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by mewpmewp2 1691 days ago
If you consider infection rate in your area and your own behaviour vs behaviour of an average person in your area, you can do some basic math to understand what the chances of getting covid are for you. For example I've deduced it to be around 1% per year, right now.

My behaviour is also better for society in terms of reducing the R. Even if I were to get Covid, since I go out so rarely it's unlikely I would ever go outside during a symptomatic phase.

What I'm doing for example:

1. WFH.

2. Order everything in.

3. Go see family only when infection rate is reasonably low.

4. Do sports outside.

5. Go to gym only at times when there's very little traffic and cases per day seems reasonable to me.

And trust me I do believe Covid19 is really bad, but I don't like vaccines either based on information I've gathered.

Keeping my R lower than 1 or even 0.5, I can also live guilt free. Many vaccinated people have R larger than 1.

1 comments

I assume you also wear a N95 all the time outside of house, otherwise that's a big hole in your defenses.
I wear medical mask if I happen to be around people, in indoor settings or are you saying it's likely one could get infected outdoors otherwise?

There probably is some sort of hole which I'm not considering and it's mainly unknowns why I even believe it to be 1%. If there were no holes I'd believe it to be near 0%.

There's people who go to office, are around other people 40+ hours a week, then come to home to large families, have children that went to school. Offices, schools, things like these probably have the most spread.

Even with a vaccine that has 90% efficacy for preventing infection they would be exposed to the virus more than 10x that I am, and so would have higher chance of getting infected.

I know some studies calculated efficacy from hours spent in a high risk situation.