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Coronavirus RESPECTFUL Discussion Only! (Mod edit: Closed)

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The Spanish Flu didn't crash the stock market, and it didn't destroy the economy.

This one has done both, and it's only getting started. We're just in the first or barely into the second inning.

I agree on all points but I think we're seeing stronger responses as the numbers rise. So in short I think we'll get ahead of this sooner rather then later.

The news of 45 minute test kits is huge.

The roll out of hundreds of thousands test kits is huge.

We began the testing extremely late but we're coming on strong.

Based on an R2 growth rate we're looking at possibly over a million infected if not more. So it's a daunting task for sure but it looks like we're doing what's needed to minimize the damage.
 
I’m all for freedom of choice. But posting ones deepest fears and allowing oneself to let their mind take them there isn’t a smart choice.

So removing your slander that others - perhaps me? - are "posting ones deepest fears," are you for or against considering downside risk and fat-tail risk -- although frankly, nobody here is even talking about the fat tails yet. Most of the conversation has been artificially constrained by the "fear" that other posters would mock inclusion of legitimate possibilities that reach into the millions. Those remain possible outcomes. As I've said elsewhere, I do not know the distribution of the probability histagram -- do you?

Again, we're not counting ouija boards and magic 8 balls.

Frankly, I'm a little tired of people saying "you're not allowed to consider downside risk" right when the people who most desire to shed possible blame are bleating "nobody could have ever seen this coming." They're too mutually reinforcing.

considering worst case scenarios does no one any good. For the past 4 weeks, I’ve changed my diet and lost 16 lbs, I’m exercising with my home gym and walking as often as possible for this time of year.

Do you think considering worst case scenarios could have done AIG any good in the last recession? A large chunk of the last economic clusterfvck was that people were making bets with the proviso that all fat tail risks, while possible, were just "crazy talk," and "if that happened," the whole game was over anyway. That grew to combine with moral hazard, AKA the Paulson Put, to result in a whole financial sector making bets it knew it could not afford to make -- but betting that the Feds would pay for their downside risk.

So yes, the act of considering worst case scenarios is part of risk assessment. Cope. Now if you mean there comes a time when you're considering personal scenarios that are beyond your means to change, you have two choices: expand your means to change scenarios (see the "I'm sure glad I got a gun" responses here,) or sort your fears by their rationality vs. irrationality. I am glad you are excercising with your home gym. I think that means you have more time now that you're at home. Does this mean that in response to your concerns you are controlling what you feel capable of controlling, and basically making lemonade? Can't fault that.

I’ve also asked my 90 year old father to stop going out other than driving to a walking path. So I’m doing his shopping, laundry and cleaning.

I prefer the choice of positive thinking & conversation. I was talking to my uncle the other day and he went on & on about how we’re going into a depression. I had to interrupt him and say “Paul, stop it...please”.

I've mentioned that I have some similar duties hereabouts. We've added some decontamination routines after going outside. They relate to downside risk. We don't have much room for error with the Mrs. She's done time in ERs and as a paramedic so has an endless supply of good advice for how to keep the bad germs a little bit less likely to fester in here. A "clean room" it ain't, but we up our chances of not getting it by X%. Our chances ain't 0, though, or close to it. Que sera sera.

more than ever, we’ve been forced to live one day at a time. And it’s ok. I had a great day celebrating my fathers 90th birthday yesterday. We had a room in a restaurant reserved with 20 people coming until we had to cancel 2 weeks ago. So it was just my father and I.

I got over there early to unload the groceries I got him and then cleaned his place. Then we took and old fashioned “ride” in his car (I drove) to a place called Green Harbor. It was chilly, but beautiful & sunny. Families were walking together everywhere we went and most were smiling.

we got back to his place and I cooked him a nice baked scallop dinner. Then my 3 siblings & I all FaceTimed so my father could see his family with all his grown grandchildren and we sang him happy birthday and talked & laughed.

Today I made a pot of meatballs & sauce, did laundry, cleaned my 2 bathrooms, went for a walk and then then hit the grocery store....again!

oh....and I shaved & showered!

Now all that sounds great, and I heartily recommend more of the same for you (and your pops, may he make it to 100.)

As it happens I am cranking away on a side project - not much mobility here. But that's my happy place, so it's not like I'm wallowing around here (though my other happy place is kicking people in the nuts online when they are wrong, so I'm doing too much of that too.)

I hope you’re ok PFiVA. This is new & f’d up for everyone bud. I’m just trying to be calm and let everyone know we don’t have to be afraid.

Oh, we don't have to be, and it's actually super easy not to be -- exhibit 1, Spring Break in Florida. The virus is invisible. You can just close your eyes and pretend it's not there so easily. You can sing "Don't worry be happy" etc.

I'm not afraid, I'm aware.

Hope you're well too Jack. No cookie for your power of positive thinking, I'm afraid, but if you're happy, whatever works for you.
 

There are plenty of gun owners without penises. I'm talking women btw, not transgenders. They're pretty serious about their right to have them too.

Speaking of guns, did you know that the gun grabbers are responsible for 9/11?
 
Dunno what this refers to Bob. I believe most of this was to set up a hypothetical use of scarce resources scenario.



High 600,000s range in U.S., tens of millions worldwide. Here, you agree with the criteria that I mentioned as implied by your previous post. To use less emotional language, these younger victims had more years of life ahead of them, and on average a better quality of life.

I don't know whose concern it is that "this is not the worst crisis in US history." It's not mine, as you're talking about something I never said.

I will, however, caution you that, unlike the so-called Spanish Flu and the world wars, this crisis is ongoing -- from all indications, only beginning.

It has the potential to be very significant. If you ran projections based on known data using a monte carlo random walk simulation, modeling all the available data, I don't know where the fat part of the histogram would be (how many scenarios end with how many deaths.) I don't know where in the histogram, say, 1 million deaths would fall. I don't know where 5 million deaths would fall. I don't think you do.

I am of course disregarding any access that you have to the magic 8 ball.

By the way, our impacts from each of the world wars pales in comparisons with some nations. The impact of the so-called Spanish Flu in the US is surpassable by this virus. I am not rooting for it.

So all that said, whether we're at the outset of "the worst crisis in U.S. history"... well, that's nothing that I said, but the wheel's still in spin.



Did I neglect to say that the 20 YO and the 60 YO are both in need of a ventilator? If I did not stipulate that, I think it is certainly within my rights to assume that you could infer it from the setup, you have 1 ventilator and a 20 YO and a 60 YO. To clarify, I did not mean that the 20 YO had the sniffles and the 60 YO's lungs were turning to concrete.

The link above says what the treatments include. Perhaps for your benefit, they should use the legalistic "but are not limited to." They curiously leave out the treatment for severe cases: Intubation and ventilation. The scenario was not meant to address how to decide the allocation of one scarce resource to 2 people, neither of whom had a need for the scarce resource in question.



Okayyyyy, and I never asserted that it was. As you'll read above, however, call me when this crisis is over for your victory lap over whoever did say that.



This response at least tells me that you indeed are using the metric of years of healthy life, i.e., years of life x quality of life. Just like Zeke Emmanuel, except that he included a lottery aspect so that hope was not foreclosed on the older and less healthy. But you're less sentimental, that's defensible.

I saw one stat that the average age at death in Italy is 81 - so I assume that's where you get yours, above. I'm a little skeptical of their data right now, having seen that 99% of Italians really had something else this morning [sic].

It's actually hard to find the "average age at death" stat. Most stat breakdowns are what percentage of each group die. However, I find an average age of 81 difficult to square with some of the info here regarding percentage of each cohort dying.

New analysis of coronavirus risk: Young adults are not invincible - STAT



All quibbles aside, we're both aware now that you are using years of life x quality of life metric like Zeke Emmanuel suggested a little more than a decade ago (in combination with a hope-preserving lottery) when he wrote about the ethics of such decisions involving scarce medical resources.



Oh, certainly. But the difficulty, you see, is that the state's purpose is to protect and serve the needs of its citizens, not vice versa.

That said, it is absolutely defensible to accord scarce resources to the younger, if all else is equal, when both an older and a younger person need said resources. My entire post was agreeing with that point. However, this "Pffft, it only kills old people" riff continues to annoy me. Not make me anxious, annoy me.

The key is, your attitude could lead to minimization of the deaths of older people. Your further utilitarian rationalization (society's use for the candidates, rather than just years and quality of life) could be applied to those on state assistance, the mentally infirm, people who you disagree with, members of unpopular religions, and so on.

It is very rare that we find ourselves faced with these scarce-resource decisions in a wholesale fashion. I agree that your "death panel" would choose correctly in giving the vent to the younger candidate (and disagree with your attempt to assert that the Mayo Clinic would send everybody home no matter the scenario and refuse any use of a ventilator to any candidate).



Given your bizarre need to put assertions in my mouth that I never said -- that this would be the worst event in U.S. History or something? -- I think that's more your problem than mine.

Thanks for playing.

I've seen shorter novels than that post.
 
When a group of men start posting about penises I generally head for the exit.
 
Thanks @1960Pats . I hoped you knew I was kidding.

Sure, but just in case I gave you a funny to let you know I was still here with you.

Btw, I haven't had to add too many posters to my ignore list, but the dipstick that laughed at Rand Paul for getting the virus was an easy addition.
 
Okay, my last word in this abomination of a thread. Oh wait, President Donald John Trump is about to speak. I'll have to catch up with all of you later. Stay safe.
 
Just an odd step. How does releasing more people into the public help stunt the spread of this? And if the point is to keep it out of prison why is the health of criminals anywhere near the top of the list of priorities?

Look, if you've committed crimes that led to actual prison then I dont expect for you to be a model citizen and stay home and help your peers stop from spreading this thing.

On top of that, where do these criminals go anyway? How many of them will not have family that can take them in?

As a citizen of maine I find this to be nuts.
We incarcerate more people per capita than any other country, most are for non violent crimes. You seriously want to let them all die and the prisons become cesspools? ************.
 
From reading article it sounds like everyone agrees. Trump was asked if he would consider releasing older non-violent prioners from federal custody. He said they would take it into consideration.

I heard he's trying to make sure it lasts for a couple years.

Say for example someone is a senior who has a job that prevents him from being prosecuted. But that job is about to end in 303 days. If that person has sealed indictments awaiting him... jail time needs to be off the table.

Completely hypothetical situation. He's just being very thorough.
 
We incarcerate more people per capita than any other country, most are for non violent crimes. You seriously want to let them all die and the prisons become cesspools? ************.

You've mixed two differnt things for a convoluted message I didnt make.

Generally if you're in prison you deserved it.

Secondly, everyone outside of prison have freedoms those in prison who dont.

You wouldnt put a single person in prison rights ahead of those you love and neither would I.

Call me when a prison for of 20k is running rampant with the virus instead of say you know Brooklyn
 
Good things about today's conference from President:

1. Releasing Defense Production Act in NY and WA with CA getting approved shortly;
2. Mobilizing National Guard in above 3 states to help out;
3. Sending military field hospitals with capacities from 1,000 to 2,000 beds to above 3 states;
4. Processing delivery of thousands of n-95 masks, surgeon masks, tobes, scrubs, gloves etc. To above 3 states and others. Figures were actually provided;

Things are moving in the right direction. Let's all hope there's still time for this to help mitigate this nasty virus.
 
So removing your slander that others - perhaps me? - are "posting ones deepest fears," are you for or against considering downside risk and fat-tail risk -- although frankly, nobody here is even talking about the fat tails yet. Most of the conversation has been artificially constrained by the "fear" that other posters would mock inclusion of legitimate possibilities that reach into the millions. Those remain possible outcomes. As I've said elsewhere, I do not know the distribution of the probability histagram -- do you?

Again, we're not counting ouija boards and magic 8 balls.

Frankly, I'm a little tired of people saying "you're not allowed to consider downside risk" right when the people who most desire to shed possible blame are bleating "nobody could have ever seen this coming." They're too mutually reinforcing.



Do you think considering worst case scenarios could have done AIG any good in the last recession? A large chunk of the last economic clusterfvck was that people were making bets with the proviso that all fat tail risks, while possible, were just "crazy talk," and "if that happened," the whole game was over anyway. That grew to combine with moral hazard, AKA the Paulson Put, to result in a whole financial sector making bets it knew it could not afford to make -- but betting that the Feds would pay for their downside risk.

So yes, the act of considering worst case scenarios is part of risk assessment. Cope. Now if you mean there comes a time when you're considering personal scenarios that are beyond your means to change, you have two choices: expand your means to change scenarios (see the "I'm sure glad I got a gun" responses here,) or sort your fears by their rationality vs. irrationality. I am glad you are excercising with your home gym. I think that means you have more time now that you're at home. Does this mean that in response to your concerns you are controlling what you feel capable of controlling, and basically making lemonade? Can't fault that.



I've mentioned that I have some similar duties hereabouts. We've added some decontamination routines after going outside. They relate to downside risk. We don't have much room for error with the Mrs. She's done time in ERs and as a paramedic so has an endless supply of good advice for how to keep the bad germs a little bit less likely to fester in here. A "clean room" it ain't, but we up our chances of not getting it by X%. Our chances ain't 0, though, or close to it. Que sera sera.



Now all that sounds great, and I heartily recommend more of the same for you (and your pops, may he make it to 100.)

As it happens I am cranking away on a side project - not much mobility here. But that's my happy place, so it's not like I'm wallowing around here (though my other happy place is kicking people in the nuts online when they are wrong, so I'm doing too much of that too.)



Oh, we don't have to be, and it's actually super easy not to be -- exhibit 1, Spring Break in Florida. The virus is invisible. You can just close your eyes and pretend it's not there so easily. You can sing "Don't worry be happy" etc.

I'm not afraid, I'm aware.

Hope you're well too Jack. No cookie for your power of positive thinking, I'm afraid, but if you're happy, whatever works for you.
I guess we all deal in different ways.
 
You've mixed two differnt things for a convoluted message I didnt make.

Generally if you're in prison you deserved it.

Secondly, everyone outside of prison have freedoms those in prison who dont.

You wouldnt put a single person in prison rights ahead of those you love and neither would I.

Call me when a prison for of 20k is running rampant with the virus instead of say you know Brooklyn
1. That’s not because they are in prison. I wouldn’t put you ahead of person I love either. In fact if someone I loved was in prison I’d put them ahead of you or any stranger as well. That’s a non point.

2. Being in prison doesn’t mean you should be more at risk of getting sick and dying

literal craziness
 
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