tspear
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Timothy
I checked "other" and wrote in "Mutt". We will see if I get a call.
I put "human" for all of us.
Tim
I checked "other" and wrote in "Mutt". We will see if I get a call.
In Michigan anyway, that theory doesn't seem to be playing out so far. We've had 4 deaths to date. One was 81, the other 3 were in their 50's.On the positive side economically, the virus will likely ravage the ranks of social security and Medicare recipients, so it might have the positive effect of reforming entitlements without Congress doing anything.
Yeah we know. You've made that pretty clear.
Did the 50’s have underlying health conditions? Guessing yes.In Michigan anyway, that theory doesn't seem to be playing out so far. We've had 4 deaths to date. One was 81, the other 3 were in their 50's.
Or however many billion China is.
Still not scared.
On the positive side economically, the virus will likely ravage the ranks of social security and Medicare recipients, so it might have the positive effect of reforming entitlements without Congress doing anything. Add back in an estate tax and maybe we balance the budget.
Just a quick thought here- why is the “death rate” the number being reported— the same statistic could be called the “ survival rate.” I think we all know the answer and, by no means am I trying to downplay the seriousness of the situation but it’s fair to say that panic and hysteria have never once helped a single situation.
Remember when we were all going through initial PPL training and we were taught that in an emergency the thing you do above all is “ fly the plane.” Seems to me we need more of that mindset right now. Stay focused on the important things like keeping yourself safe and isolated and these survival statistics, or death rates equally true, will no longer be of concern.
How do we know that? We don't know how many people will die if we don't quarantine and we don't know how many will die if we shut down the economy. Italy has not been really effectively quarantining and has been slow off the mark like us. They have so far lost about 4,000 to the virus. Our population is about 5.5 times that of Italy. That would put us at about 22-23,000 casualties, and that assumes things don't get worse which they certainly will if we just go about our lives as normal. Likely in that scenario, 23K deaths would be a mere down payment.
On the positive side economically, the virus will likely ravage the ranks of social security and Medicare recipients, so it might have the positive effect of reforming entitlements without Congress doing anything. Add back in an estate tax and maybe we balance the budget.
Two yes. One either no or undetermined.Did the 50’s have underlying health conditions? Guessing yes.
Interestingly, I disagree with the first paragraph and understand what was intended in the second, and it wasn’t how you took it.I agreed with the first paragraph, but looking forward to the old folks dying off in the second paragraph is pretty disgusting.
What does your not being scared have to do with my effort to get people to think about percentage of confirmed and deaths in each of the countries. Think about the math.
I sincerely hope that you’re not being scared is not to say that you’re not obeying requests to be safe.
Just out of curiosity, did you notice that he said "likely harm or kill", not "will harm or kill"? There is a difference.How do we know that? We don't know how many people will die if we don't quarantine and we don't know how many will die if we shut down the economy. Italy has not been really effectively quarantining and has been slow off the mark like us. They have so far lost about 4,000 to the virus. Our population is about 5.5 times that of Italy. That would put us at about 22-23,000 casualties, and that assumes things don't get worse which they certainly will if we just go about our lives as normal. Likely in that scenario, 23K deaths would be a mere down payment.
On the positive side economically, the virus will likely ravage the ranks of social security and Medicare recipients, so it might have the positive effect of reforming entitlements without Congress doing anything. Add back in an estate tax and maybe we balance the budget.
Interestingly, I disagree with the first paragraph and understand what was intended in the second, and it wasn’t how you took it.
To ignore the fact that old people are going to die is part of what is causing this irrational response in the first place. Sure it sucks. It always sucks. But it’s the only thing that’s certain to happen to everyone born. I know it’s not popular to admit it out loud, but they are going to die. So are you.
I know many will disagree with me, but I doubt the death rate will be noticeably different in the long run whether we quarantine ourselves or not. But some will feel better thinking they “did everything they could”. With a rare exception of a couple of old people that might have gotten better care if we slowed the spread, there will be no difference. We can’t prevent the spread, most will end up getting it. The effects will be the same. I’d rather not add the destruction of the economy and frankly our society to that. I mean seriously we are talking about not teaching a single student in an airplane because we might get the flu? That is insane. That is putting a tourniquet around your neck. Such a great description by half fast.
ps, I’ll bet that instructor still uses the gas pump that 100 others used, and picks up their mail that a 100 others touched. Wash your hands a few extra times and that’ll be ok. But don’t talk to one person in a small enclosed space. Omg!
pss, I figured social media would have something to do with societies downfall, but I never guessed it would happen like this. You don’t need to go outside, or to work, you can use computers to stay social. Stranger than fiction. Bad B sci-fi movies are more believable than this.
I agreed with the first paragraph, but looking forward to the old folks dying off in the second paragraph is pretty disgusting.
I still don’t understand how the comment you made in response to my post. It was non sequitur. If you would have taken the time to look at the numbers I was pointing out and could understand them, you would have seen that I was pointing out that our numbers are not as bad as Italy or Spain.
Maybe I should read your post more closely.
You say you don’t like to obey, but you are doing all the things they are requesting whether or not you are told as am I.
So far I have not been told to do anything that I disagree with. My routine has not been officially disrupted, yet. Nobody has said lock your doors and stay inside. Nobody has asked me for my weapons. I look at traffic signs as a suggestion. Most of the time I take the suggestion as I think it is a good idea.
Not respecting authority is not something to brag about.
I disagree. This country, the greatest country in the world, was founded on disrespecting authority.
That said, this doesn’t mean you should jump off a cliff when your told, but there are times to cooperate as much as is practical.
I would phrase it more like, sometimes it is just not worth the hassle to tell authority to ‘KMA’.
If authority would just be less stupid, things would be easier for everyone.
The analyst in me would like to see some academic number crunching on this. Mostly because of morbid curiosity; Medicare by far is the system for which spending is growing out of control. Which costs less? The unsuccesull treatment for COVID-19 or normal age care for those over 65. (I say this as my dad is in the hospital on a ventilator with COVID-19; he got it skiing in Colorado!).
Tim
I believe all had underlying health conditions.Did the 50’s have underlying health conditions? Guessing yes.
My apologies. I did not see the sarcasm. Things been written on a discussion forum don’t come across the same as in person. You can’t see a scowl, a grin, etc.,
I think there are some politicians that don't understand the impacts of economic collapse and would like to see it happen. Because it creates a new economic order in the country.More lockdowns are unsustainable editorials/opinions in today's WSJ.
"absent a more thorough explanation of the costs and benefits, we doubt these extreme measures will be sustainable for long as the public begins to chafe at the limits and sees the economic consequences"
Maybe toward the end of next week we'll begin to see politicians declare that the curve has been flattened, time to move on to another phase.
Hoping for a full recovery for your father...The analyst in me would like to see some academic number crunching on this. Mostly because of morbid curiosity; Medicare by far is the system for which spending is growing out of control. Which costs less? The unsuccesull treatment for COVID-19 or normal age care for those over 65. (I say this as my dad is in the hospital on a ventilator with COVID-19; he got it skiing in Colorado!).
Tim
Did the 50’s have underlying health conditions? Guessing yes.
A lot of the 'millenials' around here were calling it the "Boomer remover".
They aren't talking so much now.
But neither of those statements make me happy.
Also, we had a local girl go to the hospital with 107 temp.
They checked her for the flu, then refused to test her for Covid-19.
Makes me wonder if they are being very selective about age groups...she was pretty young, around 22 or so.
I believe all had underlying health conditions.
One problem is that the longer we wait, the more expensive the solution becomes. I'm betting that the Italians are wishing that their lockdowns had been implemented sooner:I think there are some politicians that don't understand the impacts of economic collapse and would like to see it happen. Because it creates a new economic order in the country.
I've already had a couple of people on FB try to lecture me on how important it is to lock the country down to make sure every person is protected and in good health, regardless of the cost. And they refuse to accept the fact that without a good functioning economy, there is no money to provide the resources to take care of people. There is a balance that has to be found.
One problem is that the longer we wait, the more expensive the solution becomes. I'm betting that the Italians are wishing that their lockdowns had been implemented sooner:
Italy’s reported coronavirus death toll grew to more than 4,000 on Friday, outpacing China, a country with more than 20 times its population. The Italian health care system is now buckling under the weight of the pandemic. Health care professionals are working day and night to keep critically ill Covid-19 patients alive, while wartime triage conditions have left doctors to decide who lives and who dies. The crematorium in the hard-hit city of Bergamo is so overwhelmed that the army was brought in to deal with the corpses.https://theintercept.com/2020/03/20/us-coronavirus-outbreak-italy/
In Colorado, the pot stores are considered essential but not barber or beauty shops.Starbucks is closing.... the end of the world is here
Same in California.In Colorado, the pot stores are considered essential but not barber or beauty shops.
I would have put down European, but that wasn't an option and I don't know what "white" means outside the context of the left in which it is not a designator of biological heritage but is a substitute for something like "oppressor pig". I have searched the map and I don't find a geographic region called "Whiteland" or something similar. Are all Europeans white? Spain is in Europe. Are they white? Italians didn't used to be considered "white", but maybe they are now. How about Greeks? Maybe the census should include skin tone chips and we can all pick the one that most closely matches.
Now I will return you to the other off-topic rants. I have had mine.
So we are going to have a bunch of long haired, pot smokers. Just like I remember from the '60s.In Colorado, the pot stores are considered essential but not barber or beauty shops.
Did the 50’s have underlying health conditions? Guessing yes.
I know many will disagree with me, but I doubt the death rate will be noticeably different in the long run whether we quarantine ourselves or not. But some will feel better thinking they “did everything they could”. With a rare exception of a couple of old people that might have gotten better care if we slowed the spread, there will be no difference. We can’t prevent the spread, most will end up getting it. The effects will be the same. I’d rather not add the destruction of the economy and frankly our society to that. I mean seriously we are talking about not teaching a single student in an airplane because we might get the flu? That is insane. That is putting a tourniquet around your neck. Such a great description by half fast.
ps, I’ll bet that instructor still uses the gas pump that 100 others used, and picks up their mail that a 100 others touched. Wash your hands a few extra times and that’ll be ok. But don’t talk to one person in a small enclosed space. Omg!
pss, I figured social media would have something to do with societies downfall, but I never guessed it would happen like this. You don’t need to go outside, or to work, you can use computers to stay social. Stranger than fiction. Bad B sci-fi movies are more believable than this.
Starbucks is closing.... the end of the world is here
Ohh, man. We'd have gone medieval on their asses.I always said that if the 9/11 terrorists were smarter, they'd have interrupted our supply of caffeine, and we'd have all killed each other!
Starbucks is closing.... the end of the world is here