Yes. When we thought this was going to kill at a minimum of one hundred million Americans, it made sense to shut things down for a while and gather some data on this.
Again, did we shutdown to avoid ALL deaths from this? I recall shutting down to avoid overwhelming the hospitals and ICUs and getting all the nurses and doctors too sick to work. Well, now that hospitals are empty and they’re laying off employees, it seems like we’ve flattened the curve. If the system starts getting overwhelmed again, we can reverse the decision. But we’ve changed the goalposts. Now the rhetoric from some leaders is we can’t open back up the economy until there’s a vaccine.
As a country we need to refocus our efforts on flattening the unemployment curve. Because that drain on state and national resources is already starting to overwhelm state budgets much more so than our hospitals (outside of possibly NYC) were overwhelmed by covid patients.
Agreed. The shutdown has served its purpose, which was to prevent hospitals from getting overwhelmed in the beginning. We’re past that now.
If some people want to continue hiding under their beds and ordering Grubhub for the rest of their life, that’s fine. I really don’t care. I’m just tired of these scared idiots saying that the rest of us need to hide under our beds as well.
But I don’t think it will last long. The doomsayers will begin to feel foolish when they see the smart families taking CHEAP flights to exotic locations and enjoying life, while the doomsayers are still hiding under the covers clutching their N95 masks.
Just because some people are scared shouldn’t mean that the rest of us need to stay home. And social distancing can’t last forever. It’s impractical.