โApr-07-2020 09:47 AM
โApr-07-2020 07:59 PM
bgum wrote:
No one has the right to act or do things that will make someone else sick and possibly lead to their death. This is well established in law. We have laws against drinking and driving and people infecting others with Aids or TB knowingly. Just to name two.
The dollar has caused enough deaths. We should listen to our medical and scientific community. This to shall pass. Don't listen to those who have no expertise in public health. When it is over the "me" generation will roar back stronger than ever.
โApr-07-2020 07:58 PM
โApr-07-2020 07:53 PM
โApr-07-2020 07:34 PM
โApr-07-2020 06:55 PM
bgum wrote:
No one has the right to act or do things that will make someone else sick and possibly lead to their death. This is well established in law. We have laws against drinking and driving and people infecting others with Aids or TB knowingly. Just to name two.
The dollar has caused enough deaths. We should listen to our medical and scientific community. This to shall pass. Don't listen to those who have no expertise in public health. When it is over the "me" generation will roar back stronger than ever.
โApr-07-2020 06:54 PM
rhagfo wrote:way2roll wrote:fj12ryder wrote:way2roll wrote:You say the number of cases have exploded, but consider why: there are now many, many more people being tested, but there are huge numbers of people that have it and have not been tested, and probably won't be tested because they show no symptoms.
According to the most recent data from the CDC, a month ago there were 279 cases in the US. Despite efforts to have people self quarantine and mandated closures, in the span of 30 days cases in the US have exploded to 375,000. With 12,000 deaths that's 3% mortality rate. Not 1% as some keep stating. That number continues to climb daily at the rate of 5-10% and not showing signs of slowing. Hospitals are overrun so much that decisions need to be made about who to save and who to let die. There are so many dead bodies that refrigerated trucks are needed at hospitals to store the corpses. This is not fear mongering, this is actually happening. While I agree that this is a wrecking ball through the economy, not just US but globally, are we to walk over dead bodies so we can eat at restaurants and shop? And it's not just TX, it's not just the US, this a global pandemic. Sure it's awful no matter which way you slice it, but I have seen a callous and morally bankrupt side of our fellow man that is rather disgusting. Anyone could be a carrier, and anyone could infect someone at risk and kill them. But selfishness and greed still prevail.
Those numbers and percentages you're using are fallacious. Only based on speculation, not real data. No one knows how many people have, or have had, this virus. The only semi-hard data is from tests, so how accurate are those tests?
I know of two people that were showing all the symptoms, but were denied testing because they simply weren't sick enough. This is in one little town, how often does that happen everywhere else?
When I was sick with this thing back in December/January, no one had to tell me to "self quarantine", I knew enough not to expose other people to what I had. It's called "thinking" and if more people would do it, we'd all be better off.
I agree is hard to pin a denominator. that said 12,000 Americans have died in the past 30 days. 80,000 globally. And those numbers are climbing daily.
While most compare to the normal flu, keep in mind that the death rate for the common flu is much lower and it is also based on reported cases! Many get the common flu and it isnโt reported, not counted in reported cases.
We donโt see hospitals overwhelmed during flu season with patients.
Not traveling keeps the virus from spreading, when you go camping you travel, use common facilities, interact with others, Rangers, host and other campers.
โApr-07-2020 06:49 PM
โApr-07-2020 06:41 PM
way2roll wrote:fj12ryder wrote:way2roll wrote:You say the number of cases have exploded, but consider why: there are now many, many more people being tested, but there are huge numbers of people that have it and have not been tested, and probably won't be tested because they show no symptoms.
According to the most recent data from the CDC, a month ago there were 279 cases in the US. Despite efforts to have people self quarantine and mandated closures, in the span of 30 days cases in the US have exploded to 375,000. With 12,000 deaths that's 3% mortality rate. Not 1% as some keep stating. That number continues to climb daily at the rate of 5-10% and not showing signs of slowing. Hospitals are overrun so much that decisions need to be made about who to save and who to let die. There are so many dead bodies that refrigerated trucks are needed at hospitals to store the corpses. This is not fear mongering, this is actually happening. While I agree that this is a wrecking ball through the economy, not just US but globally, are we to walk over dead bodies so we can eat at restaurants and shop? And it's not just TX, it's not just the US, this a global pandemic. Sure it's awful no matter which way you slice it, but I have seen a callous and morally bankrupt side of our fellow man that is rather disgusting. Anyone could be a carrier, and anyone could infect someone at risk and kill them. But selfishness and greed still prevail.
Those numbers and percentages you're using are fallacious. Only based on speculation, not real data. No one knows how many people have, or have had, this virus. The only semi-hard data is from tests, so how accurate are those tests?
I know of two people that were showing all the symptoms, but were denied testing because they simply weren't sick enough. This is in one little town, how often does that happen everywhere else?
When I was sick with this thing back in December/January, no one had to tell me to "self quarantine", I knew enough not to expose other people to what I had. It's called "thinking" and if more people would do it, we'd all be better off.
I agree is hard to pin a denominator. that said 12,000 Americans have died in the past 30 days. 80,000 globally. And those numbers are climbing daily.
โApr-07-2020 06:25 PM
โApr-07-2020 06:08 PM
โApr-07-2020 06:07 PM
โApr-07-2020 05:52 PM
โApr-07-2020 05:48 PM
winnietrey wrote:DallasSteve wrote:winnietrey wrote:
I have been in the medical field for some 41 years. This is how I see it. Lets say knowledge is like a pond 6 ft deep. In my speciality I probably know it down to say 5 feet after 41 years. In areas out of my specialty I might know it down a foot or so. So for me to argue with someone who know it down to 6 feet is stupid.
See, the first few inches, everything seems so crystal clear. But the problem is, at two inches you don't know about the yeah buts, the maybes, the could be but, and the maybe nots.
When you don't know, what you don't know that is a huge problem. I say we go withwhat the boys at the CDC say, they are the ones that know the pond down 6 feet, not you or I
We've heard from the experts in this field and I believe them that the best way to stop the virus is to do the shutdown. But that doesn't mean that the shutdown is the best thing to do. Huh, you say? There may be side effects. You've heard of those.
What if shutting down the economy to this degree causes more deaths? Or what if shutting it down saves 100,000 lives but it costs 10,000 lives who would've lived otherwise. Do you have the right to trade one group of lives for another? Or as Captain Kirk said "Do the needs of the few outweigh the needs of the many?"
We've heard from the scientists, but they are not the only voice that matters. We haven't heard from the economists. And we haven't heard from the ethicists. We just ran headlong into this shutdown out of fear. Fear of a 1% chance of dying. Everybody dies. The thing is to die well.
Dallas Steve that quote was spock not kirk.
I think you have all the answers, and I encourage you to run for President
โApr-07-2020 05:36 PM
DallasSteve wrote:winnietrey wrote:
I have been in the medical field for some 41 years. This is how I see it. Lets say knowledge is like a pond 6 ft deep. In my speciality I probably know it down to say 5 feet after 41 years. In areas out of my specialty I might know it down a foot or so. So for me to argue with someone who know it down to 6 feet is stupid.
See, the first few inches, everything seems so crystal clear. But the problem is, at two inches you don't know about the yeah buts, the maybes, the could be but, and the maybe nots.
When you don't know, what you don't know that is a huge problem. I say we go withwhat the boys at the CDC say, they are the ones that know the pond down 6 feet, not you or I
We've heard from the experts in this field and I believe them that the best way to stop the virus is to do the shutdown. But that doesn't mean that the shutdown is the best thing to do. Huh, you say? There may be side effects. You've heard of those.
What if shutting down the economy to this degree causes more deaths? Or what if shutting it down saves 100,000 lives but it costs 10,000 lives who would've lived otherwise. Do you have the right to trade one group of lives for another? Or as Captain Kirk said "Do the needs of the few outweigh the needs of the many?"
We've heard from the scientists, but they are not the only voice that matters. We haven't heard from the economists. And we haven't heard from the ethicists. We just ran headlong into this shutdown out of fear. Fear of a 1% chance of dying. Everybody dies. The thing is to die well.
โApr-07-2020 05:27 PM