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- pie4july
The fact that it can cause permanent lung damage is terrifying
And that smokers are in the underlying health reasons group. I don't smoke but I wonder if the second hand smoke inhalation will be a factor.The fact that it can cause permanent lung damage is terrifying
The fact that it can cause permanent lung damage is terrifying
And that smokers are in the underlying health reasons group. I don't smoke but I wonder if the second hand smoke inhalation will be a factor.
Ready to be crucified, now.
Forgive me for being blasé about the latest in a long line of pathogen panics that amounted to very little, after having it ruin my birthday and my brother's first holiday in over a decade.Pushing back against people who are going overboard, by being excessively blase about it all yourself, is equally as moronic.
That is all.
My great granddad had one lung after being gassed in the first world war. He lived until 1994 and smoked his entire life. Toughen up, people.
How?people's panic is making it far more impactful than it otherwise might be.
Because so many people cancelled their flights that an airline went out of business?How?
having it ruin my birthday
Thankyou! Finally somebody gets it!Well ****, now it really is serious!
Thankyou! Finally somebody gets it!
I AM aware how facetious I'm being, just to be clear. Just annoyed enough not to really care at this point. Miss me bloody cat.
Flybe needed a bailout to survive and they didn't get it. They've been haemorrhaging money for a decade. At some point over the next few months some people were going to have their travel plans disrupted and other were going to lose their jobs. Cancelling travel plans is a reasonable action to take under the circumstances. No doubt many cancellations are unessential business trips. It's not panic, it's sensible - at least for a period of time until we know more about the infection.Because so many people cancelled their flights that an airline went out of business?
Because people are emptying shops of toilet paper and sanitiser, much, I'm sure, to the joy of Mr. Andrex and co.?
Because people (other than the thousands at Flybe who already did) are going to lose their jobs and livelihoods?
Because people are afraid to conduct their ordinary business out of fear they will die at 35, perfectly healthy, of what essentially amounts to a nasty fever?
I hope all these preppers, if it does come down to an apocalyptic ultra pathogen situation, will enjoy the soft toilet paper while they starve to death. I will wipe my arse with leaves and eat tinned beans. If you're gonna panic, at least do it right...
(I'm a bit angry, if you can't tell.)
Sure, it's serious, people are dying, but people's panic is making it far more impactful than it otherwise might be.
Because so many people cancelled their flights that an airline went out of business?
By not panicking but taking reasonable precautions now, it is possible that the UK and elsewhere avoid the worst impacts.
If you live in Michigan and need to go to DHS or SOS for any reason better get it done ASAP. Those locations will be the first closed across the state.
Its gonna be rough for sure. Having to get up and go right to the computer desk with my cup of coffee. My wife works in the same office I do. We might make a little "vacation" of it and head up to her dad's in Atlanta, take the snowmobiles out for a drive... after business hours of course.I agree with precautions, but I do think we're hitting panic levels in the US. Washing your hand more frequently, avoiding non-essential travel, and not shaking hands or hugging makes perfect sense to me. But we have people here that are prepping like it's the end of the world as we know it (no word if Lenny Bruce is afraid or not). Even people I work with are buying a year's supply of food, medicine, and hygiene products. They're also stockpiling ammunition because I assume they're going to shoot the virus or something. They keep telling me I should do the same thing because civilization will grind to a halt and the government will declare martial law and of course we need to fight back. To me, that's just paranoia and I don't think anyone should be at that level of worry...at least not at this time.
I keep bringing up that currently, more people are set to get necrotizing fasciitis (flesh-eating disease, around 700 cases per year/ 58 per month) than CoV-19 in the US this year. Obviously, this could change, but right now CoV-19 is fairly rare in the states all things considered. People need to take a step back and think rationally based on what's currently going on. I know it's difficult though because you're absolutely bombarded with things like "emergency coronavirus reports" on every single news network.
Really the best thing you can do is just pay attention to where the cases are and read up on the source material from the CDC instead of relying on CNN or Fox News. Couple that with good hygiene practices and using some common sense, and you'll increase your chances of making it through it without getting sick. It'll be getting warm in the US fairly soon which could help reduce the spread of the virus in the states too. The change in weather probably won't stop the spread, but I'm guessing like many known respiratory viruses, it'll reduce the likelihood of getting it.
As if the SOS wasn't already the worst possible place to go
We're being told the same thing here too. Once we get a confirmed case that isn't from the cruise in Japan, pretty much all non-clinical staff will be working from home. Such a shame, not wearing pants and lounging in my recliner while I work, whatever shall I do?
Earthquakes are likely unrelated, not sure whether birds and snakes are affected and, okay, so aeroplanes seem to be involved...but Lenny died 21 years earlier, so he's probably not.(no word if Lenny Bruce is afraid or not)
Is the coronavirus problem any different than the trolley problem?
If we just let it rip and not do anything that would disrupt the economy, and 10,000 die....is that easily the moral choice over shutting down the economy by 10% in an effort save a few thousand lives?
It's different. There's no one person in control of the metaphorical "trolley switch". What will happen doesn't only depend on what WHO and governments do, but the decisions and actions of ordinary people en masse.Is the coronavirus problem any different than the trolley problem?
If we just let it rip and not do anything that would disrupt the economy, and 10,000 die....is that easily the moral choice over shutting down the economy by 10% in an effort save a few thousand lives?
Thus does politics and ideology affect what we do. How much should we trust in government? The WHO? The CDC? The media? The elites?
Should we yield up our rights, freedoms and businesses to higher authority?
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/...s/607597/?preview=3-4FLneYp3QF4ooMLWUN_KtUiR8“I don’t know what went wrong,” a former CDC chief told The Atlantic.