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" ... "When you are defending against a drone swarm, a human may be required to make that first decision, but I am just not sure any human can keep up," said Murray. "How much human involvement do you actually need when you are [making] nonlethal decisions from a human standpoint?" ... "
" ... All of this comes after a federal officer shot a protestor in the head with a “nonlethal projectile,” drawing a strong rebuke from the Portland City Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty. Addressing the federal officers’ deployment in Portland, Hardesty was accusatory. “Their presence brought on an escalation of violence towards protesters — an extreme response to a movement challenging police violence,” Hardesty said. "This reckless and aggressive behavior has now put someone in the hospital. Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler echoed the Hardesty’s sentiment. “We do not need or want [the federal officer’s] help,” Wheeler said. “The best thing they can do is stay inside their building, or leave Portland altogether.” ... "
" ... Is it the case that mutations don’t just arise in parallel within immunocompromised hosts and across global populations, but that the former originate the latter? We can’t be sure. What is almost certain, however, is that the evolutionary pathways traversed by SARS-CoV-2 are too close to influenza for comfort. We know that nonlethal human coronaviruses occur seasonally like the flu, each time in a new guise. Partially immunized populations, it seems, buffer these viruses much in the same way that a weakened immune system bolstered by sera does— the flipside of introducing new measures against contagion or disease being an increase in pressure on the virus to surmount those same defenses. We may think we have a grasp on the direction SARS-CoV-2 is headed in—predicting it will become less lethal or capable of causing serious disease, akin to a common cold—but allowing optimism to cloud our judgment only sets us up to be blindsided by more unpleasant surprises further down the line. At this point this virus has proven itself so flexible and wily, to think it might cease to change and conveniently fade into the background isn’t just optimistic, but naive. ... "
" ... The next Taser could be the one that means police don't need their guns anymore, according to one of the nonlethal weapon's creators, Rick Smith. A new patent shows where his thinking is going. ... "