News Walt Disney World theme parks increase capacity but see longer waits and less physical distancing

Chi84

Premium Member
A cardiac arrest could have been avoided by not traveling? That’s a new one.
I glossed over it at first, but one of the tweets berated the widow for bringing her husband on the plane and subjecting the other passengers to seeing him "seize or have a heart attack none of us know which, and die." Nice.
 

Miss Bella

Well-Known Member
I glossed over it at first, but one of the tweets berated the widow for bringing her husband on the plane and subjecting the other passengers to seeing him "seize or have a heart attack none of us know which, and die." Nice.
Nothing on Twitter would be surprise me. This kind of stuff happens so frequently I’m surprised this is news.
 

giantgolfer

Well-Known Member
Again we don’t know if the person died from Covid. We have no idea what they died from. Medical emergency’s happen all the time on planes. Sometimes people die on airplanes. You are using some antidotal story to say people should not fly and you say I have a ridiculous narrative. Hmm.
Yes, you have a ridiculous narrative. Sorry to break it to you.
 

Chi84

Premium Member
The passenger witnessed it. Don’t know how you missed that bullet point.
You would have to accept the tweet as both true and accurate without any confirmation whatsoever. The conclusion that the passenger had COVID is based on dubious hearsay - maybe a "nurse" working on him said his death was COVID-related (would any nurse say that and how would they know at that time?) Or maybe someone overheard the wife say to an EMT that the person had tested positive. Or maybe that's what they thought they heard. Who knows? In my opinion, social media accounts from someone you don't know are unreliable, and this one seems particularly strange in the details.
 

JoeCamel

Well-Known Member
You would have to accept the tweet as both true and accurate without any confirmation whatsoever. The conclusion that the passenger had COVID is based on dubious hearsay - maybe a "nurse" working on him said his death was COVID-related (would any nurse say that and how would they know at that time?) Or maybe someone overheard the wife say to an EMT that the person had tested positive. Or maybe that's what they thought they heard. Who knows? In my opinion, social media accounts from someone you don't know are unreliable, and this one seems particularly strange in the details.
Or maybe what she said was "I'm positive I don't know what happened"....
 

giantgolfer

Well-Known Member
You would have to accept the tweet as both true and accurate without any confirmation whatsoever. The conclusion that the passenger had COVID is based on dubious hearsay - maybe a "nurse" working on him said his death was COVID-related (would any nurse say that and how would they know at that time?) Or maybe someone overheard the wife say to an EMT that the person had tested positive. Or maybe that's what they thought they heard. Who knows? In my opinion, social media accounts from someone you don't know are unreliable, and this one seems particularly strange in the details.
Or maybe it’s all true....weird, huh?
 

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
If it’s silly overreach, it wouldn’t affect the numbers. Like using Lysol on grocery containers or leaving boxes in the sun for an hour.

Or the silly approach to question everything is wrong...but I haven’t checked numbers since Labor Day...

How we doing?🤔

No. The idea is to keep what’s effective and eliminate the ones that are not. I assume the ones that are not would be in the category of overreach.

So minimum precaution would make it great again?

Someone who puts a lot of faith in masks.
Or doesn’t want people sitting on top of them for profit motive...tomato/tomato
 

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