Global Coronavirus Deaths Cross 100,000 (nytimes.com) 195
The number of deaths linked to the coronavirus worldwide has passed 100,000 as known infections surged past 1.6 million, according to data collected by The New York Times. From a report: At least 177 countries have reported cases. The most recent was war-torn Yemen, which reported its first coronavirus case on Friday. The death toll in the United States has surpassed that of Spain, with almost 18,000 fatalities related to the virus reported by Friday afternoon. Only Italy has reported more deaths. Although some governments are considering easing restrictions, lockdowns are being extended across much of the world heading into the Easter weekend, and policing measures stepped up. Tokyo's governor parted ways with Japan's national government by requesting the closure of a range of businesses -- including nightclubs, karaoke bars, gyms and movie theaters -- during a state of emergency declared this week.
related deaths (Score:3, Insightful)
How many deaths from the social distancing and businesses including health care disruption? For example I know many people's biopsies are getting postponed like 2 to 3 months .. easily giving stage III cancers (which can be cured in many cases) enough time to become stage IV (almost incurable).
Re:related deaths (Score:4, Insightful)
If we include those, it's only fair to also include the number of people who were saved by social distancing. Less car crashes, less smog in the city, etc...
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And less non-coronavirus viral infections like influenza.
Re:related deaths (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:related deaths (Score:5, Insightful)
And knock 2/3 of the medical professionals out of work because they're sick, as well.
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"How many deaths... easily giving stage III cancers (which can be cured in many cases) enough time to become stage IV (almost incurable)."
Deaths from Corona are incurable as well, all of them.
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Deaths from Corona are incurable as well, all of them.
Death is pretty incurable, I'll give you that.
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As far as I know, all deaths are incurable.
Well, there's an anecdote about a case, but that was like 2 millennia ago and even there the details are sketchy, some would say that it didn't even happen.
Re:related deaths (Score:5, Informative)
https://www.worldometers.info/... [worldometers.info] might help address some of the questions you are raising, especially if you use the logarithmic options for cases and deaths. For example, you can sort the countries by cases/million and see that the European countries are disproportionately high for deaths/million. This seems to be indicate the large effects of related conditions where the medical systems have essentially created large numbers of potential victims.
Unfortunately, the baselines are hard to compare because the start times are different for each region, and even for countries within regions. The trend lines do seem to be quite steady for most countries, and you can see the collective effects when China "solved" their problem (or started hiding their deaths better). Of course you have to take all of these statistics with huge grains of salt. Every country is playing games with the numbers, except when they're being too incompetent to collect meaningful data.
Re: related deaths (Score:2, Insightful)
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This is the actual wording, taken directly from your link, which I've noticed you've splashed around in several threads.
“COVID-19 should be reported on the death certificate for all decedents where the disease caused or is assumed to have caused or contributed to death. Certifiers should include as much detail as possible based on their knowledge of the case, medical records, laboratory testing, etc., If the decedent had other chronic conditions such as COPD or asthma that may have also contributed,
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It's not a conspiracy to inflate numbers, it's just standard procedure to make your best effort to classify according to a case definition [cdc.gov] of the disease in question.
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Most, if not all, auto insurance carriers are doing this. Profits are limited by law to a percentage of premiums paid (at least in my state), so they really don't have much choice.
Probably less (Score:2)
My kid's a nurse, and biopsies aren't being delayed all that much. Find a new doctor/lab. Something's wrong there.
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I read earlier today (sorry; I don't have a link) that this is actually a pretty bad flu season in the US.
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My niece's leukemia treatment is proceeding as normal, except that no one can accompany her into the hospital now.
Re: related deaths (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, this is turning into a big nothing burger pandemic.
No, it's not. There's a LOT of people dying from it, and it's far from over.
ALSO: you have a massive logical flaw. If our efforts are successful, then it would indeed look like they were unneccecary.
Shitlibs - SMDHing (Score:3, Informative)
100,000 / 8 Billion == 100 / 8 Million == 0.000125 of the world's population
This nothingburger of a fake virus panic was created for the sole purpose of allowing the Global Elites to create the psychological environment within which they could make a massive power grab that might take millennia for the hoipolloi to overturn [and which might never be overturned at all], simply because dutiful little Insula-dominant Amygdala-submi
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Are you sure it would be just 100k if no quarantine were applied?
Re: Shitlibs - SMDHing (Score:2)
Well, Norway might answer that when we are all done and through. :)
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Orban is a Mensch (Score:3)
Victor Orban is about the closest thing we have to a saint right now [bitchute.com].
The problem isn't Orban, but Orban's successor, or, more likely, Orban's successor's successor.
The fellow will be about 30 to 40 years old right now, he'll have a degree from the Ecole Nationale d'Administration and also a degree from the London School of Economics, he'll dress perfectly, he'll know all the best people, he'll always say the right
Re: related deaths (Score:2)
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Taiwan did it right.
No two countries are doing exactly the same thing, the good thing about that is the next time that we have pandemic we have a full range of prior results to reference to know what an appropriate reaction is.
The modern world has never experienced anything like this before, a virulent infectious agent with a comparatively high chance of complications and death combined with never before seen global mobility. In 1918 it took a week or more to cross the Atlantic Ocean, and traffic between E
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Nobody ever gets a ticker tape parade (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: related deaths (Score:5, Informative)
Look at Sweden. No big measures and about 700 dead people.
We shall see how much longer Sweden keeps up with its soft response. Its death toll per million residents compared to its more reactive neighbors is quite high, 3x higher than Norway and 8x higher than Finland. The Swedish parliament has started to take a greater role in decision making this week, so we will see if they continue down their current dangerous trajectory.
The truth is as OP said, the actual medical approach matters more than feel good measures most of the world has currently implemented
The medical professionals are the ones advocating for the lock downs most countries are implementing. Are you under the impression most epidemiologists believe we are overreacting to this virus, because I find that hard to believe.
Re: related deaths (Score:5, Interesting)
>>Look at Sweden. No big measures and about 700 dead people.
>We shall see how much longer Sweden keeps up with its soft response.
This pandemic is the solution to the old age retirement bomb everyone keeps worrying about. People complain about the retirement bubble AND then they complain about the solution. Just a bunch of complainers.
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Also, the dead are 100,000? Thats 1/6th a years worth of influenza deaths, and were more than 1/6th done with 2020. I get that there is a bell curve, but I predict that the total dead will not pass 600,
Re: related deaths (Score:4, Insightful)
Call me when the final numbers are in.
Obviously, with no quarantine, the deaths happen earlier, so their numbers are bigger early on. But they are gonna happen in any case, so what matters is the long run.
That is the whole point here.
I would add though, that obviously, an overloaded healthcare system would quickly and drastically change that.
But given that we *took* measures, we may never know.
At least here in Germany, where there are ten times more available beds right now. Which is partially due to our actual useful measures, and partially not. And remember that those measures started before the quarantines, at least here in Germany! So they can only ever partially be attributed to the delay caused by the quarantine.
TL;DR: Quit fighting. We don't know enough about this yet. We also had to act without knowing, so errors were to be expextcted. And useless bickerig is only giving all of us a bad mood.
Go do something fun instead. The sun's out!
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The no-quarantine deaths caused by overwhelmed hospital systems won't happen in the long run. And more deaths may be avoided in the long run if we buy some time to develop treatments and vaccines.
Re: related deaths (Score:5, Insightful)
1. There is no climate change.
2. There is no scientific consensus about climate change.
3. There might be climate change, but we aren't responsible.
4. Even if we are responsible for this one, climate changes have happened all the time.
And so we go again:
1. There is no pandemic.
2. There might be one, but most of us will not notice it.
3. Even if we will notice it, people die all the time from the flu.
4. Ok, this might be a hefty one, but people would have died anyway.
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Contrast it with Belgium's almost four times as many dead despite having implemented drastic lockdowns measures AND having had their first case a full 10 days after Sweden's.
Most Countrys count only the confirmed dead (tested) from COVID-19.
In Belgium they count also the dead were there are strong indications they died from COVID-19. (Including those outside hospitals)
So the statistics are not covered up and try to provide a realistic view of the situation. If you need to make a decission, you need correct information.
The number of hospitalized is decreasing in Belgium. So drastic lockdown will have effect, but the dead statistics is lagging behind something like a day of 10.
Re: related deaths (Score:5, Interesting)
Funny that you mention death rates. They checked this in both Italy and Spain to get better data on the casualty rates - because the system is so overloaded, they don't even manage to test even the emergency cases anymore.
Turns out that death rate is at least twice as high as usual in these months. In some places much more than twice.
So, your argument was what, exactly ?
Re: related deaths (Score:2)
That that is nothing compared to flu season 2017/2018. Where 25000 people died here in Germany. And as you can tell from it saying "season", it happened in only a fraction of the year. So "almost double" is a weak argument.
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" The average daily death rate is around 25million people"
Um, no it's not even close to that.
Re: related deaths (Score:5, Insightful)
Here is a secret, It isn't so much about saving lives, but keeping the world healthcare systems under control.
While we want to hear it is about saving lives, that isn't really the full story. It is about keeping the rate of infection at a level where the world's health care systems can manage it.
Infectious diseases require unique conditions, clean filtered air (negative pressure), people need to be on Reporators and O2 for a long period of time.
Accidents and injuries often have the person in the ER then to OR within a day Discharged the next day. Then they will often be discharged or the injury is so bad they are already dead. As heartless as it sounds a dead patent is another bed and room that can be used. However, people with COVID can be bedbound for weeks needing special equipment during this time.
If the healthcare system breaks down, from too many people. Then all those people do get in car accidents and work injuries have even less of a chance to survive as there is no healthcare available to them. As well the people with COVID will also be left out, spreading the germs to other people.
If the Virus either killed people much quicker, with fewer time people being a carrier chances are governments would have considered the number acceptable loss. Not worth putting the economy on hold for.
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So many people died in Spain they had to use an ice rink as a morgue
https://www.aljazeera.com/news... [aljazeera.com]
https://www.cnn.com/2020/03/24... [cnn.com]
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9.1 billion per year huh?
57 million people died in 2015 [ourworldindata.org], which is 156k per day. You're off by a factor of 160.
In the US, there were 37,461 deaths from car accidents in 2016 [wikipedia.org], and 5,250 work related deaths in 2018 [theguardian.com], which works out to about 117 deaths per day. The US is pushing nearly 2000 deaths per day from Covid-19 right now, and will absolutely dwarf those numbers in total, even with res
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Look at the tiny sample size of that study. Or just look at the fact the publisher retracted it as unscientific. Or look at the credentials of the guy who did the study: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Yes, he is a right wing climate change denier. Quelle Suprise!
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Should we be drying the meat?
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"Yeah, this is turning into a big nothing burger pandemic. "
100.000 deaths is nothing, for your sake we'll wait until it is a million in 2 weeks.
"If we had competent administrators running out health system, "
You'd need competent politicians nominating them and those do not exist.
"we could have used 21st century technology and techniques to keep this under control."
Like what for example?
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"100.000 deaths is nothing, for your sake we'll wait until it is a million in 2 weeks."
150,000 people normally die every day.
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Yeah, and we can be like they are. Don't be afraid!
Speaking of chart-toppers, linked chart the top causes of death in the US for the past month of so. Covid overtook cancer and heart disease to be #1. (Obv, only the Covid deaths have daily reporting, the rest are averages.) https://public.flourish.studio... [public.flourish.studio]
Re: related deaths (Score:2)
No, because nobody tries to keep them alive.
Ask any pathologist: There's no such thing as "natural death". It's always something failing. And we simply go "Oh, he's old. So 'natural death" it is."
It would be cruel, but if we treated Corona patients that way, nobody would be overwhelmed.
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"we could have used 21st century technology and techniques to keep this under control."
Like what for example?
The basics are very 20th century: Isolate every person who has a reasonable chance to be infected. Test every person who has been in potential contact with the virus. Trace contacts to know who is which. Randomly test people over the whole population in large numbers to be sure you have it contained. Test every single person with some of the symptoms. Ensure the medics treating the patients have full protective gear with as many N95 respirators and face masks as they want.
The 21st century stuff inclu
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Yeah, this is turning into a big nothing burger pandemic.
If we had competent administrators running out health system, we could have used 21st century technology and techniques to keep this under control.
What are you talking about? We are 100k deaths in, and the rate of increase is still growing exponentially. Remember it was only 6000 global deaths less than 4 weeks ago (which itself was over 3 months into the crisis). And this is with significant effort worldwide to combat the virus's spread. There was a time about 3-4 weeks ago where we weren't sure if the impact was going to be as bad as many feared, but that is gone now. We aren't waiting for the exponential growth to kick in; it already has. Luckily t
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Probably the biggest casualty is all you 4chan types missing your cognitive therapy sessions.
Is this really news, though? (Score:2)
It's very obvious from the way things were going that this was going to happen, so this is really filler news - up there with "It's the Xth anniversary of Y" and "It's X holiday today".
The real news is when the number of infected people begin to drop worldwide, or when governments start lifting their lockdowns.
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"The real news is when the number of infected people begin to drop worldwide,"
You mean 'drop dead' I guess.
"Confirmed" Deaths (Score:2)
"Confirmed" deaths have topped 100,000. Actual deaths are higher. How much higher? Who knows.
The Mystery of ‘Excess Fatality’ [nymag.com]
Less than two weeks ago, Italian newspaper Corriere Della Sera published the results of an informal study that appeared to show that, in some regions of the country, non-coronavirus deaths were rising at an alarming rate alongside confirmed COVID-19 deaths — that the total death count was up as much as sixfold from previous years. Those deaths officially attributed to the coronavirus accounted for barely a quarter of the increase.
And Italy isn’t alone. In Spain, El País obtained a study that showed mortality rates in some regions had almost doubled, with only a fraction of the increase officially attributed to COVID-19. So what accounts for all those other deaths? Is the ultimate death toll from this pandemic going to be that much higher everywhere than is understood at the time? If we were able to allocate medical resources more effectively, could we reduce that number?
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""Confirmed" deaths have topped 100,000. Actual deaths are higher. How much higher? Who knows."
Nobody. Nobody sends a squad of specialists in special gear to check if all the peepaws and meemaws in retirement homes died from Corona or the usual neglect.
Re: "Confirmed" Deaths (Score:2)
It's funny how you act like your fellow (elderly) citizens, ancestors, parents, are none of your responsibility.
At least admit you don't think they are worth the effort.
It's all of zs who neglect the people that gave half their lives to raise us.
Either they did a good job, in which case it is our obligation do the same, if we don't want to end up the same.
Or, like in my case, they had been horrifying torturous monsters of gallopping insanity. In which case they can also fuck right off and die. But at least
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Sorry pal. You arent being responsible. What you are doing is the opposite of that. While you can pretend that you are being responsible, just like the SJWs pretend that they are for justice, its a fucking lie.
This isn't the peak, it's still the middle. (Score:3)
Yes - we are hitting peak in terms of initial infections - but deaths lag behind a bit.
More than that though - if we 'let up' in terms of containment, it's not unlikely we get a second wave from all the uninfected people exposing eachother in a chain of new infections.
It might be a better idea to end sheltering in organized waves - so there's no possibility of overwhelming hospitals and causing more mass deaths.
Specifically to the USA, the lack of available testing is especially troubling - doubly so when we're also the most infected in terms of raw numbers by far. The infection numbers are exactly matching the available testing at this point - meaning the real numbers here are likely much higher but unable to be tested, compared to other nations.
The idea is that once you have sufficient testing available, AND those tested numbers on sufficiently on the downswing, you open up on a controlled manner to make sure minimal percentages are lost.
If instead, you decide not to test people, then use that lack of testing as a reason to sent everyone to work at once - that's the worst method of acting under the scenario.
Mass deaths of otherwise healthy people from lack of hospital availability is a much higher cost than quarterly business growth, even just economically.
The stock market is relatively fine - let this work itself out safely if you want to be selfish about the process. The crash from rashly ignoring the public safety issues will cost you much more.
Ryan Fenton
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Love how no normalization (Score:5, Insightful)
America remains a low number in terms of deaths / 1M population. While UK, France, Italy, Spain, Sweden, etc. continue to have massive numbers of deaths / 1M populations, America remains below 100 with 54. [worldometers.info]
Re:Love how no normalization (Score:5, Interesting)
I guess I'll repost this.
I'll admit I'm not an epidemiologist or a statistician, but as far as I can tell, deaths per capita are not relevant until the virus is endemic in the population of a country. As this disease emerges, the growth appears to be exponential, and not particularly dependent on the population size. See here [ourworldindata.org], where the number of deaths has more to do with how long the disease has been present than with the size of the country.
Having a lower per-capita death rate could mean you've had a good response, but it could just as easily mean your large population gives you more margin for error.
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> Having a lower per-capita death rate could mean you've had a good response, but it could just as easily mean your large population gives you more margin for error.
Or it could mean that you have a lot more hospital capacity to take care of people who get sick.
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Or it could mean you're at a different point in time since the virus took hold in your area.
Or it could mean that you have a lot more hospital capacity to take care of people who get sick.
Or, it could mean you're not testing and not reporting all cases.
Actually, having more hospital capacity is part of having a good response.
By that logic ... why don't we go USA vs EU then? (Score:2)
Or world versus ... oh wait!
Sorry, you sound smart, until one actually thinks about it. ^^
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Lower population density helps too. It's not a fluke that the only city in the US with population density similar to Rome or Madrid is leading with deaths.
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NYC has 10K / km^2.
Rome has 2K / km^ 2
Madrid has 5K / km^2.
NONE of those are approaching NYC.
Oddly, for Spain, the small city of L'Hospitalet with only 250K ppl actually has the 2'nd highest density and is approaching NYC. Paris is the only large city with a density just under NYC's.
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It has so much to do with so many things, which have been discussed ad nauseum, but keep getting used to further the argument of whoever is making the argument, as all statistics are.
How far along the curve, how large a population, how healthy / young a population, how much you're actually testing, who you're testing, who you're reporting.
Even Singapore has fallen this week to lockdown.
We'll see more clearly at the end of this all, and we still may not ever really have a clear global picture. Not to say mi
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Comparing death rates is really hard. Aside of the question whether every death is properly reported and counted, how do you compare city-states (like, say, San Marino) that have an insanely high population density with states that have a rather low average population density? That's one of the reasons why there is a pretty decisive difference between the cases in New York and Alaska (despite how Alaska should be the perfect breeding ground, considering temperature and all).
Average age plays a huge role, as
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Then there's other circumstances like how Italy got hit with it right at the Carnival season (that's basically like if it hit the US just before Thanksgiving).
Nope. Had it been Carnival, then ALL OF ITALY would be suffering. Instead, right now, it is just Northern Italy (that is changing REAL fast).
The real issue there is that Northern Itay ( and apparently Spain) has LOADS of illegal Chinese and most went back to the motherland, got sick and brought it back. With Covid being known in Jan, and ppl starting to be scared, Chinese government pushed Italian governments to air a STUPID film saying to 'Hug a Chinese'. Chinese government made it, told the Italian gove
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With that said, there is NO WAY to know for certain how many/how far a disease is spread, esp. when you have one that is this contagious (R0 of 3 is large; For comparison flu is typically a little bit above 1 ) and we do not test ever
We don't deserve normalization (Score:2)
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we have fewer percent deaths than other first world countries, so what's your point?
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Only through an accounting trick.
The correct way to count the mortality rate is to count it against the outcome, not against the total amount of the infected - active cases still can go either way. The USA has a 41% mortality/closed cases so far. There are only a couple of first world countries that do worse than that.
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uh huh and frightening number of "recovered" patients testing positive again.
let's talk about south korea again in a month, they're gonna get fucked
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It's not that easy. Yes, considering the expenses in the medical sector, the US should be doing better. But it's simply unsound to just look at the numbers and derive a "good" or "poor" reaction state. San Marino has 1000 deaths per million. Does that mean that they have crappy medical facilites? Hell no. Their GNI is comparable to the EU, which is way above world average. But it's a city-state. High density, low population total, high average age.
How about Namibia or Ethiopia? They have incredibly low deat
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JFC, this is some low effort toddler whining
It's like raaaaaaaain on your wedding day. It's a free ride when you've already paid.
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No, I do not have a business degree. I have a BS in MicroBio/Genetic Engineering, a minor in CHem, earned in the 80s and then later Im missing a BS. in C. S, with a minor in Math by 2 classes (1 in CS and 1 in math) later in the 90s. I do have a TON of credits in various fields. When I got my BS in the 80s, I have close to 300 credits (something like 250). ONly 120 was needed. Just happened t
Life pro tip about social media (Score:3)
It's basically "Armchair expert offers vague quantification of reality. Film @ 11."
Anyone on this thread is not competent enough to be listened to.
Competent people are not arguing with easily Googled sets of disparate factoids as if they've nailed the algebra of the reality.
Re: Life pro tip about social media (Score:2)
"... of distorted perception of reality, based on what currently triggered them.", to be precise. :)
public announcement: (Score:2)
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You don't want to know where he's gonna try to ram that tube into.
How many is that, in RFE? (Score:2)
That is Regular Flu Epidemics. A standard unit of measurement. :)
About 0.01?
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The problem is not the people dying. The problem is their relatives.
The problem is that there is actually something that can tenfold your survival chances if you need it, but it's in very short supply. What do you think will happen when someone thinks that their loved one doesn't get it while someone else does?
Ponder for a moment what country we're talking about and how many guns are in private hands there.
From WHO...some numbers! (Score:2)
https://www.who.int/en/news-ro... [who.int]
"Worldwide, these annual epidemics are estimated to result in about 3 to 5 million cases of severe illness, and about 290 000 to 650 000 respiratory deaths."
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"Estimated" and "confirmed" are important distinctions here. WHO estimates that 2900,000 to 650,000 folks die annually from seasonal influenza. We see this every year. We've seen it for many years. We have pretty good knowledge about the effects of seasonal influenza.
To date, we've seen over 100,000 deaths from "confirmed" COVID-19 cases. These are folks that were tested and found to have it before they died. There are numerous folks that have died from COVID-19 who were never tested and so they'll be
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and do you think that ALL reported covid19 deaths are REALLY from covid19?
- [German Infectologist Decimates COVID-19 Doomsday Cult In Open Letter To Merkel | Zero Hedge](https://www.zerohedge.com/health/german-infectologist-decimates-covid-19-doomsday-cult-open-letter-merkel)
"According to a report in the Süddeutsche Zeitung, not even the much-cited Robert Koch Institute knows exactly how much is tested for COVID-19."
"(...)the mistake is being made worldwide to report virus-related deaths as soon as it
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Honestly though, with the hospitals and doctors being overloaded by trying to heal the living, who has time to properly classify the dead?
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and they close the entire world based on what then?
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Why yes... yes it is.
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Yeah, but given the choice between:
- A virus/disease
- Environmental catastrophe (see the other article about the hole in the ozone layer)
- Fake alien attacks by the NWO
- Actual alien attacks
- Godzilla (the aliens' pet)
At least the first one leaves all the buildings and infrastructures intact.
The bad news is, the next four points are just a matter of time!!1
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In fact, with the sudden lockdown and little to do, I wouldn't be surprised if COVID-19 is ultimately responsible for more births than deaths!
Louisiana #4 (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, Louisiana finally beat California at something, they have 30% more deaths with less than 1/8 of the population and still rising. Michigan and New Jersey are still ahead, but they have twice the population too. No surprise that the city with the highest population density in North America is in first place, though.
https://www.worldometers.info/... [worldometers.info]
Wait a minute (Score:2)
You mean that until this week, all of that was still open in Japan?
Great shame upon you.
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They werent praising anything meaningful.. faux praise of a response they are still to this day uninformed about.
I suspect that in the end, Englands original response will prove to be one of the best. Isolate the most vulnerable. Keep the economy going. Unfortunately they stopped doing that because that sort of response leads to "bad" early numbers.
History of pandemics (Score:2)
https://www.visualcapitalist.c... [visualcapitalist.com]
The position of COVID-19 is kept up-to-date on their graphics. Look at the bottom of the graphic for an idea of scale against other pandemics, since the "timeline" part of the graphic distorts scales.
Remember that self-isolation and physical social distancing are our main weapons!