Lo Que Siento)
Stella Tan: Erykah Badu and Common, “Love Of My Life (An Ode to Hip Hop)
Sydney Harper: Dua Lipa, “Pretty Please
Wendy Dorr: Loudon Wainwright III, “The Swimming Song

On The Daily this week

Monday: Brent Staples, a member of The Times editorial board, honors the extraordinary life of the civil rights icon John Lewis.

Tuesday: Jan Hoffman explains why developing a coronavirus vaccine may be easier than persuading people to take it.

Wednesday: Restarting the economy requires reopening schools. Pam Belluck shares why doing so safely remains one of our most daunting challenges.

Thursday: With Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Mike Baker, we go behind protest lines in Portland to ask: Why have militarized federal forces been deployed to an American city?

Friday: Mike Schmidt speaks with the commissioner for Major League Baseball about the path forward for the sport.

That’s it for The Daily newsletter. See you next week.

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What goes around, goes around, goes around

Comes all the way back around.
Federal agents in Portland, Ore., on July 20.Noah Berger/Associated Press
Author Headshot

By Jamelle Bouie

Opinion Columnist

I wrote my Tuesday column on the federal government’s troubling actions in Portland, Ore., using a novel and largely unaccountable paramilitary force. It went through a few drafts before I sent it to my editor, and one passage I dropped was an observation on the relationship between events in Portland and those in Iraq and Afghanistan and on America’s southern border. Here’s what I wrote:

How should we understand the paramilitary garb and occupation tactics of federal law enforcement in Portland? Not as an innovation from the Trump administration, but as a recapitulation of those tactics and techniques the American security state has used on the border and abroad.

Because I was on a deadline — and it would have taken a few hundred words to unpack this statement — I dropped the paragraph from the piece. But I’ve been thinking about it all week and brainstorming a future piece that might try to make the argument at length. Unfortunately for me — but fortunately for you, — the author and history podcaster Patrick Wyman has written a long piece on exactly this dynamic.

When we see Border Patrol agents wearing camouflage and helmets, carrying M4s with optics, rigged up like they’re about to go on patrol in Ramadi or the Korengal Valley (or deal with a migrant caravan in the southwest), that’s empire coming home. The viciousness of their handling of immigration during the Trump era, complete with threats of gunfire, concentration camps, and consistent dehumanization, has been a preview of their handling of American citizens. So too have been the various misdeeds of American soldiers overseas.

I recommend you read the entire essay. What I’ll say, for now, is that the underlying processes at work in this phenomenon — the rapid expansion of the national security state, the militarization of the border, austerity and the long-term erosion of public services — transcend this administration. What we’re witnessing, what we’re living through, is the product of a generation of political choices, many made by people who currently stand against this administration. Should Trump lose in November, Americans will have far more to unravel than simply Trumpism.

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What I Wrote

I wrote about events in Portland and the creation of an internal security force, controlled by the president and his minions.

A secretive, nationwide police force — created without congressional input or authorization, formed from highly politicized agencies, tasked with rooting out vague threats and answerable only to the president — is a nightmare out of the fever dreams of the founding generation, federalists and antifederalists alike. It’s something Americans continue to fear and for good reason. It is a power that cannot and should not exist in a democracy, lest it undermine and destroy the entire project.

I also wrote about the real “silent majority” and how it is very different from the one imagined by President Trump:

There is a silent majority in this country, and it is arrayed against a radical, extremist minority. But it stands against Trump, not the other away around. He and his allies are and always have been in the minority, acting in ways that frighten and disturb the broad middle of the electorate. And as long as Trump cannot see this — as long as he holds to his belief in a secret, silent pro-Trump majority — he and his campaign will continue to act in ways that diminish his chance of any legitimate victory in the 2020 presidential election.

As far as other mediums go, I did a live Twitter Q. and A. and spoke with CBS News about anti-Semitism in the Black community and joined the Slate Political Gabfest as a guest host.

Now Reading

Vinson Cunningham on the philosopher Frank B. Wilderson III’s new book “Afropessimism” in The New Yorker.

Nikhil Pal Singh on the early-20th-century American gadfly Randolph Bourne in the New Statesman.

Soraya McDonald on being Black and Jewish in The Undefeated.

John Ganz on the free speech debate in The Guardian.

Priscilla Page on Martin Scorsese’s film “The Irishman” on her personal blog.

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Feedback

If you’re enjoying what you’re reading, please consider recommending it to friends. They can sign up here. If you want to share your thoughts on an item in this week’s newsletter or on the newsletter in general, please email me at jamelle-newsletter@nytimes.com.

Photo of the Week

Doug Jones’s victory celebration in Birmingham, Ala.Jamelle Bouie

I have a memory card’s worth of photos to edit as well as several rolls and a few dozen sheets of film to scan, so instead of sharing anything new, I am going to pull from the archives again. I took this almost three years ago, in 2017, at the victory celebration for Senator Doug Jones of Alabama, who won, it suffices to say, unexpectedly.

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Now Eating: Cornmeal Poundcake

Now is the time for simple desserts involving fresh summer fruit. We have been eating this poundcake — which is incredibly easy to make — with fresh, ripe peaches and freshly whipped cream. It’s incredible. The recipe comes from The New York Times Cooking section.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • An orange, lime or lemon (optional)
  • ½ cup liquid fat (olive oil, coconut oil, sunflower oil, melted butter, whatever you’ve got)
  • 2 eggs
  • ½ cup plain yogurt, buttermilk, sour cream, or ½ cup whole milk mixed with 1 tablespoon lemon juice
  • A dash of vanilla or almond extract, or brandy (optional)
  • ¼ teaspoon grated nutmeg (optional)
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • ¼ teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • ½ cup cornmeal
  • 1¼ cups all-purpose flour

Directions

Heat oven to 350 degrees, and grease and flour a 9-inch loaf pan. (Or grease and line it with parchment.)

In a big bowl, add the sugar and grate the zest from the orange, lemon or lime into the bowl. If you need a little aromatherapy, work the zest into the sugar with your fingers. (This technique is supposed to infuse the citrus into the sugar.)

Add the fat, eggs and yogurt to the bowl, along with the extract and nutmeg, if you like.

Whisk in the salt, baking soda, baking powder and cornmeal. Once smooth, whisk in flour.

Scrape the batter into the prepared pan and bake for 45 minutes to an hour. Let it cool in the pan. Slice and serve.

IN THE TIMES

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