• maegul (he/they)@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    The 5 year mark of the pandemic is just around the corner now. And it’s interesting to reflect on how well things are going compared to early forecasts.

    My memory is that 3-5 years was put out there as the likely longest horizon for the pandemic. Objectively, it’s seems pretty clear that it has not gone away at all and that any progress on actually reducing its prevalence is either speculative (eg new nasal vaccines) or ”unacceptable” civil or infrastructural measures (masks, remote work, air filters etc).

    All of which is basically a failure.

    Another way of cutting it though might be to view the Omicron variant as a second pandemic that is proving generally worse than the first in part because it’s catching us at our most indifferent.

    I feel like there was a point there where a good vaccine roll out could have contained the delta or preceding variants. Which to me only highlights how all of the civil measures we were taking and could have taken were not just about maximising health at that time but also about preventing us from going down a darker path of no return which seems to be where we are now. If global measures were taken to limit the spread of the virus and so prevent its evolution, I’d wonder how good of a chance there’d be that a vaccine could then have quashed the virus.

    • Coelacanth@feddit.nu
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      2 months ago

      All good points, and very well put. As someone else said recently on here, we’ve basically failed completely in our attempts to tackle COVID and the pandemic has evolved into an endemic. It’s getting harder and harder to see a future without it, and so let’s hope whatever unstudied long-term effects of the disease aren’t too crippling, as we might otherwise end up paying dearly for our failures down the line.

      • maegul (he/they)@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        Yea, absolutely. Just as the Omicron variant broke out, I came to the conclusion that we had basically added a new virus on top of Influenza. One that was generally worse and not at all seasonal like Influenza. And that the net effect was and is humanity’s global prosperity taking an easily measurable hit. Before Omicron, IMO, there was hope that we could beat it.

        The way Omicron happened and the way we responded (IE “didn’t you know the pandemic is over!”) made it pretty clear what people’s attitudes were. The only thing that really got us through the pandemic was bio-medical scientists nailing their job, and it will be the only thing that will help us, and as much cause for celebration that is, the dark side is that hyper-individualism has prevented any other faculties to help out in the mean time (or, as I said above, prevent us from going down a darker path).

        I formative experience for me was that amongst my internet COVID bubble (mostly a particular sub-reddit) I was the first to hear about Omicron and share news about its many mutations (this was before it really spread anyway and just when the first analysis of its genome came out). The response from people, who were generally concerned enough about the pandemic to be on a sub-reddit about it, was entirely dismissive. “Fear mongering”, “viruses evolve toward being less severe” … etc … were the universal and popular response. All when it was black and white as anything … more mutations meant more immune escape, just like with influenza from year to year.

        But no one wanted to hear that. They were all done with the lockdowns and panic and had subscribed, essentially religiously, to the “promised coming of the end of the pandemic”. And then the variant turned out to have plenty of immune escape, spread like wildfire, and in my area cause the greatest spate of deaths in the whole fucking pandemic. Now it’s probably fair to say that it was the second pandemic and we welcomed it with arms wide open (all variants since are direct descendants of omicron, AFAIU, and omicron itself was not descended from any of the other variants around at the time but a separate branch from or near the original strain).

      • wholookshere@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 months ago

        as we might otherwise end up paying dearly for our failures down the line.

        Given how we’ve tackled climate change, holding your breath may be the better option soon.

  • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    So long as we suffer a capitalist way of life, literally everything comes 2nd to profit.

    Even the planet itself.

  • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    Wait… You guys started going outside again?!

    Huh. Was there a mailing list I should have joined, or something?

    Maybe I’ll stay in and just watch for the next break in the apocalypse…