MESSAGE
DATE | 2020-03-16 |
FROM | Rick Moen
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SUBJECT | Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [conspire] CABAL in the time of Cholera^W
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Quoting Ruben Safir (ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com):
> Y2K is not a good analogy at all. > > the cure for Y2K is not shutting down Western Civilization, which is the > proposed cure for this virus.
It's truly unfortunate that you utterly disregarded the actual (valid) comparison I made and, instead pretended as if I had made an entirely different (stupid and invalid) comparison. This embarrassing public blunder on your part would have been avoidable if you had exercised a tiny amount of impulse control and _thought_ before posting.
The _sole_ point of comparison I made is that it was possible to make Y2K seem like a non-event through diligent hard work behind the scenes that prevented a technology-failure blowup and then allowed idiots in the press and elsewhere to draw the non-sequitur conclusion that there never had been a threat in the first place.
By comparison, it is provably possible through painstaking but pervasive public health measures to slow down community transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in the USA to the extent that an overwhelming of and collapse of the nation's medical system (such as recently happened in Italy) will be averted,
> Is it being overblown, 100%.
Fuck off, idiot. And this time, _this_ is the sort of idiocy that can cause tens of thousands of deaths of people lying on gurneys in hospital corridors, suffocating from ARDS. (Look it up.)
> No, I don't go along with these current actions.
OK. So, seek out crowds and spend your days breathing on each other. Maybe Roosevelt Island can be isolated and dedicated to housing the small subpopulation of NYC Dunning-Krueger (look it up) basket-cases who 'disagree' with public health measures. The City can call over every few days and ask how's it hangin'.
> Putting this in perspective, our closes analogue is the 1917-1920 flu > epidement. My grandmother was born in 1917. In New York City, > theaters, sports and other public ciritical cultural venues remained > opened: [blah blah]
I am willing to spend a couple of minutes putting this 'in perspective':
1918, Philadelphia vs. St. Louis experiences, in one comparison chart: https://bshm.org.uk/can-history-help-us-in-the-covid-19-epidemic/ (scroll down for the chart).
After becoming aware of the Spanish Flu in September 1918, St. Louis authorities took strong measures to prevent assemblies of people including cancelling a city-wide parade. Philadephia blew off the risk and did essentially nothing. The resulting death rates above base-line for pneumonia and influenza in the two cities for the subsequent months:
Philadelphia: 257 per 100,000 population St. Louis: 31 per 100,000 population
In case you're also math-challenged, that's an eight-fold higher death rate.
And, Ruben, if you wish to court death this year, I might suggest that pretty much any method of exit is preferable to suffocating from fluid in your lungs.
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