That's the entire point of the problem. Coronavirus spreads more easily. |
? The entire problem is that a new disease popped out from another species and there's no vaccine, no immunity to it built up through evolution, and no way of knowing the full impact of what this virus will do.
The flu infected up to 56 million people in the U.S. alone in the last 6 months and killed up to 62,000:
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/preliminary-in-season-estimates.htm
The coronavirus in about 6 months (obviously starting with a smaller population that the flu has access to now) has infected almost 2.7 million worldwide yet killed 188,000 people. Almost a million of those infections are in the U.S. alone and over a quarter of the deaths are also in the U.S.
If you've survived one infection and you don't develop a serious illness in the intervening time, you'll almost certainly survive a second infection. |
Let's say you survive it once, twice, hell, let's say you got infected 10 times by several people who all had different strains and your super immune system fought them all off using jet propulsion engines with swords attached.
Now you've got the flu, and coronavirus comes along as well. Double trouble. So now your body has two different kinds of viruses to kill off. And there's no reason to assume that just because you fought off one at a time (and who knows how many barely managed that compared to those who barely felt it) that you'll just be god-tier immune from dying.
We don't know how the viruses will interact in your body, how your body will handle it, and what the virus will mutate into.
You don't know if it'll work until you've tried! |
They did try... In fact, back in the day they blew smoke up dead people's asses to see what it would do. Now adays, there are certain practices/techniques that we already know or assume will/won't work due to advances obviously. The issue with your argument here is that you're using knowledge which came BECAUSE people have done it to say why don't we do that - knowing it's a bad call. You can't
know that the strategy being used now is bad.
What's especially bad about a situation like this is that doing this may have in fact been the only way to prevent something horrible, but you don't know because it was prevented.. The best you can do is see what happened to other who haven't followed the same cautionary measures.
Microeconomies can still continue in those communities |
It was more about whether isolation was a good method for stopping the spread.
Don't try to tell me what I'd do, because you have no fucking clue, buddy. If you're going to accuse me of being a hypocrite the conversation ends right here. |
Nothing to do with you being a hypocrite or predicting your actions, it was more a statement about humanity. I'm saying it's easy to criticize what others are doing.
"The folly of leadership is knowing that, no matter what you do, behind your back there are hundreds, certain that their own solution is the sounder one, and that your decision was the by-product of a whimsical dart toss." ~ Sebastian LaCroix
I usually like debating with you because I find you to be intelligent in a way that differs from me. But it also means there are some things we'll probably never see eye to eye on.
Uh... Both? We understand how respiratory viruses spread in general |
I meant your chances of surviving the infection. It didn't take long after the initial spread of the virus for it to infect and kill several young people - like the young Chinese medical doctor who blew the whistle on the virus. So I'm assuming you're basing the idea that you wanna take your chances with the virus on the information gathered now that there's more insight about what population is most vulnerable.
Imagine school children spreading it and having a funeral outback for Tod. Probably for the best, no one liked Tod.
Sure you can. There were way deadlier stuff going around way back when and the world kept turning. |
A 7 year old article:
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-reutersmagazine-davos-flu-economy/flu-conomics-the-next-pandemic-could-trigger-global-recession-idUSBRE90K0F820130121
Your main issue was with the economy is what you stated before, but an outbreak always takes a toll. The difference now could be that it's a hard yet swift hit on the economy vs a long-drawn out toll on the economy. The issue, again, is that this is like a test.. You can't know the
real effect of what's happening right now until you analyze it later once it's over.
It all depends on how much of your workforce it kills or incapacitates at a given time |
I find this argument to be self-defeating. Your workers aren't going to sit around waiting to be infected - they're not the marines. If they find they're being used disposably they'll go on strike. Even now, mayors and governors have issued orders in some states here in the U.S. to reopen, and workers (even the companies that you'd think would want to start business up again) have refused.
It will never work. Not unless we discover magic or something |
Colonizing other planets doesn't require light speed - maybe if we wanted to colonize our entire galaxy. Wormholes are interesting in that while there's no known way to create one, but physics shows it may be possible. Even if not, impossible things today can be possible in the future - new ideas that we couldn't imagine could be brought to light through some new discovery.
"Trade" is a manner of speaking, because likely no living people will go on the ship. There would be no way to keep them alive for so long. |
If we're assuming light speed travel, then the passengers would experience no time. They wouldn't need anything to keep them alive because to them, the moment they left is the same moment they made it to their destination:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ACUuFg9Y9dY
But I don't feel like arguing about this. Consider what I've said and reach your own conclusions. |
I'm only arguing it's possible and I like to think we have the cognitive abilities to be able to do it. Perhaps we never will and we'll go extinct before we know it, but that possibility that we can one day truly understand the universe is fascinating and interesting.
I've been playing Half-Life 2 recently, and there's something about Source engine games that drives me crazy. For some reason they add the US layout to the list of active keyboards, and there's some strange combination of keys I hit that causes the layout to change |
Well, I use a US layout and haven't played any of the half-life games (which I need to get to!), so I'm not of much help. If you're looking for a video game recommendation: Vampire The Masquerade Bloodlines is an amazing game. It was made back in 2000, but the graphics are still pretty good. 20 years later and their finally making another one, can't wait!