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What's your COVID-19 gameplan?

A lot of emotion in here.
My wife and I lost everything twice.

Had to start over.
We are alive.
I’d rather someone had to do that.
Than die.

That’s where I’m coming from.
I don’t want anyone to die.
Even stupid selfish people.

Where is the line drawn?
We will all find out.
It’s not up to us.

Cheers.
 
A lot of emotion in here.
My wife and I lost everything twice.

Had to start over.
We are alive.
I’d rather someone had to do that.
Than die.

That’s where I’m coming from.
I don’t want anyone to die.
Even stupid selfish people.

Where is the line drawn?
We will all find out.
It’s not up to us.

Cheers.


Waa. You do realize the cure will be worse than this disease, right?

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Another pandemic is looming on the heels of the coronavirus: a pandemic of starvation, illiteracy and poverty.
“We are not only facing a global health pandemic but also a global humanitarian catastrophe,” David Beasley, a former South Carolina governor who is executive director of the United Nations World Food Program, Invalid Link Removed the Security Council this week. “We could be looking at famine in about three dozen countries.”
The world, he said, faces its most serious humanitarian crisis since World War II.
 
What do you mean people don't care about cancer or heart attacks? What can be done, especially short-term (since people have short attention spans and don't like putting aside short-term goals/benefits for long-term benefits) to prevent/reduce cancer and/or heart attacks? On an individual level, what can you do to prevent OTHER PEOPLE from getting cancer or having a heart attack? Not much really. But by staying home when you can, you can help prevent COVID from spreading to OTHER PEOPLE. And what new information do we learn every day about cancer or heart attacks? You really are comparing things that are not alike here.

And as I said before, I was initially comparing the sensationalism surrounding one even the other kills 10x more. One makes CNN, MSBNC, FOX, etc...more money these days. The other doesn't....and I think thats a problem. I also think the fear and hysteria is fueling public policy....especially financial policy and not for the benefit of you or I.

What could be done about cancer or heart attacks? Cancer is tough since its a mutation but heart attacks could easily shape public policy. How much does obesity play into it? Diet? Force dietary guidelines on the public? Ban high sugary foods (since New York City already did). Ban trans fats? Calorie restrictions?

If you are willing to shutdown an entire country over 44,000 deaths over the unknown, what can you do to significantly decrease the number of heart attacks that kills over 10x when you know what works?

I understand the argument that you are restricting movement/travel/interaction to protect people from each other to avoid more death. Its not unreasonable nor did anyone suggest it was but how far do you take it? Texas has 250 deaths yet a population of 29 million. Do you shut it down?

All of this is simple a question of "Where do you draw the line?"

You can argue that governments are "overreacting," or, more accurately, "erring on the side of caution" in regards to lockdowns without "knowing" for sure how much they help relative to how much they hurt the economy

Actually, you cant without being called stupid, ignorant and a dumbass these days :)
 
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A lot of emotion in here.
My wife and I lost everything twice.

Had to start over.
We are alive.
I’d rather someone had to do that.
Than die.

That’s where I’m coming from.
I don’t want anyone to die.
Even stupid selfish people.

Where is the line drawn?
We will all find out.
It’s not up to us.

Cheers.


See, If I was an ignorant, stupid, dumbass... I wouldn't take that into consideration. Everyone's perspective is drawn by their own hardships and/or experiences and what sounds like protesting or questioning is often confused with lack of empathy or compassion. Its not.
 
And as I said before, I was initially comparing the sensationalism surrounding one even the other kills 10x more. One makes CNN, MSBNC, FOX, etc...more money these days. The other doesn't....and I think thats a problem. I also think the fear and hysteria is fueling public policy....especially financial policy and not for the benefit of you or I.

What could be done about cancer or heart attacks? Cancer is tough since its a mutation but heart attacks could easily shape public policy. How much does obesity play into it? Diet? Force dietary guidelines on the public? Ban high sugary foods (since New York City already did). Ban trans fats? Calorie restrictions?

If you are willing to shutdown an entire country over 44,000 deaths over the unknown, what can you can do to significantly decrease the number of heart attacks that kills over 10x when you know what works?

I understand the argument that you are restricting movement/travel/interaction to protect people from each other to avoid more death. Its not unreasonable nor did anyone suggest it was but how far do you take it? Texas has 250 deaths yet a population of 29 million. Do you shut it down?

All of this is simple a question of "Where do you draw the line?"



Actually, you cant without being called stupid, ignorant and a dumbass these days :)
[/QUOTE]
The media sensationalized EVERYTHING that's the hot topic of the day though, no? Did the media not freak out about Ebola? I'm in South Florida, and they talk 24/7 about every single hurricane as if it's the end of the world.

And this COVID is a short (in the grand scheme of things) term issue. Once we have a vaccine and/or better drugs to treat it (within 12-18 months), then we don't have to have ANY policies for it. As for obesity, that is something that manifests its kill-count over years/decades/lifetimes, and we're not even close to a vaccine or major "treatment" for it, so any strict policies to try to curb it would be more or less permanent, so, again, not directly comparable to policy decisions relating to COVID.

And it's 44,000 "deaths over the unknown" (it's actually 46,379 in the US at the time of this writing) BECAUSE we're trying to control it. If we did absolutely nothing, and just let it run its course until we develop herd immunity (which IIRC requires a minimum of 40% (although it may be 70, 80, 90, etc. percent, depending on the contagion) of the population to become immune to it. Given a ~328,000,000 US population, at 40%, and even a 0.2% death rate, that's 262,400 dead.

OVER A QUARTER MILLION people dead in the US if we relied purely on reaching herd immunity via letting the disease naturally run its course. But that ignores the fact that if we allow many people to get it at once, it could overwhelm hospitals, which it has not done yet. If that happens, and we do not have sufficient capacity/equipment/ability to treat people, the severe cases, then the death rate would go up, and we'd see more than the quarter million statistic I just calculated.

Now, that's not saying that lockdowns until we have a vaccine are sustainable of course, only pointing out that a lot of the comparisons you are making are fundamentally flawed.

And I don't think I called you any names, did I? If I did, I'm sorry. :)
 
Actually, you cant without being called stupid, ignorant and a dumbass these days :)

Lol...just keep drawing it out. You really seem to love that victim role.
 
Yeah, I'm the victim. lol.


Wow.

You just keep dragging on the “ignorant” “stupid” and “dumbass” comments. So yah, you are assuming that role and seem to want to continue dragging it out given youve posted about it 2+ posts in a row to multiple different people other than the person who said these things.
 
See, If I was an ignorant, stupid, dumbass... I wouldn't take that into consideration. Everyone's perspective is drawn by their own hardships and/or experiences and what sounds like protesting or questioning is often confused with lack of empathy or compassion. Its not.

So, let's open this thing up!
What happens happens. Right!?
 
You just keep dragging on the “ignorant” “stupid” and “dumbass” comments. So yah, you are assuming that role and seem to want to continue dragging it out given youve posted about it 2+ posts in a row to multiple different people other than the person who said these things.

You're correct. We done?
 
This is how things have gone down: (Let’s just skip over the deception and motives in Wuhan)

We finally get a more accurate picture of the devastation the virus can cause based on what Italy experienced.

Then we get permeation in other European countries, Washington state and NYC- which was also devastating.

USA prepared for the worst because there was no other choice. Hospitals can’t handle a surge of patients all at once...it’s just that simple. Also, we are not a nation that accepts preventable deaths.

The lockdown/stay at home orders work- and many places (including my state) are seeing much less hospitalizations than anticipated. So far..

People bitch because it’s actually working, so let’s stop what we are doing ASAP! People prioritizing economic status over protecting more lives. Whatever...until the virus threatens the health of someone you love or yourself. Then economic status becomes secondary again, and those people will blame the government for easing up to soon.

People getting excited about the antibody testing (as was I), yet it’s not a free pass for the health of yourself or protection of others.

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We all wish this all could be easier- nobody more than myself. However, this is a pandemic and that is why it is being treated as such. This is truly only the first chapter of the book..
 
The media sensationalized EVERYTHING that's the hot topic of the day though, no? Did the media not freak out about Ebola? I'm in South Florida, and they talk 24/7 about every single hurricane as if it's the end of the world.

How about Swine Flu? Remember that freakout? For about a week. I got that as well...was horrible. Ebola? Sure I remember it...it lasted on and off for a week and I know their ad rate card didn't change.

I'm in SWFL and yes the hurricane news is always over the top until it hits...then they leave. Irma went right over my house and people were without jobs, food, electricity for weeks and sometimes months. National media left 2 days after. Its not a story. The thrill is gone!

IMO this time, its so far above and beyond any of those scenarios. Its the perfect storm..an unseen threat to the entire nation. Nobody really knows...could you die? Tune in next week......but in the meantime a 30 second ad has gone up 35%. :lol:

And this COVID is a short (in the grand scheme of things) term issue. Once we have a vaccine and/or better drugs to treat it (within 12-18 months), then we don't have to have ANY policies for it. As for obesity, that is something that manifests its kill-count over years/decades/lifetimes, and we're not even close to a vaccine or major "treatment" for it, so any strict policies to try to curb it would be more or less permanent, so, again, not directly comparable to policy decisions relating to COVID.

Yes but the costs to our healthcare system, insurance, taxes, FAR out way anything COVID-19 will be in the long run so why not implement policy?

And I disagree we won't have any policies that will remain. I bet this changes many laws for the future. Even here they are considering mandatory masks for kids starting next year in school.

Can you imagine the lawsuits after this? The insurance claims? This is a policy makers wet dream.

And it's 44,000 "deaths over the unknown" (it's actually 46,379 in the US at the time of this writing) BECAUSE we're trying to control it. If we did absolutely nothing, and just let it run its course until we develop herd immunity (which IIRC requires a minimum of 40% (although it may be 70, 80, 90, etc. percent, depending on the contagion) of the population to become immune to it. Given a ~328,000,000 US population, at 40%, and even a 0.2% death rate, that's 262,400 dead.

Herd Immunity isn't linear. You are making linear projections. Even in Sweden where its being implemented in a far less restrictive way, they are protecting the most vulnerable. They aren't just letting it "run its course". They still have many restrictions in place. Its strange that a socialist country has less restrictions right now than the US.

OVER A QUARTER MILLION people dead in the US if we relied purely on reaching herd immunity via letting the disease naturally run its course. But that ignores the fact that if we allow many people to get it at once, it could overwhelm hospitals, which it has not done yet. If that happens, and we do not have sufficient capacity/equipment/ability to treat people, the severe cases, then the death rate would go up, and we'd see more than the quarter million statistic I just calculated.

Once again, your number is based on a linear projection which isn't how it works. You've already seen that in the last month where its gone from 10% to 8% to 3-5% to now the anti-body testing saying less than 1%...and it will probably keep going.

You're second point is spot on though and the reason why a form of herd immunity isn't implemented in high population areas like NYC is because they can't handle the capacity at once. But that doesn't apply to everywhere which is why I ask you? Where do you draw the line? 245 dead (its more now 500+..i just remember that number from a speech) in Texas and a population of 29 million...shut it down?

Now, that's not saying that lockdowns until we have a vaccine are sustainable of course, only pointing out that a lot of the comparisons you are making are fundamentally flawed.

In your mind they are, in mine they are not. In my mind your projections are fundamentally flawed...I'm willing to bet in your mind they're not.

To each their own..
 
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How about Swine Flu? Remember that freakout? For about a week. I got that as well...was horrible. Ebola? Sure I remember it...it lasted on and off for a week and I know their ad rate card didn't change.

I'm in SWFL and yes the hurricane news is always over the top until it hits...then they leave. Irma went right over my house and people were without jobs, food, electricity for weeks and sometimes months. National media left 2 days after. Its not a story. The thrill is gone!
I've lived in South Florida for 25+ years; hurricanes are always a story locally. Of course NATIONAL media isn't going to stick around for LOCAL events. With a contagion, people fear it'll spread to their home state/city/town/etc. That keeps it "relevant" for them, even if it hasn't made it to them "yet." With a hurricane, it's not going to impact people living in Seattle, so they don't really care about it, because it doesn't impact them. COVID has the potential to impact all of America, even if it hasn't "yet." Look at when it got bad in NY; people there swarmed down to Florida. That spread fear of people just spreading the virus across the entire east coast.

IMO this time, its so far above and beyond any of those scenarios. Its the perfect storm..an unseen threat to the entire nation. Nobody really knows...could you die? Tune in next week......but in the meantime a 30 second ad has gone up 35%. :lol:
Is this not because of increased viewership warranting increased rates? People are stuck at home and have nothing to do but watch TV. Would rates not be higher if more people see them? Is that not why Super Bowl Ads are more expensive. Please, correct me if I'm wrong here...


Yes but the costs to our healthcare system, insurance, taxes, FAR out way anything COVID-19 will be in the long run so why not implement policy?
Are you really the admin of a forum where a statistically significant portion of the userbase uses anabolic steroids without any prescription arguing in favor of placing legal limitations on caloric content of foods? Man, that is rich!

And I disagree we won't have any policies for it that remain. I bet this changes many laws for the future. Even here they are considering mandatory masks for kids starting next year in school.
Are you a gambling man? I'll bet you money that once there's a vaccine for COVID, barring another mass-scale pandemic, children will not be mandated to wear masks in schools. Starting next year would likely be because COVID won't have a vaccine by then, so it's not a "lasting/permanent" change over DECADES like what would be needed to prevent/reduce obesity...

Can you imagine the lawsuits after this? The insurance claims? This is a policy makers wet dream.



Herd Immunity isn't linear. You are making linear projections. Even in Sweden where its being implemented in a far less restrictive way, they are protecting the most vulnerable. They aren't just letting it "run its course". They still have many restrictions in place. Its strange that a socialist country has less restrictions right now than the US.
Sweden isn't a socialist country. Even a former Prime Minister of Sweden said as much. But I'm sure you know more about the Swedish economic system than he does, right?

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Once again, your number is based on a linear projection which isn't how it works. You've already seen that in the last month where its gone from 10% to 8% to 3-5% to now the anti-body testing saying less than 1%...and it will probably keep going.

You're second point is spot on though and the reason why a form of herd immunity isn't implemented in high population areas like NYC is because they can't handle the capacity at once. But that doesn't apply to everywhere which is why I ask you? Where do you draw the line? 245 dead in Texas and a population of 29 million...shut it down?
I'm not claiming to know where to draw the line, but for the love of God man, FOCUS ON ASKING THAT LEGITIMATE QUESTION, DON'T BRING UP IRRELEVANT ANALOGIES ABOUT CAR CRASHES, OR CANCER, OR HEART ATTACKS.


In your mind they are, in mine they are not. In my mind your projections are fundamentally flawed...I'm willing to bet in your mind they're not.

To each their own..
Response bolded in above quote. You have plenty of valid point without making stupid comparisons to cancer, or heart attacks, or car crashes (which other people, not you, did on this forum). Focus on those points that I addressed above, as they are irrefutably more relevant and debatable.

And Texas now has 561 deaths. So either your numbers or outdated, or the number doubled in the last few hours?

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Response bolded in above quote. You have plenty of valid point without making stupid comparisons to cancer, or heart attacks, or car crashes (which other people, not you, did on this forum). Focus on those points that I addressed above, as they are irrefutably more relevant and debatable.

And Texas now has 561 deaths. So either your numbers or outdated, or the number doubled in the last few hours?

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Ah, once again its a stupid comparison. You seem to have gotten a bit emotional so I'll let you simmer down before I answer.
 
Ah, once again its a stupid comparison. You seem to have gotten a bit emotional so I'll let you simmer down before I answer.
Yes. It is OBJECTIVELY a stupid comparison...

I’m “emotional” because I called the comparison stupid? Really?

Obesity (since you went from cancer/heart to obesity) kills over years/decades. COVID kills essentially acutely, in the short term.

COVID is contagious; obesity is not.

COVID, if left unchecked, spreads exponentially; obesity does not.

We will likely have a vaccine for COVID within 12-18 months; we will not have a vaccine for obesity likely within the next 12-18 years.

Should I go on?
 
Yes. It is OBJECTIVELY a stupid comparison...
I'll refrain from calling other peoples point of view and/or comparisons stupid especially in this situation. It really doesn't help anything.

I’m “emotional” because I called the comparison stupid? Really?

Sure seems like it.

"I'm not claiming to know where to draw the line, but for the love of God man, FOCUS ON ASKING THAT LEGITIMATE QUESTION, DON'T BRING UP IRRELEVANT ANALOGIES ABOUT CAR CRASHES, OR CANCER, OR HEART ATTACKS."

For the love of god man...the caps....does to me.

Obesity (since you went from cancer/heart to obesity) kills over years/decades. COVID kills essentially acutely, in the short term.

COVID is contagious; obesity is not.

COVID, if left unchecked, spreads exponentially; obesity does not.

We will likely have a vaccine for COVID within 12-18 months; we will not have a vaccine for obesity likely within the next 12-18 years.

Should I go on?

Sure if you want but still haven't answered the question. Would you shut down Texas? And you are correct it is above 500 now..I remember the 245 because it was in a speech asking that same question two weeks ago.

The fundamental question that I brought up still remains even though think its a "stupid" comparison.

Short term, long term, whatever...how far would go to implement public policy that would either infringe on your rights or force you to comply?

Its a simple question of when do you draw the line and why.
 
How about Swine Flu? Remember that freakout? For about a week. I got that as well...was horrible. Ebola? Sure I remember it...it lasted on and off for a week and I know their ad rate card didn't change.

I'm in SWFL and yes the hurricane news is always over the top until it hits...then they leave. Irma went right over my house and people were without jobs, food, electricity for weeks and sometimes months. National media left 2 days after. Its not a story. The thrill is gone!

IMO this time, its so far above and beyond any of those scenarios. Its the perfect storm..an unseen threat to the entire nation. Nobody really knows...could you die? Tune in next week......but in the meantime a 30 second ad has gone up 35%.



Yes but the costs to our healthcare system, insurance, taxes, FAR out way anything COVID-19 will be in the long run so why not implement policy?

And I disagree we won't have any policies that will remain. I bet this changes many laws for the future. Even here they are considering mandatory masks for kids starting next year in school.

Can you imagine the lawsuits after this? The insurance claims? This is a policy makers wet dream.



Herd Immunity isn't linear. You are making linear projections. Even in Sweden where its being implemented in a far less restrictive way, they are protecting the most vulnerable. They aren't just letting it "run its course". They still have many restrictions in place. Its strange that a socialist country has less restrictions right now than the US.



Once again, your number is based on a linear projection which isn't how it works. You've already seen that in the last month where its gone from 10% to 8% to 3-5% to now the anti-body testing saying less than 1%...and it will probably keep going.

You're second point is spot on though and the reason why a form of herd immunity isn't implemented in high population areas like NYC is because they can't handle the capacity at once. But that doesn't apply to everywhere which is why I ask you? Where do you draw the line? 245 dead (its more now 500+..i just remember that number from a speech) in Texas and a population of 29 million...shut it down?



In your mind they are, in mine they are not. In my mind your projections are fundamentally flawed...I'm willing to bet in your mind they're not.

To each their own..
Swine flu was predicted to be much worse than it was. It had high transmission but a low fatality case ratio. It also didn't put nearly as many people in hospital. Over 65's were not disproportionately hit, because it is believed they had antibodies from other viruses that had 'merged' to form Swine Flu.

By comparison, H5N1 is exceptionally deadly, but lacks the ability to readily transmit between people. If it ever mutates a capacity similar to coronavirus, then we're in a bit of trouble. If anything is going to cause a culling of the human population, I'm banking on it being a virus or some kind of super resistant bacteria. Certainly not this virus, but if this was a test run for something much worse, some countries will be in for a tough time.

Covid19 is both readily transferred between people and relatively dangerous. Even if it doesnt kill you, 16-20% of total cases have ended up in hospital. long term effects such as lung fibrosis and blood clotting can occur after more severe respiratory tract infections, and if 20% of the total reported cases have landed in hospital so far, that's a lot of people who, even if they recover, could battle other health issues further down the track.

Think of it this way, where people are symptomatic enough to get tested, where that capacity exists, based on reported numbers, approximately 2 out of 10 end up in ICU. About 1 in 20 have died. Yes, likely more cases than reported, but just basing it off those numbers, that's reasonably substantial.
 
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Swine flu was predicted to be much worse than it was. It had high transmission but a low fatality case ratio. It also didn't put nearly as many people in hospital. Over 65's were not disproportionately hit, because it is believed they had antibodies from other viruses that had 'merged' to form Swine Flu.

By comparison, H5N1 is exceptionally deadly, but lacks the ability to readily transmit between people. If it ever mutates a capacity similar to coronavirus, then we're in a bit of trouble. If anything is going to cause a culling of the human population, I'm banking on it being a virus. Certainly not this virus, but if this was a test run for something much worse, safe to say many countries will find themselves in a bit of trouble.

Covid19 is both readily transferred between people and relatively dangerous. Even if it doesnt kill you, 16-20% of total cases have ended up in hospital. long term effects such as lung fibrosis and blood clotting can occur after more severe respiratory tract infections, and if 20% of the total reported cases have landed in hospital so far, that's a lot of people who, even if they recover, could battle other health issues further down the track.

On your last point, even those numbers are going down. I actually expect the number cases to skyrocket if they include the new testing procedures.

I had the swine flu. It was hell for 3 weeks.
 
I'll refrain from calling other peoples point of view and/or comparisons stupid especially in this situation. It really doesn't help anything.



Sure seems like it.

"I'm not claiming to know where to draw the line, but for the love of God man, FOCUS ON ASKING THAT LEGITIMATE QUESTION, DON'T BRING UP IRRELEVANT ANALOGIES ABOUT CAR CRASHES, OR CANCER, OR HEART ATTACKS."

For the love of god man...the caps....does to me.



Sure if you want but still haven't answered the question. Would you shut down Texas? And you are correct it is above 500 now..I remember the 245 because it was in a speech asking that same question two weeks ago.

The fundamental question that I brought up still remains even though think its a "stupid" comparison.

Short term, long term, whatever...how far would go to implement public policy that would either infringe on your rights or force you to comply?

Its a simple question of when do you draw the line and why.
My dude, I have repeatedly said, ad nauseam at this point, that your questions of if, when, to what extent, and for how long to shut things down cod is a valid one. What public policy to go forward with is up for some level of debate.

I am not saying otherwise. I’m saying to focus on those valid points, not on asinine comparisons to thinks that are simply not at all alike, like obesity...

I really don’t get how you can’t see that...
 
On your last point, even those numbers are going down. I actually expect the number cases to skyrocket if they include the new testing procedures.

I had the swine flu. It was hell for 3 weeks.
I bet, being from NZ we're relatively lucky we're quite isolated.

It's going to be tough to balance the economy and the virus now that the coronavirus has got a pretty good foothold in the US. In NZ, our lockdown procedure has seen new cases drop to near zero, so they're easing us from Level 4 shutdown to level 3 for 2 weeks. After that, we'll begin slowly returning to 'normal'. We were lucky it never really got a strong foothold here, so we can see the light at the end of the tunnel, so to speak.

You're facing a tough question were there will be no right answer. How can you mitigate the virus and prevent the economy from crashing? I have been surprised at how hard the economy in the US has been hit due to coronavirus. It's pretty sad to see so many job losses and small businesses closing. Tough times
 
This is how things have gone down: (Let’s just skip over the deception and motives in Wuhan)

We finally get a more accurate picture of the devastation the virus can cause based on what Italy experienced.

Then we get permeation in other European countries, Washington state and NYC- which was also devastating.

USA prepared for the worst because there was no other choice. Hospitals can’t handle a surge of patients all at once...it’s just that simple. Also, we are not a nation that accepts preventable deaths.

The lockdown/stay at home orders work- and many places (including my state) are seeing much less hospitalizations than anticipated. So far..

People bitch because it’s actually working, so let’s stop what we are doing ASAP! People prioritizing economic status over protecting more lives. Whatever...until the virus threatens the health of someone you love or yourself. Then economic status becomes secondary again, and those people will blame the government for easing up to soon.

People getting excited about the antibody testing (as was I), yet it’s not a free pass for the health of yourself or protection of others.

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We all wish this all could be easier- nobody more than myself. However, this is a pandemic and that is why it is being treated as such. This is truly only the first chapter of the book..
Swine flu was predicted to be much worse than it was. It had high transmission but a low fatality case ratio. It also didn't put nearly as many people in hospital. Over 65's were not disproportionately hit, because it is believed they had antibodies from other viruses that had 'merged' to form Swine Flu.

By comparison, H5N1 is exceptionally deadly, but lacks the ability to readily transmit between people. If it ever mutates a capacity similar to coronavirus, then we're in a bit of trouble. If anything is going to cause a culling of the human population, I'm banking on it being a virus or some kind of super resistant bacteria. Certainly not this virus, but if this was a test run for something much worse, some countries will be in for a tough time.

Covid19 is both readily transferred between people and relatively dangerous. Even if it doesnt kill you, 16-20% of total cases have ended up in hospital. long term effects such as lung fibrosis and blood clotting can occur after more severe respiratory tract infections, and if 20% of the total reported cases have landed in hospital so far, that's a lot of people who, even if they recover, could battle other health issues further down the track.

Think of it this way, where people are symptomatic enough to get tested, where that capacity exists, based on reported numbers, approximately 2 out of 10 end up in ICU. About 1 in 20 have died. Yes, likely more cases than reported, but just basing it off those numbers, that's reasonably substantial.
You were ok until you said 'total cases', and that's where it falls apart. No one has any idea how many total cases there are, but given China was lying, it may go back to November there, studies are showing loads of asymptomatic people, and they just discovered 2 by autopsy from weeks before they though the first case occurred here.... There are a TON of cases globally that have not been counted, and you cannot throw numbers like '15-20%', at all.
 
My dude, I have repeatedly said, ad nauseam at this point, that your questions of if, when, to what extent, and for how long to shut things down cod is a valid one. What public policy to go forward with is up for some level of debate.

I am not saying otherwise. I’m saying to focus on those valid points, not on asinine comparisons to thinks that are simply not at all alike, like obesity...

I really don’t get how you can’t see that...

I never said they are "alike". I simply asked when does the public health demand government action that infringes on your rights? I used heart disease and cancer because they were health conditions with 10x the death rate. I never even mentioned car crashes.
 
You were ok until you said 'total cases', and that's where it falls apart. No one has any idea how many total cases there are, but given China was lying, it may go back to November there, studies are showing loads of asymptomatic people, and they just discovered 2 by autopsy from weeks before they though the first case occurred here.... There are a TON of cases globally that have not been counted, and you cannot throw numbers like '15-20%', at all.
I'm just talking about reported cases. I agree it will be more widespread due to testing issues, but so far we can only go by what we can go by
 
Wow, wasn't getting updates and it blows up in here ;)

Once again, forest and trees...right? You tested people more likely to have it and its at 1%....10x less then what was reported earlier. Now test those it was spread to. Want to bet its another 10x?

I'm not sure of your point? If you test a group of people that are likely to have it, then why would the death rate go down?

I could go into a Covid ward in a hospital and come out of there saying, "Our study group was 100% positive for antibodies - so everyone's already has the disease. If we apply that to the US population, 323,000,000 people are already infected and the death rate is less than .00%" Obviously, taking data from an at-risk group and extrapolating it is foolish at best.

But more to the point, following the media's sales-pitch that "Everything you know about Covid is wrong and the death rate is much lower based on this study that was not peer reviewed" seems to be exactly the type of hype you are arguing against. I'm not sure how you see this as science.

Also, keep in mind their extravagant numbers equate to 2.5-4% infection - with a false positive rate of up to 1.7%. So they could have an ACTUAL infection rate of this high risk population of just 0.8%. Even at 4% - why are we talking herd immunity with those levels? Do you have any idea of the death rate if we just let it wash over so that we could get to 40-50% immunity?

Healthcare workers actually do die from the flu, they just aren't broadcast on network news and shut down the economy. Media just treat those as acceptable deaths...like heart attacks and cancer deaths.

You keep making statements that actually make the case for less mortality rates. Yes, it could be 10x as contagious...which means that many more people would have it..and the death rate is even lower.

I think the difference is, we try to do what we can to prevent all of these deaths. In this case, we see it coming (at least some of us do) and we CAN do something about it before it hits - avoid contact with the virus. Unfortunately, it is the ONLY thing we can do at this point.

Basically you are implying, using the same logic, that we shouldn't have warnings on cigarettes, medicines for high blood pressure, or any other number of interventions because keeping those people alive comes with a cost.

I don't believe this is what you mean, I just believe that you haven't realized that you are arguing against the ONLY effective form of intervention we have. The ONLY scientifically proven form of treatment we have for this disease is to AVOID it. Yay science.

And if you're worried about the cost - what do you think the cost of treating all of these people is? Who do you think is paying for that health care? We were one step away from having full-blown socialist health care system. What do you think the lock downs would be like in that case?

Yet they kill 10x more people and nobody seems to care. Its the unseen, unknown, new, novel, media driven boogeyman that shuts down the world.



No immunity?

There are COUNTLESS articles on cancer, obesity, heart disease written every day. We have tens of billions of dollars or more in medical revenue spent on treating these diseases every year. What impact on the economy do you think THAT has?

And while you're focused on the total deaths from heart attacks, you are focusing on percentages of deaths from Covid as if that matters. We are at over 50,000 deaths in just over a month, WHILE most of us are following the ONLY scientifically proven strategy for treatment (again, prevention) - how many people do you think died from a heart attack in that timeframe? (I will do the math, we average about 54,000 deaths/month from heart disease - so I'm not sure where you're getting your 10X number from)

Further, how many of those heart attacks had interventions and treatments and news articles and suggestions on how to avoid it? We DO take interventions for those diseases. Why wouldn't you agree with taking the ONLY known intervention for Covid?

Actually we don't really know because flu deaths are usually examined over a 12-18 month period as the data is revised over that period of time.

I'm not comparing apples to oranges, I'm comparing death totals and people's emotional reactions to it.

The answer to your last question won't be answered for many years to come.

I agree there is an emotional component to these reactions. But maybe you're just coming out a little stronger than you need to because some of those people react so strongly emotionally. I'm not sure.

As far as flu deaths - it's hard to lock down a solid number of deaths for any illness like this, of course. All we can do is use the best data available and avoid relying on "studies" that weren't even peer reviewed and try to paint sensational pictures of over reaction.

Work? Thats how it WILL work eventually whether by nature or vaccination. Its already working in NY as the new study is showing. Same with the Stanford study....Once again, you don't understand it.

I love answers like this. Sign a DNR if you're possibly wrong. A real humanitarian.... So sad.

And why are you bringing up protestors? Its possible for people to take COVID-19 seriously, worry about their house payments and job while questioning if the government takes away rights for "good intentions". You can ACTUALLY think about all three at one time. Its amazing!

We suspect having the antibodies will impart immunity - but this has not been proven yet and there are some questions from what I've read. I believe it will, because that is how I understand this stuff to work and have no reason to believe otherwise - but it isn't a certainty yet.

But, you were arguing that we have all of these flu deaths go unnoticed - what about those? Wouldn't herd immunity be higher in flu - especially in light of vaccines for the flu - than in a novel virus with no vaccine?

And even at that, there's no intelligent way of arguing that the death rate and transmission rates of Covid are not much greater than the flu.

Don't think I ever suggested that. I merely brought up the sensationalism based on assumption when the same people literally ignore diseases that kill 10x more people every year and they don't say a peep. It seems emotion, hysteria and fear "trump" facts.



Its a greater threat because we don't have a vaccination for it.....but does that justify destroying someone's business? job? Freedom of assembly? Do you force people to wear masks now?

How will my business do if I'm dead? How will my business do if I lose 5-6% of my customers? How will my business do if I lose 5% of my employees? Is it worth destroying someone's business or job just so that I can say I wasn't afraid of this?

As far as the "freedom" argument - this is a really fine line and I get that. I am not for taking away someone's constitutional rights, even temporarily. I am for arresting people who put others in danger. I am for enforcing liability. And what this means is, if you open your gym and someone dies and it can be traced back to your gym directly - you're liable. This is a harder line to define, but I think you get my point.

I haven't heard of any private citizens, at least in my area, being arrested for doing whatever they are doing. I have neighbors that get together every day in groups of 8-10 people and go out on dirt bikes or hang out in the house, or whatever. No cops have come by to even tell them they are morons.

Waa. You do realize the cure will be worse than this disease, right?

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I'm not sure how you are coming to this conclusion at such an early point?
 
I never said they are "alike". I simply asked when does the public health demand government action that infringes on your rights? I used heart disease and cancer because they were health conditions with 10x the death rate. I never even mentioned car crashes.

The government has loads of actions that happen that infringe on your rights for the public good, and they happen almost every day. Simple case - eminent domain. If the town can make the case that they need your property for the greater good of the community, they take it and pay you "a fair value" - which is often much less than you would obtain on an open market. That doesn't even need to be health related - it could be just to build a roadway.

I'm just talking about reported cases. I agree it will be more widespread due to testing issues, but so far we can only go by what we can go by

This^^

I'm not sure why everyone thinks it is super intelligent to make up numbers and hypothesize that the total infections could be higher and so on. If you're going to use data, use data. Don't make up things and then convince yourself they are true because you thought it up. Sure, data is never perfect, but why would you take data that has no basis over data that is being methodically collected?
 
Just since we have this data, and since we're losing lives at a rate that is NEAR that of heart disease, I looked this up:

CDCFoundation.org said:
Annually, about one in every six U.S. healthcare dollars is spent on cardiovascular disease. By 2030, annual direct medical costs associated with cardiovascular diseases are projected to rise to more than $818 billion, while lost productivity costs could exceed $275 billion

Given that those numbers don't have outcomes that usually overwhelm our system, my guess is that Covid is quickly catching up and so far, and many of us are ignoring the other side of the equation.
 
I'm not sure how you are coming to this conclusion at such an early point?

Neil Ferguson of the Imperial College, which everyone but Sweden based their lockdown bullshit on, estimated 650k-2.2m people in the US could die. The 650k takes into account SIP measures, as the best case scenario.

Globally as of now, under 200k have died. GLOBALLY. It won't reach 650k, let along 2m globally, let alone in the US. However, we've blown a few TRILLION $$$$, with little long term benefit, Americans are suffering, and we're at the top of the economic pile. Other countries are going to suffer far more.

2 years ago the world turned a corner: more people were leaving poverty than entering it, for the first time in history. Poverty and hunger have dropped exponentially, and in the US millions broke the poverty line in the last 2 decades. The media harps on income inequality, as if that should even be a thing, but there's a reason why: because more people are leaving poverty than ever before, more are becoming sustainably middle class. They can't acknowledge that capitalism has done more good for more people than any other system in history.

Now, we can take much of that progress, and flush it down the fucking toilet, because of the global economic depression brought on by the global reaction to this virus, a reaction largely based on Neil fucking Ferguson and the Imperial College model. Yeah, if you can't tell, I'm pissed.

The same progressives who whine about bathroom usage and gender pronouns, and praising the administration that encouraged that, while totally ignoring the hundreds of thousands killed illegally in war and regime change overseas, are now chanting in unison 'even one death is too many PUT YOUR MASK ON YOU HEATHEN, STAY HOME', while ignoring the hundreds of thousands who will probably die due to the impending economic hardship, famine, etc. TDS is a real thing.....
 
My wife's parents.
She refuses to talk politics with them. They have FOX on in every room.. legit. Even rooms they are not in because they walk around and won't miss anything. It's a freaking cult man.
 
My wife's parents.
She refuses to talk politics with them. They have FOX on in every room.. legit. Even rooms they are not in because they walk around and won't miss anything. It's a freaking cult man.
I don't give 2 turtle shits about politics, I believe the president is just a talking puppet. But I do love to bring up stuff Trump related in front of my dad just to see what he does. Sometimes il start saying something about a positive thing that Trump did and he literally does not hear it. He starts defending him before he realizes I didn't say something bad lol
 
I don't give 2 turtle shits about politics, I believe the president is just a talking puppet. But I do love to bring up stuff Trump related in front of my dad just to see what he does. Sometimes il start saying something about a positive thing that Trump did and he literally does not hear it. He starts defending him before he realizes I didn't say something bad lol

I was speaking more to FOX News than anything, but the response is the same when my wife brings something up about him on a call, hence she just changes topics when that comes up.

You're right! I agree. Even if it is going to be a compliment, but that speaks to the alternate TDS being tossed about because it is cultish. It's a historical fact about leaders of his Architype.
 
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Isnt TDS something Trumpers, or “Trumpanzees” as referred to here, have and not the other way around?

Trump Derangement Syndrome. If you notice, that alternate was added Feb 2020, to dilute the use.
 
Trump Derangement Syndrome. If you notice, that alternate was added Feb 2020, to dilute the use.

Gotcha. If youve seen anything ive written in the Trump For Pres thread, you may be able to draw the conclusion that I think both “syndromes” are equally as valid and equally as detrimental to the progress of our society.
 
Wow, wasn't getting updates and it blows up in here ;)



I'm not sure of your point? If you test a group of people that are likely to have it, then why would the death rate go down?

Because as of yesterday 250,000+ confirmed cased were in New York. According to the new study over 12,500,000 actually had it yet we have the same number of deaths.

The death rate goes down.




Basically you are implying, using the same logic, that we shouldn't have warnings on cigarettes, medicines for high blood pressure, or any other number of interventions because keeping those people alive comes with a cost.

I didn't imply anything of the sort.

I don't believe this is what you mean,

Fact.

I just believe that you haven't realized that you are arguing against the ONLY effective form of intervention we have. The ONLY scientifically proven form of treatment we have for this disease is to AVOID it. Yay science

I haven't argued against anything like that. I simply asked at what point do you implement it? What death rate is acceptable to those who believe the above is the only answer?



And if you're worried about the cost - what do you think the cost of treating all of these people is? Who do you think is paying for that health care? We were one step away from having full-blown socialist health care system. What do you think the lock downs would be like in that case?

Per capita probably similar to European countries.



There are COUNTLESS articles on cancer, obesity, heart disease written every day. We have tens of billions of dollars or more in medical revenue spent on treating these diseases every year. What impact on the economy do you think THAT has?

So then follow your point...if it costs so much at what point does your government step in to curb those costs?

If the government can fund and intervene in these diseases and cut the rate in half through public policy, would you be in favor of that?

And while you're focused on the total deaths from heart attacks, you are focusing on percentages of deaths from Covid as if that matters. We are at over 50,000 deaths in just over a month, WHILE most of us are following the ONLY scientifically proven strategy for treatment (again, prevention) - how many people do you think died from a heart attack in that timeframe? (I will do the math, we average about 54,000 deaths/month from heart disease - so I'm not sure where you're getting your 10X number from)

Actually the statistics for deaths of COVID are over 4 months so its 50,000 in 4 months.

Further, how many of those heart attacks had interventions and treatments and news articles and suggestions on how to avoid it? We DO take interventions for those diseases. Why wouldn't you agree with taking the ONLY known intervention for Covid?[/quote[

I'm not sure where you think I'm arguing against limiting the spread. I simply asked (it seems people think if you ask a question it implies a statement) at what point do you completely disrupt someone's life?

Is the flu death rate acceptable?



I agree there is an emotional component to these reactions. But maybe you're just coming out a little stronger than you need to because some of those people react so strongly emotionally. I'm not sure.

Because it involves politics to an extent and politics by its very definition is the art of division.

As far as flu deaths - it's hard to lock down a solid number of deaths for any illness like this, of course. All we can do is use the best data available and avoid relying on "studies" that weren't even peer reviewed and try to paint sensational pictures of over reaction.


We suspect having the antibodies will impart immunity - but this has not been proven yet and there are some questions from what I've read. I believe it will, because that is how I understand this stuff to work and have no reason to believe otherwise - but it isn't a certainty yet.

But, you were arguing that we have all of these flu deaths go unnoticed - what about those? Wouldn't herd immunity be higher in flu - especially in light of vaccines for the flu - than in a novel virus with no vaccine?

Herd immunity can be achieved either naturally or by vaccination. I think the majority of this forum before 4 months ago probably didn't know that between 22,000 and 66,000 people die every year from the flu. And 90% of those deaths are within a 6 month period of time.....and its something we actually have a vaccine for....and in terms of society and everyday life, nobody really changed much of anything.

And even at that, there's no intelligent way of arguing that the death rate and transmission rates of Covid are not much greater than the flu.

Yet what happens if the data eventually tells you it is?

How will my business do if I'm dead? How will my business do if I lose 5-6% of my customers? How will my business do if I lose 5% of my employees? Is it worth destroying someone's business or job just so that I can say I wasn't afraid of this?

A bit over the top. If you follow that logic then everyone needs to be locked down until its completely gone.

The question I have for you, what is your acceptable death rate to open up? 50,000 die? 100,000? Do we shut down until there is a vaccine?

Is it worth destroying a business in Texas when the majority of deaths of cases are 2000 miles away?

These are the questions nobody really wants to answer, especially a politician because the truth will get him crucified.

As far as the "freedom" argument - this is a really fine line and I get that. I am not for taking away someone's constitutional rights, even temporarily. I am for arresting people who put others in danger. I am for enforcing liability. And what this means is, if you open your gym and someone dies and it can be traced back to your gym directly - you're liable. This is a harder line to define, but I think you get my point.

Wait until to see what happens post COVID when you give that much power to the lawyers.

I haven't heard of any private citizens, at least in my area, being arrested for doing whatever they are doing. I have neighbors that get together every day in groups of 8-10 people and go out on dirt bikes or hang out in the house, or whatever. No cops have come by to even tell them they are morons.

Takes 10 second on Google to find those being arrested for violating social distance laws these days.

In fact you help...the Mayor of NYC set up a text hotline where you can report your neighbors for violating the social distance laws. Just snap a photo with the location and enforcement will be right out.

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I'm not sure how you are coming to this conclusion at such an early point?

I've come to no conclusions at all.
 
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Neil Ferguson of the Imperial College, which everyone but Sweden based their lockdown bullshit on, estimated 650k-2.2m people in the US could die. The 650k takes into account SIP measures, as the best case scenario.

Globally as of now, under 200k have died. GLOBALLY. It won't reach 650k, let along 2m globally, let alone in the US. However, we've blown a few TRILLION $$$$, with little long term benefit, Americans are suffering, and we're at the top of the economic pile. Other countries are going to suffer far more.

2 years ago the world turned a corner: more people were leaving poverty than entering it, for the first time in history. Poverty and hunger have dropped exponentially, and in the US millions broke the poverty line in the last 2 decades. The media harps on income inequality, as if that should even be a thing, but there's a reason why: because more people are leaving poverty than ever before, more are becoming sustainably middle class. They can't acknowledge that capitalism has done more good for more people than any other system in history.

Now, we can take much of that progress, and flush it down the fucking toilet, because of the global economic depression brought on by the global reaction to this virus, a reaction largely based on Neil fucking Ferguson and the Imperial College model. Yeah, if you can't tell, I'm pissed.

The same progressives who whine about bathroom usage and gender pronouns, and praising the administration that encouraged that, while totally ignoring the hundreds of thousands killed illegally in war and regime change overseas, are now chanting in unison 'even one death is too many PUT YOUR MASK ON YOU HEATHEN, STAY HOME', while ignoring the hundreds of thousands who will probably die due to the impending economic hardship, famine, etc. TDS is a real thing.....

So we are clear. I voted for Trump. With each passing day it becomes more and more likely that I will vote for him again. I have defended some, not all, of his actions pretty strongly on here. I may be a Trump Defender, or whatever else you want to call me.

I think Sweden disproves your case, rather than makes it. While everyone else was doing their "bullshit" lockdown, Sweden was ignoring. Let's look at the outcome.

Swedish Population: 10.23 M (Roughly 3.17% of the US population)
Swedish Covid Infections: 17,567 (Roughly 2% of the US population)
Swedish Covid Deaths: 2,152 (Roughly 12% of their infections, approximately 4.3% of the deaths in the US)

So if you consider those numbers as winning, I'm not sure what anyone can say to argue. A country with 3.17% of the population with 4.3% as many deaths is not a winning strategy. Sure, they have a lower infection rate per capita - which seems great if you believe that a shaking peoples' hands will reduce infection rates - but I think it is just more of an indicator that they are already more distant from each other and we are picking a group that isn't being hit as hard.

The US didn't have social distancing in February and their death rates from Covid were 0. Now we are at 50,000+ with social distancing. I guess that means that social distancing doesn't work and it has killed 50,000 people.

As far as the economic progress - I'm in the boat with you man. I get it, it sucks. But this isn't because of the government. This is because of COVID. This is life. Pretending that it is all planned out by somebody is called religion. Pull up your pants and adapt.
 
The government has loads of actions that happen that infringe on your rights for the public good, and they happen almost every day. Simple case - eminent domain. If the town can make the case that they need your property for the greater good of the community, they take it and pay you "a fair value" - which is often much less than you would obtain on an open market. That doesn't even need to be health related - it could be just to build a roadway.

Sure they do. In fact, even on a smaller level with compliance to police officers. We as a society choose to accept those because its actually been voted on and agreed upon. Eminent domain takes a rather long legal process.

Giving the power of government to completely shut down your business because you "might" be a risk is a bit different.
 
Hit4me, you completely misread my post, read again.

I didn't vote for trump, there were better options. It's looking more and more like I will be voting for him this time. That being said, he fucked us over by adopting Imperial College bullshit estimates as a guideline how to proceed. The CDC said this week we can expect a second worse wave, and I think I explained why in this thread already: we've pushed a majority of the deaths into next year's flu season, instead of dealing with it in the summer. Sweden is very unlikely to experience a second wave. Comparing Denmark deaths to Sweden is stupid, because Denmark will have a second wave as well, while Sweden will not, you're making comparisons before it's over.
 
Fascinating the picture i posted regarding TDS was taken down. Guess this forum is more censored to one side given the initial post regarding “TDS” is still up. So much for the “open forum”, eh?

Very telling of one’s character @Admin
 
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Fascinating the picture i posted regarding TDS was taken down. Guess this forum is more censored to one side given the initial post regarding “TDS” is still up. So much for the “open forum”, eh?

Very telling of one’s character @Admin

Censorship applies to the public spaces, not private. Might want to learn the difference champ and since you do nothing but try to instigate and insult, you can leave now. People are tired of it. Your character showed 3 pages ago.

I'm not letting the discussion turn into a bunch of memes. I actually respect others people's opinion, something you might try.
 
lol...I heard a doctor today say there is room for improvement...name me one thing a doctor can say doesn't have room for improvement? if we wait until there is nothing to be improved upon we are in for a long wait!!!
 
Censorship applies to the public spaces, not private. Might want to learn the difference champ and since you do nothing but try to instigate and insult, you can leave now. People are tired of it. Your character showed 3 pages ago.

I'm not letting the discussion turn into a bunch of memes. I actually respect others people's opinion, something you might try.
Technically censorship can be private too, there’s just no legal protection regarding free speech in private spaces. Taking down a post you disagree with is still censorship by the dictionary definition of the word. But it’s 100% allowed, since, as you said, it’s private, and you’re not a government. I think you may want to learn the difference though...

“Censorship can be carried out by the government as well as private pressure groups. Censorship by the government is unconstitutional.”

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“: the institution, system, or practice of censoring
They oppose government censorship.”

Invalid Link Removed

Their preceding “censorship” with “government” in their example tells us that censorship isn’t inherently or exclusively a government/public action
 
Because as of yesterday 250,000+ confirmed cased were in New York. According to the new study over 12,500,000 actually had it yet we have the same number of deaths.

The death rate goes down.

Ok, but you're not grasping the point at all. You are applying a "study" (that wasn't even peer reviewed - yay science) that went out into the socializing population and advertised that they would be "testing" before the study. Not only are you taking a group of people who are more likely to be infected (they are socializing) - you are further skewing those results by offering free testing, which all but insures ANYONE with symptoms who couldn't get tested is going to show up. Think about that.

So now, I have a skewed group that I've ensured will have a higher rate of infection through my methods, and I compound that with a 1.7% false positive rate and I still might only have 2.5%.

Well, I could do a similar study and go into a Covid ward at a hospital and take a test and say, "90% of the people tested were infected" - of course they were. It was a group of people who were skewed toward infection rates.

Yet, based on this study, the WHO and other organizations have extrapolated that we are no where near where we need to be in terms of herd immunity.

More to the point, I have a study of 800,000+ people that suggests 50,000 of those people will die. Who do you think has more solid stats? That study, or the one with 3300 people?

I didn't imply anything of the sort.

No, you are implying it. You may not grasp that you are implying it - that's a different issue - but you are certainly implying it. You are basically saying that since there is a cost, we shouldn't attempt to intervene.

i.e. - Why should the government effect the businesses of cigarette manufacturers by forcing them to create packaging that scares their customers? Have they considered the effect on those businesses and the economy?

Why should the government back health care? It costs tax payers millions just because someone wants to smoke or become obese?

Of course we have interventions - in this case, the only intervention that will work is avoidance.



I believe it is always important to find some agreement in any debate.

I haven't argued against anything like that. I simply asked at what point do you implement it? What death rate is acceptable to those who believe the above is the only answer?

It's not just about death rate. It's about resources. Think of it like this - if we have a hospital with 10 beds in it and 20 people become infected and need ventilators - what happens then? Essentially there are 10 people who a hospital does not exist for. What is their death rate? 100%? 50%?

And the states and businesses are trying to support these efforts to save lives - what about those costs? If they are struggling to get by because the load is just too much - or their employees won't work, or they get sick - what happens when we have to double the load because people are all getting sick at once?

As I pointed out, using your heart disease angle - we spend over $1T/year on heart disease treatment in this country. How do we arrive at that number? I mean, that's $1T+ in resources down the tubes. At what point do we cut that off?

It isn't like anyone ever says, "Oh, just 60,000 people a year die from the flu. We shouldn't even bother treating it. It costs too much." These people get treatment, and a lot of them die - but we try. And in this case, if we don't try - a lot MORE people will die because at some point, people won't get treatment because it won't exist.


Per capita probably similar to European countries.

Yeah, I think you missed my point but that is because I wasn't organised in my thoughts here so that is probably on me.

What I am saying is, if we DON'T shut down and everyone goes out and gets sick - what do you think the cost of all that healthcare will be? It is already at a point to be at least the 3rd deadliest thing we face this year, if not 1 or 2.

And our government right now is paying for A LOT of that healthcare that these patients are receiving. We overlook that. But if we had completely free, government funded healthcare - I guarantee there would be full on lockdowns everywhere. It wouldn't be up to governors, and we wouldn't have a president saying he wants to get the country open. It would be a no-brainer decision that if the gov't doesn't keep people in their homes, they would be crushed - so the lockdowns would be BRUTAL.

Just because someone doesn't grasp the cost to society of NOT having a lock down, doesn't mean they aren't there. It isn't just deaths, there is an economic costs to letting people out to run their businesses, etc.

So then follow your point...if it costs so much at what point does your government step in to curb those costs?

If the government can fund and intervene in these diseases and cut the rate in half through public policy, would you be in favor of that?

It really is determined by the cost/reward. So if we put a number on this and say, for instance, that if we let this run wild there will be x amount of sickness, y amount of deaths and the cost of medical treatment will be $1.5T this year - but if we get everyone to stay home and give the least wealthy 70% of the country $Z/month and it costs us $1.6T and saves 200,000 lives/month - Would you pull the trigger on that? Sure, it costs $100B more but - 20,000 lives. Are those lives worth $100B?

Now, what if I said, "Hey - you could lose a million lives and this could cost $1.5T. Or we might lose 50,000. No way to be sure, but there's a real chance of the losses adding up quickly." - which policy would you go with?

Actually the statistics for deaths of COVID are over 4 months so its 50,000 in 4 months.

Ok, on 03/24/2020 there were 54,453 cases and 780 deaths. We had just started to implement lock down recommendations at this point.

Today, 1 month later, with the lock downs, there are 902,000 confirmed cases and 50,988 deaths and still over 750,000 people who have yet to recover.

Just yesterday we had 46,023 confirmed cases and 2,360 deaths.

I'd say, in 1 month we have had 50,000 deaths. I'd say, based on yesterday's total, and the daily totals we've been seeing, next month is going to be worse.

Herd immunity can be achieved either naturally or by vaccination. I think the majority of this forum before 4 months ago probably didn't know that between 22,000 and 66,000 people die every year from the flu. And 90% of those deaths are within a 6 month period of time.....and its something we actually have a vaccine for....and in terms of society and everyday life, nobody really changed much of anything.

Again, you're missing the point. You are arguing for us not to have these lock downs - but what's the alternative? Let it just run free? Well, to your point - we have a large number of deaths from the flu and that's with herd immunity AND vaccination.

And this disease is much more transmittable than the flu.

So you are trying to compare an infection with herd immunity and a vaccine to this, but you are ignoring all the deaths STILL present from that disease. If the death rate is high in the flu - what do you think it would be for a flu to which we had no immunity and no vaccine? That doesn't even take into account whether or not it is more transmittable or more deadly.

Yet what happens if the data eventually tells you it is?

Ummm - if the data actually said that, then that would be an intelligent argument.

So far you're ignoring actual collected data and basing your argument on a study with obvious flaws, from authors with an obvious agenda, that hasn't even passed peer review. And again, you're throwing out a data set of millions of people and ignoring it, yet basing your argument on a study of 3,300 people advertised on Facebook.

IF the data somehow changes, then I will have to change my mind. But as of today, I stand by my statement, there is no intelligent way of arguing that the death rate and transmission rates of Covid are not much greater than the flu.
 
A bit over the top. If you follow that logic then everyone needs to be locked down until its completely gone.

The question I have for you, what is your acceptable death rate to open up? 50,000 die? 100,000? Do you we shut down until there is a vaccine?

Is the worth destroying a business in Texas when the majority of deaths of cases are 2000 miles away?

These are the questions nobody really wants to answer, especially a politician because the truth will get him crucified.

Not really over the top - people are dying. Business owners around here who have stayed open have gotten sick and are in the hospital. They quickly closed their doors after that happened. I'm not sure how you think it's over the top when it's happening. I mean, it's kind of the point - this entire thing is over the top.

It isn't about an acceptable death rate per se. It is about the cost of each path of action. Again, not doing anything has a huge cost. Ruining a bunch of businesses may actually be the lesser of two evils. Unfortunately. And I agree, it's a really tough call that I would probably want a ton of data to make a decision with - but at some point someone has to make the call.

This may have to go on until we do have some kind of herd immunity - which means we have to go about that slowly. Overwhelming the healthcare system with a disease we know so little about will make things much worse. Time will at least allow for fewer visits per day to the hospitals, and also allow for more information to be gathered for more patients (i.e. - if I get sick today, I will be treated with less available info than if I get sick in a week or a month, etc.)

As far as the unnecessary shut downs from 2000 miles away - I get that. I think that's where Trump talked big but ultimately made the right call. I know New York may be different, but ultimately there aren't any federal mandates that everyone has to stay home, or rights being trampled, etc. I can go to the store whenever I want, I can go for a walk, etc. I can even go to Wal-Mart and Home Depot which means I am way better off than my great grandparents were every day of their lives and even better off than I myself was 30 years ago in this area. I have heat and electricity and I can argue with a ton of my friends on the internet.

I can have zoom meetings with clients and even have formed a few new relationships from my house.

And believe me, I'm not about to let someone stop me from doing something I need to do. But I'm trying to be reasonable about what a need is vs. a want.

Some local governments may be going to far - I can agree with that. I don't think our federal government has though. Some individuals may be acting in very ignorant ways.

Wait until to see what happens post COVID when you give that much power to the lawyers.

I know what will happen - which is why those businesses will shut down if they are smart. It's not worth the cost of killing someone just so you can keep your business going.

Takes 10 second on Google to find those being arrested for violating social distance laws these days.

In fact you help...the Mayor of NYC set up a text hotline where you can report your neighbors for violating the social distance laws. Just snap a photo with the location and enforcement will be right out.

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Haha, thanks for the help. Now I can call the fuzz on my dumb neighbor :)

Admittedly, I think that's probably too far. People are going to be stupid. It is what it is.

I am not arguing that we should have laws to take away peoples' rights - so I think we can at least agree there. I think people should be smart, and at least try to make an attempt at self preservation and not harming others. Again, I think Trump has a fine line to walk here and while he may say stupid things or go in the wrong direction when he's talking off the cuff, I think in general he's done a good job of staying on that line. He wants to get things open, but he wants to take action to keep the population safe. But it's not really even about him - it's more about US. Individuals need to do what's right. I do agree that the Gov't itself should allow for the individual to make their own choices - but the individual should also be responsible for their actions.

This isn't toward Admin - just tangential - just thinking out loud - but it's a fine line with responsibility. If some infected person goes out and makes people sick and does so knowingly, I believe that's essentially assault and battery and if that person dies, then the person who infected them should be held liable.

But if you do that, how do you handle all the people getting sick from the flu every year? I mean, most of it isn't intentional, proving intent can be difficult, etc. - but if someone dies from the flu, is the person who gave it to them responsible?

I've come to no conclusions at all.

I wasn't directing that part at you - that was at Poison, but I get that it can be tough to know what you're responding to in all this :) These discussions get messy.
 
Technically censorship can be private too, there’s just no legal protection regarding free speech in private spaces. Taking down a post you disagree with is still censorship by the dictionary definition of the word. But it’s 100% allowed, since, as you said, it’s private, and you’re not a government. I think you may want to learn the difference though...

“Censorship can be carried out by the government as well as private pressure groups. Censorship by the government is unconstitutional.”

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“: the institution, system, or practice of censoring
They oppose government censorship.”

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Their preceding “censorship” with “government” in their example tells us that censorship isn’t inherently or exclusively a government/public action


LOL

Its not that I disgreed with anyone, its just he was being an asshole. So ba bye. Don't really care what you want to call it.

If you want to act like an asshole, you get treated like an asshole.
 
I need a nap.
 
LOL

Its not that I disgreed with anyone, its just he was being an asshole. So ba bye. Don't really care what you want to call it.

If you want to act like an asshole, you get treated like an asshole.
Again, I’m not saying you are wrong for doing it, or that it’s not your right, or anything of that sort, only that it’s still technically censorship. But life is never as simple as censorship is always 100% bad, of course.
 
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