Seriously, though, my wife is unemployed at the moment, and I had to take a pay cut. I’m fortunate in that the pay cut didn’t last long and that I still make enough to support us both, but lockdown “ROCKED”? I don’t think so.
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And I’m not even revealing all the other crap that hit the fan in my life personally, in my family, and professionally over the last seven months or so as a result of or exacerbated by the pandemic, because it’s personal. Suffice to say, “ROCKED” it did not.
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Don’t get me wrong. I get that I’m fortunate compared to many. I didn’t lose my job, for instance, although I did worry that the faculty practice plan might go bankrupt, which would’ve been very bad.
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It’s just that the sheer foolishness of assuming that I criticize
#GreatBarringtonDeclaration because for me lockdowns “ROCKED” just blows me away with the stupid, which burns.pic.twitter.com/fM6PDnwAtRShow this thread
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I’m not employed by AIER, although I would be proud if I was. They are taking the difficult path, while people like you propound the argument that it’s good for the world to stifle dissent. That’s the only way you can win, that’s why you’re for it.
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Who wants to tell her that her (dumb, offensive) argument is based on a fallacy? We never “locked down” in US. We took half measures and dragged our feet on simple preventative actions because the federal government refuses to support people temporarily not working.
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