I was trying to lighten the mood a little lol.
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MFA - we clearly fundamentally disagree that healthcare should be a basic human right. I can't sway you. As I've told you before reread the 10 commandments and tell me where you feel like you should fall on that issue. You have your religious interpretation, I have mine.
Green New Deal - If you're a "global warming isn't real" type... man. Idk.
Reproductive healthcare - Why didn't pregnant women get an extra $500 if unborns count as babies?
(Sidenote: abortion is one issue I do not like to touch. It's scary to craft an opinion on because when we ultimately decide, we have to decide what is a human and what is not. Once we do that, we could grow humans in a lab by that definition. That feels morally weird and wrong. So I generally abstain from that debate. Only ask for consistency across all policies if someone is going to have a strong opinion on it because I don't think anyone actually should.)
Taxes- ... do you think he's taxing 90% or something? I'm genuinely curious if you understand how tax brackets work. I have a feeling you're misinformed on that basic principle (like way too many Americans are).
Voting rights- I don't believe those move the needle near as much as what the Russians did to us last cycle. I'm of the opinion to leave this up to the States. I don't have to see eye-to-eye on everything.
College Tuition- If you think it's the middle class that would foot this bill then you really don't understand how uneven the wealth gap is. (If you made $1000/hr for every hr since the beginning of 1 AD.... you aren't 1/5 as rich as Jeff Bezos. You aren't in the top 20 of rich Americans. Besides that, this is one of those things that would mitigate your "laziness" claim. Americans would have the freedom to pursue their interests and do things they want to do. Instead of forcing themselves only into jobs that can pay bills. And guess what would happen to that middle class that "would foot the bill", that bill of college debt would be gone. I'm assuming you don't understand how ridiculous college has gotten. In my 6 years at MSU, tuition increased over 33%. The costs keep rising and it's an absolute joke.
Marijuana - Sounds like you would be better suited smack dab in 1930. Prohibition is more your speed. Let's ban alcohol. Or let's regulate something that people are going to use anyways and get tax dollars out of it. (If you were to argue against legalization, the only two points that are fair imo are to argue against the taxing and that the government will dilute the product / so you don't want regulation on it.) The fact that you see this harmless plant as something to actively fight against tells me you need to roll one and chill the **** out. (Fun fact, I've only smoked a handful of times. Not for me. But I can see it's merits. So inb4 you label me a stoner too. I'm a drunk, get it right.)
Education - I don't even understand your rambling at this point. I'm confused what you could mean here. Are you arguing against private schools? Education system shows you a lot of what the basis would happen with gov healthcare. You can still opt to get privatized if you want, but we ensure everyone has the bare minimum. That's what I want for healthcare. (Not everyone forced on the same plan bs you seem to think.)
Labor - if you think unions are bad then you are horribly, horribly lost. While I do agree that you should have the option to opt out, the fact of the matter is that without unions you see atrocities like amazon warehouses. Being generally against adding protections to the middle class just seems like a weird stance to take for someone who wants to protect their tax dollars.
As for your conclusion. You should get more informed on issues. You parroted bad versions of the extreme right versions of these arguments. If you think the issue is that Americans are too lazy to work (for the first time in history) instead of the fact that the middle class QOL is overall being squeezed and pushed further and further down, then you are mistaken. The fact is that most middle class Americans can't afford to own property anymore. Nothing to do with laziness and everything to do with a system that disproportionately compensates.
I mean really. How ****ing dare you call Americans lazy when so many of us are put into the "essential worker roles", labeled as heroes, and shown minimal to no extra compensation. So many of these people can't earn a wage that allows them to buy a house but they're essential to the fabric of our nation. AND YOU CALL THEM LAZY. You're an entitled uppity twat if that's how you really feel. Go move to Russia, their system and people align more with your beliefs than America. (Makes a lot of sense why you want Donald.)
No I've not changed my opinion. If anything recent events have reinforced my opinion. https://imgur.com/a/tH61SGX
If numbers are being added to the coronavirus death toll of those that haven't even tested positive then the legitimacy of the coronavirus death toll numbers are gone. *Let me be clear that I'm in no way saying people aren't dying to the coronavirus just that the numbers can't be trusted* Here's another link to the NYT reporting on the death toll in New York going up by the thousands after they included those that were "presumed" to have died of COVID but were never tested: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/14/n...0uofkK7Dl5lgbM
Another factor that has been hit on here are the death total projections that went from astronomically high to now in the 60k range - https://covid19.healthdata.org/united-states-of-america
I realize a main defense for that has been the social distancing put in place but I like some others on here believe that this virus has been here for some time maybe even as early as December but of course this paragraph and even the link (death projections) are all speculation and we can argue this to death. We'll just have to agree to disagree on this one.
I read a post by Hacker earlier that responded to one of the others mentioning the coronavirus deaths and numbers being misleading where he said (I'm paraphrasing so forgive me Hacker if it's not completely accurate), "If someone has COVID but is murdered then that death will go down as a murder." It should but I don't believe even that is as clear cut. While not a murder per say you may or may not be aware of the 6 wk old baby that died in CT a little while back and the governor and media were sensationalizing the child's death as the "youngest victim to succumb to COVID19." Later it was claimed the death was due to accidental suffocation by the caretaker but more specifics weren't released out of "sensitivity to the parents." The child tested positive for the coronavirus postmortem and the governor and media ran with it. Either way the coroner has yet to rule and the governor has walked back his statements.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...icut-baby.html
https://www.dailywire.com/news/viral...MOB8FaxpGR9beU
Our hospitals here are operating with very low patient census and I live and work in a bigger city. I realize that due to elective surgeries and what not being for the most part delayed until further notice play a large part in this but we were also preparing for a large surge in COVID patients which while we have a few positives it's nothing like we prepared for (Good thing). The bad part is that nurses are being laid off. Last I heard the number we laid off here recently was around the 800 mark but that was last week and that's one hospital. I have friends saying the same thing about their hospitals in other states. A hospital in OK City just closed and only left the ER and some outpatient areas open. Many nurses were laid off. I also speak with several that travel nurse and a few that were in the process of going to New York. I actually looked into it as well since it paid north of $10,000 a week. That was about two or so weeks ago I believe and now those contracts to NY are being cancelled (these were mostly 13 week contracts). It's not just New York contracts being cancelled but Cali, Wash, LA some of the hardest hit areas that were begging for help all of sudden no longer need nurses. I'm grateful to still have a job but to be fair I wouldn't be surprised if I was looking for a new one at some point. Here I was thinking that by going into the medical field I'd never have to worry about job security.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/...ff/5102320002/
Your statement that other nurses would be disgusted by my opinions of the media and it's role during this difficult time is painting with a very broad brush. It's akin to saying since I support one candidate then all supporters of the other would hate me. No I know many that more or less are of the same mindset. While some may not be as extreme you'd be surprised. Of course there's those that would vilify my standing and I know them and avoid talking about it around them. Just like anything else.
*Btw the highlighted portion of your comment is a lie.* I won't repost your comment saying I don't because you should know what you said.
But you trying to bring that to America. Cause that's what communism is like dude. That's what it's like when everybody has the "basic" living conditions. There are fewer elites at the top, and an equal class that is about like our poorest. No in between much to speak of. The store shelves are mostly bare.
ETA: And here's something to think about. EVERYTHING the govt gets involved in, medicine (medicare/medicaid), education (student loans), etc. costs go up and quality goes down. Every time. And things govt really should regulate (like banking) they decided starting in about 1980 to deregulate and over time 2008 happened. There are things the govt should regulate, but most of the rest they should be mostly hands-off of. Let states do what maybe should be done in most of those areas.
How many are out there with covid19 and have no idea? Could be a lot... 60% of cases on USS Theodore Roosevelt were asymptotic. This is a huge number.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/possible-...201204720.html
Then there's another number we don't have, recovered among the asymptotic.
What's the definition of "recovered among asymptotoc" ... you meant asymptomatic didn't you? But even then, if you never develop symptoms, what do you have to recover from. Maybe the disease is "active" among them with no symptoms and after that they'll test negative and an antibody test is needed to find out if they have had it??
I thought it was "asymptomatic", but the article made me question it. Here's an exert from the article...
"The Navy found that out of the 48-hundred member crew - about 600 were positive for the virus. 60 percent of those were asymptotic."
This made me question my use of "asymptomatic".
As far as "recovered"... yeah, bad word choice, but you get what I'm saying
1. Literally the first word of your response is what I said not to tell me is a solution. Politicians will do whatever they or their puppeteers pull their strings and tell them to do. Thanks for nothing.
2. You can be informed and still have nothing but crooked ass politician to choose from. (Like every presidential election I've been able to vote in) By the time they are in the position to be elected president (or any other high ranking office) they are so bought and have their pockets so lined it defeats the purpose. The fact that you believe any politician, republican or democrat will make the right decisions for the American people without some sort of angle being played is the problem. You just lap up whatever the side you are on says.
3. So all your political posts on here are you being the change in this world that we all need?.... Fail. IF ANYTHING they are divisive.
4. He would remain with hardly any votes if it weren't for so many people losing their jobs and looking for something to help them through this. This isn't going to last forever. Guarantee you when things get back to normal most of those who signed up for UBI would be complaining about where the rest of their check was. Or as someone else posted, efficiency and work ethic would plummet because there is no benefit to working harder than the next guy. To pretend like everyone has the same initiative and motivation is foolish.
Sorry folks. I know this is political and irrelevant to the COVID thread. I'll drop it with this post.
Agree with this statement wholeheartedly. Where we differ is on what those things are. I'm not for true communism (and I think this keeps getting puppeted because early in the thread I made a point to show extendedcab why imposing his religious beliefs are in bad faith on the government. He doesn't want to follow his religion if it doesn't serve him.
As for education, last I checked it's free public education up to 18... no? When we get into college institutions that's where we keep seeing the dollar amount go higher and higher. And the quality going down is a matter of perspective. For the top, quality sure goes down, but for the bottom we create a safety net and bring that quality up. It's kind of a ****ed up proposition really. How low are we willing to let our worst fall to allow our highest reach their heights? The answer to that is the root of our difference of opinion.
Pray tell, why are people dying so much more than normal then. Explain the huge spike in NY if not for Corona if the death count is being inflated. How you can look at those stats, work in healthcare and still be forcibly ignorant are a complete and total disgrace.
And the fact of the matter that you puppet the stance about how could the projections be so high until we did what the doctor ordered. Sounds like the patient who stops taking the antibiotic because they got better and thinks the doctor is stupid for having prescribed it. If you're really an RN you should see the similarity in your beliefs and hopefully do some self reflection.
The "not counting deaths" properly is a tired discussion. If physicians are reporting cause of death, then this is actually quite easy to do correctly. Regardless, the total is not going to be that statistically different. I'm not convinced we don't get to more than 60k deaths reported the way its looking right now. The course of this disease in the USA in general is still fairly early. Its hard to comprehend in Mississippi because it, and many other places, are light year different situations than NYC or NJ. Not saying this to argue we shouldn't be trying to open things up slowly, because we should. But I keep seeing people downplaying this due to projections yet we are sitting here in mid-April at 34k and rising pretty steadily, and no one has opened up anything yet. The death toll is going to be a large number before this Summer is over, but I'm not sure how you avoid it eventually without a vaccine.