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For a few lines of 'inconsequential nothingness' see above
People are taking the virus seriously. Vulnerable groups in particular are keeping their distance more. Most people (except ignorant ones) are washing their hands more and generally being more cautious about physical contact. But if you go into total lockdown of everyone, you only delay the spike and potentially cause an even bigger one, because a certain degree of exposure to threats is important for keeping our immune systems active, and if you go into a bubble for a long time you actually increase your vulnerability when you emerge.
No, I posted, "As one doctor on the radio put it the other day: if you're sitting there worrying about the Coronavirus, you should be more worried if you haven't had a flu jab."
No, I posted "I've got no problem with it being reported in a calm way, and with people taking sensible precautions as advised, but I'm cynical about the level of hype, if not panic, that the media are creating." That remains my view. The reporting by some media outlets has been sensationalist rather than helpful and informative.
No, I didn't say that. I made a comment in jest to BFP saying "I'll bet neither of us dies from Coronavirus but if we do, I owe you a tenner!". I think it's highly unlikely I'll die from it, but I cannot guarantee it and I don't wish such misfortune on anyone.
Same here. I totally support people taking sensible precautions, and those precautions should be tighter for the most vulnerable groups. This will hopefully have some positive effect, but it won't work for everyone. Vulnerability and mortality is part and parcel of human existence.
I would try to answer this, but it's complete gibberish.
After a spell of quite severe health anxiety when I was younger I've become much less troubled by my own mortality in recent years and much healthier for it. Plus, when I read posts like yours, death kind of loses its sting!
I never said it was and I don't advocate either.
Yes, sensible precautions, like the ones people are taking. It won't stop the contagion but it might delay and flatten it to a degree, easing the pressure a little on our health services.
Were you once interviewed on Brass Eye by any chance?
Last edited by jackal2; 14-03-2020 at 11:52 PM.
In days of old when Knights were bold
And paper hadn't been invented
They wiped their bums with their shirts
And walked away contented.
(Other variations are available.)
I'm sure many senior folk on here remember sheets of newspaper pages tied up in the bog though the modern stuff, like Izal, isn't as absorptive.
Mat Hancock just said over 70s to self isolate in the coming weeks for up to 4 months - BBC
Close the fecking borders stop people traveling might be an idea
Jackal, I've read your reply and to me it looks like you've completely dodged some of my points and used semantics to wriggle out of others, all the while falling back on advocating 'sensible precautions' without really specifying what is sensible and what isn't, while also consistently leading people to underestimate the severity of the virus, therefore increasing the probability that they won't take said sensibile precautions.
This is the your post I was referring to on the 'games off in Italy' thread. We argue about the semantics but to me the intent is clear. The deliberately misleading statistics you made up at the end are the icing on the cake.
I think your overriding disdain for the media and unusual approach to mortality mean there's too much distance between us on this to make this a fruitful conversation. If you think the precautions people are currently taking (which from talking to friends in the UK and seeing what they post online amount to pretty much zilch) are 'sensible' then I truly believe you have no idea what may be around the corner.
My daughter works as a deputy manager in a care home. On evening she had to go to an evening meeting and was stuck for transport so I drove her there. Myself and one or two other dads were allowed to sit and wait in the reception area, as we came through the outside door we were welcomed by the manageress with a reassuring handshake, when I mentioned the virus, "we don't bother with that here" she said.