tysker said:
MetoliusAg said:
tysker said:
k2aggie07 said:
Quote:
We get it. The desired effect is to keep a segment of society alive longer to eventually die of the same disease anyways. By delaying the inevitable we'll hopefully save lives of the other unhealthy people that also need medical care. The reason the government and media aren't relaying the message is that it sucks and sounds like a form of rationing.
No. The desired effect is to reduce the spread, to reduce the peak. This saves more lives in the long run by affording better care to those who are inevitably going to get it and who are at higher risk.
It also prevents the rationing that will a matter of fact if the number of cases exceeds capacity.
Reducing the spread and the peak is fine but if we have a long-flat peak (upside down U) versus a short high-peak (upside down V), is that really worth it in the long run? Especially if estimates are that 60-70% of the population is going to get it anyways? Should we suffer now greatly now and get is over with or suffer less but more slowly over time? Again I'm glad I don't have to make these decisions.
And by rationing I would also consider it to include time, money and general happiness. From the outside, the young and healthy appear to be taking the brunt of the effort, lifestyle change and monetary loss.
I'm a retiree, and 95% of my best friends, siblings, cousins, in-laws, and favorite hunting & fishing buddies are in the age range of 60 to 90 (including many Trumper friends who I love dearly). So I too am glad you are not the one making these decisions.
You're selfishness is noted and, imo, commendable. I'm simply trying to ask questions and be open and honest about my desire to protect my family, friends and community. You do you and I'll do me.
No offense taken, friend. I was just making a personal observation from my own point of view.
In truth, I've enjoyed reading the questions you've been asking, the rationales you've posited, and the ongoing discussion your posts have instigated, even though I am fully aware of the results those rationales would cause if our federal, state, county, and city govmts took them.
I'll add that I think your focus on how you are impacted personally substantially underweights the financial, cultural, and societal impact (and political power) of the 100M Americans age 60 and above who vote, travel, spend money, own businesses and assets, buy lots of stuff, eat out, and make up a huge and invaluable part of the American culture, economy, and society Plus there's a lot of trans-generational knowledge and wisdom we "olds" were handed down from preceding generations which we still haven't finished passing down to younger generations yet.