No I think it makes some sense. You’re thinking in absolute terms. If you know everything and do everything right, your description may be better. But if you don’t want to be so careful all the time, wanting to be relax and not need to think about security implications all the time, the setup above is quite good.
I carry out a similar mentality, I don’t trust Windows and hence I run things I don’t trust on Windows as well. Eg I only install Zoom native app on Windows but not on any other desktop OSes. Use windows like it is a public machine, and you’ll have nothing to lose. (It is just an analogy, not to mean an exact statement, because you always has something to lose… just minimally here.)
I carry out a similar mentality, I don’t trust Windows and hence I run things I don’t trust on Windows as well. Eg I only install Zoom native app on Windows but not on any other desktop OSes. Use windows like it is a public machine, and you’ll have nothing to lose. (It is just an analogy, not to mean an exact statement, because you always has something to lose… just minimally here.)