The US had more cases and deaths than all of the third world countries combined. As of today there are more confirmed American deaths from the coronavirus than all that died on 9/11. And the numbers are now growing faster and faster every day. The number of cases there is expected to reach China and Italy combined by Tuesday, and that's confirmed cases, considering the US did a smaller number of tests than many developing countries. Considering the US is late to the game, the number of deaths is going to catch up quickly now as well.
In New York alone yesterday there was a person confirmed to die from the coronavirus every 15 minutes. That means they tested positive (most who are sick still are not) and the outcome was death, in most cases due to total respiratory failure. It means not all coronavirus-deaths are counted, and in that city there are already more of these confirmed deaths than cancer deaths, and these kill 600,000 Americans every year.
And that's not even the scariest part. The worst part is that it's getting significantly worse with every single day, with the number of deaths increasing literally exponentially now:
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I have no idea how it's still possible to spin it as a "others" problem, or play it down, considering America is the center of this now, and the numbers are crazy scary. If there are any hopes of stopping this by summer, leaving home shouldn't be an option, even if your office is on fire.
Well, yeah, I mentioned those people as the examples of why this could be spreading so fast. Because people don't take it as seriously, for some reason. It seems the more "well-connected" a society is with information, the stupider and more lax they are about the situation.
As with every tragedy, the memes inevitably come about. When the Harambe incident happened, people were shocked and angry and demanded quick action and discipline of the person who shot them. A few months later? "Dicks out for Harambe."
The Epstein scandal? People were so disgusted when the news first broke. Everyone wanted this guy in jail, hung, etc. After, of course, spitting out the names of the people he dealt with that also partook in the abuse and trafficking. What happened? A few weeks in jail, he gets killed/killed himself, and Epstein is literally a meme now. "Epstein didn't kill himself" appears everywhere.
The Covid situation? It's a healthy mix of clickbait articles in the media and people meme-ing about what they're doing or not doing during quarantine and tons of other stuff.
I can see some people need an outlet during these trying times, but social media really makes it seem like people take the wrong message from things that get posted. About anything. What's meant to be a joke or a jab can quickly turn integrate in to some people's ideas, philosophies, politics, ethics, etc. And I would venture to guess that Western countries come in to more contact with these memes and jokes more than the rest of the world. Especially the US.
People see these memes day-in and day-out and become desensitized to it. Now it's just something someone says is "bad" but most Americans haven't actually seen the effects of the virus, other than empty toilet paper aisles and empty roads due to people self-quarantining. That's not real enough to make someone take it seriously. So I get why some people might be lax about social distancing and everything else that's being strongly suggested as measures to protect us all.
If you're talking about the government's response, or lack thereof, then that's different and I don't have much to say about that because I'm not that informed. The whole world was unprepared for something of this scale but somehow the US seems to have gotten it the worst. And we're supposedly not even at the halfway point as yet of how bad this thing will ultimately be. I'll be honest, I pin this whole thing on the Chinese government keeping all of the details under wraps and not doing more to stop it. That includes being open about who was infected, how, etc. When this even is looked back upon in the future, there will always be an asterisk next to China's reported numbers because they clearly kept it secret from their own people and the rest of the world. Only once it started fucking with countries like Italy did the world notice and try to take action. This akin to starting a fire at work, tossing a wet rag on it and running out of the building and waiting in the parking lot, not even pulling the alarm to let others know something is up, let alone that you were responsible for it.
But I honestly don't know how the US is so high although some stuff I've read has simply been attributing it to lack of tests and shitty criteria in order to obtain one. There was a British and/or an Indian company that supposedly had a 15 minute test available and they were looking to get it approved but I'm not sure what happened with that.
Anway, away from the actualy outbreak and its negative effects and on to something relatively positive. I've been cleaning out who I follow on social media, especially Twitter and YouTube. I really only use social media for news and updates from certain people, but I've started using YouTube more regularly than I ever did before. Prior to a few months ago, I was only on YouTube because I was linked to some video on Twitter or Reddit and I'd usually just watch the video and that was it.
But now I've been adding and removing more people, especially tech people. I actually unfollowed MKBHD a few weeks back because I just got tired of his bland takes on tech. It was either about things I'd never look to buy or things I'd be interested in but he did grill it hard enough and just said it was "dope." I still love the guy but his videos were not for me anymore.
Instead, I started following review sites I'd normally visit on their actual site and subscribed to their channels for the reviews. RTings, The Wirecutter, etc. And now I've really been enjoying their stuff by watching it instead of just reading it.
I'm still looking for more tech folks to follow since I still follow pretty mainstream YTers like UrAvgConsumer and iJustine and Austin Evans. I enjoy them, but the "this video was sponsored by _____" always rubs me the wrong way, even though I understand it's necessary in order for them to make money.
And the rest have been car channels where they review stuff or do dumbass things with them.
So I'm probably a decade late to the party of YouTube channel-subscribing, but with this time I have to do nothing, I've been able to clean up some stuff I had been following since 2008, or so, and replace it with proper content creators that align more with my interests now.
I still have a lot of pruning to do on Twitter accounts, though. I think I added every Android-related blog since 2009 on there lol. And just broad, general tech sites like Engadget, who I don't think I read their content as much anymore. So I might have to get rid of those and trim down those lists.