Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

For the first time ever, one thing unites us all

- B Y DA N I E L H E R N A N D E Z GlueKit For The Times

LA T E L Y I’ve come to realize that the pandemic is the first panhuman event in this planet’s history or certainly in our lifetimes. How? Through globalizat­ion and technology, virtually every sentient human from a child of 3 to elders in triple-digit age brackets knows COVID-19 is happening.

In that sense we’ve found something — finally — that unites us all, from the most remote villages to the most concentrat­ed big cities, such as ours. The pandemic has reached deep into the Amazon, where it’s taking a devastatin­g toll on the Yanomami, and even to tiny South Pacific islands.

For many years, we thought the internet would in some way unite all humans. But more than anything else it has largely succeeded in dividing us into minute tribes; the most dystopian version of the web has won out over the most hopeful or congealing. The nearest events you could say approximat­e what we are experienci­ng now are the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 — but it would be woefully naive to conclude that people in Fiji or the depths of Siberia would have the same emotional reactions to 9/11 as we did as Americans. No, 9/11 didn’t bind the planet.

It took 2020 to do that. For the first time, everyone everywhere — whether or not they have been directly affected by the virus — is experienci­ng some degree of the same emotions: fear, anxiety, trepidatio­n, and the sadness and mourning the pandemic has wrought. Even the reticence of the coronaviru­s protocol-skeptics could be read as reflective of those same feelings. When people are confronted with something alien and powerful, like an invisible and fatal virus, reactions can reliably range from defensiven­ess to denial. We hate and shun what scares us.

Of course, even if the pandemic can be considered a universal experience, its effects have not been universall­y applied.

Xeni Jardin, the L.A.-based writer and journalist currently isolating in southweste­rn Utah, talked with me over the phone last week about the ways poverty, co-morbiditie­s and access to prevention, care and (soon) vaccines are creating wildly different frames for how the coronaviru­s threat is lived and viewed.

“[Futurist] William Gibson said, ‘The future is already here, it’s just not very evenly distribute­d,’ and now that’s the same truth of the coronaviru­s,” said Jardin, one of the brains behind the trailblazi­ng tech and culture blog BoingBoing.net.

“With this pandemic, it washes over all of us in real time, and it exposes exactly what so many of us knew was always there,” she said. “That healthcare is a national security issue and that an injustice to one is an injustice to all.”

For historians and public health experts, the parallels to the 1918 flu are obvious, although modern technologi­es and the connectivi­ty they produce have made awareness of today’s COVID-19 pandemic more readily accessible, even for those who have barely left their homes since March. Everyone is watching.

On Tristan da Cunha, dubbed the world’s most remote permanentl­y inhabited archipelag­o (for a fun exercise in imagining extreme isolation, try searching for it on a map), local administra­tor Steve Townsend wrote earlier this year in a coronaviru­s update: “Our nearest neighbour is over 1,200 miles away, we are used to quite a lot of isolation! However we still follow the news on the television, and are very concerned about the risk of the virus reaching the island.”

(The island cluster’s last posted update says it remains COVID-free, thus masks are not mandated for its 244 inhabitant­s.)

Andrew Noymer, an associate professor of public health at UC Irvine, noted that past and current mass biological threats, such as HIV-AIDS or endemic tuberculos­is, are not characteri­zed by the same sort of “insidious” threat that COVID-19 brings in broader society.

“This virus is in the sweet spot that it’s bad enough to kill us, but sort of on the range of flu in terms of the threat, and therefore easy to call bogus,” Noymer said. “But look at these hospital numbers; this is not a ‘normal’ flu season.” (An October CDC study done in Veterans Health Administra­tion facilities found that patients hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 were five times more likely to die than those hospitaliz­ed with the flu.)

In the sphere of public health, and where it intersects with the collective consciousn­ess, Noymer said that in mid-January 2020 he spent “two weeks arguing on Twitter” with people who were downplayin­g the looming threat of COVID-19, until each of them — and each of us — had “that holy crap” moment when we realized “this is real.”

“We all know when the pandemic began for us. And I don’t mean December 2019 in Wuhan; I mean when the pandemic began for us. That’s a different date for everyone, but it’s a date that we all remember,” Noymer said. “With the exception of those of us who die, sadly, defining the end of it is going to be a lot more nebulous, because it’s going to fade away more than burn out.”

So that is us now, person to person, country to country, continent to continent. Futurists often talk of the “Singularit­y,” when the rate of technologi­cal change is so fast and so exponentia­l that, as theorist Ray Kurzweil puts it, “human life will be irreversib­ly transforme­d.” Certainly the exponentia­l growth of the virus has transforme­d us. Every human being who is aware of the pandemic and its path on the face of the planet can say that they are sharing something — waiting for the end of this. A true humankind cultural unifier found in 2020.

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