12 The EconomistApril 4th 2020
Lettersarewelcomeandshouldbe
addressedtotheEditorat
TheEconomist,TheAdelphiBuilding,
1-11 JohnAdamStreet,LondonWC 2 N 6 HT
Email:[email protected]
Morelettersareavailableat:
Economist.com/lettersLetters
Coronavirus as a weapon
One aspect has been ignored in
The Economist’s and the wider
media coverage of covid-19: the
national security implications
(“The lockdown and the long
haul”, March 21st). The rapid
spread of the virus in Europe
and North America and the
somewhat confused and errat-
ic response of governments
demonstrates how unprepared
we are to respond to the threat
of biological warfare, despite
spending hundreds of billions
of dollars on defence.
Drawing on lessons learned
from this pandemic, govern-
ments should enact legislation
that will help us respond to
future emergencies. In addi-
tion we could stockpile essen-
tial equipment such as por-
table hospitals and testing kits
to help public health systems
respond effectively. In the
context of defence spending,
these measures are not partic-
ularly expensive. For example,
the latest American aircraft-
carrier cost $13bn. Perhaps this
money could have been better
spent preparing us for future
bio-warfare threats.
There is no question in my
mind that malicious groups
are watching this situation
with great interest and may be
considering how to take ad-
vantage of our weaknesses.
robert morley
Former staff member on the
National Security Council
Richmond, TexasFor comparison, the global
influenza pandemic of 1918-
infected up to 500m people
and killed up to 50m. Today we
are light years away from these
figures and will not reach them
because of the global advances
in medical research that our
technology enables.
What remains inexplicable
is how America, the world’s
powerhouse, can have been so
ill-prepared. All reliable evi-
dence demonstrates that it is
near the bottom of Western
countries for testing. The
federal Centres for Disease
Control and Prevention was
inept in dealing with what was
coming. The system of checks
and balances is supposed toensurethatevenif a president
doesnotrealisethegravityofa
situation,institutionslikethe
cdcarereadytospringinto
action.Thecdc’s delayed
responsemaybethegravest
mistakesofarincombating
covid-19worldwide.
georgerousseau
Emeritusprofessorofhistory
OxfordUniversityTheimfandtheWorldBank
havemade$62bninfunding
availabletocombatcovid-19.
Yetfundingformalariaisonly
halfofthe$6bnthattheWorld
HealthOrganisationrequests
eachyear.I understandthefear
ofthiscoronavirus,butmalar-
iainfects228mpeopleeach
yearandkills400,000.Per-
hapsif werebrandmalariaasa
newphenomenonit willmake
theheadlinesandgetthefund-
ingit deserves.
rachelzweig
Fayetteville,ArkansasI wouldliketosuggesttheuse
of“physicaldistancing”rather
than“socialdistancing”.Asa
sociologistI amstunnedatthe
manywayspeoplehave
overcomesocialdistancing
whilehavingtokeepa physical
distance.
professorpatrickkenis
SchoolofEconomicsand
Management
TilburgUniversity
Tilburg,NetherlandsNot so happy with Evo
In Bolivia we are certainly
enjoying the bouquet of free-
dom after 14 years of Evo
Morales (Bello, March 7th). The
former president never “used
natural-gas revenues to build
schools, roads and clinics”.
Instead, he built football fields
with synthetic grass. Today
Bolivia is going through a dire
public-health situation pre-
cisely because of the lack of
hospitals and medical equip-
ment in rural areas.
Bolivia under Mr Morales
was a dysfunctional democra-
cy that squandered the money
it earned from commodities in
a blend of corruption,
pharaonic projects and short-
term social programmes.
Those revenues vanished inscandalsandvanityprojects.
MrMoralesbuilta museumfor
himselftoexhibithissports
outfits.Heerecteda lavish
buildingthatdestroyedthe
colonialaestheticofthehistor-
iccentreofLaPazandnamedit
theHouseofthePeople,
emulatingNicolaeCeausescu
inRomania.Thelargesteco-
nomicboombecamethegreat-
estmissedopportunityin
Bolivianhistory.
jaimeaparicio
AmbassadorofBoliviatothe
OrganisationofAmerican
States
Washington,DCThis sporting life
Your leader lamenting the
cancellation of sports fixtures
referred to the Romans who
understood the importance of
bread and circuses, “keeping
the public not just fed, but
entertained, too” (“The game’s
the thing”, March 21st). But
although our modern colise-
ums lie dormant, e-sports
beckon like never before. La
Liga, Spain’s top-tier football
league, recently held an online
tournament using eaSports’
fifa20 video game. Some
170,000 people tuned in to
watch a player with Real
Madrid win the final. That’s
more than double the capacity
of Madrid’s Santiago Bernabéu
stadium. The biggest obstacle
to game streaming has been
the inability of the sporting
establishment to recognise its
huge reach. The business
world may now finally wake up
to its potential, not just to
augment but enhance the
world of sports entertainment.
jonny shaw
Chief strategy officer
VCCP New YorkKudos to The Economistfor
supporting the morale-boost-
ing potential of the return of
professional sport, albeit in a
reduced capacity. In 2012 I
watched a distant Champions
League final between Chelsea
and Bayern Munich, having
just fought in my first battle in
Afghanistan with the British
army. A sporting event has
enormous normalising power.
Occasionally, as today, lifethrows up challenges that
ensure you never again take
the small things for granted.
robin lyon
LondonOn the straight and narrow
The construction of artificial
barriers to restrict the flow of
rivers and protect land (“Put-
ting the wiggles back in rivers”,
March 7th) was widespread in
the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. This was particular-
ly the case for alpine rivers in
U-shaped glacial valleys,
which carry large amounts of
sediment after heavy rainfall.
Two such rivers came to public
attention in the 1920s and
1930s. James Joyce even alluded
to these rivers as “burst” in
“Finnegans Wake”.
The first was the Thur with
its source in the Swiss Alps
flowing through the Zurich
Canton that Joyce lived in. The
second was the Waiho flowing
out of the Southern Alps of
New Zealand near Greymouth.
One of Joyce’s sisters lived in
the Greymouth convent and
sent pieces of local interest to
her brother that he occasional-
ly used, albeit creatively but
recognisably in “Finnegans
Wake”. Both rivers have caused
destructive flooding after their
flows were constrained and
slowed a century ago,
exacerbating problems caused
by large deposits of gravel
accumulated over time.
gerald smith
Wellington, New ZealandFungus fun
“A little lichen relief” (March
21st) notes that Iceland, Scot-
land and the Faroe Islands have
issued stamps depicting
lichen, giving their people a
lichen likeness, one might say.
I must, however, ask: do they
like licking lichen?
keith snider
Alexandria, Virginia