“What strategy is correct for the coronavirus?” is the wrong question. You can’t answer that before answering: 1) what level of competence/restraint will we see from our federal government? 2) what is an acceptable amount of death of old and senesitive populations?
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At first, I was pretty against the herd immunity strategies, but then I realized: America ain’t got it. Civil liberties that prevent China-like restrictions and our federal govts incompetence make adopting Singapore or Taiwan strategies totally unrealistic.
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Also, I’ve basically been in quarantine for about 2.5 months. I took precautions early because I thought the us numbers were bullshit and I wasn’t sure how bad the disease was going to be. My point is, the longer you are in quarantine, the more tired of it you become.
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The longer we do these restrictions, I suspect, the less people are going to care about the old and sensitive groups and the more they’ll care about the economy and themselves.
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So in summary, there is a clear path to minimizing death, but the US wont pull it off between its laws, govt incompetence, and lack of sympathy for sensitive groups. We will do some half-asses herd immunity thing and the exposed sadly will be in our “thoughts and prayers”.
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Replying to @Molson_Hart
There's a severe Y2K effect starting to kick in, where it's not as big a deal as it was projected to be, either because we did shut down or just because, so Joe Schmoe on the street is starting to look around and say "I'm out of work for this?"
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Breaking news: people are idiots.
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