Understand, most people who had a relative go into the hospital with COVID, some did FaceTime, yes, others did not have or use that tech. But FaceTime, when possible, was usually a head shot with vague glimpses of some hospital equipment and maybe a nasal cannula. Again, nothing unusual.
So what happened is people who saw their loved one go in, or distantly out of context on FaceTime, rarely saw the sick struggles or the healthcare staff working on them while in crisis. No visitors allowed, with full bans in effect at many locations for the duration.
The family experience could be: I talked to him, he went to the hospital for 2-5 weeks, and then I picked him up, and he was fine then too. The time he spent in the hospital remaining a hazy black hole in their loved ones’ awareness. No eyes laid on anything but flu like symptoms in some cases.
Others, their loved one went in looking flu-ish, and never came home. No eyes on. No witness to the progression, the struggle for air, the decline into death. Again, a hazy black hole of awareness with a crazy, inexplicable outcome because the last time you saw your loved one, sure they felt bad enough to go to the hospital but they were fine, or so it appeared.
The experience of hospitalizations for loved ones is one of a black hole in their first hand awareness of what actually happened with COVID.
To be clear, as awful as all of the above is, the visitor bans were necessary for multiple reasons.
It couldn’t be manipulated as an excuse to invade another country and take their resources; if the general origin of COVID was a country smaller than China, I bet we would be balls to the wall “investigating the origins” of it and “helping cleanup/recovery” for years.
oh and while we’re there, might as well set up an airfield and/or dock. And while we have those lets give you some military aid. Lets just call it a military base. We live here now.
lmao Americans can’t do math, so if there’s no explosion they can’t remember or comprehend the issue
They didn’t physically see it.
Understand, most people who had a relative go into the hospital with COVID, some did FaceTime, yes, others did not have or use that tech. But FaceTime, when possible, was usually a head shot with vague glimpses of some hospital equipment and maybe a nasal cannula. Again, nothing unusual.
So what happened is people who saw their loved one go in, or distantly out of context on FaceTime, rarely saw the sick struggles or the healthcare staff working on them while in crisis. No visitors allowed, with full bans in effect at many locations for the duration.
The family experience could be: I talked to him, he went to the hospital for 2-5 weeks, and then I picked him up, and he was fine then too. The time he spent in the hospital remaining a hazy black hole in their loved ones’ awareness. No eyes laid on anything but flu like symptoms in some cases.
Others, their loved one went in looking flu-ish, and never came home. No eyes on. No witness to the progression, the struggle for air, the decline into death. Again, a hazy black hole of awareness with a crazy, inexplicable outcome because the last time you saw your loved one, sure they felt bad enough to go to the hospital but they were fine, or so it appeared.
The experience of hospitalizations for loved ones is one of a black hole in their first hand awareness of what actually happened with COVID.
To be clear, as awful as all of the above is, the visitor bans were necessary for multiple reasons.
They’re super racist. They had brown people they could hate.
It couldn’t be manipulated as an excuse to invade another country and take their resources; if the general origin of COVID was a country smaller than China, I bet we would be balls to the wall “investigating the origins” of it and “helping cleanup/recovery” for years.
oh and while we’re there, might as well set up an airfield and/or dock. And while we have those lets give you some military aid. Lets just call it a military base. We live here now.
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