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Science Friday

Surgeon General, Blockchain. July 23, 2021, Part 1

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Natural Sciences, Wnyc, Science, Friday, Life Sciences

4.4 • 6.3K Ratings

🗓️ 23 July 2021

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Flooding Worldwide Fits Climate Change Models While the western United States is burning again this summer, other parts of the world are drowning. Germany, Belgium, and China saw floods this week after intense rainstorms that dropped many inches of rain in matters of hours, killing hundreds and displacing thousands. In Turkey and Nigeria, less deadly rain events throughout July have still flooded streets and destroyed homes. And as climate change continues around the globe, scientists say these intense rain events will only worsen, putting flood-prone areas at risk of longer-lasting, and faster-raining storms. FiveThirtyEight science writer Maggie Koerth talks to Ira about the rising cost of rain events under climate change. Plus, why climate change may be hurting monarch butterflies more than a lack of milkweed, a first step toward experiments in geoengineering, and how Australia’s cockatoos are spreading a culture of dumpster-diving.     Biden’s Surgeon General On How To Tackle Vaccine Hesitancy It’s a tale of two pandemics. In some parts of the country, communities are opening up, saying it’s time to get back to normal. In other pockets of the country, infection numbers and hospital admissions are creeping up again—and some places, such as Los Angeles County, have moved to reinstate mask mandates, even for the vaccinated.   The key factor in the pandemic response in many communities is the local vaccination level, with outlooks very different for vaccinated and unvaccinated people. But even as public health workers advocate for widespread vaccination, misinformation and disinformation is discouraging some vulnerable people from taking the vaccine. Dr. Vivek Murthy, Surgeon General of the United States, joins Ira to talk about vaccine hesitancy, the U.S. response to the pandemic, preparing for public health on a global scale, and post-pandemic public health priorities.      Will Blockchain Really Change The Way The Internet Runs? The internet has changed quite a bit over the last few decades. People of a certain age may remember having to use dial-up to get connected, or Netscape as the first web browser. Now, social networking is king, and it’s easier than ever to find information at the click of a mouse. But the modern internet has massive privacy concerns, with many sites collecting, retaining, and sometimes sharing user’s personal information. This has led many technology-minded people to think about what the future of the web might look like. Enter blockchain, a decentralized database technology that some say will change the way the internet runs, while giving users more control over their data. Some say that blockchain will be the basis for the next version of the internet, a so-called “Web 3.0.”  But where are we now with blockchain technology, and can it be everything we want it to be? Joining Ira to wade through the jargon of blockchain and the future of the internet is Morgen Peck, freelance technology journalist based in New York.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Flato.

0:02.3

Later in the hour, talking with the U.S. Surgeon General about vaccines, COVID, and health in the U.S.

0:09.0

But first, a wave of flooding around the world this week is throwing the spotlight on one of the predicted consequences of climate change.

0:18.4

Intense rainfall, flash flooding, loss of life as areas face an increasing

0:23.6

frequency and intensity of storms. Hundreds are dead and more are missing in Germany, Belgium, China,

0:30.2

Turkey, and Nigeria. And China's floods this week have been called thousand-year events.

0:36.6

Here to talk more about this and other stories is

0:38.8

Maggie Kerth, senior science writer for a 538. Always good to have you, Maggie. Thanks for having me

0:45.6

back. You know, I have seen some pretty terrible pictures from these floods as I'm sure you have.

0:51.9

Can you say more about how bad they've been? Yeah, so these are just

0:58.0

huge storms. The system that went across Europe, across Germany and Belgium, dropped six inches of

1:04.0

rain in 24 hours, and these flash floods killed at least 196 people. The floods in China,

1:13.5

those are even more staggering. So in the city of Zhengzhou, they had a year's worth of rain, more than 25 inches that fell in just three days. Reservoirs

1:21.5

were overflowing. There were these videos we could see people trying to pull other people out

1:26.4

of mudslides.

1:35.5

And there were some videos that were circulating around where you saw hundreds of people trapped on subway lines with water up to their necks.

1:39.4

Like they'd just bit on the subway and the flash flood had come through and inundated it.

1:44.7

We saw the floods in China being described as thousand-year floods, something that's only happening once every thousand years, but we're seeing 500-year floods, other places, 200-year

1:51.2

floods.

1:52.2

This is sort of becoming a name that doesn't mean so much anymore.

1:55.5

Right.

1:56.5

Yeah.

...

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