Anonymous wrote:What do you think about someone traveling - nonessentially - to king county wa?
Anonymous wrote:I am really struggling. I know we should't go on our cruise but we are beyong the point of getting any money back unless the cruise line cancels. So its highly unlikely we will go, but eating $6K just really really hurts. Like could have bought a few appliances for my kitchen hurts. Ugh. We can "afford" it, but are not so wealthy it doesn't hurt.
Anonymous wrote:This might take out Trump, Sanders, or Biden. They travel all over, meet with international people, have crowds around them, shake a lot of hands and all are older men. Who knows what underlying health conditions they have. Campaigning with COVID might land one of them in hospital.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Kitts next week, transferring through Miami one way and PR the other way
This is the only trip on this thread I would consider. Although, I’ve been to St. Kitts and Nevis and would not go back.
Anonymous wrote:Disney World, last week in March. All healthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anthony Fauci, a world expert on infectious disease, was just on CNN sounding realistic.
No cause for panic. Wash hands.
No by all means we should cease doing anything and crash the economy to avoid a virus no worse than an nasty cold for most people
Who did you hear that from?
Everyone who is literally canceling all possible plans and forgoing regular activity! There’s a reason the markets crashed this week
No who told you that it’s no worse than a nasty cold? Surely not the 3000+ people who have died. Turn off Fox News.
Out of how many people who got it! Yes, doe 99.98% of people who contract it it will not be a big deal.
The problem with this line of thinking is it’s individually centered. IOW, typically American.
While it may be like a bad cold for you so you will continue with your normal activities- work, shopping, parties, travel, school, etc. You will continue to pass this onto to many more people. People who may not fare a lucky as you or perhaps their kids may not or their parents may not.
You may survive barely scathed, yet you may have contributed to the deaths and/or very serious illnesses of others because of your lack of precautions.
That’s why containment is so important. It’s ridiculously difficult to give up our freedoms temporarily for the greater good of our communities but it’s the only proven method that has worked so far. We have no medications for it, no vaccine for it. We don’t have hospital resources for it.
Look at Washington state right now. They bought a motel to provide a make shift hospital. Has that ever happened because of something “no worse than a nasty cold”?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't go on a cruise ship and I wouldn't travel to a country with a current outbreak (northern Italy, Iran, china,) but otherwise yes we will travel.
The economic impact of not rebelling due to fear will lead to tons of unemoyment, families losing their homes, suicides, kids going hungry. There is a large segment of working poor who work in the travel, hospitality, retail and service industries who will be severely negatively impacted by everyone staying home.
Unless there is an actual risk, we will continue to travel. We have family currently travelling internationally right now and more leaving next week.
Define actual risk. There is community spread in the Seattle area. There is almost certainly community spread in the SF Bay Area. I'm not saying you should be making one decision or another, but there is actual risk (of varying levels) with almost all travel right now.