
I Love that sneaky little Catturd...😂😂😂
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Last time I checked, you don’t inject a seatbelt into your body, nor are there potential adverse reactions to simply wearing one. Your comparison lacks equivalencies.My fake argument only sounds convincing if you are incapable of contemplating questions which lack a yes/no answer.
Why should we wear masks? Do we trust our vaccine or not?
For comparison, why do you wear a seat belt? Do you trust your brakes or not?
It's the same stupid argument.
Well we know a number of them drop off dramatically within 10 weeks of a booster as it relates to omicron.How many vaccines still allow the “host” to catch and communicate the disease it is intended to immunize the host from?
More logic? Here you go:And that's where your math fails. Why you should have spent more time with logic. To get policy, you have to ascribe yes or no answers. It's yes or no to definitional question. It's why we have decision trees. For example...for seatbelts...do seatbelts "work" with "work" being defined as an x reduction in deaths.
But in the scenario you laid out (which had 2 contrasting scenarios for whether the vaccine "worked"), there are two questions that need answering: a. Do they "work" for the elderly and immunocompromised ("work" being defined as reduced to a statistically insignificant chance of death, the answer being what we now know as no), and b. Do they "work" for preventing transmission ("work" being defined as a substantial reduction in the ability to catch and transmit COVID, with which the omicron we also know the answer is no).
Now particular scenarios might be much more complicated than that (which is why policy making is not perfect and precise like mathematics) but it does require us to get to yes or no answer if we are to proceed with policy solutions. On your decision tree, we are still stuck in phase 2, what are your preferred solutions, which you still continue to duck, given what's been pointed out to you now by numerous people.
Its pretty amazing when you think about it, try getting a group of 9 people from diverse backgrounds to agree on anything. Of course it doesnt fit the political narrative, so the partisans ignore the fact that SCOTUS generally agrees on matters. The other issue that is often ignored is these cases have their own unique fact patterns, but partisans attempt to boil it down to pro this or anti that.I don't think people realize how frequently they have many members on board with their decisions to create large majority opinions.
We never had the option. The complexity of the virus put the writing on the wall very early. It's unfortunate that transparency isn't a trait the government exhibits.Endemic does not have to mean ubiquitous. We chose that option.
We could have chosen to meet outdoors, get vaccinated, wear masks, and keep our distance. We didn't. And we still aren't.
I certainly don't mean the CDC change. The CDC change is mostly about helping businesses meet staffing needs by allowing people to come in while sick. I'd be curious to see why they think it will work, instead of just accelerating the Omicron wave.
This is the part dad fails at time and time again.Society doesn't allow us to do all of these in any type of permanent state, it's not the way humans and our economy operate.
I’m waiting for one of you to realize that declining immunity pokes a big hole in your “protect only the vulnerable” plan.
We could have chosen to meet outdoors, get vaccinated, wear masks, and keep our distance. We didn't. And we still aren't.
Vindicated by Fauci no less. Good job if you didn't jab, especially your kids. On the other hand, must suck having to wait and wonder if you damaged your kids.My fake argument only sounds convincing if you are incapable of contemplating questions which lack a yes/no answer.
Why should we wear masks? Do we trust our vaccine or not?
For comparison, why do you wear a seat belt? Do you trust your brakes or not?
It's the same stupid argument.
I look at you guys as the public health equivalent of the Seattle rioters.I think you confused ‘recommended policy’ with ‘plan’.
Covid-0 was never a viable ‘plan’ and those ‘recommended policies’ should have been ‘protect the vulnerable’.
Once you get to herd immunity, the deaths of the vulnerable are baked in. When are you going to realize that?
More logic? Here you go:
Sentences one and two are just insults. Your false dichotomy fallacy is in sentence three. Everything else is word spam, and can be ignored because it builds off your initial false claim.
Orwellian translatorI look at you guys as the public health equivalent of the Seattle rioters.
You both demonstrated that, if you work at it really hard, you can get rid of the laws meant to protect you.
You also both have self serving explanations for why the inevitable deaths aren't really your fault.
Fail again.You both demonstrated that, if you work at it really hard, you can get rid of the laws meant to protect you.
You're the one who built a whole house of cards on an obvious falsehood.Orwellian translator:
"Sentences and two are just insults"= I'm allowed to be nasty. You aren't. I'm allowed to be condescending. You aren't.
"Your false dichotomy fallacy is in sentence three"= I'm rejecting the premise of everything you say because I don't want to discuss policy. I just want to preach and berate people, which is what I enjoy doing.
"Everything else is word spam"= I don't want to hear it.
"and can be ignored"= sticking my fingers in my ears....falalalalala....not hearing it
"because it builds off your initial false claim"= If I wave my hand, I can make it go away and not have to address the merits and I can decline again to state my policy proposal and just harangue everyone for their failures which I can blame the current situation on.
[built in subtext]=I'm just so smart. I'm so virtuous.![]()
You also both have self serving explanations for why the inevitable deaths aren't really your fault.
Touchy touchy, aren't we. That's how you do policy dude. You have to reduce it to yes or no questions or you can't decision tree it. I know it's frustrating for a math guy who is used to precision and certainty but that's not simply how policy works. Way too many variables. Guess now we know why you like to preach and don't like to do policy....why you prefer the theoretical to the real world. Otherwise man you just go round and round in circles and can never reach a decision. Every decision in the end is a go/no go....every policy proposal results in a binary choice.You're the one who built a whole house of cards on an obvious falsehood.
You claimed that it is impossible to make policy without reducing every complexity to a yes/no question. The claim is clearly false.
Don't blame me for noticing it. It all falls down. Next time, don't build your card castle on the trampoline.
The CDC guidelines, which you have ignored since last May, didn't work?Fail again.
The laws/policies didn't stop the covid.
Outside of shutting down for a couple of weeks, biz, families, kids, etc cannot survive without being out and about working, learning, socializing, etc for any length of time.
It was never going to work. Understanding economics, humans, etc would have told you this. Your models never took into account how the real world works, which means the models are/were worthless.