UTExan said:
California Ag 90 said:
BowSowy said:
PJYoung said:
Quote:
we are far below model projections regardless of geography.
This is the part that is funny to me. The same people that have always been against the social distancing and economic shutdowns are the first to say the deaths from this virus are falling far short of the model projections - ignoring the fact that our economic shutdowns and social distancing (that they have always been against) are the very reason the virus hasn't been as deadly as first projected by those models.
It was inevitable. The "just the flu"ers were of course going to pat themselves on the back for being "right" after the measures we took stopped this thing from spreading out of control.
and there's another one. i'm not a 'just the flu-er'.
another emotive post drawing stark lines between 'you're an idiot who thinks this is the flu' vs 'its the black plague'.
nobody should pat themselves on the back when this is over in America. the impact is only beginning and it is going to be very grim.
my view, again to be ratified on 12/31, is that this is a public health policy debacle. time will tell.
I think I will listen to the infectious disease docs on this one. I have a microbiologist in my family with extensive experience in medical and hospital labs who informs my opinions on this disease as well as friends in the local medical community and they universally believe the Swedish policy to be ill-informed. But the follow on advantage of reacting with such caution to this pandemic is that another one, equally or more devastating, is bound to occur. So if cheerleading and "emotional reactions" motivate people to acquire food, supplies and most of all knowledge, I am good with that.
infectious disease docs, heroes all, should not make public health policy. they should provide critical input into it, but just that - input. public policy in health matters results in death - always. choices get made that impact death rates in every federal budget, in every state budget, in every local budget, every year.
medical doctors (thank god) put avoidance of any death as their over riding priority. if we put public health policy in their hands on all matters we would 'never shake hands again', stay 'locked down for eighteen more months', and 'wear masks forever' (all recent statements from very learned erudite medical doctors).
i would wager you are a salaried professional undergoing little to no direct financial impact from this as yet as you work from home. just like myself.
but around you everywhere lives are being torn apart from job loss, loss of health insurance, etc. domestic violence, alcoholism, drug abuse, are all skyrocketing, and its only beginning.
yet you think that that is a worthwhile price to pay if we succeed in scaring everyone into 'being ready' for the next pandemic, regardless of how much we may have missed the boat on this particular crisis due to emotional versus logic driven decision processes in public health policy.
interesting.
We're from North California, and South Alabam
and little towns all around this land...