• RQG
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    891 year ago

    Another one for my once in a lifetime crisis collection.

  • pewpew
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    1121 year ago

    I’d say to my kids: “I was there when it was written”

    • @Bondrewd@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Every pandemic that ended up as a seasonal disease is still active.

      You can try denying they ended in this way, but you will end up with an unusable language because most things are technically not over as they had a continuation in some form.

      Almost every sickness you get infected with had its hayday of mass genocide. It will die down and then occasionally reoccur.

      Dont worry about it, they are mutating heck of a lot. 2020 pandemic is a lot different than the current situation is with the completely different strains we now have.

      • The current strains of COVID are more infectious and more dangerous than the 2019 strain was. Up until the end of 2023, the only reason we didn’t hear about it was because the vaccines were effective against them (and the corporations want to pretend that it’s been over for several years now). The latest strain is resistant to vaccinations from before the end of September, and the US just saw the second biggest spike in COVID cases since 2019, with an estimated peak at 2 million daily new infections on the 11th.

        Just because big businesses say that the pandemic is over so everybody goes back to work and buying stuff doesn’t mean that the pandemic ended. There are plenty of immune compromised people who never left quarantine because they can’t with COVID still around. The rest of society simply decided that their deaths were less important than going back to drinking in crowded bars.

    • @Earthwormjim91@lemmy.world
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      151 year ago

      I mean, the pandemic has been over for over a year.

      Covid is just endemic now like the flu. It’s seasonal and is never going to go away.

    • @RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world
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      641 year ago

      I’ll be honest, even without Trump most Americans proved they were too stupid or stubborn to follow instructions, so he didn’t really need to do anything to slap the whole US with more infections.

        • @Ultraviolet@lemmy.world
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          71 year ago

          Unfortunately his strategy was much more cartoonishly evil. By making it so taking the pandemic seriously was a partisan issue, he could make it so people voting in person were disproportionately likely to be his base. Then set up some regulations to prevent states from counting mail in votes until in person voting is done to manufacture a narrative that they’re less legitimate and try to stop the count.

        • @jballs@sh.itjust.works
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          171 year ago

          The problem is Trump is both the cause and the symptom of a very broken Republican party. He definitely brings out the worst in his supporters, but they also bring out the worst in him. You saw when he tried to encourage vaccines and his supporters turned on him instantly, so he had to quickly back track.

          I think, like you said, the only way he can attempt to steer the MAGA-ship at this point is to offer solutions that blatantly look like he’s doing it to own the libs. He can’t say “get the vaccine because it’ll prevent you from dying.” He’d have to say, “Biden is trying to take away the beautiful vaccine I created. He wants to give it to illegal immigrants instead of hard working people like you! The deep state is trying to trick you to believe that the vaccine is poison so they can give it to their pedophile leaders so they can be safe, while you good, Christian patriots are dying.”

          Even then, I doubt it would work.

    • @Lmaydev@programming.dev
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      111 year ago

      Yeah being disabled sucks. Millions of people live like this.

      It’s not until it happens to someone you know that you really think about it.

      But people learn to live with it.

    • @Slovene@feddit.nl
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      211 year ago

      My great-grandma survived the Spanish flu as a teenager. But the high fever during the illness fucked her up so bad, she died of heart failure in her forties.

    • @shiroininja@lemmy.world
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      121 year ago

      I was 34 when I first got it March 2020. I have no other health issues. I am not overweight. Covid fucked me up. My lungs were messed up for six months. I had long Covid for a year. My lungs are still not the same. I couldn’t smoke weed again if I wanted to (I was not a smoker at the time, but I did when I was younger). Then I got it two more times before vaccines were widely available. I’m a shell of the energy I had before, and I really feel like it did something to my brain

    • DessertStorms
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      -11 year ago

      I know you probably don’t mean it to but the idea that it’s better to die than to be chronically ill or disabled is ableist as hell. Society treating us like shit doesn’t mean sick and disabled peoples’ lives don’t have value.

    • @Overspark@feddit.nl
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      141 year ago

      I’ve had it for a couple of months now. Sure, it sucks, and I can’t work currently, but I’d much rather have this than die though. This will pass (almost everyone gets better in a couple of years max), death is rather final. Also, don’t kid yourself about the people that had COVID but don’t experience long covid. Many of them have permanent changes to their body too, they just don’t know it.

      • @Serinus@lemmy.world
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        51 year ago

        My hypothesis is that when Covid started, the experts weren’t really sure of the long term effects, and they were preparing for the worst.

        It’s bad enough as it is that I’m happy to wear a mask when appropriate.

        • More like as more people got sick, the worse side effects they found. At first, they didn’t think there were any real long-term side effects. Then people started having the heart and lung issues, brain fog, hell, they even found permanent COVID damage in guys’ testicles, causing infertility.

          Even now, we don’t know the effects it’ll have had when we look back 10 years after the fact and make the connections between increases in conditions and COVID.

      • Ms. ArmoredThirteen
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        91 year ago

        I’ve had minor asthma my entire life, but didn’t used to really get asthma attacks. After getting COVID though I get them no problem. That was almost two years ago I was sick less than a week. Jogging, biking, sex, playing tag with the cats, need to grab my inhaler now.

  • Captain Aggravated
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    181 year ago

    What a bizarre experience.

    When I was in school…I’m pretty sure the state history cirriculum was designed to be America centric, and pro-America. Any nation a boomer would remember being at war with? Not in the history books, or they appear out of nowhere, do something pro-America, and then disappear again, like Russia did from 1939 to 1945. And both World and US history classes end at 1950 because 1. to the limp dicks that actually make the policy, “The fifties are practically now” and 2. we haven’t done much “being the good guys” since the jitterbug fell out of fashion.

    So I’m not used to seeing something in a history textbook that isn’t from at least two of my lifetimes ago.

    • @Confound4082@lemmy.ml
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      41 year ago

      We homeschool our kids, and are religious, but we are heavily opposed to Christian nationalism, and want our kids to learn what actually happened, not some whitewashed curriculum that downplays anyone particular people’s ideological downfalls.

      We found a curriculum, but it took a while. One of the first ones I opened to read through had a first chapter titled “God’s gift to the world through America” noped right out of that one…

  • @TheJims@lemmy.world
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    191 year ago

    Are they going to leave out the part where the president called it a hoax while simultaneously spitballing ideas about UV light, bleach and horse dewormer cures all while thousands of Americans were dying every day. Or the part where he emptied the treasury with zero oversight?

  • Flying Squid
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    241 year ago

    Now you kids know what it was like when 9/11 was in every history textbook by 2002.

      • @AllOutOfBubbleGum@lemmy.world
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        51 year ago

        Guessing you mean in your post-2001 books, but this comment has me imagining a Black Mirror style thing where there’s this future prediction in everyone’s school books that all the teachers refuse to talk about.

      • Flying Squid
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        -11 year ago

        Did you know it changed everything? Because that’s what we were told regularly until about 2010 or so when pretty much everyone had stopped buying it.

          • Flying Squid
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            -21 year ago

            Life was pretty different in the 2000s than it is today. That’s just called time.

            • @indepndnt@lemmy.world
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              71 year ago

              It didn’t change everything, but it did change some things. We still take our shoes off to get through airport security, for example.

              • @noevidenz@infosec.pub
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                91 year ago

                Airport security is by far the most identifiable change for me personally. We never used to take shoes or belts off at airport security, we never walked through backscatter x-ray machines, we could carry liquids onto the plane and you could see your family or friends off at the departure gate even if you didn’t have a boarding pass.

        • @CaptnNMorgan@reddthat.com
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          21 year ago

          That’s more media than school. But my understanding of it is that it kind of did. Mostly for people who frequent airports and Muslims than anyone else though

    • @DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe
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      1 year ago

      It has varying definitions, but not quite.

      Definitions can range anywhere from “Effects a whole country” to “has spread to several large regions” to “threatens to affect the entire globe” but as a general rule the definitions shy away from saying global because then people will quibble about, like, Greenland not being effected because those bastards shut down the ports again.

      So you could, for example, have a pandemic that spread through Europe and Asia but the swift and decisive actions of competent executives prevented the spread to the Americas.

    • I was in elementary school when 9/11 happened. My brother is 6 years younger, and doesn’t actually remember it. So yeah, I felt old when he was learning about it in high school history classes; And I was only in my mid 20’s at the time.