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VA Public Schools other than FCPS
Reply to "Why are you demanding 5 day in-person school now that the pandemic is getting more dangerous?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]OP here. I am not Ventilation lady and I have never posted on AEM and I don't belong to it either. Why are people posting things without sources? Maybe that's my answer - the people who are demanding return right now have really, really, really strong cognitive bias and believe what they want to believe and don't seek out information. The current vaccines are not as effective against South African strain and Brazil strain. The NYTimes article cited by a PP was based on health workers in the U.S., where the other variants were not yet circulating. In fact, the reason the J&J vaccine had lower efficacy was because it was partially tested in South Africa. https://www.ama-assn.org/delivering-care/public-health/why-coronavirus-variants-might-undercut-vaccine-efficacy https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2102214 I posted earlier that the Brazil variant reinfects people who already were infected. Also, vaccine manufacturers are actively working on new vaccines for the variants. If the current vaccines were effective, why would they work on new ones? If you don't believe me, or in science, or in data, or in news, can you at least believe in market capitalism? Also, I don't fly, go to bars, eat at restaurants, etc. I'm not advocating for that instead of schools opening? What a straw man argument! jeez [/quote] Ok well just like you don’t go to bars, restaurants, etc. you also DON’T HAVE TO SEND YOUR KID TO SCHOOL. Just OPT OUT if you’re not comfortable with it. And it’s not a straw man argument. You sound like you don’t even know what that means. The point is that why are you not worried about exposure at these other locations (bars, planes, etc.) but you are worried about schools? It’s not like COVID variants act differently in a restaurant than in a school. And if society can only tolerate a certain level of potential exposure then I would argue education is vastly more important than drinking a beer at a bar. So it’s a perfectly rational point to bring up — go fight the spread of COVID at all these other locations if you’re *that* worried about the new variants. If you aren’t worried about the spread in those places b/c you don’t go there, then why do you care about potential spread at schools when all districts have announced plans to continue with virtual. Just don’t send your kid if you’re that worried but you don’t get to take away this fundamental right from the rest of us because you think the world owes you safety from COVID.[/quote] OP here. I'm not worried for myself! I'm not sending my kids back to in-person school in 2021. At some point I may worry about collapse of the health care system and needing to go to a hospital for something unrelated to covid, but I'm not worried about exposure because of my choices. I asked why YOU weren't worried because you are wanting to send your kids back to in-person school in 2021. I would ask the same exact question to anyone who went to a bar, went to a restaurant, or flew on a plane. In fact, I have mentioned this to friends and family last week. [/quote] I am worried, OP. But my kindergartener was having a really hard time. School refusal, acting out, loneliness...sure, you can blame me as a bad parent for not providing him enough individual academic and social enrichment to make up for spending 6 hours a day online before he could even read. I admit that I failed to organize sufficiently frequent covid-safe outdoor playdates and fun, motivating school supplementation while working full time and also caring for an infant on a shift schedule with my husband. I just can't do it without a support system. Anyway, when we sent him in 2 days a week, it made a positive difference. He sounds happier, is more motivated for school, and has basically stopped acting out with no other changes - I think, and a teacher friend agrees, that it was a cry for normalcy. At the time we did, the numbers were continually improving and we were hopeful vaccination would stay ahead of variants. Now it's looking like we will not. My husband's a vaccinated hospital worker, but the kids and i could get sick, and I AM scared about that. It's a hard balance. I'm not sure when to call it and withdraw the kid, but it means so much to him, it's not going to be before his school has had a single covid case.[/quote] I blame you for not teaching your child to read and giving them more support. K. is really easy and no big deal.[/quote]
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