RamblingMad
I'm an 80s kid too.
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2019
- Messages
- 8,005
It would be nice if our citizens would understand without that, wouldn't it?
As for as the news coverage goes, here's the way I think of it. As long as its factual, I don't have any problem with it. If it's true, let me see it.
If the paper or the news call it a spike, go look at how they came to that conclusion. Even if it doesn't take the testing or the hospitalizations into account but the 3000 is true, I don't have any problem with that news. It is still a fact. What I do with that fact is up to me. What I see happening on the DISboards quite a bit is arguing the facts or trying to change the facts. Just because the reporter didn't take into account the testing (which I saw more of early in this disaster and little of these days), still doesn't make the 3000 less important or less of a fact. The fact is that no matter how they find the 3000, those people were still out there, infecting other people.
I'm not hung up on the lag either. It would be great if we had a instantaneous test, but we don't. I see the 3000 new people in a day as an issue that needs to be dealt with. Perhaps we should have fewer things open. Perhaps masks should be mandatory. Perhaps the medical professionals will look at their data and decide what this means and take whatever steps are necessary to get the number under control.
Even when testing increases the number of positive cases, that's not cause to celebrate. If the number of people testing positive is in a area where the cases are spreading quickly, then we aren't acting sufficiently to slow it down. The virus has most of the control. We are not prepared unless we keep things slow and measured, practicing the safety measures we have identified.
Herd immunity is a good thing, but it is a slow process. You can't just open the country, let anyone and everyone get sick and count the deaths as the cost of doing business. It is a phased process and it's what the US is trying to do now.
We have decided to sacrifice our at risk population to our deity: the almighty dollar. And we have language to keep the opening going. If the number of cases go up, we say that’s because we’re testing more. If more people die, we say they had other health conditions, so don’t worry about it. If people talk about wearing masks, we say the science isn’t 100% positive that they’re effective, so do whatever you want. It’s glorious PR to keep the dollars rolling in.