Boy, we really haven't moved forward an inch with regard to politicizing everything about this virus, have we? Getting our 2021 son vaccinated came up earlier this week as he's roughly 7 weeks away from heading to college to play ball. The plan was to get him his first dose next week. Yesterday a friend forwarded me a link to a Rueters/Yahoo article about this latest development, so I passed it along to my highly liberal exwife suggesting we pause plans a little while until more info is known. Her response was to immediately downplay the significance of the development and then went on to say that once CNN reports on it, she'll take it more seriously. Now, I am not looking to take shots at liberals or CNN, but if the "tucker carlson angle" is not okay, then neither should the angle my ex is taking. We've really lost our way when we allow major news outlets and politics to control us like this. I'm not saying the left or the right is wrong. I'm saying we're all hanging on WAY too tight to the bonds between Covid and politics. No, one single person in this country is not to blame. That's a puddle-deep, lazy argument for quite possibly the most complex problem in decades or longer.
Google it and you'll see a large swatch of news outlets are reporting on this now. Yes, on both sides of the aisle. The CDC has scheduled an emergency meeting next week to dig into this. So I think it's worth letting this one breath a little bit. There have been a thousand things we "knew" about this virus that we had to un-know the next day.
@3and2Fastball you bring up a very important point about twisting statistics. It's disgusting, but I see both the left and right pivoting constantly on how they present their data. Some numbers look radically different when viewed as a whole number versus when they're viewed as a percentage. One side views Covid deaths in terms of massive whole numbers while the other side uses tiny percentages. Both are 100% accurate, yet we pretend one is horrifying and the other is negligible. And vice versa. Spoiler alert - neither singular focus is right. The term "rare" runs on a massive sliding scale these days. Sadly, most of our strongest feelings around Covid and what we're "sure" of, stem from our sick obsession with the the two incredibly divisive factions "representing" us in Washington. We need to be better than this.