By "throwing out the baby with the bathwater" do you mean, stopping all mandatory testing of people without symptoms? If not, what do you mean?
Because I can tell you what hasn't solved this: all the measures those of us here are railing about. Arguably, in fact, they have exacerbated it,creating more mental health issues, weight gain, an…
By "throwing out the baby with the bathwater" do you mean, stopping all mandatory testing of people without symptoms? If not, what do you mean?
Because I can tell you what hasn't solved this: all the measures those of us here are railing about. Arguably, in fact, they have exacerbated it,creating more mental health issues, weight gain, and health problems among our youth.
Trust me, I don't want people to die. I want to protect the most vulnerable. I don't think being old, sick, or obese makes anybody's death less tragic. I'm just quite certain that by focusing on lunacy-- vaccinating and masking children, mandating healthy young employees to get vaccinated, in some countries now threatening the unvaxxed with future fines or prison time-- we are actually missing the trees for the forest. None of these measures appears to have any impact on the people most at risk for covid, although they may in the future when all of the most vulnerable people have already perished in a prior wave. Do we really want to get to THAT future?
What I mean is that many now seem to be inferring there is no real pandemic, if we would just stop testing so much. They are throwing out the pandemic (the baby) with the bathwater (the testing).
I think there's a happy medium between that and fear mongering the hell out of people, along with useless mandates that do nothing to protect the vulnerable, as you point out.
Case numbers are not the important thing, but it's not just case numbers that reflect what's happening with the pandemic.
Thanks for explaining! I guess my only disagreement is that I'm of the opinion that we should no longer be treating this a pandemic. I can see how my original post made it seem like I was dismissive that people are actually still getting sick from covid and I appreciate you speaking up. I have a tendency to make offensive jokes that you legitimately called me on.
Oh you're good! I was more referring to the overall discourse and direction lately it seems to have gone on this blog.
As far as treating it like a pandemic...I think it is what it is, and until it behaves more like the flu and doesn't put so much strain on our hospital systems, we have to deal with that reality. But I agree that we can't keep treating it the same way we did the first few months. That was an overreaction - but unfortunately, I don't think we can just dismiss it now.
By "throwing out the baby with the bathwater" do you mean, stopping all mandatory testing of people without symptoms? If not, what do you mean?
Because I can tell you what hasn't solved this: all the measures those of us here are railing about. Arguably, in fact, they have exacerbated it,creating more mental health issues, weight gain, and health problems among our youth.
Trust me, I don't want people to die. I want to protect the most vulnerable. I don't think being old, sick, or obese makes anybody's death less tragic. I'm just quite certain that by focusing on lunacy-- vaccinating and masking children, mandating healthy young employees to get vaccinated, in some countries now threatening the unvaxxed with future fines or prison time-- we are actually missing the trees for the forest. None of these measures appears to have any impact on the people most at risk for covid, although they may in the future when all of the most vulnerable people have already perished in a prior wave. Do we really want to get to THAT future?
What I mean is that many now seem to be inferring there is no real pandemic, if we would just stop testing so much. They are throwing out the pandemic (the baby) with the bathwater (the testing).
I think there's a happy medium between that and fear mongering the hell out of people, along with useless mandates that do nothing to protect the vulnerable, as you point out.
Case numbers are not the important thing, but it's not just case numbers that reflect what's happening with the pandemic.
Thanks for explaining! I guess my only disagreement is that I'm of the opinion that we should no longer be treating this a pandemic. I can see how my original post made it seem like I was dismissive that people are actually still getting sick from covid and I appreciate you speaking up. I have a tendency to make offensive jokes that you legitimately called me on.
Oh you're good! I was more referring to the overall discourse and direction lately it seems to have gone on this blog.
As far as treating it like a pandemic...I think it is what it is, and until it behaves more like the flu and doesn't put so much strain on our hospital systems, we have to deal with that reality. But I agree that we can't keep treating it the same way we did the first few months. That was an overreaction - but unfortunately, I don't think we can just dismiss it now.