Anonymous wrote:It's not just the risk--it's the risk/reward ratio. I don't like restaurants enough to take any heightened level of risk in the service of getting into one. Sitting in an indoor space with maskless adults with the diagram of the Korean restaurant transmission study in my head for an hour or two would not be my idea of a good time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. We just did yesterday.
So did we. Yesterday and today.
Just came back from dinner with our two kids. The restaurant seemed full of elderly people, who have presumably been vaccinated. It was nice to see the older folks out. Not sure why people our age are still staying away, though.
I picked up food from a restaurant two nights ago. 70% full. 100% seniors.
Another reason, besides health concerns, that it was imperative to get the seniors vaccinated first- they've been itching to get out and don't have to deal with the unvaccinated kid issue. Boon for the economy.
Kids have suffered disproportionately during this pandemic. If vaccinated seniors aren’t ready to to take on risk, they should stay home.
OMG no. Kids have not suffered disproportionately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. We just did yesterday.
So did we. Yesterday and today.
Just came back from dinner with our two kids. The restaurant seemed full of elderly people, who have presumably been vaccinated. It was nice to see the older folks out. Not sure why people our age are still staying away, though.
I picked up food from a restaurant two nights ago. 70% full. 100% seniors.
Another reason, besides health concerns, that it was imperative to get the seniors vaccinated first- they've been itching to get out and don't have to deal with the unvaccinated kid issue. Boon for the economy.
Kids have suffered disproportionately during this pandemic. If vaccinated seniors aren’t ready to to take on risk, they should stay home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Jesus Christ are people this mental? There are about 52,000 things you do every day without thinking that are statistically more dangerous to your kids than covid.
Let them live a regular life already!!
Most of those things are not statistically more dangerous to the community than my kid contracting COVID.
Kids are very inefficient vectors of covid and we’ve known cue some time that asymptomatic spread is minimal.
So - your pathological need to deny science and act like anyone could be an infectious vector at any time when we know that’s just not how it works 98% of the time, is your own issue.
Me and my kids have eaten indoors at restaurants since June. They hung out with their friends maskless. So did I. I went on vacation with girlfriends in October. Surprise - none of us got covid. Anecdotally, the only ppl I know who did lived in a car home or in large multi family housing with lots of people working essential jobs. Anytime any of us had any whiff of illness or direct contact that might be sick, we stayed home.
Conversely, my kids aren’t suffering from the massive mental illness crisis that the kids of my friends are, who locked them up like they were diseased vectors for the last year. I’m sure it burns to know that you didn’t have to be all crazy like this all year, but doubling down on more crazy won’t change anything.