So what I'm suggesting isn't just to let the old folks die, but it's to place a higher burden on the old to protect themselves, and it's to temper their protection by governmental mandates and expenditures in the same way we do it in other contexts. That's not cold hearted. It's just reality — Hanover
Incidentally this is also why your question about car deaths misses the point. The healthcare industry can cope with that loss of life. It can't cope with a pandemic. — Michael
There may be other ways we could have done this. We took the path that seemed smartest at the time. We can't change course now because the whole country is waiting for it to bear down. We're prepared according to the information we have. — frank
As a general principle, why are we required to see through a plan just because it seemed reasonable at the time but not now? I get that it would should stubborn resolve, but that's not always a good reason to do things. — Hanover
somewhere like Brasil, Indonesia, Philippines or Nigeria where the gap between rich and poor (per person) is a gaping chasm in comparison. — I like sushi
I was referring to the economic fallout due to lockdowns potentially killing millions more than the virus itself. — I like sushi
I guess you'll be in favour of tax-funded UBI? Reduces the amount of suffering. If a few thousand rich people have less money to spend on second homes and diamond watches so that millions more people can get out of poverty or having to have second jobs then the country will be a quantitatively less miserable place. — Michael
What do you mean by being better off? You brought up suffering before so I was just addressing that. Does it matter if some people aren’t incentivised to work? They might be happier for it. Do we really need fast food restaurants? We could do away with them and their employees can live off UBI. — Michael
I don't believe money comes from trees, so the lack of work in a society will result in its eventual failure. — Hanover
Stop being a snowflake Hanover. — Baden
You shut down the economy for a couple of months until you get transmission rates below 1:1 then you open it up gradually with lots of social distancing rules in place and the other things you said about extra precautions for the vulnerable. Things eventually get back to normal, but with a bigger debt. End. What you don't do is take off the bandage before the wound has healed otherwise you start the whole cycle again. — Baden
But the money isn't coming from trees. It's coming from the government, which in turn is coming from tax payers who would have spent that money at fast food restaurants. — Michael
Would it be better in a hunter gatherer society for everyone to sit around and bullshit all day instead of hunting and gathering, sure, until dinner time. Same thing for our society, just bigger scale. — Hanover
FYI: everyone in hunter gather societies actually have a lot of time to sit around and bullshit. Far more than us fools on the capitalist hamster wheel. — praxis
In last 24 hrs there've been prominent US voices calling for a stop to social distancing, citing rationale that they're worse than impact of COVID itself. It’s worth looking very closely at that claim, where we are in US COVID epidemic and what happens if we stop. 1/x
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These big social distancing measures take time to work. The impact of big interventions in Wuhan China took about 3 wks to start to reverse things. And then everyday after the situation got better. In the US, we're about 7 to 10 days into this, depending on the state.10/x
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Anyone advising the end of social distancing now, needs to fully understand what the country will look like if we do that. COVID would spread widely, rapidly, terribly, could kill potentially millions in the yr ahead with huge social and economic impact across the country. 15/x
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We also need to put every conceivable econ program in place to help those being hurt by these social distancing measures. And move ahead rapidly to get our country far better prepared to cope w COVID before people recommend we abandon our efforts to slow this virus. 24/x — Tom Inglesby - MD, Professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
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