bleach wrote:For those planning on going to Arch Madness, be aware that proof of vaccination or negative test is required. Masks are also required. May not be news but I hadn't heard it until tonights broadcast. This will undoubtedly affect attendance to some degree in a negative way. I'm so over Covid.
My Dad and I have had season tickets every season since the 80's until last year. He's a stubborn old man and doesn't want to wear a mask, and I'm an apathetic middle aged man who doesn't leave the house any more than I have to because I hate how people are fighting tooth and nail over masks for a disease only slightly more likely to kill me than a hundred others that have existed since forever. AFAIC, the whole world has gone nuts and I want no part of it.
Whatever anyone may think of people that don't get vaccinated and/or don't like the mask mandates, the mandates and policies are costing businesses customers and costing our economy money. That's sustainable for a while, but not forever. Nothing has infinite value, yes even lives. Politicians won't ever say that publicly, because they think we're too stupid to understand or so sheltered we will all be appalled at the notion that the value of a human life can be calculated to several decimal points. Fortunately, I had a level headed realist economics professor in college who explained the hard truth that politicians can, and do, put a monetary value on human life (at the time it averaged about two million dollars).
The bottom line is this. There is a point at which, macroeconomically speaking, the cost of COVID policies is greater than the value of the lives those policies are saving. Some people say we're not there yet. Some people think we passed it a while ago. Really smart, and not so smart people, can and do disagree about where that point is, but sooner or later the powers that be will all realize we've passed it somewhere and the debate will die down. The media will find something else to scare people to death with, the politicians will find some other issue to use to whip people into a frothing mouthed frenzy, and the caravan that is civilization will move on. Once we get to that point, we can begin to assess what the permanent costs of COVID were and historians and economists will take up the debate as to whether it was all worth it, or whether we'd have been better off doing nothing at all and letting the chips fall where they may.
My Dad might resume attending racer games at that point, or he might decide he likes staying at home sitting in his recliner and paying for ESPN+. The new conference will definitely increase the likelihood he and I will return, but neither of us are likely to return until most everybody is, like this poster, and like me, so over COVID.