Chapter
Informed Opinions on the Food Industry
The speaker argues that the opinions of informed individuals in the food industry regarding the economic impact of lockdown measures should not be discounted, despite potential biases. They also criticize the black and white argument of locking down the economy versus allowing people to die from the virus, pointing out the potential impact on people's ability to access healthcare and basic necessities.
Clips
The speaker argues that extended economic lockdowns may lead to catastrophic public policy outcomes and that governments are not taking into account the risks and trade-offs involved.
02:26 - 05:37 (03:11)
Summary
The speaker argues that extended economic lockdowns may lead to catastrophic public policy outcomes and that governments are not taking into account the risks and trade-offs involved. He suggests that the decision-making process has been oversimplified and that the consequences may be far worse than the pandemic itself for certain vulnerable populations.
ChapterInformed Opinions on the Food Industry
EpisodeA Bombshell Story Drops, And No One is Covering it (Ep 1238)
PodcastThe Dan Bongino Show
The food industry is giving informed opinions about potential dangers to our food supply during the pandemic, but it seems like some are ignoring the issue while healthcare systems struggle to save lives.
05:37 - 08:46 (03:08)
Summary
The food industry is giving informed opinions about potential dangers to our food supply during the pandemic, but it seems like some are ignoring the issue while healthcare systems struggle to save lives.
ChapterInformed Opinions on the Food Industry
EpisodeA Bombshell Story Drops, And No One is Covering it (Ep 1238)
PodcastThe Dan Bongino Show
The fear of contracting COVID-19 has caused a decline in the number of ambulance runs to hospitals in New York and has also kept sick people away from seeking medical attention, which is dangerous since hospitals need to generate revenue to pay staff and bills.
08:46 - 10:32 (01:46)
Summary
The fear of contracting COVID-19 has caused a decline in the number of ambulance runs to hospitals in New York and has also kept sick people away from seeking medical attention, which is dangerous since hospitals need to generate revenue to pay staff and bills.