"In Maryland, 28.3% of adults are considered obese. " https://phpa.health.maryland.gov/ccdpc/healthy-lifestyles/Pages/obesity.aspx |
And pregnancy. Looks like I’ll have a baby next year, after all. |
Teachers 65 or older can get full pension. So do teachers in their 50’s with more than 30 years who continue to “teach” as they have cushy jobs with a lot of flexibility. They need to retire and the positions cut. |
| The median age for teachers in the US is around 40. 40% of Americans have at least one risk factor. Oh and don’t forget the staff and administrators. That’s a lot of people to take out of the pool and expect the schools to somehow function at full capacity. The death rate for people 50-64 is 2.9 % which is an unacceptable number of deaths. Also keep in mind that this is a NEW virus so what you think you know about it may not prove to be true. Information can and will change so it is best to make cautious decisions as we move forward. |
Do you have a source for that fatality rate? I am assuming it is a case fatality rate and not an infection fatality rate? |
There needs to be more justification than "it's best to be cautious" to keep schools closed next fall. If we're concerned about community spread, and we believe that schools are a priority, then we need to focus on limiting community spread so that schools can open. If we don't believe that schools are a priority, then we just decide right off the bat that it's not possible for schools to open. |
Schools can't open because there's a pandemic, but a pandemic is a great time to have a baby! Wait, what? |
There are more serious problems in our society than education if your child (or anyone's child) will DIE because they can't go to school. That idea just blows my mind. There are some serious issues that need to be dealt with that have nothing to do with a virus. I for one would have to be dependent on the schools to keep my kids alive. Parents need to be responsible for keeping their kids alive. That basic premise is gone?? |
You are trying to personalize this, and twist the call to re-open schools into the moral failure of the suburban moms on DCUM. But the issue is much bigger than this. We are not just talking about the loss of education for mine or some other poster’s kid, but for tens of millions across the country. It is a question both of public health and of bioethics. How many lives would we need to save in order to justify depriving millions of kids of their education for a year? How many lives saved would justify the harms inflicted on so many kids, as well as on their families’ livelihoods? I don’t think your cavalier dismissal that those harms even exist or that they don’t matter in the face of even a single death is going to be taken seriously by any expert in the field. There are no easy answers, but trying to brand the parents who question the justifications and wisdom of widespread and indefinite school closures as morally deficient is definitely not helpful to any serious discussion of this complex issue. |
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Just as soon as the state mandate to shut down happened I saw people in our community hosting driveway parties, neighbors hanging out in each other's living rooms, extended family meals together soccer teams sneaking in practices on the fields and even one ding bat throwing an impromptu concert on the street.
Those idiots who chose to thumb their noses at the measures to stop the virus spread are who you can thank for the mess we find ourselves in today. Virus can not spread without a host. The anti science, anti mask people have taken from you your children's education, have damaged your economy for years and , should we fully shut down again, your liberties. Those people should be shunned, though I can think of more extreme repercussions I wish we could see. |
Are the stats truly improving? |
Let them. All I can say is enjoy paying through the nose for a nanny and being trapped at home with a newborn for the next 18 months.
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The MOCO corona stats dashboard is updated every day and yes they are "truly improving" almost every day. And if not a day an improvement-a day of stability. It's been like that for over a month at the least. |
You're exactly right, PP, and I'm afraid your second scenario is what's happening. By all means, reopen indoor dining and retail or society will crumble, but keep the schools closed, it would take too many sacrifices elsewhere to open them. I'm so depressed. |
Maryland Heath gov is also updated daily with graphics so improvement is easy to see at state level. Improvement has been on going since peak of hospitalizations in April I’m not sure how someone would say they are not truly improving in MD. Virginia / NOVA also right trends on their dashboard but they had a Slight lag behind MD. Same with DC |