BjornP wrote: Mon May 11, 2020 12:42 pm
Just to verify something: If any of you (Americans) were to get COVID-19, and had to stay a week in a hospital bed, how much will that probably cost you? For the hospital treatment alone, I mean. Would the insurance cover all of the cost? And if you like many other Americans lost your job, how much would the hospital bill be for a treatment for COVID, then?
Americans have the health care system and labor market they have. That’s the one they need to work with. I don’t see how or even why you can want or expect Americans to want to stay home and lose their jobs "to stay healthy" when being out of a job means getting sick can then bankrupt you. If you need a job in order to afford to get sick, society shutting down is just another way to slowly kill you.
Already had it... I spent two weeks at home using a nebulizer. I was back to work and functioning as an active part of society a week later after being told it was OK.
Here is the issue, if we treated this like the flu, in where the elderly which are still at high risk and those with weakened immune systems, we take personal responsibility and separate ourselves from them when we know there is a chance of being contagious... or even not, we don't want to take the risk, then we stay separate more so.
If we live with people who are immunocompromised, we do the same thing we do when we have the flu go around...
Why is it so hard to understand that if we actually practiced personal responsibility this wouldn't be such a big deal. I mean seriously, 284K deaths worldwide... (if that number can be believed) is still nothing. 2017 it was estimated between 500K to 650K people die yearly from the flu, and there is a VACCINE for it!
We have already proven to some extent social distancing doesn't work, and that people who have been practicing it still have gotten it. We have been told it's not good to be close to people, yet we have had the supermarkets open, we have ad the liquor stores open, we have had hardware stores open...
Where this is OK:
but we are told to keep separate.
Can't have it both ways...
Stores need to open up, people need to take personal responsibility, and you need to remember, to use that few lbs of fat between your ears...