Hobohunter
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2019
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 130
- Reaction score
- 58
- Location
- East Wenatchee, WA
- First Name
- Jeff
- Vehicle(s)
- 2007 Audi S4, 2016 Mustang GT/CS (sold)
No, dude, I've been saying the scenarios aren't analogous because in the case of the drunk driver they get to the point of risking others knowingly (they drink alcohol) and the Covid person not so much. That's what I've been saying. I haven't at any point said that a person unknowingly spreading covid poses less of a risk than someone who knows they have it, I've said they can spread it without knowing, and a drunk driver cannot get drunk without knowing it. That's what I've been saying. I think you've been reading what I've written but absorbed a different, non-existent argument out of it.But instead, you've tried to tie this into someone knowing if they have Covid or not and how that somehow changes the risk to others. The bottom line, which I've said many times, is that if doesn't matter is someone knows or not if they have Covid because if they have it and either know it or don't know it, then they still pose a risk to others around them. No matter what you say, that fact will always hold true.
Sponsored