The coronavirus is the most important - and devastating - thing to happen in my lifetime

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The coronavirus is the most important - and devastating - thing to happen in my lifetime
Coronavirus sign Las Vegas courthouse shut Regional Justice Center
  • The coronavirus is upending the world in ways we usually associate with war, revolution, or terrifying natural disasters like a volcano.
  • On a global scale, the outbreak is still just beginning. It has been decades since so much of the world has experienced so profound a shock at once.
  • At least in the Western world, perhaps only those who can remember the Second World War have lived through something similar.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

I am 29 years old. This week:

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Around the world, people are adjusting to a strange new way of life that has usually only been associated with war, natural disasters like a flood, or huge political upheaval.

In some ways, this is completely surreal. The cause of this chaos and disruption is a virus that, as of March 17, has infected 0.002% of the world's population and killed 0.00009%.

However, as scientists and governments are increasingly realizing, those very small numbers obscure the enormous human cost this virus is capable of exacting.

St Peter's Square Pope Angelus Address March 15 2020 coronavirus

Its ability to spread exponentially - and our capacity to model and comprehend this - is both the cause of the reaction so far, and the only reason we may yet get through without a death toll in the tens of millions.

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It is easy to think of other events from the past three decades which we understand to have reshaped the world: the fall of the Berlin Wall, the terror attacks on September 11, 2001, the financial crisis of 2008.

The first two affected relatively few of us directly, but had enormous symbolism. The third affected us all, but was difficult to conceptualize on an individual level.

The coronavirus is both minuscule enough to penetrate the bronchioles of your lungs, yet enormous enough to eviscerate entire industries.

Modern society - despite its technological advances - is still predicated on close human interaction.

For hundreds of millions of people, that most basic of urges is about to be repressed by lockdowns of unprecedented scope and duration.

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It is not quite clear what kind of people we will be on the other side.

This is an opinion column. The thoughts expressed are those of the author(s).

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