Clyde_Style wrote:HarthorneWingo wrote:ibraheim718 wrote:
I think some other things are at play. I say this because the country was never more wide opened then after Biden announced if you were full vaxxed you could now shed your mask.
First, that’s not that how omicron started. It began in South Africa, I believe. But with a “novel” virus things change as the virus mutates. You gotta change course with it. That’s why it’s so important to get everyone vaccinated and masked up.
Once omicron was discovered, Fauci said that everyone has to mask up. I watched him say it. But people are resisting which is the problem. They went maskless for a little bit, went to bars and restaurants during the nice weather (not me) and got used to “normal” without recognizing that we weren’t over this. Biden isn’t still saying you can drop the mask now. This shyt is like wildfire.
Restaurants are packed here with not a mask in sight. Last night I was craving Italian and thought maybe I could find a well ventilated booth in the corner or at least get takeout. It was jammed. There were 200 people in there without a mask. I was the ONLY person there with a mask on. I left.
I get how different factions in America have their different pet reasons for why things may not be working against the Covid flu. I'd like to think my ideas are close to what mainstream science and common sense would suggest.
Anyway, I'd like to point out that that lots of people have been calling what's happening now, in one form or another, since early on.
Why? Because a variation of this happened during the 1918 Spanish Flu. The pandemic rages, people have mixed amounts of doing the public health measures, they comply better, and the virus seems to move on. They loosened up, the flu ran rampant again. Or it mutated and it ran rampant again. Or both. Point being, that flu also had at least one, and I think two, periods where it was "over" but it wasn't, and the infections raged again.
All we can hope is enough people get vaccinated. Well, that isn't going to happen anymore than it is unless there is some true massive death event over 800,000, like one where young people die in sufficiently spectacular numbers to make generally selfish Americans actually pay the f*ck attention. The other is that the virus mutates into something more infectious but less deadly, as they generally do. However, that takes X amount of time, where no one knows what X is, and there may or may not be the spectacular death count along the way.
The "1918 Spanish Flu" isn't the most helpful historical title, because the problems went on for several years. Just like now.
Oh well. We have the means to stop this with 100+ years of medical advances, but just a bit too many people are too stubborn. Also, the country is 3X more populous, so that matters as well. I figure we break the million death # by February, easy.