Among the nations of the world, only one is fully prepared for an emergency like the current pandemic: Finland. While the rest of us have lived like grasshoppers, not worrying about possible disasters, the Finns are like ants: storing what is needed for whatever might happen. They long ago decided not to be dependent on the global supply chain for essential equipment.
The New York Times published this story:
STOCKHOLM — As some nations scramble to find protective gear to fight the coronavirus pandemic, Finland is sitting on an enviable stockpile of personal protective equipment like surgical masks, putting it ahead of less-prepared Nordic neighbors.
The stockpile, considered one of Europe’s best and built up over years, includes not only medical supplies, but also oil, grains, agricultural tools and raw materials to make ammunition. Norway, Sweden and Denmark had also amassed large stockpiles of medical and military equipment, fuel and food during the Cold War era. Later, most all but abandoned those stockpiles.
But not Finland. Its preparedness has cast a spotlight on national stockpiles and exposed the vulnerability of other Nordic nations.
When the coronavirus hit, the Finnish government tapped into its supply of medical equipment for the first time since World War II.
“Finland is the prepper nation of the Nordics, always ready for a major catastrophe or a World War III,” said Magnus Hakenstad, a scholar at the Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies.
Though year after year Finland has ranked high on the list of happiest nations, its location and historical lessons have taught the nation of 5.5 million to prepare for the worst, Tomi Lounema, the chief executive of Finland’s National Emergency Supply Agency, said on Saturday.
“It’s in the Finnish people’s DNA to be prepared,” Mr. Lounema said, referring to his country’s proximity to Russia, its eastern neighbor. (Finland fought off a Soviet invasion in 1939.)
In addition, most of its trade goes through the Baltic Sea. That, Mr. Lounema said, is considered a vulnerability because, unlike Sweden, which has direct access to the North Sea on its west coast, Finland has to rely on the security conditions and the running of maritime traffic in the Baltic.
“If there is some kind of crisis, there might be some disturbance” in the supply chain, he explained.
Two weeks ago, as the country’s coronavirus cases ticked up — by Sunday, the country had recorded more than 1,880 cases and 25 deaths — the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health ordered that stored masks be sent to hospitals around the country.
“The masks are old — but they are still functioning,” Mr. Lounema said by phone.
There is little publicly available information on the number of masks and other supplies that Finland has or where exactly they are stored.

MAFA — Make America Finland Again!
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“How will we pay?
How will we pay
For health care for all?
How will we pay
To offset the stall?
How will we pay
For masks for our nurses?
How will we pay
For virus-caused curses?
How will we pay
For deal that is green?
How will we pay
For problems unseen?
How we will pay
Not “How will we pay?”
For knee-jerk tomorrow
Not planning today
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We do NOT want to be like Finland!
Their public education system is a horror story (with hundreds of thousand of children becoming critical thinkers), and their single payer system is worse (with people getting robust medical treatment as a human and civil right, not as a commodity). People there, to my repulsion, get a big bang for their tax dollar, and wealth is very fairly distributed. That’s immoral and loathsome!!
We Americans are capitalists. It’s the Hunger Games, Darwinism, and Shark Tank on speed, caffeine and cocaine.
How can you even suggest MAFA?
Maybe MTDOAFA?
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Finland is Finished
Finland is finished
Encouraging play
Future’s diminished
On PISA they’ll pay
PS I love being able to recycle old poems, which just seem to get more relevant with each passing day.
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Yes, Finland is Finnish-ed
Reduced and diminished
A haven for a commie?
repulsed by Mitt Romney
Where people are human
not just about YOU, MAN
It’s we and it’s us
not thrown under a bus
Your taxes pay for humanism
Ours pay for capitalism
Healthcare, housing, and education
vs. wealthcare, grousing, and decimation
Finland is Finland
but we live in Sin-land
It’s our lesson to learn
The strife
for a better life
Something we’ll just
have to earn . . . . .
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I am trying a method for making a mask developed by material scientists and designers in HongKong…no sewing machine required, one use only. I need one for every day I exit from my condo to get mail or for any other reason.
At least one condo resident has a Covid-19 diagnosis. She was smart and kind enough to notify the management. She also waived the HIPPA rules so all residents could be informed.
Take care of yourself and others in your orbits…
Diane: Thanks for keeping this blog open and lively.
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“Diane: Thanks for keeping this blog open and lively.”
Yes, definitely.
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That’s because socialism is not a swear word in Finland. So long as we insist on strict capitalism, we are stuck with “just in time” supply chains. It’s all about keeping monetary costs as low as possible regardless of the human costs. This pandemic has stripped the pretty veneer from this country and revealed our bald-faced greed.
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Profit over people how everything works in this country.
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Just in time Supply
Just in time
For certain death
Just in time
For profit net
Just in time
For just a dime
Just in time
Is just a crime
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No one wants to hear what I think of America.
Trump is: Making America GRATE, not great.
Wish I lived in Finland. I don’t mind the cold.
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Are the Trump Administration ever going to get around to working on a national plan to deal with this?
It’s one thing to not do the work to prepare, which they didn’t. It’s another to do no work now that they’re (somewhat) aware of the crisis.
Maybe they should spend less time on the reality tv press conferences where everyone’s required to fawn over Donald Trump and get some actual work done.
What’s the plan? We’re paying thousands of these Trump appointees. What are they doing all day?
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There is no national policy. It is a patchwork of state plans cobbled together. This is what we get when we vote in those that despise the federal government. This pandemic is a war, and the feds should be leading the charge.
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A war on ourselves
A war on ourselves
Is covid response
A cancer that dwells
In capital haunts
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It’s actually much worse than a plague of grasshoppers —
There’s probably an Aesop fable somewhere, or there oughta be, about the three little (capitalist) pigs who sell the thatch off their roofs (rooves?) to the highest bidder (probably a wolf) because it isn’t raining that day …
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A plague of crasshoppers
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I guess the country just lurches along, depending on state governments to do all the work, for the next six months while Donald Trump and his fawning admirers spend their days planning television appearances.
It isn’t going to work. We can’t be going in 50 different directions to solve a national epidemic. They’re going to have to show up for work at some point and let the public in on their plan for the country.
It’s too late to do the work they didn’t do to plan or prepare at this point, that’s gone, but they also don’t seem to be capable of functioning going forward. If they can’t do this job can they get out of the way and allow someone competent to step in?
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“Michael Petrilli
It’s remarkable, if not surprising, that leading charter networks acted so nimbly in response to the crisis. @natmalkus can you tell from your data whether small districts are more like the charters or more like the large districts in @RbnLake’s sample? ”
The echo chamber have all settled on the narrative for school response to the virus. They all rely on a single fellow echo chamber member who determined that charter schools all did a great job and public schools all did a lousy job.
This is now set in stone. It has become “truth”.
It’s a shame that public schools have to be “evaluated” by people who ideologically oppose the existence of public schools. It simply isn’t fair to those schools to have the only commentary on them be supplied by people with a charter/voucher ax to grind.
Would ed reformers accept this? What if I told them the only people who would be evaluating charter and voucher programs were teachers unions? They would reject that. But it’s perfectly accepted that people who oppose public schools are the single source for evaluations of public schools.
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Ohio, in particular, is Fordham’s oligarchy/theocracy/plutocracy.
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“Finland benefits from socialist initiatives that have significantly placed democratic checks and balances on capital…the system is based on years of civic culture and everyday democratic practices and expectations… Finlanders built a good society…including collective self-help.”
The reason Gates, Hastings, Walton heirs, Fordham etc. want an end to the election of local school boards is it eliminates everyday democratic practices that underpin a society with checks and balances on capital.
The U.S. has a CDC with private interests operating as its strategic planner (the CDC Foundation) while those interests starve the collective good of funds.
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It seems like just yesterday that Diane’s blog had 34,000,000 views. Now, it has almost 36,000,000. The blog is an essential service provided by an amazing and gracious host.
A toast from our homes to the inimitable Diane Ravitch!
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Yes, agree 100%, this is an invaluable and precious web site and resource for those who support our public schools and sanity.
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And then there is Sweden, Time, 4-9-20: When Chloe Fu, 24, went for a run on Monday evening, the streets of Stockholm were filled with people drinking on restaurant patios, enjoying the first warm day of sunshine after a long winter.
“When you walk around, there is a total and utter absence of panic,” Fu says, who moved to Sweden from the United States last year. “The streets are just as busy as they would have been last spring.”
As many public spaces throughout Europe empty out—with citizens only leaving home for essential groceries or medication—life in Sweden is carrying on, mostly as usual. Children walk to school while adults meet up for dinner at their local bar. Only the vulnerable have been advised to isolate and some are working from home. Yet in Sweden, where there are 9,141 confirmed cases and 793 people have died, experts worry weaker measures may be leading to a more severe outbreak in the country of just 10 million citizens.
https://time.com/5817412/sweden-coronavirus/
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The Swedes are taking a radical approach to this pandemic. They are isolating the elderly and vulnerable and letting others infect each other. It is called herd immunity, and it is for the survival of the fittest. Many Swedish doctors are protesting this bold experiment.
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Exactly. The UK tried that, and it was a catastrophe. And their Prime Minister is in the ICU.
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The experiment in Sweden will have a better outcome. They don’t have the poverty the U.S. has which creates many of the underlying conditions that put people at risk of dying.
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The Fins are smart to prepare for emergencies. Are the Fins smarter so they don’t have annual, high stakes, standards-based, standardized testing, or are they smarter because they don’t have all the testing?
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Which came first?
The Fin? Or the fish?
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Which came first?
Which came first?
The chicken or egg?
Which came first?
The arm or the leg?
Which came first?
The Fin or the fish?
Which came first?
The plate or the dish?
Which came first?
The zeroeth or first?
Which came first?
The best or the worst?
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Which came first?
The fork or the spoon?
Which came first?
The cow or the moon?
Which came first?
The broom or the witch?
Which came first?
The ivy or itch?
Feel free to add your own
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Which came first?
The Donald
or his curse?
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I think I have read that zero was a rather late development in time. the First seemed to preceed zero.
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Robert: Good addition.
Roy
Humans might have discovered 0 after 1, but in the Platonic world of mathematics, 0 and 1 have both always existed and which is first , positionwise on the number line depends on perspective (whether one moves from negative to positive or positive to negative)
So I’m not sure it is any more settled than the Fin or fish question.
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You can probably tell that i have thought a lot about these sorts of important questions.
Someone has to do it, right?
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Which came first?
Coleman or Gates?
Which came first?
Mother Norma or Bates?
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LCT
Are you suggesting that David Coleman is actually Melinda Gates in drag?
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Let me be quite clear, Poet my friend: I am not saying David Coleman is not Melinda Gates.
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Either way, David and Melinda DRAG us all down . . .
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I have been thinking a lot about the mindset of testing advocates.
They are terrified that children will “fall behind” if they are not tested.
Testing is their obsession and their only idea, damaged as it is.
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The testing industry has convinced too many people that becoming educated is a matter of filling one’s head with sequential skills and information, like making progressive steps in a foot race. They want young people to simply earn mastery badges as in a video game. It is so difficult to explain to even many experienced educators that learning is more complex than checking off points on a list.
The only way I have ever successfully convinced anyone that learning is not a race, does not follow a track, does not have a finish line, and does not have racers who fall behind, is to spend long periods of time explaining the history of education, democracy-rooted philosophies behind education, cooperative learning pedagogy, and neurological organics underlying cognition. In other words, it ain’t easy to do. Everybody just wants to reach a (nonexistent) finish line.
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LCT,
I have been trying to think of ways to persuade people that learning is not a ladder or a sequential list of skills to be learned in lockstep. Neither is life. After I finished college, I married, had children, didn’t go to graduate school, held jobs of no great significance. I didn’t embark on what became my career until I was 32. If life was a foot race, I started far, far behind. Luckily life is not a foot race and I made up for time spent on other things.
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I too am always trying to figure out a way to persuade people that school and life are not races. One day we will. Something tells me the argument to be made is as complex as are school and life. Do you have Socrates’ phone number?
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Yes.
1-800-NHeaven
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Life
If life were a ladder
Of rungs to be climbed
The top would be gladder
Most all of the time
But life is a journey
With twists and with turns
And ladder is gurney
As rung-climber learns
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On Amanpour this morning, Christiane interviewed a leader–the Prime Minister–? (I missed her title)–of Norway, which has also been well-prepared for the pandemic.
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Oh, & thank you for a rare, light moment, LCT & Diane. “1-800-NHeaven.”
You would know his phone #!!
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