By Hammy | November 2, 2009 - 6:16 am - Posted in Current Events, Newspaper Columns, West Virginia

(This is my column that appears in today’s Dominion Post concerning the news coverage of swine flu.  I was a skeptic when the hype began months ago but now believe that the hyperactive predictions aren’t as pathetic as they once were.  Even if they are pretty pathetic still.

One portion I want to expand on is the line referring to inaccurate testing methods and self reporting cases.  I thought the stats would be worthless when I first heard that WVU was setting up a web site where sick students could self-report they had H1N1 merely on having flu-like symptoms.  I still find that the case.  I also questioned – and still do – some health care provider’s decisions to not test every person with flu-like symptoms and treat it as swine anyway.  I also understand from my nurse & doctor friends that the nose swab tests are anywhere from 30-60% unreliable, mainly depending on how far up the nose one can get the swab in a patient.

Still, the confirmed deaths in West Virginia from flu this early and the large amount of Garrett’s friends who have caught the pig bug have changed my mind somewhat on the “pandemic”.  I continue to believe that the hype is still high regarding H1N1, but I also am starting to believe that this is more than just 36-point headlines.)

In today’s world we have more news, data, and information at our fingertips than at any previous point in our history.  Locally we have a daily newspaper, two news radio stations, five television stations between Clarksburg and Pittsburgh, and the 24-hour news cycle of cable news and the Internet that bring us updates all day, every day.  Normally this is a positive attribute because information is a powerful resource.

Sometimes, though, this easy access to information becomes more harmful and confusing rather than useful. We’ve seen this several times this decade already, especially in the areas of health and disease.  SARS, avian flu, and H1N1 have each had their years in the sun of late.  My desire for we as citizens and the media would be to find better methods of discussing potential threats.  Whether it’s disease, the environment, terrorism, etc., the preview of impacts caused by the occurrence of each is a balancing act.  Understate the story and people become ignorant.  Overstate the case and people become hysterical.  Rather than ride the middle ground and shoot for realistic predictions, it’s not hard to see which line the typical story crosses.

Given the amount of coverage over H1N1, it’s natural for more than a few people to become skeptical.  After all, given all the hype over avian flu a couple years ago, World Health Organization (WHO) figures indicate only 442 confirmed cases of H5N1, most in southeast Asia, although the 262 deaths represent a high mortality rate for those infected.  What about SARS, the 2003 scare?  After all the panic reports a total of 8,273 individuals worldwide were confirmed infected with a death count of 775.  Granted, in this day we should be able to minimize the amount of deaths from any disease, but both outbreak scares pale in comparison to seasonal flu that kills hundreds of thousands worldwide annually.

What then to make of H1N1?  The coverage has been just as breathless as the other “pandemics” prior, leading to a great number of folks (myself included) to ask if this is once again much ado about very little.  This time, however, the cases are coming fast and furious (Although I question if some of the statistics are inflated via the self-reporting and testing methods), with over 500,000 cases and 6,200 deaths.  These counts, and the fatalities in Morgantown and West Virginia have erased in my mind doubts about the seriousness of the outbreak.  So much so, in fact, that my children should be vaccinated by the time this column prints.  A month ago this would not have been the case.

My hope is that news sources will strive to better find the middle ground in reporting potential calamities.  Unfortunate results can occur if we feel that the media are crying “Wolf!” when the coverage is accurate.

By Hammy | October 21, 2009 - 6:05 am - Posted in Current Events, Football, WVU Sports

The college football world and greater sports world awoke Sunday to the surprising news of the death of Jasper Howard, a starting defensive back on the Connecticut football team.  It has been quite heartening to see everyone rally around the UConn team and offer their support.  We sometimes get too wrapped up in a game and it’s outcome (I know I used to), but events like this remind us of the things that really matter in the big picture.

I’m also heartened to see the overall compassion coming from Mountaineer Nation, set to host the Huskies this Saturday.  We have a fan base whose overall impression is, um, less than stellar nationally, but this week has been filled with stories, posts, and thoughts about honoring Howard and the grief stricken team.  There will be a moment of silence, pregame embraces, and helmet decals aplenty.  I’m reading stories of students selling #6 armbands and sending the proceeds to Howard’s family, the Rubber U vendors donating proceeds, individuals making their own armbands, and I’m sure there’s much I’m missing.

Here’s hoping for a good and safe game Saturday, one to help take the Huskies minds off the tragedy of this weekend and escape to a different world for a few hours.

By Hammy | September 30, 2009 - 5:57 pm - Posted in Current Events, Politics

Pesident Obama is bringing to light nationally a debate that has gone on locally for eons – should schools be year round?  Not only is Barama leaning towards recommending it, there are also reports out that he wants to lengthen each school day.

The main benefits are touted as being more instruction equals more learning and better test scores, less downtime to forget what was learned the previous year, and a reduced need for parents to spend money on summertime childcare.   Key complaints raised so far include the economic destruction of the summertime tourist industry, not giving children a chance to take a break to recharge, and finding money to keep schools operating more days when education funding already sucks.

When I look at this I don’t take an economic viewpoint for once.  On education I think the problems we have are more societal than financial.  I see a system where a less than quality teacher can survive long enough to become locked into a position that may not be deserved (I’m avoiding the “T” word).  I see a system where too many children do not have parents involved with either their school or their schoolwork.  I also see a system where children are not taught to think critically and independently, but to learn the answers to standardized testing.

(I have a bunch of teacher friends, and I know that most of them are great teachers.  I’m not pointing the finger at you guys, but at the ones who give half-assed efforts in the classroom and then bitch about their kids in the teacher’s lounge.)

Until we make sure that sub-par teachers are replaced with quality teachers; until we can get parents or guardians involved and interested in their child’s schooling; and until we can teach children how to learn and improve their minds and abilities themselves, our schools will never improve.  All the extra days and hours spent in the schoolhouse won’t mean a thing until we improve the quality of the product coming through the doors when the bell rings.

By Hammy | September 15, 2009 - 9:00 pm - Posted in Current Events

Newsweek is running a cover story on racial discrimination and how kids as young as six months discriminate based on skin color.  Rather than dive into all the problems I saw in the article, which will no doubt be discussed to death in the coming days, I have to admit that we’ve known this for years.  Hell, I’ve even known a racist baby.  When I was working in Charlotte my team there was led by a white woman, had up to three black women, one black man, one other white woman, and my white ass.  (Of course, it’s pointless to say how well we all got along and worked together.  Race-baiters don’t care about what actually happens within groups.)  One of the black women gave birth to her first daughter the year I started, and on occasion she would bring the girl into the office.   As she got more mobile through crawling and then walking, a funny pattern would emerge.  She would crawl/walk to me and my boss, but would not crawl to the black woman in the cube across from me.  This was really surprising because this woman had spent a lot of  time helping our teammate at her house. adjusting to her newborn.  One day after the girl wouldn’t crawl to her but turned to me instead, she cried out in jest “Girl – why are you raising a racist baby?  She won’t ever crawl to me, but she goes right to him!”

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By Hammy | - 8:28 am - Posted in Current Events

Blind squirrels do find ACORNs every once in awhile, and Barack said something I agree with…..

“Obama calls Kanye ‘Jackass’”