- Joined
- Jul 1, 2017
It happens in red state towns too like the one I live in, but the low population density means it's a lot less of a problem since there's only so many Johnny Methheads willing to do that shit in a given area.Especially in leftist-run crime-ridden urban crapholes where "porch poaching" is an issue?
As I said, if you get a chance to move to a more conservative small town, best to take it.
I have no idea why testing is so beloved and praised, to the point people think it's their mandatory duty to get tested if they've been exposed. I think it has something to do with the start of the scamdemic where there were very few tests available for the then-novel disease and the media was like "oh, if only we had a lot of tests available, we could stop the spread!" which probably wasn't true since February 2020. I thought I was DEFINITELY exposed at least once (coworker had some other cold) and was very possibly exposed (and knew it) 2-3 other times, and I didn't bother doing shit.Haven't gotten tested once since the whole fiasco. Never felt super ill so didn't feel the need to. As the old adage goes, if it ain't broke don't fix it.
Testing doesn't seem to matter much for this disease. I think a lot of this contract tracing/testing bullshit is scientifically grounded in the idea that it works since it helped stopped the ebola epidemic in West Africa a few years ago, but ebola is a fundamentally different disease in how it spreads (and you know, how it fucking kills you), but in actual practice it's pretty much a failure. At best, it just delays the inevitable, and odds are very high that if you get infected, you're catching it from someone who lives in the same building as you.
I don't like Big Pharma getting to kill journalists before evil internet trolls like me get to do it.