


Cardiovascular disease is my main concern as we lose 600,000 Americans every year to this condition. See lots of folks give up and surrender to this issue. Get up early every day and play hard is my main defense. COVID took out many that had already surrendered to preventable medical conditions.XtremeJibber2001 wrote: ↑Sep 24th, '20, 19:23We’re on track to lose more American’s to COVID in less than a year than we did in the entirety of WWII. We should probably give up and surrender to the virus.
Guy in Shorts wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 07:52Cardiovascular disease is my main concern as we lose 600,000 Americans every year to this condition. See lots of folks give up and surrender to this issue. Get up early every day and play hard is my main defense. COVID took out many that had already surrendered to preventable medical conditions.XtremeJibber2001 wrote: ↑Sep 24th, '20, 19:23We’re on track to lose more American’s to COVID in less than a year than we did in the entirety of WWII. We should probably give up and surrender to the virus.
For many (most?), cardiovascular disease is preventable. COVID, not so much unless you practice distancing, masks, etc.Guy in Shorts wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 07:52Cardiovascular disease is my main concern as we lose 600,000 Americans every year to this condition. See lots of folks give up and surrender to this issue. Get up early every day and play hard is my main defense. COVID took out many that had already surrendered to preventable medical conditions.XtremeJibber2001 wrote: ↑Sep 24th, '20, 19:23We’re on track to lose more American’s to COVID in less than a year than we did in the entirety of WWII. We should probably give up and surrender to the virus.
Wouldn't that make COVID just as preventable then? No guarantee with either, just sound practices to reduce the risk of either significantly.XtremeJibber2001 wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 08:37For many (most?), cardiovascular disease is preventable. COVID, not so much unless you practice distancing, masks, etc.Guy in Shorts wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 07:52Cardiovascular disease is my main concern as we lose 600,000 Americans every year to this condition. See lots of folks give up and surrender to this issue. Get up early every day and play hard is my main defense. COVID took out many that had already surrendered to preventable medical conditions.XtremeJibber2001 wrote: ↑Sep 24th, '20, 19:23 We’re on track to lose more American’s to COVID in less than a year than we did in the entirety of WWII. We should probably give up and surrender to the virus.
Sure, maybe if we all follow the sound practices that this thread is advocating we end.Mister Moose wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 08:48Wouldn't that make COVID just as preventable then? No guarantee with either, just sound practices to reduce the risk of either significantly.XtremeJibber2001 wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 08:37For many (most?), cardiovascular disease is preventable. COVID, not so much unless you practice distancing, masks, etc.Guy in Shorts wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 07:52Cardiovascular disease is my main concern as we lose 600,000 Americans every year to this condition. See lots of folks give up and surrender to this issue. Get up early every day and play hard is my main defense. COVID took out many that had already surrendered to preventable medical conditions.XtremeJibber2001 wrote: ↑Sep 24th, '20, 19:23 We’re on track to lose more American’s to COVID in less than a year than we did in the entirety of WWII. We should probably give up and surrender to the virus.
A lot of midwestern states that have never really started any distancing/masks are seeing cases / death increase. Seems proof enough to stay the course for now and re-assess once vaccines become available.easyrider16 wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 09:56Numbers are down and that is great. Hoping from here on out things stay that way. But ending social distancing right now seems reckless considering our experience from just six months ago.
You could say the same thing about cardiovascular disease. Yet many do not heed the advice. You can choose to wear a mask, keep 6 feet away from others outside your household, not go to bars or any other close contact situation you feel is past your comfort level. There is nothing stopping you from reducing your risk from cardiovascular disease or COVID19. You haven't illustrated any other difference between the two. Why haven't we outlawed smoking? Why haven't we outlawed high salt french fries, soups, or corned beef? Why haven't we outlawed 24oz sugary drinks? (And when it was tried in NYC it was thrown out to an uproar) Why haven't we mandated 30 minutes of aerobic exercise each day? And yet Heart disease is the #1 cause of death in the US, with 650,000 deaths in 2019.XtremeJibber2001 wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 09:08Sure, maybe if we all follow the sound practices that this thread is advocating we end.Mister Moose wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 08:48Wouldn't that make COVID just as preventable then? No guarantee with either, just sound practices to reduce the risk of either significantly.XtremeJibber2001 wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 08:37For many (most?), cardiovascular disease is preventable. COVID, not so much unless you practice distancing, masks, etc.Guy in Shorts wrote: ↑Sep 25th, '20, 07:52Cardiovascular disease is my main concern as we lose 600,000 Americans every year to this condition. See lots of folks give up and surrender to this issue. Get up early every day and play hard is my main defense. COVID took out many that had already surrendered to preventable medical conditions.XtremeJibber2001 wrote: ↑Sep 24th, '20, 19:23 We’re on track to lose more American’s to COVID in less than a year than we did in the entirety of WWII. We should probably give up and surrender to the virus.