Originally Posted by
darrowdisciple
I graduated from name-calling school in 9th grade, so rather than respond in kind, I'll appeal to the side of you that writes interestingly and eloquently about the science of strength training. There are two statistics that matter in making decisions in the pandemic. The first is that 60%-70% of the population will be infected before it slows down. The other stat is the "R" rate. Infection rates in a given area? You'd need a comprehensive testing system, which has been inexcusably absent from the outset. Death rates? There are countless variables: available medical care and equipment, quality of medical care, personal characteristics of the infected person, how a death is characterized. Do they count someone with the virus who dies of pneumonia as a COVID death, or just "pneumonia." What about people who die weeks after infection from a related illness? In New York, during the peak, the "home death" count tripled, but few corpses were tested for COVID. Regardless of how you calculate it, COVID-19 is now the No. 1 cause of death in the U.S., which itself only really matters in relation to other considerations.
Plus, are the only two affects of the virus, as you seem to suggest, dying or being sick "for a few days?" The evidence from thousands of health care professionals and hospitals suggests otherwise. And, there are the non-COVID illnesses and accidents that can't be treated properly in overloaded hospitals. Does anyone think those problems are not the result of the pandemic? And of course, what right does anyone have recklessly to inflict on someone else even just being sick? Total prevention can't be achieved, even with appropriate precautions while reopening, but is throwing caution to the wind a sensible alternative?
The other important statistic is the "R" rate, or "reproduction rate." If there were a comprehensive testing system, it could be calculated more reliably. The purpose of the lockdowns has been to keep the medical system from being overloaded as much as possible, and to reduce the transmission rate in a given area below an R of 1, such that an infected person infects, statistically, less than one other person. in the interim, leaders were supposed to develop plans for safe reopening that would prevent the necessity of closing agains. When an R rate of less than 1has been achieved in a given area, it makes sense to re-open further we sensible precautions. We have been open all along.
Society "maimed?" That's a matter of perspective. I might suggest that what has been maimed is a kind of selfishness that goes as far as ignoring the effect of one's behavior on others. During WWII, people recognized the necessity of shared sacrifice. Many products and services were rationed, or not allowed at all. Those who weren't in the military needed no encouragement to serve in other ways. Everyone understood that the sacrifices were necessary, and a responsible, inspiring national leadership made it clear that the war would end one day, and that we needed to work together toward victory.
Dr. Osterholm has said that we are in "the second inning of a nine inning game." The virus is going to score at least 6-7 runs. Our goal is to keep the score as close as possible until we get a vaccine -- a walk-off home run. How we play the game until we score our own runs is the issue, and relying on science is the only way that makes sense.