Colleen27
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,190
I invite you to travel to New York and tell me how much of an overreaction the last month has been. Maybe in smaller, rural areas it’s easy to believe we’ve been “crying wolf,” but in cities like New York and Portland and Detroit and Pittsburgh, the threat is very real and many, many, many people are dying.
I'm a native Detroiter and still live on the edge of the metro area. I wouldn't call the response here an overreaction on whole, but there are definitely elements of overreaction - field hospitals that ended up cancelled before they could be set up or are operating to serve a very small number of cases, a lockdown that missed some essential things in the first round (traveling to second homes in rural "up north" areas with limited medical resources and seasonal retail infrastructure that couldn't handle a winter influx) and then became quite arbitrary in the second (Best Buy can offer curbside service but garden centers can't, plants and paint are non-essential but lottery is essential, kayaking is fine but fishing boats are illegal), total shut down of non-essential medical procedures and services without regard to the local prevalence of virus cases which is causing mass layoffs and possible hospital closures, etc. Am I allowed to have that opinion, since I do live in a "hot spot" area and know people who have had the virus?
It’s funny the hysterical reaction about re opening beaches in Florida. The safest place in the world for protection from this virus is a beach. It is destroyed almost immediately by UV light and if that somehow doesn’t kill it then the combination of temperature and humidity will. If you wanted to organize a Coronavirus safe haven best place to put it would be on a Florida beach
I think the biggest problem with the beaches right now is that it isn't being handled at the state level. When it is left to local leaders, many beaches will remain closed and those that are open will therefore be much more crowded than if all the public beaches were open. Plus people will be driving more than necessary to get to those open beaches.
We've seen the same thing with parks in my area - the closure of big local parks has pushed everyone to use the county and state parks, which has made those parks more crowded and is now creating pressure for them to close too. But my county of 160K people has something like 3500 acres of park land, most of it far enough from the more populated parts of neighboring counties to be quite inconvenient or unknown to people who aren't from the area. When it is all open, there's almost no chance of crowding.