on words with -demic in them.

No question now, what had happened to the faces of the pigs. The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
–Animal Farm

The last week or so, obviously, have been somewhat transfigured by pandemic paranoia. Pandemic is ancient greek for either “all peoples” or “freak the fsck out,” it’s hard to tell. This can be easily distinguished from epidemic, which is greek for “upon peoples” and endemic, which is greek for “within peoples.”

Here’s a handy table for disambiguation of various words with demic in them, described in terms of internet memes:

greek root english literal meaning
pan-demic all peoples the call’s coming from inside the house.
epi-demic upon peoples getting mediæval on your ass.
en-demic within peoples never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down, never gonna run around and desert you.
syn-demic together with peoples I put a disease in your disease, so you could get sick while you’re sick

So, with this out of the way, we can proceed upon our merry way. It’s been an exciting week, I have been interested in public health and related things (epidemiology, etc…) for a long time so I’ve been watching the news, websites, twitter, and any other mechanism of public information I could get my hands on.

As for myself, I’m sort of guardedly watching the news (considering I’m traveling soon to Texas, where both US fatalities have occured), but am mostly concerned about the Northern hemisphere flu season. That said, there’ve been a lot of people coughing in this coffee shop today.