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I agree with what you said. I am very concerned about the well documented possibility of vaccines sometimes making the disease course worse or causing auto-immune problems down the line.

After all, one problem with sars-cov-2 is that the virus mimics human self-identification all over the place, one reason it is so effective. What if a non-negligible part of the population develop a chronic auto-immune disease? Those diseases are treated with steroids. If we have to give immune-suppressing steroids to a large part of the population, are we not setting ourselves up for a second pandemic?

These are just speculations, but I am extremely adverse to this rush mentality like we're trying to get a new software UI out and it doesn't matter if it breaks. While we are under the gun here, I still think we should take a considered approach and indeed mobilize against the virus. Much of this mobilization would involve not only production, but also non-production i.e. paying people to stay home and building structures that enable safe socialization etc.

There's a mentality that we must preserve our highly competitive way of life at all costs, and the people leading us are the ones that "won". I think this is the wrong course.

Further, I think this discussion of liabilities and profits is insanity. The relevant phrama companies should be nationalized and anyone harmed should be able to make a claim against the government. I don't understand why an entire civilization needs to rely on the kindness of buisness people.



Absolutely. I agree. Production of remedies is just as important as non-production of non-essential industries. The fewer people there are out and about, the better off we are during this pandemic. The fact that there's been so little direct aid to people directly impacted is baffling to me. Corporations don't need money to sustain themselves. That's classical neocon supply-side thinking at work. We're in a situation where demand-side thinking and stimulus is critical.

If nothing else, I have a foolish hope that this pandemic will force us to reexamine our way of life and alter it to be more community-centric and relax our competitiveness. There's no reason life has to move at the speed it does. There's no reason the workweek needs to be 40 hours. There's no reason parents can't spend more time with their children and all people can have more leisure and unstructured playtime.

And finally, I 100% agree. I have little faith in most corporations that are doing things that shouldn't be scarce goods - such as medical care and pharmaceuticals. Relying on them to deliver us through this disaster is foolish. Their incentive is _not_ on getting us through this. It's on delivering shareholder value and right now, they're delivering all kinds of value since they're in higher demand. We should view it as a failing when private industry is our only hope of deliverance from a disaster.




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