No number - institute the rules that are necessary (masks, temperature checks into businesses (employees for now, others later on), limit occupants in a building to allow for spacing, make spacing (one-way aisleways) mandatory, make regular cleaning/disinfecting mandatory, and so on). Open up ways to report businesses that aren't following these guidelines and shut those places down that don't comply. Get everyone back to work, with this laundry list of guidelines in place, and go from there.Gil Dobie wrote: ↑Wed Apr 15, 2020 2:03 pmWhat's your number?GannonFan wrote: ↑Wed Apr 15, 2020 1:57 pm
The list of rules already exist and they will continue to exist for most likely the next 12-18 months, assuming a magical vaccine isn't created between now and then. I just posted that the PA governor just added to this list, as they did in NY as well. We're 5 weeks into lockdown here in PA, these rules have been added on to the whole time and people are following them as they get updated. If essential businesses are doing this, not sure why non-essential businesses couldn't do it either. That sounds very much like managing the virus to me. And again, these rules aren't going away once the death rates get down to whatever number you deem acceptable, these rules are in place for the long term right now.
You say you want to manage the virus, this is what managing it looks like. Testing everyone everyday isn't ever going to be viable (see my earlier calculations to kalmie of something like hundreds of trillions of tests for this country alone in a year) and given that people can be asymptomatic and spreaders (the typhoid Mary issue) means without testing everyone everyday you're going to be exposed. Only way to mitigate that, other than hibernation (which also isn't viable) is to give people a means to protect themselves in public and at work and at schools. Waiting on a number is pointless, because the moment you let people out of hibernation the number will go back up and you'll be stuck with the idea of do we shut everything down again. We need a long-term strategy and that laundry list of ways to protect people is a long-term strategy.








