Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I know someone who insisted on seeing their son and grandchild. Both grandparents got Covid-19 from them. Son brought it home from his work. If you are willing to take that risk...I know it’s hard, but if they get it, will you regret it?
Those of us that said we were said we’ve been isolating. So nobody has been to work. Also, I am starting to really wonder about these stories. 80,000
People have died. All of dcum knows one? K.
The deaths have been concentrated in certain parts of the country, many fairly close to the DC area. And you know a lot of people--coworkers, fellow congregants, people you went to college with, relatives, friends, your kids' friends, etc....and for some of them you know their friends and family too. So it doesn't seem unlikely at all that many people would know someone who died. If each person who died only had 100 people who knew them (which seems low) that would be 8 million people who know someone who died. My grandfather died of covid and just his direct descendants and the people they married are 25 people. Then add his spouse, siblings and their spouses, cousins, the 200-ish people who live and work in his assisted living community, folks from his military history club and book group, former coworkers, old neighbors...he knew a lot of people.
There are definitely lower risk ways to bring people into your bubble. I'm not saying whether OP should or shouldn't do it, but I probably would in her shoes if I could make the drive in one day. Assuming that somehow the stories are being told are fake (or worse, that the number of deaths is exaggerated) is a pretty low blow.