Capitol Ag said:
Gordo14 said:
beerad12man said:
Most aren't saying be reckless. No, we don't need to go backwards. Not here in this part. Maybe some more aggressive hot spots with public transit and closer lifestyles and less resources.
That's not near enough to make a meaningful difference though. The data is pretty clear we need something closer to what we've done the last month and a half than just being careful with public transit to keep this virus under control. We also do need society to function at some point. Which is why my outlook is very negative. The real possibility of keeping this virus contained is gone. We're now going to have to prevent it from going out of control - which means we really can't go much beyond the rate of spread we have had for the month of April. Given how contagious this virus is, that means (IMO), to sustainably exist we need to wear masks in public, not take public transport, constantly wash hands in when in public, focus on largely outdoor activities at social gathering places, probably keep schools and offices closed. I bet anything beyond that will likely have to revert to that if we don't want to lose the last bit of control we have left. We'll try to do all those things I'm sure. But I think they'll fail because we didn't get the active case count down.
This goes against what doctors in NY and Pittsburgh have stated in the past week. Your dark outlook and opinions are fine. But from what I reading and seeing, we have hit the crest or peak and it's now time to emerse ourselves in the public if we are not senior or vulnerable. Unfortunately we have lives to live too and while some of those that are vulnerable are dependent on care of others, we also can't keep telling the healthy to live limited (ie disregard your rights and way of life) over a virus that 99% will be absolutely fine and recover from if they contract. No one scoffed at 300,000 either. It was the 2-3 million deaths predicted in America that was wrong. Also, why is a flu season where 60,000+ die not enough to make us shut down? Why is 100-300k too much that we must shut down? Where is that line and why wouldn't it be better to allow herd immunity to spread? And what are you basing your logic that we will all be like NY soon from? That's honestly my biggest question. B/c that was regional thing and greatly based on mistakes made by the State of NY. How come we didn't see it else where?
Finally, it just cannot be stated enough that a very very very small proportion of those infected actually die from this or even require hospitalization. This is not "world ending" virus at all.
I'm in the camp that believes we must re-engage the economy, but am willing to accept that it will not be back to "business as usual" for a long time, perhaps another year or two. I'm 32 and will by all rights will be fine if I were to catch it, but more than half my family, and more than a few close friends, are high enough risk that the inconvenience that comes along with a changed paradigm is (to me) an acceptable trade off.
I think the great concern with this thought of attaining herd immunity is that it appears champions of the idea ignore it will necessarily require something like the 2-3 million American deaths to get to. The 0.5-1% fatality rate applied across a large population is a lot of people, and given the anecdotes we've seen from doctors posting here it cannot be ignored that death or complete recoveries are two opposite ends on a spectrum of outcomes that we're just starting to understand, including some (presently unknown) percentage of people in addition to the dead that "recover" but will be on dialysis for the rest of their lives or require a new liver or have one-third the lung function.
This might be a little blunt, but to me the heart of the debate is less so "
what is an acceptable loss of life" but rather
what value do we put on others' lives lost or disaffected that's an acceptable balance. The threshold is different for everyone I suppose.