Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When 99.98% of the people who get COVID don’t die or have any severe side effects, it’s hard for many people to get really worked up about COVID. And younger, healthy people have even better odds. They really aren’t at risk. Trying to get them to care about strangers they don’t know is hard over the long haul.
It’s a real hard sell to younger people, who are probably more at risk from dying in a traffic accident on the way to the bar than they are from dying due to COVID, to keep staying home indefinitely.
The message that you should sacrifice for others, with nothing in return, was always going to go over like a lead balloon. Especially in a society where the older generations (looking at you, baby boomers) would not be making any sacrifices if this was primarily a disease that killed young people.
This, 100 times! I have a friend whose 72 year old parents got Covid from hanging out in a bar. So, all the young people have to stay home but the boomers can go to bars?
This is a real thing and has been obvious since March and April. I left my condo in early April for a masked walk after about 5 weeks and it was like every person on the street was over 65. My Boomer parents have been decent, but it took a bit to get them there and they and their friends were way more risky than any of my friends in our 30s. And those were people on lockdown in NYC! Don't get me started on what my friends parents were up to in places like Florida and Texas...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These places should be shut down again.
If they’re violating mandates, call the police. If enough people complain and report the violators we can make a positive impact.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, this is why I have given up going anywhere. Too many people who don't care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Murderers, every single one of them.
There is no excuse now, after 300 000 have died and the mode of transmission is well known.
+1 million. How many grandparents and health care workers need to die to get through to these idiots. STAY HOME. Just stay the F home. I’m done with so many former friends who I used to think were decent people. No more.
NP, and I completely agree. I've had it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When 99.98% of the people who get COVID don’t die or have any severe side effects, it’s hard for many people to get really worked up about COVID. And younger, healthy people have even better odds. They really aren’t at risk. Trying to get them to care about strangers they don’t know is hard over the long haul.
It’s a real hard sell to younger people, who are probably more at risk from dying in a traffic accident on the way to the bar than they are from dying due to COVID, to keep staying home indefinitely.
The message that you should sacrifice for others, with nothing in return, was always going to go over like a lead balloon. Especially in a society where the older generations (looking at you, baby boomers) would not be making any sacrifices if this was primarily a disease that killed young people.
This, 100 times! I have a friend whose 72 year old parents got Covid from hanging out in a bar. So, all the young people have to stay home but the boomers can go to bars?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When 99.98% of the people who get COVID don’t die or have any severe side effects, it’s hard for many people to get really worked up about COVID. And younger, healthy people have even better odds. They really aren’t at risk. Trying to get them to care about strangers they don’t know is hard over the long haul.
It’s a real hard sell to younger people, who are probably more at risk from dying in a traffic accident on the way to the bar than they are from dying due to COVID, to keep staying home indefinitely.
The message that you should sacrifice for others, with nothing in return, was always going to go over like a lead balloon. Especially in a society where the older generations (looking at you, baby boomers) would not be making any sacrifices if this was primarily a disease that killed young people.
This, 100 times! I have a friend whose 72 year old parents got Covid from hanging out in a bar. So, all the young people have to stay home but the boomers can go to bars?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When 99.98% of the people who get COVID don’t die or have any severe side effects, it’s hard for many people to get really worked up about COVID. And younger, healthy people have even better odds. They really aren’t at risk. Trying to get them to care about strangers they don’t know is hard over the long haul.
It’s a real hard sell to younger people, who are probably more at risk from dying in a traffic accident on the way to the bar than they are from dying due to COVID, to keep staying home indefinitely.
The message that you should sacrifice for others, with nothing in return, was always going to go over like a lead balloon. Especially in a society where the older generations (looking at you, baby boomers) would not be making any sacrifices if this was primarily a disease that killed young people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry to say that I’m not surprised by this OP. Disappointed, but not surprised. Businesses are allowing whatever they can get away with to stay afloat, there’s no enforcement, and so many people don’t care or don’t think they’ll get it or thinking of it as an individual illness and not a public health issue.
What gets me is so much of DCUM insisting that the community spread is from going to the grocery store (masked) or passing someone on the sidewalk that isn’t wearing a mask. Nope, it’s from people living normal lives as if there isn’t a virus.
I agree that what’s driving community spread is instances like these. Unfortunately, however, I do think it impacts how safely we can grocery shop and run necessary errands simply because more people have it. I still have trouble wrapping my head around the likelihood of getting it from someone I pass on the street, but I do feel slightly more at risk grocery shopping these days. I ran into Wegman’s this past weekend and it was packed! Parking lots everywhere look the same as any holiday season. I’ve done very, very little in-store gift shopping this year, and when I do, I’m basically running in to grab the items I’ve already decided on. Lots of people are crowding the aisles just browsing. I can’t imagine feeling that comfortable in a store right now.
Anonymous wrote:When 99.98% of the people who get COVID don’t die or have any severe side effects, it’s hard for many people to get really worked up about COVID. And younger, healthy people have even better odds. They really aren’t at risk. Trying to get them to care about strangers they don’t know is hard over the long haul.