UncleBuck
Well-Known Member
if the goal is to prevent the spread of covid, should people expose themselves to more people or less people?I'm waiting.
if the goal is to prevent the spread of covid, should people expose themselves to more people or less people?I'm waiting.
Leading questions are not effective argumentation.if the goal is to prevent the spread of covid, should people expose themselves to more people or less people?
That wasn’t a leading questionLeading questions are not effective argumentation.
I simply counter, If the goal of the lockdowns are to flatten the curve such that the baseline remains above the apex, is this even possible? What's the cost?
Furthermore, this must be factored:That wasn’t a leading question
there were more than 8,000 non-coronavirus deaths reported within NYC from March 11-April 13. For comparison, the city health department confirmed there were 5,167 deaths during that same time span last year — meaning there would've been a sudden, nearly 66 percent spike in deaths unrelated to the pandemic year-over-year, which would be unheard of.
maybe if they had taken less precautions and exposed themselves to more people it would have been lessFurthermore, this must be factored:
NYC Reports Thousands of Additional Deaths, City Toll Tops 10K Despite Signs of Hope
New York’s daily death toll surged back near 800 Tuesday, a day after falling below 700 for the first time in a week, while its coronavirus caseload surpassed 200,000, according to the state’s Department of Health. Still, Gov. Andrew Cuomo pointed to signs of optimism as total hospitalizations...www.nbcnewyork.com
So all deaths except those related to traffic are up, and it's because they failed to obey the lockdown properly?maybe if they had taken less precautions and exposed themselves to more people it would have been less
i think it’s due to a global pandemicSo all deaths except those related to traffic are up, and it's because they failed to obey the lockdown properly?
The fact is, you thought my argument was more simple and you're finding that it's a little more nuanced. I actually still think you can come up with a strong counter once you see what I'm actually saying, but it doesn't seem worth the effort to you, so you opt instead to dismiss and insult.i think it’s due to a global pandemic
i haven’t insulted or dismissed you and I don’t find anything nuanced about your argument or mineThe fact is, you thought my argument was more simple and you're finding that it's a little more nuanced. I actually still think you can come up with a strong counter once you see what I'm actually saying, but it doesn't seem worth the effort to you, so you opt instead to dismiss and insult.
I'm ok with that, as long as we undertsand eachother.
i don’t think you’re trolling, I think you are under tremendous stress from multiple directions and not dealing with it as well as you could@UncleBuck
I'll boil it down as short as I can, because I can see this is tedious to you and I'm actually not trolling, at least with this.
When I say lockdowns don't work, I mean the current strategy of "flatten the curve". Some of my premises include this more simple statement, that they don't work in the very simple sense that you're noticing regarding case number growth, because it's still impossible to prove that the other factors and not the lockdown account for it.
However, it has caused us to segue from the conclusion (though I still stand by those premises).
So here's the short version of what I'm trying to say:
It is not possible to "flatten the curve" such that the apex remains below the baseline and if we continue to try to do so, we will cause another problem that will compound the epidemic, killing more people, bringing the baseline down further and raising the apex as well.
That's a dismissal.i don’t think you’re trolling, I think you are under tremendous stress from multiple directions and not dealing with it as well as you could
No, they're not. Here's where I think we can agree with or without the lockdowns: "Test and trace" is a better instrumentLockdowns are a blunt instrument but the best one we have
Nahlockdowns alone do more harm than good.
Noted that this is the entirety of your argument.
CorrectNoted that this is the entirety of your argument.
Not really, we've already established that you disagree. You inability to offer anything other than "nah" will become all the more facile in the coming days when more and more news stories start talking about how to reopen the economy and even states like New York seek to do so while stipulating that it is on their terms.Correct
Direct contradiction of your premise is sufficient. Some might call it “intuitively obvious to the casual observer”
it is intuitively obvious to the most casual observer that by limiting our interactions with others, we also limit the spread of very communicable diseasesNot really, we've already established that you disagree. You inability to offer anything other than "nah" will become all the more facile in the coming days when more and more news stories start talking about how to reopen the economy and even states like New York seek to do so while stipulating that it is on their terms.
I would also easily dismiss the intuitions of any casual observer in a time of crisis as "privileged bullshit".
It was a "nah" to a minor premise, a furthermore. Not to a major premise.it is intuitively obvious to the most casual observer that by limiting our interactions with others, we also limit the spread of very communicable diseases
Thus “nah” is an acceptable response to contradict your premises regarding the supposed failure of lockdowns and social distancing