bohumm -> RE: Covid 19 and those infected (8/9/2020 11:00:35 AM)
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ORIGINAL: unome quote:
ORIGINAL: bohumm quote:
ORIGINAL: unome quote:
ORIGINAL: bohumm The argument that we shut down and we can't afford to do it again is false. We didn't shut down while fully complying with universal infection control practices at the public health level; we've been uneven, sporadic, and incomplete from Day 1, and as long as we continue that path, our economy will continue to die the death of a thousand cuts. "I couldn't afford to make that necessary repair" turns into an exponentially more expensive necessary repair down the road that leads to other expensive repairs, compounding the problem. We don't necessarily have to go all McMurphy at this point, but we need to go more there than where we are right now, or we will eventually have to go all McMurphy and maybe beyond eventually. Epidemiology is a complex discipline but getting it wrong leads to a simple outcome: the problem in its current form never goes away. It is not false and you have not certainly not presented any evidence to this effect whatsoever. Not that any of this even matters, because what you or McMurfy want won't happen. The reality is that you are extremists in the same way some of the idiot Trumpers are extremists. You want all or nothing. Whether it is not wearing masks as a sort of constitutional right or shutting everything down as a panacea, these are both wrong headed and both will cost us so much in unneeded loss of life or economic resources. Should Trump have done a better job in March and April? Sure, but he failed, and will likely be voted out of office because of it. But, we do not need to be extreme. We can take smart moderate action. Any Governor in a state with a big COVID HAS TO take action on stuff like masks and shutting down obvious infectious activities. If he or she does not, the President should step in. He won't, but he should. We can get this problem manageable, but we do not need a death from a thousand cuts or one big death blow; we need smart, prolonged, moderate action and we will have cases drop and we will not get the eventual backlash of loss of freedom you see from heavy handed government action. Evidence: Current case levels. Evidence: Worsening economic crisis. Current economic czar: the virus. Choices: take measures sufficient to tamp down transmission, test thoroughly and quickly, and contact trace, or, at best, continue on our current path with "smart, moderate action." Current path: Out of control health crisis, deepening economic crisis. How come Italy and Spain are on a completely different path than us right now? Evidence: Current case levels have dropped by 15,000 a day from two weeks ago. Evidence: U.S. economy added 1.8 million jobs in July as it worked to recover from the coronavirus pandemic The jobless rate fell to 10.2 percent, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2020/08/07/july-2020-jobs-report/ Current path: Nothing at all like what you wrote. The current path is only a problem if we do not do smart things like wear masks and keep some obvious activities closed or severely limited. We still have Governors like Kemp that are arguing that required mask-wearing is a civil liberty violation. Italy and Spain? Italy's economy are crushed: https://economics.rabobank.com/publications/2020/july/covid-19-devastating-impact-on-italy-economy/#b8e0c36f-082b-4f40-a4f1-aa76c9c9701c Spain re-opened more because their economy was in such bad shape and their COVID numbers have really jumped. We currently have about 10K fewer cases on our 7-day moving average from a week or two ago, but still almost double from the peak during March/April. Deaths are down since that time but about 1000/day. This is an out-of-control public health crisis that is not getting better, even while we open up more and more. Hard to see how you can spin that differently. Economically, we sputter along in fits and starts, which aligns with an out-of-control public health crisis. Thanks for making my point on Spain. Both Spain and Italy, who were out of control in the spring, brought their cases down by taking measures commensurate with a public health crisis. We did not. Italy remains in control; Spain has had issues with reopening. This shows how difficult this is and how half-measures are inadequate to meet the crisis.
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