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- #2,305
Justmehere
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The 1968 pandemic of the Hong Kong flu may be worth looking into. A million people died and nothing was shut down. Adjusted for population growth, it would be an even larger number of deaths of the current population if it hit the world today. We are not near that level of outbreak.
“Timid men prefer the calm of despotism to the boisterous sea of liberty.” - Thomas Jefferson
It was expected that the US would be uh, lively. It’s always been this way and unless we see true tyrant that somehow manages to suppress it, it will continue, with all its benefits and flaws. In fact, in the face of the real or imagined threat of tyranny, the messiness, in a way, of the nation increases on purpose as part of what should stop a tyrant.
Here’s the thing... the US is not uniquely the worst mess ever with covid 19 management. It’s putting wayyy too much focus on one nation and completely ignoring the plight of the people in Syria, India, Yemen. Kenya. Etc. My goodness what’s happening in Yemen with covid 19 is so heartbreaking. Or Brazil or Ecuador where the bodies are piling up in the streets. Or refugee camps...
The US has horribly failed at early management of the pandemic, but some take it to suggest that the US would have been able to stop the current level of outbreak if only this or that had been done. It wasn’t possible. It was never going to happen.
It’s like the issue of flattening the curve. Many are expecting this is about lowering the total number of infections of over the entire pandemic in a nation, but in many nations, it’s not and it’s never been about lowering the total number but the total number being the same, spread out.
Covid is here to stay. It’s not going away unless there is herd immunity through vaccine or infection. There is an extremely low chance of getting a vaccine implemented worldwide prior to much of the world population getting infected. The US is one of the first hot spots, but more will happen unless nations continue to keep borders locked down. It may be slow and super drawn out for other nations - which is good, because it buys time for vaccine or treatments to come online.
As for the US, it’s been a mess... but the belief that many have (not referring to anyone specific here) that the virus could have been stopped by this or that amazing management technique is not really supported by the science.
China didn’t stop the virus even by welding people into their homes to die. They still keep finding infections and new outbreaks. They didn’t stop the virus even with the strongest and most coordinated/organized response. After New Coronavirus Outbreaks, China Imposes Wuhan-Style Lockdown
While critiquing really serious flaws in pandemic responses, of which there are many in the US, so many, I think we also have to be realistic about what is humanly possible in terms of control of the virus in the first place.
Also, there is another factor to consider. I’ve lived outside the US and inside the US. News internationally (and nationally) about the on the ground realities in the US is not ah, fully accurate. No, I’m not crying “fake news” but rather “if it bleeds it leads.” News in other nations makes us look like we all eat Mickey Ds. I don’t know many people who do. News makes it look like people are dying in the streets and it’s utter chaos here. The on the ground reality in my area is that the response is fairly well organized and calm, even if it’s not all agreed upon, and the type and level of response varies around the nation.
Not really new with the pandemic, is it? Maybe amplified now... but seriously, the nation was founded on a bunch of rebels rejecting authoritarian government and stating we want freedom from much governance.Again- seriously glad I don't live in the states. I mean you get that every other nation is laughing at you right? at the same time they're crying?
“Timid men prefer the calm of despotism to the boisterous sea of liberty.” - Thomas Jefferson
It was expected that the US would be uh, lively. It’s always been this way and unless we see true tyrant that somehow manages to suppress it, it will continue, with all its benefits and flaws. In fact, in the face of the real or imagined threat of tyranny, the messiness, in a way, of the nation increases on purpose as part of what should stop a tyrant.
Here’s the thing... the US is not uniquely the worst mess ever with covid 19 management. It’s putting wayyy too much focus on one nation and completely ignoring the plight of the people in Syria, India, Yemen. Kenya. Etc. My goodness what’s happening in Yemen with covid 19 is so heartbreaking. Or Brazil or Ecuador where the bodies are piling up in the streets. Or refugee camps...
The US has horribly failed at early management of the pandemic, but some take it to suggest that the US would have been able to stop the current level of outbreak if only this or that had been done. It wasn’t possible. It was never going to happen.
It’s like the issue of flattening the curve. Many are expecting this is about lowering the total number of infections of over the entire pandemic in a nation, but in many nations, it’s not and it’s never been about lowering the total number but the total number being the same, spread out.
Covid is here to stay. It’s not going away unless there is herd immunity through vaccine or infection. There is an extremely low chance of getting a vaccine implemented worldwide prior to much of the world population getting infected. The US is one of the first hot spots, but more will happen unless nations continue to keep borders locked down. It may be slow and super drawn out for other nations - which is good, because it buys time for vaccine or treatments to come online.
As for the US, it’s been a mess... but the belief that many have (not referring to anyone specific here) that the virus could have been stopped by this or that amazing management technique is not really supported by the science.
In congressional testimony, in medical webcasts and in private discussions with health officials, they warned that the unique features of this flu-like virus made it impossible to control, and that the administration must use any time that containment measures might buy to prepare the country for an inevitable outbreak. "Doomed from the Start.” Why Trump's Coronavirus Response Was Never Going to Work
China didn’t stop the virus even by welding people into their homes to die. They still keep finding infections and new outbreaks. They didn’t stop the virus even with the strongest and most coordinated/organized response. After New Coronavirus Outbreaks, China Imposes Wuhan-Style Lockdown
While critiquing really serious flaws in pandemic responses, of which there are many in the US, so many, I think we also have to be realistic about what is humanly possible in terms of control of the virus in the first place.
Also, there is another factor to consider. I’ve lived outside the US and inside the US. News internationally (and nationally) about the on the ground realities in the US is not ah, fully accurate. No, I’m not crying “fake news” but rather “if it bleeds it leads.” News in other nations makes us look like we all eat Mickey Ds. I don’t know many people who do. News makes it look like people are dying in the streets and it’s utter chaos here. The on the ground reality in my area is that the response is fairly well organized and calm, even if it’s not all agreed upon, and the type and level of response varies around the nation.