Quote (WickedDarkJuggalos @ Nov 21 2021 08:07pm)
Sooo what you are saying is when people go to the hospital for the sniffles they get put in line and are waited to be seen. So they will eventually take up a bed? Sounds just like what I said but with more words. Also sounds like the fear campaign drove them to go to the hospital when it wasn’t necessary.
Also, the remedy for a large work load is more workers, not less customers. We literally see things backwards from each other. When there is a high demand for health care workers the immediate fix is more workers. You can’t wave a wand and make people not sick. Be real.
It also seems as if every successful vaccine has virtually eliminated the virus from the world. Then you have flu shots and Covid shots which basically may or may not be helpful more likely than not but still who knows.
They might get a bed for 30 minutes in the ER, in the hallway, but they aren't going to be admitted. The admitted beds are the real resource. You can pack as many people in an ER hallway as will fit and it won't really impact the hospital's ability to care for critical patients. So no, it isn't what you said, it's you not really understanding how hospitals work. And I must stress this. It's fine that you don't know how hospitals work. 99% of people have no reason to know how hospitals work. But when people who work on hospitals tell you how it is, you should listen instead of asserting that you know more.
Hospitals aren't factories. You can't just add on more and more workers indefinitely. At a certain point critical resources like ventilators get used up and it doesn't matter if you have more people. Rarely are beds the limiting factor. And since the issue is happening across the entire country you're SOL if you want more workers, because basically all the workers are taken. That was a very real issue for most of last year. So you can say "add more workers" or "add more resources" all you want, but that can't be done at the snap of a finger, and especially can't be added when a significant portion of the country needs to add at once.
I'm sorry if you don't realize this, but the only disease that's ever been eliminated by humans is smallpox. Far from "every successful vaccine eliminating the virus from the world", it's actually "every successful vaccine has contained the consequences after achieving virtually universal vaccination, but the virus still exists and spreads significantly throughout the world". In the USA with regards to Covid we haven't achieved a large enough vaccination level to make it comparable to vaccines like Measles, and Covid is easier to transmit than measles, and we haven't eliminated any but a single disease. The flu vaccine is the most comparable here, and it's been massively successful although hasn't come close to eliminating hardly any flu virus strains.
Quote (Sh00p @ Nov 21 2021 08:47pm)
But you still have to give us NOTHING but bitchute like wtf LUL
Nah, he gave me a Reuters link that directly contradicted his position. He bought into the bitchute crap and when he tracked down a source that wasn't bitchute he quickly realized he got duped. Although he won't admit it.
This post was edited by NetflixAdaptationWidow on Nov 21 2021 08:50pm