I repeat, again, In bold letters BRAIN DAMAGE. I'm not telling you to send or not send your kids to school or react in one way or another. But whatever choice you make, you will do it informed. For the record, you should always take anything the cdc says with a bucket of salt and you should keep a skeptical eye even on the mayo clinic but I can assure you they're right on this matter. If you had kids and you were looking at a 1 in 10 chance your kid came back with a 22 short in their skull, you'd take what I'm telling you seriously. This brain damage may be minor and kids are very adaptable anyway (they change half their brain in a couple years during puberty) so the point may be moot but read what I'm providing you and take this information as coming from someone who WOULD give you the choice to send your child to school no matter what.
Don't get mad at what I'm about to tell you.
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/coronavirus/in-depth/coronavirus-in-babies-and-children/art-20484405 13% of covid cases are "children"
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/daily-life-coping/children/symptoms.html
I repeat, again, In bold letters BRAIN DAMAGE. I'm not telling you to send or not send your kids to school or react in one way or another. But whatever choice you make, you will do it informed. For the record, you should always take anything the cdc says with a bucket of salt and you should keep a skeptical eye even on the mayo clinic but I can assure you they're right on this matter. If you had kids and you were looking at a 1 in 10 chance your kid came back with a 22 short in their skull, you'd take what I'm telling you seriously. This brain damage may be minor and kids are very adaptable anyway (they change half their brain in a couple years during puberty) so the point may be moot but read what I'm providing you and take this information as coming from someone who WOULD give you the choice to send your child to school no matter what.