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COVID-19
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(11-30-2020, 01:21 PM)NeptuneBeachBum Wrote:(11-30-2020, 01:13 PM)p_rushing Wrote: I've already read the link you put, it has no info. Excess death is measured by spikes, how is that a real way to measure deaths? You have a bunch of people die in huge car crash, that counts. In that same wreck, you have a bunch of people with a bunch of conditions that will cause them to die, but that would still count as excess. That is not what they are saying. Excess deaths is looking at a month by month or week by week. Look that the total death numbers, the current estimates are less than last year. You keep trying to make a point based on bad data. Yes there was a spike in March, but most of those people would have died later in the year based on the total number of deaths this year. We show less advertisements to registered users. Accounts are free; join today!
(11-30-2020, 01:26 PM)p_rushing Wrote:(11-30-2020, 01:21 PM)NeptuneBeachBum Wrote: "Total deaths are not open to bias. It tells you how many people have died regardless of the claimed cause." False. And who are "they"? Provide your source, like a grown up. I cited Johns Hopkins, who you originally said was "they". But THEY said the exact opposite of you. You sound like Trump. "Massive election fraud! Everyone is saying it! They say I won, by millions!" ![]() Run along now, you little rascal you!
This is a results-oriented business. There are no trophies or titles given for "moral victories" or for "winning the draft". Our record with DC is 37-86. 6-10 is our 2nd best season in 8 years of Caldwell leadership. These are the FACTS.
(11-30-2020, 12:29 PM)NeptuneBeachBum Wrote:(11-30-2020, 11:48 AM)flsprtsgod Wrote: Just out of curiosity, is your degree is medicine, math, or poly-sci? I have a good friend who is degreed in Hospitality Management, it's a fine field. However, I don't think you're serious. Are you unwilling to share or just being your normal self? “An empty vessel makes the loudest sound, so they that have the least wit are the greatest babblers.”. - Plato
(11-30-2020, 02:11 PM)flsprtsgod Wrote:(11-30-2020, 12:29 PM)NeptuneBeachBum Wrote: Hotel management. I regularly stay at a Holiday Inn Express. Yes. To both.
This is a results-oriented business. There are no trophies or titles given for "moral victories" or for "winning the draft". Our record with DC is 37-86. 6-10 is our 2nd best season in 8 years of Caldwell leadership. These are the FACTS.
(11-30-2020, 03:32 PM)NeptuneBeachBum Wrote:(11-30-2020, 02:11 PM)flsprtsgod Wrote: I have a good friend who is degreed in Hospitality Management, it's a fine field. However, I don't think you're serious. Are you unwilling to share or just being your normal self? Ah, ok then. “An empty vessel makes the loudest sound, so they that have the least wit are the greatest babblers.”. - Plato
We show less advertisements to registered users. Accounts are free; join today! (11-30-2020, 01:29 PM)NeptuneBeachBum Wrote:(11-30-2020, 01:26 PM)p_rushing Wrote: That is not what they are saying. Excess deaths is looking at a month by month or week by week. Look that the total death numbers, the current estimates are less than last year. You keep trying to make a point based on bad data. Yes there was a spike in March, but most of those people would have died later in the year based on the total number of deaths this year. They is your very own source, but you don't understand the source you cited. Goodbye. "Can you explain the "200,000 excess deaths" you referenced in your recent tweet? We can observe trends from the number of deaths reported each year, on a weekly basis. When we see large deviations in the numbers for a time period, we call that excess deaths. Looking at 2020 since March, the raw number of excess deaths is 200,000 more people than a normal year. When we try to understand that, COVID-19 is the most rational and likely explanation. If you don't believe it's COVID-19, try to pinpoint why this year has been so different than any other. Why would a new disease that kills people not be the cause?" All time periods on a week by week basis, not for the year on hole where John Hopkins showed the numbers were lower than last year. Excess deaths is a made up metric with no real use outside of other influences.
(11-30-2020, 05:30 PM)p_rushing Wrote:(11-30-2020, 01:29 PM)NeptuneBeachBum Wrote: False. And who are "they"? Provide your source, like a grown up. I cited Johns Hopkins, who you originally said was "they". But THEY said the exact opposite of you. You are obviously not intellectually capable of reading or understanding this very basic concept. The quote you cited works AGAINST your argument... not for it. Attempting to explain this simple fact to you is like trying to teach Japanese Algebra to a 5-year old. So you go run along now, you little rascal you! Try not to eat any dirt while you're playing outside.
This is a results-oriented business. There are no trophies or titles given for "moral victories" or for "winning the draft". Our record with DC is 37-86. 6-10 is our 2nd best season in 8 years of Caldwell leadership. These are the FACTS.
(11-30-2020, 09:04 PM)snaxdelrio Wrote: More personal insults, shocker More sensitivity, shocker.
This is a results-oriented business. There are no trophies or titles given for "moral victories" or for "winning the draft". Our record with DC is 37-86. 6-10 is our 2nd best season in 8 years of Caldwell leadership. These are the FACTS.
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It was always my belief that COVID infection rates were tracked strictly by hospital admissions and tracing data. Apparently authorities are using mass data dumps to keep track of virus infection rates. Let no opportunity go to waste.
Testing of wastewater shows dramatic increase in COVID-19 cases in Missouri (KMOV.com) - Missouri epidemiologists have been testing wastewater while test results show a state flushed with coronavirus cases. “We’re learning new things about it every month,” says Jeff Wenzel. News 4 found the state has been detecting coronavirus volumes in wastewater since May. The samples are provided by MSD from their seven wastewater treatment plants across St. Louis City and St. Louis County. “We don’t have any plans of stopping anytime soon,” Wenzel said. The state says they can detect coronavirus in human feces before symptoms appear. “The spike in the wastewater actually precedes the spike in clinically reported cases sometimes between 4 to 10 days,” said Jennings Heussner.
Covid is a real problem for people over 70. The excess deaths should show that a lot of people were affected by it. A lot of people is relative, though. For a brand new virus that hasn't had a chance to burn through the population, 200k is nothing. Lockdowns probably helped a bit, but not by much, otherwise the WHO wouldn't have changed it's course. I think they are doing more harm in the long run, unless this vaccine works. I'm not going to be the first in line, though, I can promise you that. Once we achieve herd immunity, I suspect we'll see the number drop by a significant degree, and it will be in line with the flu. Which, of course, will still increase excess deaths, but not significantly.
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(12-01-2020, 08:20 AM)homebiscuit Wrote: It was always my belief that COVID infection rates were tracked strictly by hospital admissions and tracing data. Apparently authorities are using mass data dumps to keep track of virus infection rates. Let no opportunity go to waste. Just think, every shart is a contagion event. “An empty vessel makes the loudest sound, so they that have the least wit are the greatest babblers.”. - Plato
(12-01-2020, 08:20 AM)homebiscuit Wrote: It was always my belief that COVID infection rates were tracked strictly by hospital admissions and tracing data. Apparently authorities are using mass data dumps to keep track of virus infection rates. Let no opportunity go to waste. Excellent post (and puns). This demonstrates that epidemiologists are looking at creative and unique ways to pinpoint the true infection rate in communities that most people have never even imagined (or would want to). Lucky2Last acts like epidemiologists just turn on CNN everyday and divide the reported deaths by the reported cases on the tv screen to get mortality rate, and then take the rest of the day off. "I wonder if they know 40% of biopsied pneumonia deaths had unreported flu infections?!?!?!". Uhm.... yeah. They know. Thanks for participating though. (12-01-2020, 08:57 AM)Lucky2Last Wrote: Covid is a real problem for people over 70. The excess deaths should show that a lot of people were affected by it. A lot of people is relative, though. For a brand new virus that hasn't had a chance to burn through the population, 200k is nothing. Lockdowns probably helped a bit, but not by much, otherwise the WHO wouldn't have changed it's course. I think they are doing more harm in the long run, unless this vaccine works. I'm not going to be the first in line, though, I can promise you that. Once we achieve herd immunity, I suspect we'll see the number drop by a significant degree, and it will be in line with the flu. Which, of course, will still increase excess deaths, but not significantly. 200k is actually the EXACT number of COVID deaths in the US at the time that article was published... so there is that small detail. And current COVID-related deaths in the US are now at about 270k... the equivalent amount of American death as from NINETY 9-11 terrorist attacks. And you call that degree of excess death "nothing"?!? Of course with vaccines, herd immunity, and improved therapeutics the COVID deaths will decrease... just like any other novel disease. The point is what the COVID mortality rate was looking like in the early stages of the pandemic and the rest of 2020; not what it will be in 2021. You make decisions on what is happening AT THE MOMENT; not what will be happening next year. This is a simple concept.
This is a results-oriented business. There are no trophies or titles given for "moral victories" or for "winning the draft". Our record with DC is 37-86. 6-10 is our 2nd best season in 8 years of Caldwell leadership. These are the FACTS.
(12-01-2020, 12:11 AM)mikesez Wrote:(11-30-2020, 09:04 PM)snaxdelrio Wrote: More personal insults, shocker One man's "rude" is another man's "presidential".
This is a results-oriented business. There are no trophies or titles given for "moral victories" or for "winning the draft". Our record with DC is 37-86. 6-10 is our 2nd best season in 8 years of Caldwell leadership. These are the FACTS.
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(11-29-2020, 05:40 PM)NeptuneBeachBum Wrote:(11-29-2020, 01:47 PM)Lucky2Last Wrote: I was wrong about cancer. I thought it could kill you outright, but you are correct. I retract that statement, but it doesn't change how I am correct in my post. It is just the same as the flu and covid. Here's an example death certificate: You are not presenting overwhelming evidence of anything. You might have it, but so far, most of what you wrote is ambiguity with a hint of appeal to authority. You reference all of the epidemiologists, who aren't a monolith, without knowing what a majority of them think. Then you reference a majority of data, without knowledge of how or where that data is produced. You make a claim that they all know about the study I read 4 months ago, without any evidence it is common knowledge. Can you show proof of any of that, or are we supposed to take your word at face value? I feel like you're operating on principles that just aren't true. There are 7 thousand epidemiologists, according to the department of labor, and they are studying over 320,000 viruses in the world. All information is not commonplace. It's unreasonable to think that any of them know all the things. That's not how knowledge works. MOST people remember the most frequent tasks they use in their job and whatever it is they are researching at the moment. I bet 90% of our data on the flu comes from less than 100 people (just a guess, could be wrong). How much influence do you think they have on the literature used by every other scientist? Why would the researcher even waste time to publish it if it were common knowledge? This is not to say that I know more than them; I certainly don't. However, this is a well known phenomenon in science that the front runners of new information are often ignored because people continue to accept the status quo. It happens ALL THE TIME. There are entire books written about it. Human beings know barely anything when it comes to actual knowledge, so we are constantly modifying our views. Unfortunately, the rate at which the general population changes their view is different than the rate at which the scientific community changes its view, which is different than the rate the individual researchers change their view. Good science begs for the accurate knowledge to be pushed to the forefront of society. Politicized science does not. This phenomenon is amplified to the degree the media is not politicized, because scientists do not have the capacity to get that information to the public. Our media is dog [BLEEP], completely in bed with a government that profits at the taxpayer's expense. I am fully aware of my biases (well, to the degree that I can be). I know that I have them, and I am generally good about filtering new information through them. I almost always try to understand the opposing point of view, and thinking about the problems they would have with my claims. I even take the time to look up opposing arguments. I do almost all my own research, so I find it odd that you'd recommend that I take that up as a hobby. I also try to understand the systems that produce or information and their biases and limitations. The problem with anything political in our current environment is that almost all new information is processed through a political lens, packaged, and handed to us in a ready-to-consume form. I am inherently mistrusting of institutions that benefit from that system. That's a bias, sure, I get it. I'm not wrong a lot, though, and I could give you probably 50 examples this year of legacy media outright lying to the American public. Do I get duped by alternate news sources from time to time? Sure, but only when I get lazy. That happens, too. It's hard to stay on top of this stuff. I certainly don't think you do. Probably shouldn't call people sheep for mistrusting an obviously corrupt system. If you can't see it, you're a part of the problem.
(12-01-2020, 08:04 PM)Lucky2Last Wrote:(11-29-2020, 05:40 PM)NeptuneBeachBum Wrote: I appreciate you recognizing your error with cancer being essentially the same as COVID with respect to causes of death. But your statement that COVID is "like the straw that breaks the camel's back" is not always accurate. Like cancer, it can be that; but it can also be the anvil that is dropped from three stories up that crushes someone. Every individual case is unique. I'm not going to unpack all of your mindless drivel here, but I will indulge your first request. That is easy enough, and it is hysterically entertaining that you think you know even a fraction of what epidemiologists do. They plug all these factors into their statistical models; but you acting like you found something special, like a child at Christmas, is cute though. Here you go: https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/how...imates.htm "The in-hospital deaths are adjusted for under-detection of influenza using methods similar to those described above for hospitalizations using data on the frequency and sensitivity of influenza testing." The rest of your post is too boring and intellectually lazy to even respond to. Go play with P_RUSHING now in the backyard until you get called for dinner.
This is a results-oriented business. There are no trophies or titles given for "moral victories" or for "winning the draft". Our record with DC is 37-86. 6-10 is our 2nd best season in 8 years of Caldwell leadership. These are the FACTS.
You're awful smug for a person that's still wrong. You made me waste 20 minutes of my life trying to find the study. It was heart disease, not pneumonia. That's what I get from going by memory. Not sorry.
https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M20-1509 Quote:In this population-based study of adults hospitalized with influenza, almost 12% of patients had an acute cardiovascular event. Clinicians should ensure high rates of influenza vaccination, especially in those with underlying chronic conditions, to protect against acute cardiovascular events associated with influenza. Here's another: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NE...tured_home Quote:It is important to confirm the association between influenza and acute myocardial infarction because cardiovascular events triggered by influenza are potentially preventable by vaccination. Better evidence that influenza triggers cardiovascular events may lead to a change in practice that would improve the currently suboptimal vaccine coverage among persons who are at high risk for acute myocardial infarction. Thanks for posting that link, btw. Just proves that these super smart experts a) don't actually know how many flu deaths there are because it's not regularly tested, b) only use pneumonia and influenza estimates, c) don't look for any other complications that might have been related. You know where they do look? Covid. You can respond to the rest of my post now. |
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