shut downs only delayed the inevitable, and caused much economic and social heartache. shutdowns were understandable though, before we really knew what the behavior of the virus was...as was obsessively disinfecting every surface we could find (we know better now)BasketballJayhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jul 27, 2021 2:39 pmI disagree there knowing what we know now. Eradication of the virus entirely was going to take extreme and prolonged shutdowns.TraditionKU wrote: ↑Tue Jul 27, 2021 2:35 pmyesBasketballJayhawk wrote: ↑Tue Jul 27, 2021 2:29 pm
Ok. Gotcha. Ya we agree. They should have stuck them in a hotel for 2 weeks and quarantined for sure.
The plan sucked as far as the "ban" goes. We are in total agreement there.
Personally i thought all airline travel should have been shut down (even between states) and borders closed for many months. Maybe the entire year. Otherwise you're just playing whack a mole it seemed like.
but it wouldn’t have taken months. 3-4 weeks would have been sufficient to make an enormous difference, so long as common sense mitigation measures were followed locally
We shutdown for months and made nice progress....but the moment we opened up the spike began again. The virus was in circulation far too widely to think this was just a few week fix.
Sure in theory if we had a total global shutdown of 3-4 weeks where NOBODY left their house for ANYTHING then that timeline works. But anything short of extreme and total lockdown allows for too much transmission to continue to occur.
what worked better, and continues to work, are behavioral modifications...distancing, hand washing and masks
all we had to do was get through to the development of vaccines (and then do the logical thing, get vaccinated)