RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version
Posted: Mon Jul 13, 2020 12:27 pm
What's your Strategy?
https://forums.matrixgames.com:443/
ORIGINAL: RangerJoe
There are some problems with that one. No facilities for waste disposal being one!
A think tank is suing the state of Ohio and the city of Columbus, saying a state law allowing the city to collect income taxes from employees required to work from their homes outside the municipality amid the COVID-19 pandemic is unconstitutional.
The Buckeye Institute and three of its employees – Rea S. Hederman Jr., Greg R. Lawson and Joe Nichols – filed the lawsuit last week in Franklin County Common Pleas Court.
The Buckeye Institute, which required its employees to work from home to comply with a state order mandating nonessential businesses close, is challenging a provision included in House Bill 197. The legislation “deemed” for tax purposes the work that employees did at home “to have been performed” at their primary office. . . .
ORIGINAL: BBfanboy
I think this is rooted in the psychological "need" to be proven correct in one's beliefs (because security comes from being able to project what will happen next). When our beliefs start to dismiss objective data, we create a "faith", and that is very hard to abandon. Doing so would mean admitting we were wrong about a long list of things that we constructed/incorporated as part of the faith.ORIGINAL: Dante Fierro
Funny how often COVID-19 gets steered into a political argument. As if people here have an agenda whether they want to admit to it or not. And who gets left out, all the ordinary working Americans who have to deal with this crisis on a first hand basis.
My own faith seems to be that skeptics, who demand objective evidence about new info, are more flexible in creating/abandoning various models of what is happening. I freely admit to being wrong about a great many things during my lifetime and I am the better for changing my mind. But like all of us, I am a (piece of?) work in progress!
ORIGINAL: JohnDillworth
And now Hospitals have been told to report coronavirus-related information directly to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), not the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), under new instructions from the Trump administration. So the distortion of numbers will now become official policy. First it started with the states fudging numbers now the fudging will come directly from the White House. https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/covid-19-faqs-hospitals-hospital-laboratory-acute-care-facility-data-reporting.pdf
ORIGINAL: obvert
ORIGINAL: JohnDillworth
And now Hospitals have been told to report coronavirus-related information directly to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), not the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), under new instructions from the Trump administration. So the distortion of numbers will now become official policy. First it started with the states fudging numbers now the fudging will come directly from the White House. https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/covid-19-faqs-hospitals-hospital-laboratory-acute-care-facility-data-reporting.pdf
This will make it hard to be accurately informed but each state must continue to act on its own and in conjunction with neighbouring states. At this point there is no real mitigation strategy anyway so the numbers aren't doing anything useful other than to inform scientists and local policy makers.
Information will get out regardless I think, and it's already quite obvious what is happening.
Are you suggesting that the State Of Florida's official site is over reporting data? Because that is where the number came from.ORIGINAL: Nomad
Things like this make you wonder what is what: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy ... nflated-90
ORIGINAL: JohnDillworth
Are you suggesting that the State Of Florida's official site is over reporting data? Because that is where the number came from.ORIGINAL: Nomad
Things like this make you wonder what is what: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy ... nflated-90
I was not addressing this to religious faith, if that is your comfort source you refer to. I was referring to our own personal models of how the world works that include sets of assumptions that don't fit with bona fide data, well sourced and verified. To ignore this requires us to put faith in some other source that supports out assumptions.ORIGINAL: obvert
ORIGINAL: BBfanboy
I think this is rooted in the psychological "need" to be proven correct in one's beliefs (because security comes from being able to project what will happen next). When our beliefs start to dismiss objective data, we create a "faith", and that is very hard to abandon. Doing so would mean admitting we were wrong about a long list of things that we constructed/incorporated as part of the faith.ORIGINAL: Dante Fierro
Funny how often COVID-19 gets steered into a political argument. As if people here have an agenda whether they want to admit to it or not. And who gets left out, all the ordinary working Americans who have to deal with this crisis on a first hand basis.
My own faith seems to be that skeptics, who demand objective evidence about new info, are more flexible in creating/abandoning various models of what is happening. I freely admit to being wrong about a great many things during my lifetime and I am the better for changing my mind. But like all of us, I am a (piece of?) work in progress!
I like your approach. I was forced in some ways to adopt something similar from a young age. It's not "better" but it might be more flexible in making adjustments to unforeseen events and being able to learn form mistaken assumptions. During times of stability it can also be unsettling to not have the kind of guidance, comfort and understanding that faith allows.