Understood it's stomach flu.Some a$$holes definitely seem to be a bit... overactive…
Understood it's stomach flu.Some a$$holes definitely seem to be a bit... overactive…
The media is in the business of making money by getting you to pay attention. It looks like you've been a very reliable customer.Well, if you digest everything the media has to say...
State-owned and publicly financed media should always be keeping the highest standard of professionalism and reliability in informing.The media is in the business of making money by getting you to pay attention. It looks like you've been a very reliable customer.
Not finger pointing at you LS, just making a statement.
People need to get over the notion that the media exists to inform people of the most factual, pertinent information. That quaint notion went away a long, long time ago.
Yeast makes bread and yeast makes beer.
Someone at my office saw somebody buying 360 rolls of toilet paper. Even if you're under a 3 month lockdown, that's 3 entire rolls a day.
You risk six months in the jail here, only yesterday were reported more than 7.000 people denounced.With some countries now going into virtual lock down, how is the not leaving your home under unnecessary circumstances meant to be policed? I would think that would be impossible. Also, only being able to work is a problem, for whilst some people live to work, most of us work to live. And what if you are driving your car to get away from the city to hike for a few hours (probably encountering less than a dozen people)? If you are stopped by the police and admit that you are not going to work, are you sent back home again?
The media is in the business of making money, yes. If your take from my comments is that I buy into the hysteria, then you're taking the wrong things from it. Sir Fly's comment is very apposite.The media is in the business of making money by getting you to pay attention. It looks like you've been a very reliable customer.
Not finger pointing at you LS, just making a statement.
People need to get over the notion that the media exists to inform people of the most factual, pertinent information. That quaint notion went away a long, long time ago.
With some countries now going into virtual lock down, how is the not leaving your home under unnecessary circumstances meant to be policed? I would think that would be impossible. Also, only being able to work is a problem, for whilst some people live to work, most of us work to live. And what if you are driving your car to get away from the city to hike for a few hours (probably encountering less than a dozen people)? If you are stopped by the police and admit that you are not going to work, are you sent back home again?
The vast majority of us who will contract the coronavirus - and many of us will - will not die from it, nor will we suffer anything beyond a normal seasonal influenza.
I'd love to know how people are supposed to pay bills if they can't work. No work means no paycheck thus no money to pay bills that don't stop.
I'd love to know how people are supposed to pay bills if they can't work. No work means no paycheck thus no money to pay bills that don't stop.
Not boarding the plane would be sufficient pre-emptive measures. It wouldn't take a complete ban on aeroplanes and closure of all airports to prevent the risk of anybody else boarding any aircraft, in case any aircraft that may be boarded may be that aircraft that has a 0.2% chance of crashing, to stop me from boarding that aircraft. In the same manner, you don't have to ban sex to manage the spread of HIV, but it doesn't mean that not banning sex gives you carte blanche or that the risk of contracting HIV should be treated lightly. In a Trumpian world of binary outcomes, perhaps we do need this complete "all or nothing" approach to management ("not sufficient evidence of guilt" = "total exoneration"), but in a rational world we should not. I resent being treated like a total moron, but simultaneously I despair of the irrational, panicking mob whose counterproductive responses help justify the government treating its populace that way.Would you fly on an airplane if there were an 0.2% chance of its crashing? I doubt it. What if the chances were much higher--5-10%--depending on the carrier or the type of plane, and you had no way of knowing in advance what that was?
The Italian Government was going to not force home owners to continue to pay their mortgages for the foreseeable future. I don't know how this is all worked out financially, but that's what I stumbled across.
https://www.businessinsider.com.au/...ts-suspended-during-lockdown-2020-3?r=US&IR=T
No work means some bills may have to stop. How can payment of certain monthly services be justified if some aspects of the services are suspended?
Italy has at least suspected mortgage payments
That's just reactionary BS. Hiking and cycling on your own should always be allowed. Not doing any sport, not going outside, has proven adverse effects on body and mind. You don't pick up the virus in the woods or when no-one is around, and you don't risk spreading it, so it's totally irrational.You risk six months in the jail here, only yesterday were reported more than 7.000 people denounced.
Not boarding the plane would be sufficient pre-emptive measures. It wouldn't take a complete ban on aeroplanes and closure of all airports to prevent the risk of anybody else boarding any aircraft, in case any aircraft that may be boarded may be that aircraft that has a 0.2% chance of crashing, to stop me from boarding that aircraft.
The issue with Covid-19 is not its ill effects for the vast majority of people. It is its transmissibility to the very small minority of people for whom those ill effects are worse, and managing the flow of those so that they aren't overrun like they have been in Italy in the emergency departments.
Before you can test the RNA sample from the nasal swab, you have to extract it. Doing so requires a specific chemical. The majority of this specific chemical (called a reagent) is produced by one company with production facilities in Germany and Spain.
From what I read, US and UK reactions and testing are the worst, so I expect those to be the biggest disasters sadly.I looked a bit at some numbers and made a graphic that shows how it evolved in each country after they hit 1,000 confirmed chases.
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It looks like the USA, France and Switzerland are going to end up like Italy, Germany even worse and Spain looks like a real desaster, a total collapse of the whole health care system seem really plausible.
Yes. Every time we go to the restaurant, we have a nonzero% chance of indirectly killing somebody or multiple somebodies who otherwise would've survived.I think you're missing the point. I used the example to illustrate how death changes our view of low probability. In the intended example, every plane has an 0.2% chance of crashing, and it's completely random. You can't avoid this possibility by not flying on a particular plane. Of course it would result in a complete ban on boarding any aircraft, because you don't know which one is going to crash, and very few people--maybe you are more adventurous than others, but very few--would chance it. In fact, they couldn't if they wanted to, because the FAA would definitely step in. More than 100,000 flights occur daily all over the world. An 0.2% chance of crashing means there would be an average of two hundred plane crashes every day. The public simply wouldn't tolerate that.
In the first place, how do you propose to keep those most at risk from being infected? If you don't restrict the behavior of those at lower risk, that behavior will definitely lead to infections of higher risk people. In fact, the relatively small number of people at high risk (though it isn't that small, it's around 15-20% of the population, or more, depending on where you draw the line), means they're going to be greatly outnumbered by people who pose a great risk to them.
In the second place, you're ignoring the serious-critical cases, 15-20% of the total. That's what's overwhelming medical resources. I ask again: would it be worth eating at a favorite restaurant if you had that high a risk for ending up in intensive care?
There are different methods for extracting RNA, shouldn't have to depend on one specific reagent (and in fact it isn't one reagent, but a combination of several). There may be one procedure that maximizes speed and purity, but it's not like absent that procedure, testing can't be done.
Here in Oregon we now have one death in the Portland area attributed to the coronavirus (an elderly man with underlying health conditions), and I'm surrounded by counties that all have confirmed positive cases, my county doesn't have an officially positive case yet. But that's probably due to lack of testing.Here in Colorado the governor has shut down all ski resorts for at least one week. I'm sure this will only be the beginning.