Depends on what age group I was in.

Depends on what age group I was in.
Good answer!
kalm wrote: ↑Mon May 04, 2020 11:36 am
I’m using fear porn sarcastically in response to some using “crisis porn”.
There’s legit concerns for both.
We can’t print money forever but as I’ve mentioned before, CCC and WPA type projects are a no brainer for getting people back to work and reinjecting tax revenue especially on a local and state level.
History doesn’t repeat but it echoes. We’ve gone through economic crisis before and have come out the back end with profits from public investments.
We’re not talking years, we’re talking months or even weeks if we play it right and the health situation is massively reduced...quickly.
If we open up to much to soon and a second wave kicks in for June and July. We may lose even more small businesses due to a smaller customer base and extended self quarantine of many of their customers. I'm looking restaurants, as a lot of older people meet at them in groups. Specifically the 4pm crowd will be down.Winterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 5:44 amkalm wrote: ↑Mon May 04, 2020 11:36 am
I’m using fear porn sarcastically in response to some using “crisis porn”.
There’s legit concerns for both.
We can’t print money forever but as I’ve mentioned before, CCC and WPA type projects are a no brainer for getting people back to work and reinjecting tax revenue especially on a local and state level.
History doesn’t repeat but it echoes. We’ve gone through economic crisis before and have come out the back end with profits from public investments.
We’re not talking years, we’re talking months or even weeks if we play it right and the health situation is massively reduced...quickly.![]()
![]()
For the most part the people who could actually do those jobs are still working.![]()
The ones that are laid off are retail or service industry. Those people wouldn't know what to do with a muck stick if it hit them in the back of the head, much less have the willingness to do that type of work. Unless you plan on withholding their unemployment benefits to get them to work?
There will be a second, third, and etc. wave. This is not a one and done, nor a two and done. We will loose those small business if we stay shut down. In fact we will loose much more than those small business if we stay shut down much longer. That is the real economic hit.Gil Dobie wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:17 amIf we open up to much to soon and a second wave kicks in for June and July. We may lose even more small businesses due to a smaller customer base and extended self quarantine of many of their customers. I'm looking restaurants, as a lot of older people meet at them in groups. Specifically the 4pm crowd will be down.Winterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 5:44 am
![]()
![]()
For the most part the people who could actually do those jobs are still working.![]()
The ones that are laid off are retail or service industry. Those people wouldn't know what to do with a muck stick if it hit them in the back of the head, much less have the willingness to do that type of work. Unless you plan on withholding their unemployment benefits to get them to work?
YesWinterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 5:44 amkalm wrote: ↑Mon May 04, 2020 11:36 am
I’m using fear porn sarcastically in response to some using “crisis porn”.
There’s legit concerns for both.
We can’t print money forever but as I’ve mentioned before, CCC and WPA type projects are a no brainer for getting people back to work and reinjecting tax revenue especially on a local and state level.
History doesn’t repeat but it echoes. We’ve gone through economic crisis before and have come out the back end with profits from public investments.
We’re not talking years, we’re talking months or even weeks if we play it right and the health situation is massively reduced...quickly.![]()
![]()
For the most part the people who could actually do those jobs are still working.![]()
The ones that are laid off are retail or service industry. Those people wouldn't know what to do with a muck stick if it hit them in the back of the head, much less have the willingness to do that type of work. Unless you plan on withholding their unemployment benefits to get them to work?
kalm wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:33 amYesWinterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 5:44 am
![]()
![]()
For the most part the people who could actually do those jobs are still working.![]()
The ones that are laid off are retail or service industry. Those people wouldn't know what to do with a muck stick if it hit them in the back of the head, much less have the willingness to do that type of work. Unless you plan on withholding their unemployment benefits to get them to work?
We’re inching closer but there’s still much to learn before reopening. A few young, healthy people are still succumbing to it. It’s also weird how certain people (including some low-risk healthy) go from asymptomatic (0) to organ failure (60) by the 6th day or so) Maybe a blip but it may be a trend or mutation.Winterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:33 amThere will be a second, third, and etc. wave. This is not a one and done, nor a two and done. We will loose those small business if we stay shut down. In fact we will loose much more than those small business if we stay shut down much longer. That is the real economic hit.Gil Dobie wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:17 am
If we open up to much to soon and a second wave kicks in for June and July. We may lose even more small businesses due to a smaller customer base and extended self quarantine of many of their customers. I'm looking restaurants, as a lot of older people meet at them in groups. Specifically the 4pm crowd will be down.
If you are in a high risk age group, stay home. Those of us that are not, our task is to keep the economy running. A one size stay at home order, even a state by state one is not the right fit, IMHO. It will have to be done by risk factor and that is going to annoy people because they think they are being singled out and "discriminated" against. There are very clear age/risk factors that are know on this virus, let us use that to open up for those people that are not affected.
I'm not saying we stay shut down. I'm saying we open cautiously, specifically in the densely populated area's. If we open too fast, and the number of deaths go back to 3000 per day, the government may tend to look at locking things down again.Winterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:33 amThere will be a second, third, and etc. wave. This is not a one and done, nor a two and done. We will loose those small business if we stay shut down. In fact we will loose much more than those small business if we stay shut down much longer. That is the real economic hit.Gil Dobie wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:17 am
If we open up to much to soon and a second wave kicks in for June and July. We may lose even more small businesses due to a smaller customer base and extended self quarantine of many of their customers. I'm looking restaurants, as a lot of older people meet at them in groups. Specifically the 4pm crowd will be down.
If you are in a high risk age group, stay home. Those of us that are not, our task is to keep the economy running. A one size stay at home order, even a state by state one is not the right fit, IMHO. It will have to be done by risk factor and that is going to annoy people because they think they are being singled out and "discriminated" against. There are very clear age/risk factors that are know on this virus, let us use that to open up for those people that are not affected.
Much to learn, yes. But there are some clear trends that are known and can guide us.kalm wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:43 amWe’re inching closer but there’s still much to learn before reopening. A few young, healthy people are still succumbing to it. It’s also weird how certain people (including some low-risk healthy) go from asymptomatic (0) to organ failure (60) by the 6th day or so) Maybe a blip but it may be a trend or mutation.Winterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:33 am
There will be a second, third, and etc. wave. This is not a one and done, nor a two and done. We will loose those small business if we stay shut down. In fact we will loose much more than those small business if we stay shut down much longer. That is the real economic hit.
If you are in a high risk age group, stay home. Those of us that are not, our task is to keep the economy running. A one size stay at home order, even a state by state one is not the right fit, IMHO. It will have to be done by risk factor and that is going to annoy people because they think they are being singled out and "discriminated" against. There are very clear age/risk factors that are know on this virus, let us use that to open up for those people that are not affected.
This the USA, man.....it's all or nothing!Gil Dobie wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:46 amI'm not saying we stay shut down. I'm saying we open cautiously, specifically in the densely populated area's. If we open too fast, and the number of deaths go back to 3000 per day, the government may tend to look at locking things down again.Winterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:33 am
There will be a second, third, and etc. wave. This is not a one and done, nor a two and done. We will loose those small business if we stay shut down. In fact we will loose much more than those small business if we stay shut down much longer. That is the real economic hit.
If you are in a high risk age group, stay home. Those of us that are not, our task is to keep the economy running. A one size stay at home order, even a state by state one is not the right fit, IMHO. It will have to be done by risk factor and that is going to annoy people because they think they are being singled out and "discriminated" against. There are very clear age/risk factors that are know on this virus, let us use that to open up for those people that are not affected.
I am not saying you were (if I came across that way, it was not my intention) but there is a difference in opening cautiously (which I think we are doing now, albeit a bit late) and what some people's proposal of opening cautiously which is basically a "stay at home" indefinitely.Gil Dobie wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:46 amI'm not saying we stay shut down. I'm saying we open cautiously, specifically in the densely populated area's. If we open too fast, and the number of deaths go back to 3000 per day, the government may tend to look at locking things down again.Winterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:33 am
There will be a second, third, and etc. wave. This is not a one and done, nor a two and done. We will loose those small business if we stay shut down. In fact we will loose much more than those small business if we stay shut down much longer. That is the real economic hit.
If you are in a high risk age group, stay home. Those of us that are not, our task is to keep the economy running. A one size stay at home order, even a state by state one is not the right fit, IMHO. It will have to be done by risk factor and that is going to annoy people because they think they are being singled out and "discriminated" against. There are very clear age/risk factors that are know on this virus, let us use that to open up for those people that are not affected.
I get it, cautious is relative to the person speaking.Winterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 7:14 amI am not saying you were (if I came across that way, it was not my intention) but there is a difference in opening cautiously (which I think we are doing now, albeit a bit late) and what some people's proposal of opening cautiously which is basically a "stay at home" indefinitely.
Semantics are important and should be the basis of any debate.Gil Dobie wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 7:26 amI get it, cautious is relative to the person speaking.Winterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 7:14 am
I am not saying you were (if I came across that way, it was not my intention) but there is a difference in opening cautiously (which I think we are doing now, albeit a bit late) and what some people's proposal of opening cautiously which is basically a "stay at home" indefinitely.
Yes, because that’s exactly what “reopening MOST OF AMERICA WITH PROPER PROTOCOLS” means.....
Please do - maybe you can also quote MAGAt's like Candace Owens, Aubrey Huff and Tomi Lehren...
Please link these so called large scale studies.
Gil, we do that shit every. Single. Day.
Do your own googling. I’m tired of carrying your water trying to clear up your fucked up, echo chamber viewpoints.
LMAO. Says the man that has moved into an echo chamber and spreads it around.
Jon, there are all kinds of links out there, even some from your favorite news sources, that validate the studies (growing in number) that ALL show the same thing: this thing is much more prevalent than originally thought.....50-80x more prevalent. Which makes it 50-80x LESS deadly.dbackjon wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 9:04 amLMAO. Says the man that has moved into an echo chamber and spreads it around.
So in other words, you don't have any links, and are talking out your ass.
Maybe you will pull out the now discredited Stanford Study, not realizing you are using a study that is horridly flawed, but MAGAts are treating it like Gospel because it reinforces what they WANT to hear.
You're forgetting the part that asympyomatic carriers play. Until we get accurate testing in very large numbers we're just swinging at a pinata.Winterborn wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:33 amThere will be a second, third, and etc. wave. This is not a one and done, nor a two and done. We will loose those small business if we stay shut down. In fact we will loose much more than those small business if we stay shut down much longer. That is the real economic hit.Gil Dobie wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 6:17 am
If we open up to much to soon and a second wave kicks in for June and July. We may lose even more small businesses due to a smaller customer base and extended self quarantine of many of their customers. I'm looking restaurants, as a lot of older people meet at them in groups. Specifically the 4pm crowd will be down.
If you are in a high risk age group, stay home. Those of us that are not, our task is to keep the economy running. A one size stay at home order, even a state by state one is not the right fit, IMHO.It will have to be done by risk factor and that is going to annoy people because they think they are being singled out and "discriminated" against. There are very clear age/risk factors that are know on this virus, let us use that to open up for those people that are not affected.
Not exactly - it depends on how many deaths from other causes were aggravated by the virus. Now that they know it isn't only attacking respiratory systems we may have underestimated the number of deaths.AZGrizFan wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 9:06 amJon, there are all kinds of links out there, even some from your favorite news sources, that validate the studies (growing in number) that ALL show the same thing: this thing is much more prevalent than originally thought.....50-80x more prevalent. Which makes it 50-80x LESS deadly.dbackjon wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 9:04 am
LMAO. Says the man that has moved into an echo chamber and spreads it around.
So in other words, you don't have any links, and are talking out your ass.
Maybe you will pull out the now discredited Stanford Study, not realizing you are using a study that is horridly flawed, but MAGAts are treating it like Gospel because it reinforces what they WANT to hear.
But you’d rather hang YOUR hat on one horribly flawed model that pedals fear porn because it reinforces what YOU want to hear.
You do you. Hide in your fucking basement if you want to. I’m ready to go back to work.![]()
It's apples and oranges. We can do something to stop the spread of this virus.AZGrizFan wrote: ↑Tue May 05, 2020 9:00 amGil, we do that shit every. Single. Day.
Every time you leave your house, there’s risk involved. Every time you get in an elevator. Every time you get fast food. Every time you go into a public place. Every time you plug something in. EVERYTHING involves an element of risk. If 2 of 100 cookies are poisoned, that’s one thing. If 2 of 10,000 are poisoned, I’m eating cookies all day long.