Sure..that didn't need to be in place for someone with balls to have said CLOSE THE FUCKN BORDER EARLY! — schopenhauer1
It doesnt. For the most part, lockdowns were used to reduce the load on healthcare systems. In Europe and the US, the virus was out of control before it was clear how dangerous it was. That's partly because it mutated in Europe early on. — frank
They did close the border to China. They just didn't realize that It was in the process of exploding in Italy. COVID19 symptoms may not show up for two weeks after infection. A lot of infected people never have severe symptoms, if any at all. It's mutated into a very contagious pathogen. All these factors allow it to sneak up on a population. — frank
The Australia path is a ticking time bomb in my opinion, it could go off at anytime in the future. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
All these factors allow it to sneak up on a population. — frank
All these factors allow it to sneak up on a population. — frank
and that would happen if we followed the advice in the OP. — Banno
I think I've mentioned before that I find the inability of so many Americans to think in terms of a common wealth... puzzling. — Banno
Those who understand the nature of pandemics told the government what would happen. And they were correct. — Banno
To be fair, I think the virus was in the US MUCH earlier than in March. However, you are making excuses. Once that shit was seen to be out of China, if there was ANYONE who had the foresight or wisdom to shutdown ALL borders, where were they, and why weren't they listened to? I already answered that though. — schopenhauer1
No one from either side of the aisle would have advocated mass shutdowns of international travel when it was most needed.. probably mid-February.. That would have taken foresight and wisdom no one had. — schopenhauer1
Clearly, we are dealing with an extreme fat-tailed process owing to an increased connectivity, which increases the spreading in a nonlinear way [1], [2]. Fat tailed processes have special attributes, making conventional risk-management approaches inadequate.
..
Together, these observations lead to the necessity of a precautionary approach to current and potential pandemic outbreaks that must include constraining mobility patterns in the early stages of an outbreak, especially when little is known about the true parameters of the pathogen.
It will cost something to reduce mobility in the short term, but to fail do so will eventually cost everything — if not from this event, then one in the future. Outbreaks are inevitable, but an appropriately precautionary response can mitigate systemic risk to the globe at large. But policy- and decision-makers must act swiftly and avoid the fallacy that to have an appropriate respect for uncertainty in the face of possible irreversible catastrophe amounts to "paranoia," or the converse a belief that nothing can be done. — Joseph Norman, Yaneer Bar-Yam, and Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Systemic risk of pandemic via novel pathogens – Coronavirus: A note, New England Complex Systems Institute (January 26, 2020).
This is where having experts and advisors that understand the nature of pandemics is important. The president's call shouldn't depend on being able to predict the future since no-one can. — Andrew M
But, I don't know the full story, wasn't there conflicting public health advise too though? — schopenhauer1
Not if the Australians have any say in the matter: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-australia/australia-begins-mass-covid-19-vaccination-programme-idUSKBN2AL0Q1The Australia path is a ticking time bomb in my opinion, it could go off at anytime in the future. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The uncertainty wasn't taken seriously, clearly. — schopenhauer1
'm talking at the very beginning. — schopenhauer1
Not if the Australians have any say in the matter: — EricH
I think I've mentioned before that I find the inability of so many Americans to think in terms of a common wealth... puzzling. — Banno
Our citizens have no conception of a common good. The result is they don't believe they (or their government) have any obligations beyond those necessary to the preservation of those rights — Ciceronianus the White
Perhaps. There is also what Zizek calls "ideology"; the unspoken actions that are just expected of the populace — Banno
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.