It's not just the media. There's always a duplicitous crowd prepared to use an event as a vehicle for politics and propaganda: leftists, rightists, westerners, easterners, etc., etc., each one with a mirror image at whom to hurl claims.
Its in the long term that a scientific view wins out. Give it time. — frank
So leaving the country semi-open with the recommendation that people stay at home and work from home as much as they can, actually works. — Christoffer
So I had a scenario where this plays out not well for employee pitted against employer when the lockdown measures were not as stringent.. and I think this will be the same in any country, including Sweden. Check out the discussion here — schopenhauer1
If Jefferson had the order right: Life comes before liberty because without a life, there is no liberty to be had. Without civil liberties, there is no pursuit of happiness. But you still need that life there first. How bad does it have to be then, for any intervention? Let's say Ebola was highly contagious and airborne, would it be acceptable then? Also, global economies ultimately depend on a more-or-less healthy population. Without the healthy population, you have an economic collapse anyways as everyone is sick in hospitals- organizations that would have no measure of help in your scenario.
It is a weird utilitarian calculus to try to boost a future economy but not help those who are dying now. Apparently the golden rule idea doesn't apply to government, only crass utilitarian ones that calculate current death with economic depressions. Depressions do indeed hurt people, but usually they don't lead to outright death. Poverty does suck as a close second though, that I'll admit, but it is second.
Again I don’t think it’s that black and white. You are literally not helping others, protecting others, or soothing any suffering by hiding in your house. You are hiding. You have retreated. You have cowered. Those who are helping people are the first line in this pandemic: doctors, nurses, “essential workers”. So let’s stop pretending we are in some way morally better because we hide in our bedrooms. — NOS4A2
In my mind the utilitarian calculus is the one that claims to save lives by denying basic civil liberties and human rights while ruining the very means with which we provide for our families. It does not follow that such measures need to be enforced in order to practice them. Do you yourself require a police-state and a ruined economy to physically distance yourself from others, to practice hygiene and to follow common-sense steps to avoid infection? — NOS4A2
What does this have to do with the argument? That is such a red herring! The argument was civil liberties vs. federal government intervention. Oddly you are making my case by saying how little it as asking people to do.. Most people it means stay at home as much as possible. This is the best and minimal thing you can do as a citizen. Then there is federal aid to hospitals, etc. done in a fair, quick, and smart way. That part requires federal action and money, and the orange clown in office isn't going to get us there.
So first you say quarantining isn't eve a big deal, and now its police-state. Which is it? But anyways, the major point is yes..clearly people do need to be told about this, as can be shown when many people were at bars and restaurants despite the order and some employers circumvented the intent of the law by mandating people come to work, even if they were non-essential and can work from home. It's that simple. You have watched too many reruns of Red Dawn, dude.
Asking people to give up their livelihood and the means with which they support themselves and their family isn’t asking a little. It is asking a lot, and with dire consequences. — NOS4A2
I think it’s reasonable to quarantine the sick. I don’t think it is reasonable to quarantine healthy. — NOS4A2
So you do need to be forced or otherwise coerced into taking proactive measures to protect yourselves and others? — NOS4A2
Hmm, how do those people get sick in the first place? How do you contain the spread of a virus? Oh yeah, not being in contact with people!
Nope, but apparently others do. Que the guy who goes to a crowded spring break beach, with all the other people going there...
Right, we’ll live apart from others for the rest of our lives. What if it only prolongs the inevitable? — NOS4A2
Measures for three but not for me. — NOS4A2
Which of the following statements do you think is false?
1) By going outside I am statistically more likely to come in contact with people.
2) By coming in contact with people, I am statistically more likely to transmit the virus. — Baden
I don’t think either are false. — NOS4A2
Or is there something in the above you can show to be false?
You just agreed that by going outside, you are statistically more likely to transmit the virus.
This is a red herring.
Which of the following statements do you think is false?
1) By going outside I am statistically more likely to come in contact with people.
2) By coming in contact with people, I am statistically more likely to transmit the virus. — Baden
I don’t think either are false. — NOS4A2
What I disagree with is the implication that going outside means I’m going to come into contact with people — NOS4A2
No, both are true. The statistical likelihood of me coming into contact with someone when I go outside is greater. Does this mean I necessarily come into contact with people when I go outside? No. In fact I maintain the proper distance as prescribed by the experts.
What about you? Do you think one must remain isolated in his house to practice physical distancing — NOS4A2
You are literally not helping others, protecting others, or soothing any suffering by hiding in your house — NOS4A2
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