Yes, herd immunity comes at a cost. Sweden is seeing a larger death toll. The Atlantic had a good article about "acclimatization" to Yellow Fever in New Orleans in the 1700s. You died or became immune. Now we don't know if having this bug grants immunity. Nor do we know without an antibody study how many people have had it and gotten over it. We do know that people like me die of it; heart disease, immunity challenged and taking a blood pressure drug. Hence "boomer remover" is a hashtag and the plague visits nursing homes and cleans house. This wasn't an issue in the 18th century when people didn't live that long. We don't "fully stop" the flu. We don't "fully stop" traffic accidents. We don't "fully stop" murder. Public policy balances efforts in flu mitigation with the surety that some tens of thousands die of flu every year. Public policy leaves highways open at night even though people get in accidents and die. Public policy doesn't stop and frisk despite the great results it brings. As harsh as it sounds, that does discount human life against other public goods. We will "go backward" and have outbreaks again. The outbreaks lines and deaths lines will look like an eight point saw. Outbreak, response, decline, and repeat.
And to Brian Stelter, who cried for our old life; I guarrantee you people on this board grieved the end of sports as we know it. I mentioned how silly I felt grieving the end of college hoops, but yep, I sure did. Doc talks about a burger and beer and ball game on a bar stool. We get it, Brian. But we cowboy up.
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