• @[email protected]
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    271 day ago

    But it can cause long-term and permanent damage to certain organs, and that is a pretty big reason to care. Unfortunately that fact doesn’t seem to clear the hurdle of point 3 on your list for many people.

    • @[email protected]
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      1623 hours ago

      Yeah, but so can alcohol, smoking, microplastics, and red meat. Heart disease is back to being the #1 killer of Americans, and humans still prioritize fear over serial killers and Bird Flu rather than heart disease and car accidents.

      Humans are notoriously bad at assessing risk. It’s a lot of work to overcome our cognitive biases.

      • @MellowYellow13
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        23 hours ago

        Wonder why heart disease is number one killer of Americans, so hard to figure out /s

      • @[email protected]
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        18 hours ago

        You really don’t see the difference between vices that a person chooses to ingest, and people spreading a potentially deadly/debilitating virus to a person unwittingly?

        Really?

        • @[email protected]
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          518 hours ago

          Yes, I understand the difference between communicable and noncommunicable disease.

          The point is that media also rarely talk about these things, and people are not great at taking steps to mitigate their risk. Lots of things we can prevent, or not, still cause us lasting harm. But because those things are mundane, they are not clickbait-y enough to warrant regular coverage.