Was Cornwall really that crowded during the summer?
Quebec's still trying to play damage control on the extreme measures they've put in place for the second lock down, treating its audience like complete idiots by saying we have a chance to "break" the second wave if we follow the rules. There is no possibility of that whatsoever given the ramp up in testing and natural course of influenza-like illnesses during this period of the year. I loathe the major media networks here so much.
That actually seems low to me. It is extremely common for people who have the flu to experience at least one of those symptoms, usually headaches or dizziness. Every time in my life I've had the flu I know I've had both.Over 80% of hospitalized coronavirus patients experience neurological symptoms, study finds
Over 80% of hospitalized patients involved in the study experienced some type of neurological symptom.www.foxnews.com
Nothing we didn't already know, but the % is higher than I expected :<
lol "could"
This. It's easy to make the headline extremely scary when you say "neurological symptoms". That makes people think seizures or Guillian-Barre or encephalopathy or other scary shit. But mild headaches or dizzyness included... okay this isn't news.That actually seems low to me. It is extremely common for people who have the flu to experience at least one of those symptoms, usually headaches or dizziness. Every time in my life I've had the flu I know I've had both.
I bet COVID is what wiped out the dinosaurs too!
Maybe this is the tide turning...
Scientists call for Covid herd immunity strategy for young
Critics describe proposal to isolate vulnerable, disabled and older people as ‘grotesque’www.theguardian.com
Seriously, how the hell can anyone advocate lockdowns (even partial ones), restrictions, mask mandates, when we have a country that did NONE of that is and is also doing better. The fact that you will not see a single doctor on any form of media or in the government talking about Sweden says all you need to know about the farce that they call science today. It’s just CYA groupthink.
it’s like having a choice between a shit sandwich and a pizza, everyone is eating the shit sandwich, throwing up like crazy, feels like shit, and you just decide to keep chowing down because everyone else is doing it.
very good, insightful episode
A wonderful discussion.
My favourite quotation: “One third of Americans have pandemic anger... these people don’t understand the pandemic and are in denial... and this is a toxic, toxic group.”
He also says the virus never leaves and never goes away, which I have been saying since the very beginning despite your subtext.
So bottom line we can stay scared and destroy our economy and our civic life and our collective mental health over a virus that quite frankly is not very dangerous or deadly or we can be rational about it. We have never engaged in this insane behavior before, not even for Spanish Flu which was far more deadly and far more dangerous. It makes NO sense.
These new shutdowns in Europe will accomplish nothing except destroy the economy further... just be adults and ride it out like Sweden and come out on the other end.
You‘re the guy who denied that hospitals in Italy and Spain were over-run when there weren’t lockdowns when there should have been lockdowns.
You really have no grasp of this pandemic.
Even Sweden introduced restrictions. They banned gatherings greater than 50 people, required table service in bars and restaurants, and closed secondary schools and universities. Looking at the mobility data, visits to workplaces declined by up to 44% at the peak (https://ourworldindata.org/covid-mobility-trends). The idea behind Sweden's policies was not "business as usual" but rather personal responsibility for reducing the spread. That works well in a country with strong social cohesion where adherence to health norms is not a partisan issue.Seriously, how the hell can anyone advocate lockdowns (even partial ones), restrictions, mask mandates, when we have a country that did NONE of that is and is also doing better.
Even Sweden introduced restrictions. They banned gatherings greater than 50 people, required table service in bars and restaurants, and closed secondary schools and universities. Looking at the mobility data, visits to workplaces declined by up to 44% at the peak (https://ourworldindata.org/covid-mobility-trends). The idea behind Sweden's policies was not "business as usual" but rather personal responsibility for reducing the spread. That works well in a country with strong social cohesion where adherence to health norms is not a partisan issue.
This is what Tegnell had to say about potentially rising cases in Stockholm:
"We have a discussion with Stockholm about whether we need to introduce measures to reduce the spread of infection. Exactly what that will be, we will come back to in the next few days,"
Reuters | Breaking International News & Views
Find latest news from every corner of the globe at Reuters.com, your online source for breaking international news coverage.uk.reuters.com
The whole point about restrictions is that they are only neccessary when R is above 1.
I found a video here:That article was from September 22... what were the measures? because I have to think if Tegnell got on TV and said, well we have to do all this stuff and act like France and Spain, CNN and BBC and the entire media and global operation would go apeshit with glee... because every day that Sweden is living in relative normalcy is like a giant slap in the face to the lockdown maniacs.
I couldn't find any new measures they implemented that were not out of step with what they have been doing, and the case count has not exploded either. Seems to be more of the same there while in the rest of Europe they're instituting new broad lockdowns and restrictions. But it's also worth discussing that part of what Sweden is doing is not panicking or engaging in hysteria over case counts.
It’s just kicking the can down the road
Even Sweden introduced restrictions. They banned gatherings greater than 50 people, required table service in bars and restaurants, and closed secondary schools and universities. Looking at the mobility data, visits to workplaces declined by up to 44% at the peak (https://ourworldindata.org/covid-mobility-trends). The idea behind Sweden's policies was not "business as usual" but rather personal responsibility for reducing the spread. That works well in a country with strong social cohesion where adherence to health norms is not a partisan issue.
This is what Tegnell had to say about potentially rising cases in Stockholm:
"We have a discussion with Stockholm about whether we need to introduce measures to reduce the spread of infection. Exactly what that will be, we will come back to in the next few days,"
Reuters | Breaking International News & Views
Find latest news from every corner of the globe at Reuters.com, your online source for breaking international news coverage.uk.reuters.com
The whole point about restrictions is that they are only neccessary when R is above 1.
Maybe, but I still think we should try to argue in good faith rather than impugn other's motives, which in itself creates division.DiffusionX is going to push his agenda at all costs. He’ll simply ignore well written, rational, fact based posts like yours.
DiffusionX is going to push his agenda at all costs. He’ll simply ignore well written, rational, fact based posts like yours.
My agenda is to look at this thing in an objective way, with real data, and to weigh the costs and benefits of every single action. No morality plays, no "it's about respect", no accusations of killing granny, no "just wear the mask peasant", just look at the data and what we can do best to handle a new infectious disease, knowing it cannot be avoided and we cannot eradicate it.DiffusionX is going to push his agenda at all costs. He’ll simply ignore well written, rational, fact based posts like yours.
The whole point about restrictions is that they are only neccessary when R is above 1.
This is basically what's happening in my area of Connecticut. The majority are now wearing masks when outdoors alone, which didn't become the case until towards late August. The positivity rate was around 0.6% to 0.8% for months until kids started going back to college campuses. Between that and school reopening, positivity rate has crept above 1% for the past couple weeks. They recently now instituted fines for gatherings and lack of mask (before there was no real 'penalty'). Amazing that they are doing this shit now, 6+ months later. There's no way they could have gotten away with it back then. But that Overton Window is on the move. Which was the objective all along.Almost everyone here in my corner of Montreal is wearing masks outdoors now, even on empty streets, a big change from the summer months. Testing capacity jumped over 250% in 2-3 weeks and the positive results along with it despite positivity rate remaining around the 1.5% mark. The fearmongers did their thing, the province raised the "alert" level from green to red (no criteria for each color ever spoken) based on those increased tests, not hospitalizations, gave the police more power to enforce their measures and now everyone's living in fear again. It's amazing how so few people can see through this sham.
If you're testing in the same way (whether including historical cases or not), you should still be able see growth from one period to the next.That's the entire problem: this pandemic is founded on a massive scam. How do we even know what the true R value is when our tests were rushed to market and can't even distinguish between a dead/fragmented virus and a live, infectious one?
The problem i have with the current mainstream narrative of COVID is that it’s totally fake....
And this is why you’re a threat to the rest of us.
If you're testing in the same way (whether including historical cases or not), you should still be able see growth from one period to the next.
However in addition, when R is above 1 for an extended period of time, hospital admissions and deaths per day should both be accelerating, with a ~3 week time lag. So we do have if you like, a hard check on how the virus is spreading in the population. Accounting for the massively increased testing, we're at a much lower point on the curve than we were in March, so in some sense we would expect hospitalisations and deaths to be close to base levels. However if deaths per day continue to double, then – even if you don't trust the tests at all – you still have reason to think R is above 1.
no, it’s the other way around, scared children like you are why we are on the path to ruin with no end in sight. You also claimed I would “simply ignore” that persons post when in reality I responded to it before you did. What a joke.
I’m scared?
I’ve been surrounded by people who were sick with Covid19 and I’ve fed them. The building in which I work was infested with Coronavirus and I watched as 21 people, roughly the same age as my mother (whom I’m looking after at home) died from a virus that, to them, was lethal.
Do you have any idea what it’s like to return home to your 86-year-old mother after you’ve been surrounded by people who are sick and dying from Covid? The paranoia that you’re bringing home a disease to your mother that will kill her is pretty extreme.
Yeah, okay. I’m scared. Whatever, man.