WHO warned that the reported number of cases and deaths do not reflect the true numbers. Read more at straitstimes.com.

  • Tavarin@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Nope, there was never a chance for us to eliminate it. By the time we even knew it existed Covid had been spreading worldwide for over 2 months (initial spread Oct-Nov 2019, discovered late Dec 2019), so there were a lot of unreported cases everywhere.

    And once it’s in a household it takes way longer than 2 weeks to eliminate due to delayed spread between household members. Also some people stay contagious for months.

    And I’m all for the vaccines, but they also don’t stop covid, they make it harder to get and reduce symptoms, but you can still get it and spread it even with the vaccine.

    The two weeks and it’s gone was a fantasy to sell people on lockdowns to slow down covid, it was never going to eliminate it.

    • FfaerieOxide@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      They would have worked if we took them seriously.

      “They never would have worked” is a lie told by people unwilling to shoot violators.

      We could have ended it through a (relative to the length of the still ongoing pandemic) short period of massive testing and quarantine, like what Vietnam did.

      Instead white people had to be waited on by wage employees so their could feel important and now millions of people are permanently disabled.

      Also all the deaths.

      • Tavarin@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Nope, covid was way too widespread, and exists in multiple animal species, meaning it can easily jump back to humans even if we got rid of it in our populations (which would never have happened).

        In all of human history we’ve eliminated a single disease, Smallpox, and it doesn’t spread through the air. Yet you think a few weeks lockdown would have actually gotten rid of a far more transmissible airborne illness? Get real.

          • Tavarin@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            For every human, and every wild animal on the planet, sure. Not exactly worth it.

            • FfaerieOxide@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              Wouldn’t have taken that many.

              Especially if vaccine patents were not only shared, the vaccines were administered at the barrel of a gun.

              We could have certainly fared better than the real world plan of “let’s infect everyone on purpose as quickly as possible”.

              • Tavarin@lemmy.ca
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                1 year ago

                Yes it would have.

                As already stated covid is present in several animal species, so you would have to kill all muskelids, cats, deer, bats, etc…

                Covid is also asymptomatic in about 50% of people, so you wouldn’t even know who to shoot.

                And vaccines are not perfect, I got covid 3 shots in, from someone who had 4 shots of the vaccine.

                And in all of human history, as I have said, we have only ever eliminated 1 disease, despite massive efforts to eliminate others.

                There was never any chance to eliminate covid. That’s a fairy tale fantasy only those that lack knowledge could believe.

                • FfaerieOxide@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  Yes there was and you don’t have the wherewithal to carry it out.

                  “Animal reservoirs” is the refuge of someone who never wanted to shut down in the first place and fought restrictions the entire way. We never had to “live with Covid”.

                  Why are you so hung up on killing everybody anyway?

                  We can test people. We can test animals. We can vaccinate both. We can isolate people and things.

                  We could have controlled this. We chose—Chose—to exacerbate things.

                  • Tavarin@lemmy.ca
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                    1 year ago

                    You’re the one who said we have enough bullets to stop it, it’s you who suggested killing everyone.

                    And if it’s so easy to eliminate an airborne disease, as you say, then why have we never managed to do it in all of human history?

                    We have been trying to eliminate the flu for over a hundred years, how’s that going?

                    We could have controlled this.

                    Nope, we could not. It’s a rapidly spreading airborne illness that was already in nearly every country on the planet before it was discovered.