Almost all Corona infections happen indoors, and yet every country enamoured of mass containment insists that people spend inordinate amounts of time indoors and places heavy restrictions on going outside.
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Replying to @eugyppius1
This can't be that hard to understand. It's not that going outside is more risky, but rather that people who go outside tend to also enter enclosed space with people of other groups. It's about maintaining small exposure capsules.
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Replying to @PaddysPubKey
Are you serious? We have police patrolling our parks scolding people and sometimes even issuing citations. Düsseldorf issued an ordinance forbidding people to spend time on park benches on the banks of the Rhine.
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Replying to @eugyppius1 @PaddysPubKey
In fact, it’s technically illegal to be *stationary* anywhere outside in Bavaria. You can only “exercise” outside (one of only five or six reasons you can go outside at all)
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Replying to @eugyppius1
Look, I'm just trying to explain why crude, inefficient policies get enforced. You can argue that strip searching grandma at the airport is dumb, but no one would argue it's not. You have to come up with alternative policies that prevent planes from exploding. Not easy.
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Replying to @PaddysPubKey @eugyppius1
Highly recommend you read this: https://samharris.org/to-profile-or-not-to-profile/ … It may seem offtopic, but it actually explains quite well why crude policies are sometimes the only viable option.
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lmao yes I’m aware of the Schneier / Harris security engineering debate from 8 years ago are there any other Very Smart things you can point me to
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