Yeah, in your insane troll logic world.
Oh, well shall we debate rationale?
Minimizing the spread of flu is no different...or traffic safety. If we banned motor vehicles we'd have zero traffic accidents, but the versatility and freedom afforded to us by cars and public transport is considered of such benefit to society that we are fine with 38,000 US citizens dying every year in traffic accidents...
www.nhtsa.gov
According to the NHTSA, over 90% of vehicle accident fatalities are due to human error. Nearly half of them are due to failure to use restraint devices, a quarter due to speeding, just over a quarter due to impaired (alcohol or drugs) driving, and another three thousand and some change due to distracted or drowsy driving.
All of which are criminal acts in nearly every US jurisdiction, punishable by fine, citation, jail time or revocation of license for serious or repeated offenses. So no, we're not "fine" with it. In fact, we have laws on the books specifically to
prevent people from doing stupid shit and getting themselves, and uninvolved parties, killed. And stupid people do it
anyways to entirely predictable results.
Just like we
still have stupid motherfuckers in this country who won't practice hygiene, wear masks, and go out acting the goddamn fool, and
evil motherfuckers in this country refusing to give the public the basic resources necessary to minimize risk through basic public health and economic policy.
Next time, make
something of an effort to not trip over your own dick, tumble down a flight of stairs, and land face-first into a kiddie pool full of puppy diarrhea for good measure. Especially if you're going to whinge about others using, in your own words, "insane troll logic".
Isn't it funny how I addressed this in my first post but you already forgot it? Those things will not have a serious impact on the flu, which is what lockdowns and restrictions on travel and group sizes does.
And it's funny how you ignore how I'm
also addressing these points.
No. Both the NHS in the UK and the Swedish healthcare system has faced criticisms for the decades of dismantling them and making them unprepared and ill suited for pandemic response...
Well, I suppose now and here you're left with the conundrum of admitting your argument they have universal health care is either moot, or irrelevant. To say nothing that you've failed to account for the US's lack of mandatory sick leave.
If physicians and nurses can't prevent the flu from spreading in a very clean environment while going above and beyond what you can expect from any member of the random public, you won't stop it. Period.
Because the point of hygiene and masks isn't to stop spread, it's to
slow it and
reduce the chance of infection. Yeah, if your bar is "all or nothing" then you're gonna be disappointed...but it's not "all or nothing" in the first place.
...No, to have a proper effect you need to maintain the more drastic measures such as social distancing, limiting the number of people that can spend time in a group or how far you can travel from your home.
...yeah? Flu season peaks for about a month every winter. So the public has to deal with mask mandates and occupancy limits on public facilities for two to three weeks, at the point coincident economic activity hits its lowest point, every year.
While mandating paid sick days, mandating a livable wage, and implementing a
real universal health care system, so employees aren't having to come to work sick (and needlessly spreading infectious disease) and can instead actually receive medical treatment if necessary (which would include annual flu vaccinations, just so we're clear).
This means that we need to discuss how much personal freedom we want to give up to combat disease.
This wouldn't be a sticking point if it weren't the case here in the US, "personal freedom" is the rallying cry of the stupid to justify reckless stupidity.
Had the US a sufficient educational system to foster civic responsibility in the general public as opposed to idealize myopic, selfish, idiocy, you may rest assured this would be a
very different conversation. But if we had that, we likely wouldn't have half a million dead of COVID, or a health care system impoverished countries in the economic South would be ashamed to have, in the first place.
Which is precisely why I "banged on" about basic hygiene and masks. The US is, as a country, well and truly
that fucking stupid. We as a country have degenerated to a point where
washing your goddamn hands is, somehow, controversial. The entire world watched as the wealthiest,
supposedly most technologically-advanced, country on the planet struggled with the concept of practicing basic hygiene as a means to prevent infectious disease spread.
So in this regard, fuck "personal freedom". The correlative to "freedom" is "responsibility". If the average member of the American public is so personally and civically irresponsible they can't be trusted to wash their hands after taking a shit, they don't deserve the fucking freedom to run out acting the goddamn fool spreading preventable disease.