Apr-08-2020 11:56 AM
Apr-09-2020 01:37 PM
2012Coleman wrote:
I'll tell everyone this. My wife is on the front line in one of my areas biggest hospital systems. Currently, they are converting every available space including cafeterias and even board rooms to house beds for patients. The rate of new infections is rising - I can hear it in the conversations down the stairs from me when she is working at home. Fox news may tell you that this is over - sure go ahead and take that advice.
From my perspective the economy is doing ok. I get packages from Amazon, restaurants are doing a good business on take out and drive through. Critical jobs are being filled - grocery stores, gas stations, etc. The transportation industry (my industry) is doing great.
Go ahead and do your thing. Maybe you'll end up in a bed in some closet in a hospital basement or a converted convention center. And maybe you will need a ventilator your president would not give you. Good luck. Write a goodbye letter to those grandchildren.
Apr-09-2020 01:14 PM
If we all had billions of N95 masks then yes, more of the country could be opened. But lack thereof is a part of the inept federal response.
Apr-09-2020 01:08 PM
Apr-09-2020 01:00 PM
RambleOnNW wrote:
A lot of this discussion has been folks trying to give cover for an ineffective preparation and response to what should have been treated as a major invasion on the level of the WWII Battle of the Bulge. Take a look at how South Korea responded to see how it should have been done:
S. Korea CV Response
If you scale up the S. Korea level of CV results to the US population level you get the following stats(S. Korea Population 51.2 million, US: : 327 million):
S. Korea total cases: 10,423 deaths: 204
S. Korea scaled to US population size(6.38X): 66,487 deaths: 1301
US total cases: 451,491 deaths: 15,938
If we all had billions of N95 masks then yes, more of the country could be opened. But lack thereof is a part of the inept federal response.
wikipedia wrote:
Obesity has been consistently among the world's lowest - only 3% of the population were obese, which was the second lowest in the OECD, compared to over 30% in the U.S. or 23% in the UK. As a result, mortality from cardiovascular disease was the fourth lowest in the OECD.
Apr-09-2020 12:51 PM
fj12ryder wrote:Not really - it depends on what the person telling you wants you to believe. Mostly for their benefit, politically, or monetarily or bothjdc1 wrote:Well, there are certainly some professionals who disagree with you and say that the peak has passed. Go figure, just depends on who you choose to believe.agesilaus wrote:
News
The states still control this tho but I would expect a lot of states to follow the suggestions. Not the Plague Centers tho. So maybe we will be able to RV again.
We are going out to find some cotton material that can be used to make washable masks. They recommend the stuff like tee shirts are made of. 6 or 8 layers. It will not stop viruses but will stop spray from coughs and sneezes.
That's a shame some areas are considering loosening the rules. This virus hasn't peaked yet. Those areas that decide to go against the professionals advice are playing with lives.
Apr-09-2020 12:40 PM
Apr-09-2020 11:03 AM
wildtoad wrote:
Every job is critical to somebody. One could say a grocery store is a critical store/service but McDonalds is not. How is a liquor store a critical job? How is a golf course a critical job. For the people who work there all of them are.
Sure if the job entails one person putting their hands on another and not for medical reasons, perhaps they should remain closed. But even then if one follows the hygiene rules it can be done safely.
Past time to take a look at how a business can remain OPEN versus shutting them down. No reason a state park has to shut down for all activities. Got a fully self contained RV, don’t need to use the public restrooms, buy junk from the store? You should be able to occupy a campsite.
Apr-09-2020 10:58 AM
Apr-09-2020 10:54 AM
DallasSteve wrote:PawPaw_n_Gram wrote:
In general I find this forum a lot of "I want a T-bone, not a porterhouse' level of whining.
In general I find the people who want the stay at home orders are a bunch of cowards in bad health who are afraid of dying and they say "I don't care how much this hurts the future of my children and grandchildren, I want to live a few more months." And then they try to bash the non-stay at home people and sound morally superior.
Edit: By the way, I quit eating beef and pork about 40 years ago because I don't think it's very healthy for humans. My complaint would be "I want salmon, not trout." But since I saved my money I have salmon in my freezer, so go ahead and wreck the economy. It won't ruin my life. Just your kids' lives.
Apr-09-2020 10:45 AM
Apr-09-2020 10:10 AM
PawPaw_n_Gram wrote:
In general I find this forum a lot of "I want a T-bone, not a porterhouse' level of whining.
Apr-09-2020 10:06 AM
Apr-09-2020 10:00 AM
But it is an inconvenience, not an emergency.
Most of the complaints I see here are "I can't go have fun"
Apr-09-2020 09:29 AM
Apr-09-2020 09:22 AM
Terryallan wrote:
We all look at the numbers, and they are scary. Which is what they are designed to be. We are only now seeing them admit that the numbers are skewed to scare you. Every one that dies is being listed as dying from the the virus if they did or not. Notice heart attack deaths have disappeared, as have victims of strokes.
Now as of last report. The Gov is actually doing a study to determine how many have in reality died from the virus, and how many have died form natural causes. once the study is finished. There will be a drastic reduction in the real death rate of the virus. and the 98% survival rate will rise to a much higher survival rate.
Take that for what you want. But just realize you are being fed fake numbers to scare you.