It would seem that the view is binary - full lockdown forever to save the world, or back to normal, and acres of dead bodies. There is actually a middle ground, which no one is recommending. We know that 95% of deaths occur in patients with "co-morbidities" ( I love the way the propaganda has created all this new jargon that everyone glibly throws around), and we know that no more than 2% of the population are at risk. Currently, 100% of the population are suffering the consequences of "saving" the 2%. Why? Every life is valuable beyond calculation, and no suffering is too much suffering, provided we save just one life. Except you don't get to be protected if you are a "key worker" - you get the entire street coming out to clap you as you go to work, to use social pressure to ensure that you don't stay at home and hide. A while ago I read that "The aristocracy shelter in their private estates and islands, the middle classes work safely from home, but the working class get out there and fight and die, for the benefit of those who have the wealth to rely on their status to hide and be safe". The world is not equal, and some don't have the luxury of isolating themselves.
It seems to me that there is a third way - for the vast majority of people, the disease has little effect. For a third, no effect whatsoever. Why not allow full economic activity - back to normal in other words, but those who are at risk can, if they so choose, isolate themselves to whatever degree they deem necessary. In other words leave it to the individual. You are all individuals. (See my Monty Python clip above for more details).
There will be consequences to the lockdown strategy, with it's pre-planned repeated closures of the economy over the next two years (think about that). Small and medium sized businesses will mostly be unable to pay their debts, so will either be subsumed by the giants (who benefit from largess from government much more than smaller businesses do), or those hard-working entrepreneurs will have their assets given to the banking industry through bankruptcy, in amounts that has never happened before,
worldwide. The largest worldwide transfer of wealth from the general population to a tiny minority. This doesn't have to happen, but it will, because the 2% are more important than the other 98%, and the "1%" elite are going to make hay while the sun shines. It's an ill wind that blows no one any good.
I wonder how much those with no skin in the game want everything shut down for their own safety, at the expense of everyone else,
with no consideration of the consequences.
rafezetter":1hsqsxez said:
Pretty sure I was saying this and calling him on out on having this viewpoint a month ago - I don't wish bankruptcy on anyone, but if you are still alive, you've got the chance to reverse it.
Dead, you don't.
All I say is "Careful what you wish for". An individual bankruptcy is a traumatic thing, but you can get over it, certainly. When entire nations are bankrupted? Food riots in Chile, because lockdown is total. Thousands (millions?) of peasant workers abandoned to walk home or starve in India. That sort of thing doesn't have to be just far away - it could happen in Europe, too. Why should supply chains remain intact, if everyone is cowering under their beds? You get to hide, why shouldn't farmers, too?
Actions have consequences. So does inaction.
And before everyone accuses me of being a genocidal nazi, all of the above is food for thought - I'm not advocating freeing up the economy, I am interested in views. I can probably weather the storm for the next couple of years, with virtually no economic activity - I'm all right, Jack. It's everyone else I worry about. I am semi self-sufficient now, and could be completely if necessary (I may have to eat grasshoppers, but it's good protein, so why not).
Our current course of action will see everyone in the world becoming dependent on the largess of the likes of Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos and friends, because they will own
everything. Do we trust them?