dice wrote:GetBuLLish wrote:These are some of the people that have been guiding public health policy the past few months. A joke. An absolutely insane joke.
if you actually read the entirety of the linked statement, it's quite reasonable. michael tracey took the single line in the whole thing that could be made to look ridiculous when taken out of context and did so. this is not a case of health experts saying that when black people do something it's healthy and when others do it's not. they're saying that IN GENERAL these protests contribute to the health of the black community in the long run because they draw attention to the systematic inequality in our health system. what's not clear is if they're saying that the long-term benefits outweigh the increased COVID-19 risk in this PARTICULAR instance. but that may also be the case given that the black community has been forced to endure additional trauma by viewing what happened in minneapolis while cooped up at home, disproportionately affected both economically and health-wise by the pandemic. at some point there is a psychological breaking point, and that point has painfully obviously been reached in the black community
regardless, what's actually an absolutely insane joke is that you think you know better than the health experts
Health experts have been wrong on:
- Masks
- Transmissibility
- When it came to the US
- Symptoms
- Model projections
- Fatality rate
- Asymptomatic transmission
etc., etc.
There are countless other things that they might get disproved on soon too. For example, health experts were cocksure positive that exposure to other coronavirae gave no immunity to covid 19 to the point where they jacked with antibody tests as a result. There are people starting to put 2 and 2 together that might not be true.
From January to some time in April, I'm not sure health experts got much right. The incompetence was overwhelming. If not for Trump being so bad, we would all be discussing how badly the CDC, WHO and others botched this. An orangutan punching keys randomly on a keyboard would have had a better success rate than the health experts did on covid.










