Heather07438
WDW Apprentice
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2015
- Messages
- 5,516
I totally understand where you are coming from. Not really fair to over-burdened health workers.Of course, and that's a different conversation. How does a conversation about second-hand smoke, reckless driving, etc. have anything to do with deciding to go to a huge gathering with no precautions (with the exception of the outdoor part which seems fine) and catching something that, when you have it, you put healthcare workers immediately at risk and they don't really have a choice in the matter. We have no laws against that. We do for speeding though.
That was my whole point from the first post I made: that I don't care what people do with their own health WRT COVID but, if they get it, they are seriously threatening all the healthcare workers in their path. That's just incredibly selfish and it's a shame that some doctor, nurse, lab technician, etc. is going to take on greater risk because someone wanted to go have fun in a crowd. There's just something so incredibly self-centered about that mentality.
Obviously I'm being super-dense here because I cannot neatly compare another situation out there today that fits with enjoying yourself in a pandemic, catching it, then relying on already-burdened frontline healthcare workers to take care of you and think nothing of it.
On some level though most people in rescue and aid positions become experienced with dealing with and accepting that public ignorance often puts themselves in jeopardy. Not that it's right, just a matter of reality. Firemen, police, healthcare, rescue teams... It's quite intricate and distracting to consider if and when a person deserved attention.
Maybe a good solution would be to set up Sturgis infection tents and let the maskless of society tend to the infected inside.