Troutslime said:
Gordo14 said:
Troutslime said:
Gordo14 said:
Just for the record, I think it's hilarious that people in here assune that if we did "nothing", the economy wouldn't get ****ed like it has. The truth is this **** is here. It has consequences. And we have to make the best decisions with the data we have. The data clearly suggests to everybody who is an expert on this kind of stuff that we need to take extreme measures. That's not just 1 expert, it's thousands of them.
Not one person denies that. But overreacting is causing the problem to growwait for it..exponentially!
How can you be so sure that we are overreacting? You don't use numbers, we've established that. So what evidence is there that anything that's been done is an overreaction. What evidence is what we have done worse, both from an economic or health outcome, than doing nothing? I've seen literally nothing but internet bravado, childish name-calling (e.g. "numbers guy"), ignorance to experts, and assurances that there are a million billion asymptomatic cases that would suggest you can back up that "nothing" leads to better outcomes. There's been plenty of evidence shown that doing nothing leads to terrible outcomes whether you choose to believe it or not.
You are asking me to defend something that has no data for support. I.e our reaction is saving X number of lives. I'm just saying that when one considers we are using data from China (communism controls information) that the outcomes must be flawed as well. Now, assume that data in other countries is at least slightly flawed( human nature, political bias, etc) the outcomes we generate can't be used with great confidence, especially because Chinese data is a large percentage of the data. So if we are talking fractions of a percentage (who knows), and apply that to a large population (us) the difference can be hundreds of thousands in terms of total deaths. We are acting on that Chinese data, which logically means our death number projections are inflated. So if 19 ends up being statistically no worse than h1n1, we have overreacted in comparison. The overreaction is going to cause severe economic damage and put many more lives at risk(suicides, loss of health insurance, food, loss of housing, etc).
But there is no way to accurately predict the effects of quarantining us will have on the outcomes.
We know it's significantly worse than H1N1. That much is way beyond debate. Plenty of evidence in this thread that absolutely proves that beyond doubt. But if you have no data to support your stance then maybe you really don't have a point. At the end of the day we aren't going to potentially let millions of people die because of your intuition... Because you refused to be.a "numbers guy" or listen to anybody that's an expert in the field. If you can't back up your position, honestly, you have no position at all.
I think everybody understands the gravity of the decisions being made. I work in oil. I will likely lose my job because of this virus. I have a significant amount of money in the stock market - especially for my age. The idea that I don't understand the gravity of the economic consequences is ridiculous. I am, unfortunately, all to aware. However, I'm not convinced doing nothing is a better economic or health outcome. And the evidence is beyond debate - this is orders of magnitude worse than H1N1. You really shouldn't use that as an argument because it clues everyone into the fact you have no idea what you are talking about.
If you're wondering how we know this hasn't already spread through society we could start with the fact that only 10% of those tested are testing positive (as of today). And the only people being tested have symptoms. So we know that only a tiny fraction of 10% have the virus TODAY. But that will change very quickly at current rates. If you know anything about economics, you know that 20% compounded every day is a very large number very quickly. So the fact only 10% of tests are poisitve today shouldn't be any consolation that this isn't a serious problem.