SoCal Deek Posted April 11, 2021 Share Posted April 11, 2021 2 hours ago, Capco said: Why are you pinning this on Biden? After all, you JUST said: So which SoCal Deek post am I supposed to follow? Good gravy! We have a serious reading comprehension problem here. I’m NOT pinning this on Biden! If you slow down and READ a bit, you’d see my point is the exact opposite! Biden’s done nothing different from Trump since taking office. Why? Because there’s nothing the President really has the authority to do...and that senile sack of crap knew it prior to taking office...but this country of nitwits bought into the lie hook, line and sinker. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SoCal Deek Posted April 11, 2021 Share Posted April 11, 2021 4 hours ago, Big Blitz said: That America is filled with a bunch of woke virtue signaling dupes that prefer to be controlled and like mocking freedom. And we're the most narcissistic people to ever walk the earth. What’s stunning is that I can post these ABSOLUTE FACTS and nobody wants to even touch them. Nope! They run from them as if they were radioactive. Facts are pesky things when you’re trying to control the population with panic and misinformation. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sundancer Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 On 4/10/2021 at 4:49 PM, Chef Jim said: The flu of 1918 killed a lot more people but went away rather quickly without a vaccine. What do you think explains that? That H1N1 virus mutates a lot--not like the SARS-COV, which has mostly mutated just along the spike protein. This is why the vaccines are proving more effective against the variants--the vaccines all focus on the spike protein. Also in 1918-21, 1/3 (!!!) of the human race caught it (herd, massive variant possibilities) and that H1N1 flu's direct descendants still rise up every once in a while on grand scale, 2009 being the most recent bigger moment, and are in circulation every year. It never "went away" as you said it did. As has been said many times, this ain't the flu for better (it should mutate more slowly, doesn't kill kids) and worse (it's been more contagious and deadly overall). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gene Frenkle Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 6 hours ago, Big Blitz said: That America is filled with a bunch of woke virtue signaling dupes that prefer to be controlled and like mocking freedom. And we're the most narcissistic people to ever walk the earth. I hope they keep their virtue signaling off of your lawn. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
B-Man Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/08/health/coronavirus-hygiene-cleaning-surfaces.html A FAREWELL TO HYGIENE THEATER? Has the Era of Overzealous Cleaning Finally Come to an End? This week, the C.D.C. acknowledged what scientists have been saying for months: The risk of catching the coronavirus from surfaces is low. When the coronavirus began to spread in the United States last spring, many experts warned of the danger posed by surfaces. Researchers reported that the virus could survive for days on plastic or stainless steel, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advised that if someone touched one of these contaminated surfaces — and then touched their eyes, nose or mouth — they could become infected. Americans responded in kind, wiping down groceries, quarantining mail and clearing drugstore shelves of Clorox wipes. Facebook closed two of its offices for a “deep cleaning.” New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority began disinfecting subway cars every night. But the era of “hygiene theater” may have come to an unofficial end this week, when the C.D.C. updated its surface cleaning guidelines and noted that the risk of contracting the virus from touching a contaminated surface was less than 1 in 10,000. “People can be affected with the virus that causes Covid-19 through contact with contaminated surfaces and objects,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the director of the C.D.C., said at a White House briefing on Monday. “However, evidence has demonstrated that the risk by this route of infection of transmission is actually low.” . . . “Finally,” said Linsey Marr, an expert on airborne viruses at Virginia Tech. “We’ve known this for a long time and yet people are still focusing so much on surface cleaning.” She added, “There’s really no evidence that anyone has ever gotten Covid-19 by touching a contaminated surface.” . . . “This should be the end of deep cleaning,” Dr. Allen said, noting that the misplaced focus on surfaces has had real costs. “It has led to closed playgrounds, it has led to taking nets off basketball courts, it has led to quarantining books in the library. It has led to entire missed school days for deep cleaning. It has led to not being able to share a pencil. So that’s all that hygiene theater, and it’s a direct result of not properly classifying surface transmission as low risk.” We’ve known this for months; glad the CDC is finally catching up. That said, anything that got New York and Boston to clean their subways can’t be all bad. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tiberius Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 16 hours ago, leh-nerd skin-erd said: I think if the libs in office, in the media, and at the CDC had been honest about the superspreader protest events we saw all last summer, we would have flattened the curve early on as projected and the death count would have been far, far less. The desire to protest on behalf of social issues is an important part of the fabric of our nation, but the silence was deafening as people ignored just about every guideline recommended by the CDC. On top of that, the hypocrisy of the approach lead many folks to question the true nature of the lockdown as the govt chose winners and losers. It's sad you can't admit the truth. Just admit it, Trump's in door events, without precautions, were way worse than any spontaneous events that took place outside. Trump called those events. Trump organized and held events during a pandemic. Whataboutism all you want. You can't face that simple truth. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SoCal Deek Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 15 hours ago, oldmanfan said: No. Once we knew about the fact that you could have asymptomatic carrying for a couple weeks, we could have all gotten behind masking and distancing. A lot less people would have died. Here’s where I hope we’ll find common ground: Or we could’ve have simply super-isolated OLD PEOPLE since they were/are the ones that were/are actually at risk of dying! For the life of me I cannot figure out what the Trump Administration was doing there. That was their biggest messaging misstep. While I still agree that it had to be handled at the State level, more information was needed and should have been disseminated. If this had a been an infant centric disease, you can bet it would’ve been. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
leh-nerd skin-erd Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 21 minutes ago, Tiberius said: It's sad you can't admit the truth. Just admit it, Trump's in door events, without precautions, were way worse than any spontaneous events that took place outside. Trump called those events. Trump organized and held events during a pandemic. Whataboutism all you want. You can't face that simple truth. Tibsy’s “COVID For Dummies” has now been updated to reflect that the virus transmission is severely hampered by events deemed “spontaneous”. So, to recap.. 1. Close proximity is bad, unless it’s not; 2. Unnecessary travel and interaction with others spreads the virus, unless it doesn’t; 3. Animated dialogue in close contact contributes to the spread, unless deemed otherwise; 4. Spontaneous gatherings have a virus forcefield around them that prevents transmission; Conclusion: It is best to surprise Grandma with a visit ONLY while wearing a dirty Greenpeace T. Credit though, for acknowledging that the virus spread caused by the gatherings was bad. That’s a start. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tiberius Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 1 minute ago, leh-nerd skin-erd said: Tibsy’s “COVID For Dummies” has now been updated to reflect that the virus transmission is severely hampered by events deemed “spontaneous”. So, to recap.. 1. Close proximity is bad, unless it’s not; 2. Unnecessary travel and interaction with others spreads the virus, unless it doesn’t; 3. Animated dialogue in close contact contributes to the spread, unless deemed otherwise; 4. Spontaneous gatherings have a virus forcefield around them that prevents transmission; Conclusion: It is best to surprise Grandma with a visit ONLY while wearing a dirty Greenpeace T. Credit though, for acknowledging that the virus spread caused by the gatherings was bad. That’s a start. So Trump DID do something bad with super spreader events, or not? Boy, you sure are evasive Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
oldmanfan Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 22 minutes ago, SoCal Deek said: Here’s where I hope we’ll find common ground: Or we could’ve have simply super-isolated OLD PEOPLE since they were/are the ones that were/are actually at risk of dying! For the life of me I cannot figure out what the Trump Administration was doing there. That was their biggest messaging misstep. While I still agree that it had to be handled at the State level, more information was needed and should have been disseminated. If this had a been an infant centric disease, you can bet it would’ve been. That would have helped. But one of the unique features of Covid was the asymptomatic carrier status, Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SoCal Deek Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 2 minutes ago, oldmanfan said: That would have helped. But one of the unique features of Covid was the asymptomatic carrier status, Let’s say you’re right. So...you STILL protect old people! We can all play Monday morning QB but I believe we should’ve have gone about our regular lives, and made it really clear that if you live with or come in contact with a senior citizen that you needed to take serious precautions. We could’ve created and army of meal deliverers. (We sort of did anyway.) We would’ve left schools open and sent older teachers home. Etc. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
All_Pro_Bills Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 6 minutes ago, SoCal Deek said: Let’s say you’re right. So...you STILL protect old people! We can all play Monday morning QB but I believe we should’ve have gone about our regular lives, and made it really clear that if you live with or come in contact with a senior citizen that you needed to take serious precautions. We could’ve created and army of meal deliverers. (We sort of did anyway.) We would’ve left schools open and sent older teachers home. Etc. The fatal aspects of the virus are concentrated among the elderly with immune systems degraded by the aging process and among people having a pre-existing condition that also degrades the immune system. Such as diabetes and obesity. Two very common and systemic conditions among Americans. Almost all patients that died had some other pre-existing condition. My county has kept good statistics on the outbreak since the beginning. There have been 21,147 cases confirmed by testing with 703 deaths. 97% of all deaths occurred among the 50+ population against 40% of the cases. 30-49 reported the other 3%. No deaths were reported among the 0-29 age group. The breakout is: 80+ 6% of cases, 54% of deaths 65-79 10% of cases, 30% of deaths 50-64 24% of cases, 12% of deaths 30-49 29% of cases, 3 % of deaths 18-29 20% of cases, 0% of deaths 5-17 9% of cases, 0% of deaths 0-4 2% of cases, 0% of deaths State and national statistics show the same patterns within a small range of deviation. These numbers show which age groups are most at-risk of a fatal event. Part of the problem of isolating the oldest and most at risk is the fact that family units might comprise individuals from several of these age groups and not just one. But we could have done a better job of protecting the most vulnerable and given our understanding of the virus and the at-risk factors provide a custom individual assessment for a person given their specific condition. And let life go on as close as possible to "normal" for those at close to zero risk of death. Fortunately there are some promising treatments coming out of the clinical trial pipeline that should gain FDA EUA approval that give doctor's better treatment options to significantly cut the fatality rate going forward. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
\GoBillsInDallas/ Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 COVID is negatively affecting everyone: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/desperate-students-sell-sex-pay-23890764 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SoCal Deek Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 32 minutes ago, All_Pro_Bills said: The fatal aspects of the virus are concentrated among the elderly with immune systems degraded by the aging process and among people having a pre-existing condition that also degrades the immune system. Such as diabetes and obesity. Two very common and systemic conditions among Americans. Almost all patients that died had some other pre-existing condition. My county has kept good statistics on the outbreak since the beginning. There have been 21,147 cases confirmed by testing with 703 deaths. 97% of all deaths occurred among the 50+ population against 40% of the cases. 30-49 reported the other 3%. No deaths were reported among the 0-29 age group. The breakout is: 80+ 6% of cases, 54% of deaths 65-79 10% of cases, 30% of deaths 50-64 24% of cases, 12% of deaths 30-49 29% of cases, 3 % of deaths 18-29 20% of cases, 0% of deaths 5-17 9% of cases, 0% of deaths 0-4 2% of cases, 0% of deaths State and national statistics show the same patterns within a small range of deviation. These numbers show which age groups are most at-risk of a fatal event. Part of the problem of isolating the oldest and most at risk is the fact that family units might comprise individuals from several of these age groups and not just one. But we could have done a better job of protecting the most vulnerable and given our understanding of the virus and the at-risk factors provide a custom individual assessment for a person given their specific condition. And let life go on as close as possible to "normal" for those at close to zero risk of death. Fortunately there are some promising treatments coming out of the clinical trial pipeline that should gain FDA EUA approval that give doctor's better treatment options to significantly cut the fatality rate going forward. Thanks for the in depth analysis. So what happened? Why couldn’t we just say that to people? Why all the fear mongering? From the very outset I found this whole thing to be a truly pathetic mess, with politics having gotten wrapped around a simple health issue. Sad on so many levels! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
All_Pro_Bills Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 2 hours ago, SoCal Deek said: Thanks for the in depth analysis. So what happened? Why couldn’t we just say that to people? Why all the fear mongering? From the very outset I found this whole thing to be a truly pathetic mess, with politics having gotten wrapped around a simple health issue. Sad on so many levels! I wish I had the answer to those questions. But I do wonder if critical and logical thinking are becoming a lost art. The link below is timely to this topic. https://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2021/04/stimulus-and-covid-19-attitudes-reflect.html 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dpberr Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 3 hours ago, All_Pro_Bills said: The fatal aspects of the virus are concentrated among the elderly with immune systems degraded by the aging process and among people having a pre-existing condition that also degrades the immune system. Such as diabetes and obesity. Two very common and systemic conditions among Americans. Almost all patients that died had some other pre-existing condition. My county has kept good statistics on the outbreak since the beginning. There have been 21,147 cases confirmed by testing with 703 deaths. 97% of all deaths occurred among the 50+ population against 40% of the cases. 30-49 reported the other 3%. No deaths were reported among the 0-29 age group. The breakout is: 80+ 6% of cases, 54% of deaths 65-79 10% of cases, 30% of deaths 50-64 24% of cases, 12% of deaths 30-49 29% of cases, 3 % of deaths 18-29 20% of cases, 0% of deaths 5-17 9% of cases, 0% of deaths 0-4 2% of cases, 0% of deaths State and national statistics show the same patterns within a small range of deviation. These numbers show which age groups are most at-risk of a fatal event. Part of the problem of isolating the oldest and most at risk is the fact that family units might comprise individuals from several of these age groups and not just one. But we could have done a better job of protecting the most vulnerable and given our understanding of the virus and the at-risk factors provide a custom individual assessment for a person given their specific condition. And let life go on as close as possible to "normal" for those at close to zero risk of death. Fortunately there are some promising treatments coming out of the clinical trial pipeline that should gain FDA EUA approval that give doctor's better treatment options to significantly cut the fatality rate going forward. I'll add that it is *very* likely that in all fatalities and severe cases, the patient was extremely deficient in Vitamin D, like a single digit level. This isn't a COVID thing - viruses love Vitamin D deficient bodies and the obese and elderly bodies are always deficient without supplementation. You may find 1 out of 10 that isn't and I'd offer that anyone who supplements with it daily has either avoided COVID altogether or had a very mild case. I'd argue that the vaccine is worthless in a D-deficient body and a body with a high D level that isn't elderly is as strong as a vaccinated one. The catch is that you need a blood test to measure your levels which requires a diligence most neither have nor can afford unless you're already being treated for something where it's part of the workup. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Big Blitz Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 The messaging to "get vaccinated" is truly astounding. It almost sounds like "don't bother." 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
leh-nerd skin-erd Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 8 hours ago, Tiberius said: So Trump DID do something bad with super spreader events, or not? Boy, you sure are evasive I strive to be as direct as possible but can’t account for your inability to follow a topic through to conclusion. I thought the rallies were a mistake. There was precious little upside, and surely we knew the media would excoriate him and with Americans huddled in fear in their houses over a mysterious virus, a lot of downside. I think he counted on the common sense of the American people looking at the treatment of massive protests and nary a word of the dangers associated with them, people would see through the billshyt of a Fauc and his evolving tale of danger. I am glad that you have finally acknowledged that the protests were bad as it relates to Covid spread. That’s a start. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
All_Pro_Bills Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 1 hour ago, Big Blitz said: The messaging to "get vaccinated" is truly astounding. It almost sounds like "don't bother." The good doctor's NIH was funding secret "gain of function" virus research at the suspected Wuhan lab. Genetic research that is banned from being conducted on US soil. Because it is deemed too dangerous. Research on viruses such as Coronavirus. Connect the dots here between his consistently wrong advice and his connection to the lab. My conclusion.. he's working hard to cover his ass and mislead while also covering for China's complicity in the virus escaping containment as a result of poorly defined and run safety protocols. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Big Blitz Posted April 12, 2021 Share Posted April 12, 2021 New super Covid variant combination of 18 mutations, including Brazilian, British and SA strains https://www.cityam.com/new-super-covid-variant-combines-18-mutations/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
B-Man Posted April 13, 2021 Share Posted April 13, 2021 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SoCal Deek Posted April 13, 2021 Share Posted April 13, 2021 My daughter had a baby over the weekend. The baby was a few days late so they’d scheduled her to be induced on Monday, but our granddaughter actually came naturally on Sunday night. Now because the birth was going to be ‘schedule’ the mother was required to get a Covid test on Saturday. Interestingly, our son-in-law, who was allowed to be with her during the delivery wasn’t required to be tested. You cannot tell me the reason for the test wasn’t because the hospital wanted to see if they could get some federal reimbursement for the procedure if they could claim she was a Covid patient. (FYI: It all went great and everyone is home.) 1 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RiotAct Posted April 13, 2021 Share Posted April 13, 2021 The halt to all Johnson & Johnson distribution due to the blood clotting should do wonders for people who were on the fence about getting vaccinated. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dpberr Posted April 13, 2021 Share Posted April 13, 2021 14 hours ago, All_Pro_Bills said: The good doctor's NIH was funding secret "gain of function" virus research at the suspected Wuhan lab. Genetic research that is banned from being conducted on US soil. Because it is deemed too dangerous. Research on viruses such as Coronavirus. Connect the dots here between his consistently wrong advice and his connection to the lab. My conclusion.. he's working hard to cover his ass and mislead while also covering for China's complicity in the virus escaping containment as a result of poorly defined and run safety protocols. It goes even deeper than that I suspect. I agree with you - I think there is billowing smoke that the coronavirus was the result of a lab accident where they were playing with spike proteins as delivery systems. I've always found it ironic that Americans "trust" Fauci like he's a pillar of truth and honesty despite being clearly quite compromised because he's eyeballs deep in the research. I think SARS was also the result of a lab leak but it didn't get much scrutiny because it was largely contained to Asia and the world dodged a bullet it didn't' dodge with COVID. That accident is what initially freaked out governments about the GOF research. It's why you had the fundamental research into this vaccine tech already underway. There are a lot of monied interests (academia, NGOs) that have every incentive to keep the lid on their research. One, it'd show the world that the research isn't being safely conducted and secondly,there's a lot more dangerous research being conducted by the same incompetent, careless people and same labs. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
B-Man Posted April 13, 2021 Share Posted April 13, 2021 3 hours ago, RiotAct said: The halt to all Johnson & Johnson distribution due to the blood clotting should do wonders for people who were on the fence about getting vaccinated. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dpberr Posted April 13, 2021 Share Posted April 13, 2021 3 hours ago, RiotAct said: The halt to all Johnson & Johnson distribution due to the blood clotting should do wonders for people who were on the fence about getting vaccinated. That's why the absoluteness of the "safe and effective" message has been counterproductive. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TSOL Posted April 13, 2021 Share Posted April 13, 2021 3 hours ago, RiotAct said: The halt to all Johnson & Johnson distribution due to the blood clotting should do wonders for people who were on the fence about getting vaccinated. I really have no sympathy for the people who have been falling for this corona grift. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Big Blitz Posted April 13, 2021 Share Posted April 13, 2021 (edited) The reply wants you to think Jordan is wrong because Texas is sane. As you just heard in Erie County, NYS is not. This @karn Bot is proving his point. This is political theater always has been. Edited April 13, 2021 by Big Blitz Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Big Blitz Posted April 13, 2021 Share Posted April 13, 2021 Because @DrDawkinstein asked but thread was locked before more logic and data were posted. Plus I couldn't respond to him telling me to "take a break." 310,000 of the 560,000 deaths are over 75. I'm not a math guy. What is that like 65%? Roughly 465,000 of the 560,000 deaths are over age 65. Again I'm not a math guy. What percentage is that? Over 85%? 250 are under age 18. What's that percentage? Is it the same as swine flu? And roughly 20,000 are under 40. Total. In 14 months. Was that the same as swine flu? https://www.statista.com/statistics/1191568/reported-deaths-from-covid-by-age-us/ Guess what? It's a serious virus. But the math says the mitigation is the most egregious overreaction in human history. And to think you're going to eradicate an aerosolized highly contagious virus that is fully global is some real I really need to take a break from CNN type nonsense. Here is what we should try: Shelter in place till you get vaccinated. Everyone else live your freaking life. Let me guess? Long term side effects we don't know!!! Yes correct you'll also be studying those for DECADES. You know it's funny. We're so hysterical and irrational right now that the CDC and Fauci are Gospel. Of course why shouldn't they be they told you to take the J and J vax. We need to listen to these experts! Except when it comes to proper protocols for studying vaccines and mandating people including kids under 16 get them. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
leh-nerd skin-erd Posted April 13, 2021 Share Posted April 13, 2021 11 hours ago, SoCal Deek said: My daughter had a baby over the weekend. The baby was a few days late so they’d scheduled her to be induced on Monday, but our granddaughter actually came naturally on Sunday night. Now because the birth was going to be ‘schedule’ the mother was required to get a Covid test on Saturday. Interestingly, our son-in-law, who was allowed to be with her during the delivery wasn’t required to be tested. You cannot tell me the reason for the test wasn’t because the hospital wanted to see if they could get some federal reimbursement for the procedure if they could claim she was a Covid patient. (FYI: It all went great and everyone is home.) Deek, missed this earlier. Congrats and God Bless your daughter and her family. Awesome news! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DrDawkinstein Posted April 14, 2021 Share Posted April 14, 2021 (edited) 3 hours ago, Big Blitz said: Because @DrDawkinstein asked but thread was locked before more logic and data were posted. Plus I couldn't respond to him telling me to "take a break. Oh sure, drag me down to this ***** hole, where all your bad ideas look halfway decent compared to the other garbage being kicked around Thanks for the stats. Yeah, COVID affects older people more. No duh. We all know that. What I was challenging was @Boxcar's assertion that, and I quote, "the average age of someone who dies from Covid is over 80 years. The average life expectancy is a little over 78 years." Now it will seem I'm splitting hairs, but he uses that stat to prop up his other assertion that the average life expectancy is less than the average COVID victim, and uses those assertions to conclude that we shouldnt worry about COVID. So the details are important. What he is saying in the bold is that if you added up all the ages of all the people who died from COVID, and divided by total deaths, the age would be over 80 years old. Using your statista.com link, and using ages at the high end of every age bracket (giving you and Boxcar an advantage), it averages out to 74. And again, that is giving YOU the benefit of the doubt and using only higher ages. So the true average is likely more around 70. Still old? Sure. But far from "over 80", and well under the normal life expectancy. So refuting his assertions. Details, accuracy, facts... All these things matter far more than how you guys want to feel about it. In all seriousness tho, even though we greatly disagree, good chat in the main page thread. We almost kept it on the rails there in the beginning, but then it took the usual life of its own. Oh well. edit: @Boxcar, one other note, the ft.com link you posted in the original thread has a hard paywall. No idea what it says or what you were trying to link. But I imagine I covered most of it above anyways. Edited April 14, 2021 by DrDawkinstein 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Boxcar Posted April 14, 2021 Share Posted April 14, 2021 6 hours ago, DrDawkinstein said: Oh sure, drag me down to this ***** hole, where all your bad ideas look halfway decent compared to the other garbage being kicked around Thanks for the stats. Yeah, COVID affects older people more. No duh. We all know that. What I was challenging was @Boxcar's assertion that, and I quote, "the average age of someone who dies from Covid is over 80 years. The average life expectancy is a little over 78 years." Now it will seem I'm splitting hairs, but he uses that stat to prop up his other assertion that the average life expectancy is less than the average COVID victim, and uses those assertions to conclude that we shouldnt worry about COVID. So the details are important. What he is saying in the bold is that if you added up all the ages of all the people who died from COVID, and divided by total deaths, the age would be over 80 years old. Using your statista.com link, and using ages at the high end of every age bracket (giving you and Boxcar an advantage), it averages out to 74. And again, that is giving YOU the benefit of the doubt and using only higher ages. So the true average is likely more around 70. Still old? Sure. But far from "over 80", and well under the normal life expectancy. So refuting his assertions. Details, accuracy, facts... All these things matter far more than how you guys want to feel about it. In all seriousness tho, even though we greatly disagree, good chat in the main page thread. We almost kept it on the rails there in the beginning, but then it took the usual life of its own. Oh well. edit: @Boxcar, one other note, the ft.com link you posted in the original thread has a hard paywall. No idea what it says or what you were trying to link. But I imagine I covered most of it above anyways. Don't strawman me. I didn't say we shouldn't worry about it, I said the response was a massive overreaction. The numbers I got were from Britain because I had trouble finding them for the US, but I forgot that Covid has a more drastic effect on obese people. The point is that the vast majority of people who die within what is it, 28 days? of a positive test are near the end of their life expectancy. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
B-Man Posted April 14, 2021 Share Posted April 14, 2021 https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/547694-hawaii-to-rollout-vaccine-passport-program-by-summer DO YOU HAFF YOUR PAPERS? Hawaii to roll out ‘vaccine passport’ program by summer. “The vaccine passport program is seen by tourism officials as a way to speed up the state’s recovery, Forbes notes.” I’m guessing it will have the opposite effect. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chef Jim Posted April 14, 2021 Share Posted April 14, 2021 7 minutes ago, B-Man said: https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/547694-hawaii-to-rollout-vaccine-passport-program-by-summer DO YOU HAFF YOUR PAPERS? Hawaii to roll out ‘vaccine passport’ program by summer. “The vaccine passport program is seen by tourism officials as a way to speed up the state’s recovery, Forbes notes.” I’m guessing it will have the opposite effect. I don't assume they meant their Economic Recovery. I'm a Caribbean guy anyway. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Big Blitz Posted April 14, 2021 Share Posted April 14, 2021 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FireChans Posted April 14, 2021 Share Posted April 14, 2021 Folks must have their brains in a pretzel now that Fauci da God is afraid of 6 people with blood clots and also doesn’t think we should eat indoors with vaccines. Imagine this being your deity. At least my God flooded the world keep our asses in line. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Justice Posted April 14, 2021 Share Posted April 14, 2021 Sup fellas. Long time. Me and my fam got vaccinated about a month ago. Even my daughters who are only 21 and 19 (gotta love Florida). No issues so far. We all took the J & J shot. That’s not what prompted me to post a message though. I wanted to share something that seems odd to me. My extended family is from a small village in Palestine. No more than 4,000 people. Over 60% of the population has gotten covid. Here’s the kicker. Not one single person died from it. These aren’t exactly the healthiest people. They eat lots of bread and rice. Nobody works out. The only people you’ll ever see jogging are the tourists and yet no deaths. What’s really interesting is the few cases that were serious were given a shot that costs $4,000US in Israel. That’s a ton of money for the majority of the people from my village. Average salary is about $1,000 per month. I couldn’t tell you what’s in that shot. All I know is it works and takes about two to three days to recover from the worst symptoms. Take it for what it’s worth. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Boatdrinks Posted April 14, 2021 Share Posted April 14, 2021 42 minutes ago, Justice said: Sup fellas. Long time. Me and my fam got vaccinated about a month ago. Even my daughters who are only 21 and 19 (gotta love Florida). No issues so far. We all took the J & J shot. That’s not what prompted me to post a message though. I wanted to share something that seems odd to me. My extended family is from a small village in Palestine. No more than 4,000 people. Over 60% of the population has gotten covid. Here’s the kicker. Not one single person died from it. These aren’t exactly the healthiest people. They eat lots of bread and rice. Nobody works out. The only people you’ll ever see jogging are the tourists and yet no deaths. What’s really interesting is the few cases that were serious were given a shot that costs $4,000US in Israel. That’s a ton of money for the majority of the people from my village. Average salary is about $1,000 per month. I couldn’t tell you what’s in that shot. All I know is it works and takes about two to three days to recover from the worst symptoms. Take it for what it’s worth. Sounds like regeneron ? Very interesting, and promising. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chef Jim Posted April 14, 2021 Share Posted April 14, 2021 (edited) 2 hours ago, FireChans said: Folks must have their brains in a pretzel now that Fauci da God is afraid of 6 people with blood clots and also doesn’t think we should eat indoors with vaccines. Imagine this being your deity. At least my God flooded the world keep our asses in line. Mine wrote Layla. 51 minutes ago, Justice said: Sup fellas. Long time. Me and my fam got vaccinated about a month ago. Even my daughters who are only 21 and 19 (gotta love Florida). No issues so far. We all took the J & J shot. That’s not what prompted me to post a message though. I wanted to share something that seems odd to me. My extended family is from a small village in Palestine. No more than 4,000 people. Over 60% of the population has gotten covid. Here’s the kicker. Not one single person died from it. These aren’t exactly the healthiest people. They eat lots of bread and rice. Nobody works out. The only people you’ll ever see jogging are the tourists and yet no deaths. What’s really interesting is the few cases that were serious were given a shot that costs $4,000US in Israel. That’s a ton of money for the majority of the people from my village. Average salary is about $1,000 per month. I couldn’t tell you what’s in that shot. All I know is it works and takes about two to three days to recover from the worst symptoms. Take it for what it’s worth. This brings up the whole argument of "how many of the US deaths identified as "from Covid" would be better categorized as "with Covid" Or more importantly that the symptoms of Covid were such that their advanced age or poor health couldn't overcome them. Edited April 14, 2021 by Chef Jim 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
B-Man Posted April 15, 2021 Share Posted April 15, 2021 https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/more-covid-state-shutdowns-unlikely-despite-cdc-suggestion/ar-BB1fEHpO LOCKDOWNS ARE OVER: More COVID state shutdowns unlikely, despite CDC suggestion. “When one of the nation’s top health officials this week suggested states dealing with a spring spike of coronavirus cases should ‘shut things down,’ the remark landed with a thud.” Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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