The Wall Street Journal - 09.03.2020

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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Monday, March 9, 2020 |A


‘Network Effects’ Multiply a Viral Threat


caught swine flu, the death toll
could exceed 440,000.
In short, Covid-19 has the poten-
tial to make 2020 much more than a
bad flu season. To understand why,
we need to apply more sophisticated
frameworks than are being employed
by most lay commentators, billion-
aires included.
“In Wuhan there also seems to be
a new outbreak of pneumonia that’s
bad.” That was the first mention in
my email of the coming pandemic,
on Jan. 4. Just over two weeks later,
I noted that the new virus had “al-
ready caused three deaths in the city
of Wuhan” but warned that it could
spread rapidly, like SARS in 2003, as
the outbreak coincided with the Chi-
nese New Year celebrations. Ten
days after that, on Jan. 30, the num-
ber of confirmed cases world-wide
was 9,776 and the total deaths 213.
As of March 8, there are more than
107,000 confirmed cases and close to
3,700 deaths.
At first, the number of cases out-
side China did not grow exponen-
tially. But that changed in February.
Three weeks ago, the number was
doubling every eight days. Now it is
doubling every five days.
Standard epidemiological models
tend to understate the threat posed
by a virus such as 2019-nCoV, be-
cause they don’t take account of the
topology of the social networks that
transmit it. Thanks to the work of
network scientists such as Romualdo
Pastor-Satorras and Alessandro
Vespignani, we now understand the
extraordinary power of modern
transportation networks combined
with the social-network hubs known
as “superspreaders.”
To quote László Barabási, Mr.
Vespignani’s colleague at Northeast-
ern University, “When it comes to
the spreading of a pathogen, the epi-
demic parameters are of secondary
importance. The most important fac-
tor is the structure of the mobility

network....Aninfluenza virus
moves through a continent with the
speed of a sports car or of a smaller
airplane.”
That means travel restrictions
tend to be imposed too late to stop
the spread of a contagious virus
along the routes between the world’s
3,000 busiest airports. What matters
is not geographic distance but “ef-
fective distance” in journey time.
Then there are all the local net-
works on the ground, where air-
ports, shopping malls, supermarkets
and schools act as hubs connected to
countless homes and offices.
Finally, and crucially, there are
social networks, which have the
same “scale-free” character as the
transportation networks: A relatively
small number of nodes have an
amazingly high number of edges. In
good times, these are the frequent
flyers, the gregarious networkers,
the sexual Lotharios. In times of
contagion, they are the superspread-
ers, like Gaëtan Dugas, the Canadian
flight attendant who claimed to have
had 2,500 sexual partners and came
to be known as “patient zero” in the

early histories of AIDS, or Liu Jian-
lun, the physician from Guangdong
Province who brought SARS to Hong
Kong when he checked into the
Metropole Hotel on Feb. 21, 2003.
Nicholas Christakis has shown
that there was a similar pattern at
Harvard when H1N1 came to campus.
“The speed with which people ac-
quired the flu during the epidemic,
depended on various aspects of their
social network position,” writes Mr.
Christakis, who is now at Yale.
“Those with more friends, those who
were more central in the network,
and those whose friends did not
know each other got it sooner.”
Similar processes have caused
Covid-19 to spread with startling
speed around the world, then out-
ward from transport and social hubs.
A British businessman who went
from a conference in Singapore to a
ski trip in the French Alps was one
of the first superspreaders to be
identified in this epidemic. The virus
reached Switzerland via a group of
tourists returning from Italy.
For all these reasons, the number
of known cases in the U.S. (436)

must be off by at least one order of
magnitude and more likely two, sim-
ply because of the disastrous short-
age of test kits. According to Messrs.
Pastor-Satorras and Vespignani’s
Global Epidemic and Mobility model,
the United States is the fifth-likeliest
country to import Covid-19 from
abroad—after Thailand, Japan, Tai-
wan and South Korea. If the U.S.
turns out to have proportionately as
many cases as South Korea, it will
soon have some 46,000 cases and
more than 300 deaths—or 1,
deaths if the U.S. mortality rate is as
high as Italy’s.
Network effects are the reason it
is anything but dumb to worry about
the novel coronavirus. Not only is it
spreading much faster than most
Americans realize; it is also disrupt-
ing global manufacturing supply
chains as well as all the economic
activities that depend on travel and
proximity. It could set off a cascade
of defaults in the corporate bond
market, disrupting the global finan-
cial network.
Finally, cable news and online so-
cial networks can be relied upon to
disseminate alarmist and downright
fake stories about the pandemic—
like the widely circulated map of
global air routes that, according to
one Australian website, depicted the
“flight data of an estimated five mil-
lion Wuhan residents who fled dur-
ing the critical two weeks before the
outbreak city was placed under lock-
down.”
That aspect of the panic is indeed
dumb. But that doesn’t make it
smart to underestimate the scale of
the Covid-19 pandemic—a perfect il-
lustration of the vulnerability and
fragility of our networked world.

Mr. Ferguson is writer and host of
“Niall Ferguson’s Networld,” based
on his 2018 book, “The Square and
the Tower,” which will air March 17
on PBS.

By Niall Ferguson


DAVID KLEIN

‘T


he coronavirus panic
is dumb.” I hesitate to
disagree with Elon
Musk, but here goes.
The wrong way to
think about the rapid spread around
the world of the novel coronavirus,
2019-nCoV, and the disease it causes,
Covid-19, is to say—as another smart
and wealthy man put it to me last
Monday—“Remember the H1N1-A vi-
rus of 2009? Neither do I. It infected
a significant chunk of the globe,
killed 20,000 U.S. citizens and we
got over it pretty quickly.” He might
have added that 20,000 is less than
half the number of Americans who
died of influenza and pneumonia in
2017.


H1N1, also known as swine flu,
was a form of influenza. The repro-
ductive number—the number of peo-
ple a carrier typically infected, R
for short—was 1.75. In the U.S., the
CDC estimates that H1N1 infected
60.8 million people and killed 12,469,
for a mortality rate of 0.02%
This new coronavirus—which is
not influenza—appears to have a
higher R0 and a much higher mor-
tality rate. That rate is almost cer-
tainly lower than the World Health
Organization suggested last week
(3.4%), but it is still much higher
than for H1N1. South Korea, which
probably has the most accurate data
given its aggressive testing regime,
reports 50 deaths from 7,313 infec-
tions, a mortality rate of 0.68%. If as
many Americans catch Covid-19 as


This isn’t merely a bad


flu season. Covid-19 is


spreading far faster than


most Americans realize.


Where Do the Candidates Stand on This Radical Immigration Plan?


P


oliticians used to write bills
pandering to American voters
in election years. Now a bill in
the House panders to deported
criminals living in foreign countries.
Chicago-area Rep. Jesús “Chuy” Gar-
cia and 44 Democratic co-spon-
sors—including three other lawmak-
ers from gang-ravaged Chicago—
recently introduced a radical
immigration bill called the New Way
Forward Act that seeks, as per a
press release from Mr. Garcia, to
“disrupt the prison to deportation
pipeline.”
The bill would make it more diffi-
cult for U.S. authorities to deport ille-
gal aliens who commit felonies. It
would roll back the federal statute
that requires local authorities to co-
operate and communicate with Immi-
gration and Customs and Enforce-
ment, making sanctuary cities legal.
Its provisions would also help return
already deported felons to the U.S.
Not long ago such a proposal
would have been dismissed as too


radical in the faculty lounge at
Berkeley; today it is fast approach-
ing the mainstream in the increas-
ingly woke Democratic Party. Con-
sider the bill’s key points:


  • It would create a five-year stat-
    ute of limitations for deportations
    and formally decriminalize illegal
    border crossings.

  • It would raise the minimum
    prison sentence needed to require
    deportation from one year to five,
    paving the way for illegal aliens con-
    victed of serious crimes such as
    armed robbery, sexual assault, child
    molestation and manslaughter to re-
    main in America.

  • It would repeal a law that bars
    entry to aliens who have committed
    crimes of moral turpitude—deprav-
    ity such as murder, voluntary man-
    slaughter, rape, child molestation,
    kidnapping, assault and so on. Even
    multiple offenders would be permit-
    ted to enter under the bill.

  • It concludes by bestowing a
    “right to come home” to the U.S. at
    taxpayer expense on anyone de-
    ported after April 24, 1996.


The media, lurching leftward with
the Democratic Party, has largely
failed to scrutinize the bill. But it’s
a mistake to dismiss this as a fringe
proposal that will never see the
light of day.
Recall the first Democratic de-
bate, when NBC’s Savannah Guthrie

asked the candidates to raise their
hands if their health-care plans cov-
ered undocumented immigrants. Ev-
ery candidate on stage put his hand
up, including Joe Biden, who hesi-
tated and looked as if he knew it
was madness but he had to keep up.
The show of hands illustrated how
bad ideas can go from fringe to
mandatory in a few years.
We don’t have a clear idea of how

many Democrats support it, but
many prominent representatives do.
There are the usual suspects—“the
Squad,” led by Rep. Alexandria Oca-
sio-Cortez, as well as several law-
makers from districts with serious
crime problems. There are also a
couple of surprising co-sponsors,
such as Madeleine Dean (D., Pa.) and
Andy Levin (D., Mich.), who repre-
sent moderate districts.
What about the presidential can-
didates? The campaigns of Mr. Biden
and Bernie Sanders didn’t respond
to requests for comment. Mr. Biden
has said he will have a moratorium
on deportations in his first 100 days
if elected. He has also asserted that
criminal aliens with drunk-driving-
related felonies shouldn’t be de-
ported but is vague on details.
Mr. Sanders wants to decriminal-
ize illegal border crossings, stop
construction of what he calls a “rac-
ist and ineffective wall,” “break up”
ICE and Customs and Border Protec-
tion, end workplace raids, and insti-
tute a moratorium on deportations.
He also wants to “repeal 1996 immi-

gration laws” intended to remove
criminal aliens.
Why is the Democratic Party
moving left on immigration when
America elected a president who
campaigned on building a wall?
They might think they’re courting
the Latino vote, but many Latinos
live in neighborhoods with crime
problems. Mr. Garcia’s heavily La-
tino district had 332 homicides in
the past six years as of time of pub-
lication. The last thing people who
live in violence-plagued neighbor-
hoods need is a fresh infusion of de-
ported criminals.
The media has a responsibility to
pin the candidates down on issues
like these, but too often reporters
seem willing to save Democrats
from themselves. If Democrats want
to push for free return trips for de-
ported criminals, let’s make sure the
American people know about it.

Mr. Seminara is a former diplo-
mat and author of “Breakfast With
Polygamists: Dispatches From the
Margins of the Americas.”

By Dave Seminara


A Democratic House bill
would invite criminals in
and give deported aliens a
right to return to the U.S.

OPINION


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How the U.S. Won World War II Without Invading Japan


T


he U.S. entered World War II in


  1. Yet American planes
    couldn’t dent a roof in Japan
    until 1945. The 1942 Doolittle raid,
    with its 16 bombers that took off
    from carriers, showed great ingenuity
    and bravery. But it had zero impact
    on Japan’s ability to make war.
    The raid was designed to boost
    morale after Pearl Harbor. When the
    U.S. didn’t follow up with more at-
    tacks, the Japanese believed their
    homeland was invulnerable to en-
    emy bombs because of the em-
    peror’s divine presence. That hubris
    ended 75 years ago Monday with an
    event that set in motion the even-
    tual U.S. victory.
    First, a little more history: The
    U.S. could reach Japan only after the
    Marines took the Mariana Islands at


great cost in 1944. The largest air-
ports in the world were built within
months and filled with new, modern
B-29 bombers. The B-29 was a mar-
vel and the greatest expense of the
war at $3 billion, compared with
$2.4 billion for the Manhattan Proj-
ect. Each plane was three times the
size of the next-largest bomber, the
B-17. The B-29 could fly 3,700 miles
and cruise at an altitude high enough
to elude antiaircraft fire.
But the B-29 ran into a problem
during its first mission over Japan—
huge winds up to 200 miles an hour.
The jet stream rendered it impossi-
ble for bombs to hit targets.
Hap Arnold, head of the Army Air
Force, turned to his youngest gen-
eral, 38-year-old Curtis LeMay, who
didn’t fit the profile of the glamor-
ous flyboy. LeMay was slightly over-
weight, surly and taciturn. Most peo-

ple found him frightening. He was a
lieutenant in 1940 but rose out of ob-
scurity to become the most innova-
tive problem solver in bomber com-
mand. LeMay also insisted on flying
the lead bomber on every dangerous
mission. He was also the only U.S.
general in the war who fought in
front of his troops—a case study in
military leadership.
LeMay approached the jet-stream
dilemma like the engineer he was. On
the night of March 9, 1945, he sent
346 B-29s to Tokyo. In a radical de-
parture from normal operations, he
ordered the planes to fly low—5,
feet—and not in formation, but in a
single-file line. The planes would
drop incendiaries instead of impact
bombs. The crews protested, assum-
ing they would be destroyed by the
flak. But LeMay believed the crews
could survive because the Japanese

wouldn’t see this coming.
He was right. With minimum loss
to the U.S., the incendiaries started a
firestorm that burned down more
than 16 square miles of Tokyo. The
firestorm left more than a million
homeless and killed an estimated

100,000 men, women and children.
The Japanese were as surprised as
they were devastated. More people
died during that 24-hour period than
perished five months later in either
Hiroshima or Nagasaki.

If this sounds shocking to contem-
porary ears, consider the context. An
estimated 15 million to 17 million
Asian civilians were killed—Chinese,
Koreans, Filipinos and those from ev-
ery other country Japan conquered.
Like their German allies, the Japa-
nese adopted a sense of triumphal
racial superiority. Many of their vic-
tims were killed in the most brutal,
medieval ways. An average of
250,000 people were dying through-
out Asia every month in the first half
of 1945.
As Americans approached the
mainland, the Japanese fought even
more ferociously on Iwo Jima and
later Okinawa. The war in the Pacific
was turning into an out-of-control
bloodbath. The only way to stop this
mass death—and prevent a pro-
longed guerrilla war following the
largest invasion in history—was to
force the empire to surrender by de-
struction from the air.
The U.S. would have to firebomb
64 Japanese cities, capped off by the
two atomic bombs in August 1945, to
end World War II. In the tragic calcu-
lus of war, it took the deaths of un-
told numbers of human beings to
save the lives of even more. These
are brutal realities few people today
can imagine, let alone confront.
Sept. 2 will mark the 75th anni-
versary of the Japanese surrender on
the USS Missouri. That happened
without an invasion of the Japanese
mainland. Imagine Iwo Jima times
100 or even 1,000. At least a million
American servicemen and many
more millions of Japanese lived full
lives thanks to the terrible and
tragic—but necessary—events that
began on March 9, 1945.

Mr. Kozak is author of “LeMay:
The Life and Wars of General Curtis
LeMay.”

By Warren Kozak


More people died in the
March 1945 firebombing
of Tokyo than at either
Hiroshima or Nagasaki.

Rich Matta writing for the Hill,
March 8:

A couple weeks before the Demo-
cratic field narrowed on Super Tues-
day, as an experiment, I looked up
the privacy policies of all the major
Democratic presidential campaigns at
the time, as well as President Donald
Trump’s campaign. Privacy policies
for Joe Biden, Pete Buttigieg and
President Trump appeared to address
Californians’ privacy rights with a
dedicated section indicating an email
address for requesting details on how
their information is shared with third
parties, or in Trump’s case, for exer-
cising third party disclosure choices.
The Bernie Sanders campaign stated
that the CCPA doesn’t apply to their
campaign, as it is a non-profit organ-

ization and not defined as a “busi-
ness” under the CCPA, but they
would nevertheless make efforts to
respect my privacy upon request. The
other remaining candidates at the
time remained silent about the CCPA
in their privacy policies—Elizabeth
Warren, Tom Steyer, Amy Klobuchar
and Mike Bloomberg.
As we all know, policies are one
thing, actions are another. I followed
the instructions in the privacy poli-
cies to make a polite CCPA request to
each campaign at their designated
email addresses asking what per-
sonal information they were storing
about me.
Not one of the presidential cam-
paigns fulfilled my request—includ-
ing those that said they’d respect
such requests.

Notable & Quotable: Privacy

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