But you can look at the data and very easily see deaths and new cases are not increasing at this time. Deaths have remained about 100/day since April 1st and new cases have leveled.
Nothing else in Sweden is killing 100 people a day. For the last 10 years, Sweden averages just 250 deaths a day. Corona Virus has increased the number of people dying there a day by 40%. That's not normal.
I understand but a Canadian company did test a SARS vaccine and had disastrous results.
Here is a report on SARS Vaccine testing. What you're talking about is a secondary TH2 immunopathologic response triggered by exposure to the SARS virus in vaccinated lab animals. This happened at very early stages of testing and it's something they were more or less expecting. The vaccines caused the TH2 response in some of the mice types used, the primates, and the ferrets. Some of the vaccines tested did not provoke this response in some mice and the hamsters. All of the vaccines induced protection against SARS-Coronavirus.
The current estimates (which seem to change about every week or so) put it at twice as contagious as flu.
It could be
quite a bit higher. Maybe R0 value of over 5 compared to 1.3 of flu.
But he really didn't have a choice, so back he went. If he'd refused he couldn't keep claiming unemployment
This is why there is so much push to re-open the country. There are huge financial interests that need the rest of us to get back to work. They want us unable to refuse to put ourselves at greater risk.
I thought in this time while we were down that plans would be developed to address ways in which we could stagger workers or alternate work spaces, and stuff like that. Very odd the way things are opening up.
If it was as bad as some would like you to believe there would not be one grocery store clerk left alive by now.
Well, they are
getting it pretty bad.
Do you have any thoughts on why Queens out of the Burroughs was especially hard hit?
I lived in Brooklyn for 2 years, I can think of two things. First, Brooklyn and Queens both have airports, so increased contact with foreign travelers. Second, the median income and just the nature of work done in Manhattan means a larger portion are able to work from home.
So, if you take the lower end of their estimate (30 times the number of cases) - the rate of fatality is .14% (1/10th of 1 percent) and the rate of hospitalization is .84% (8/10th of 1%). And that includes all the vulnerable. If we tell the vulnerable to be more cautious we don't have the big bad boogie man the media and certain officials are making this out to be.
Right, we just let everyone hurry up and get it and no big deal, it's just a virus killing 14,000 in LA. Is that the thinking here? Lock the old and disabled into sick wards and let a quarter million (assuming a much lower fatalaty rate once the old people are written off) of the rest of us die?
Do you not go out during the regular flu season? Do you not drive a car?
Not what he was asking, do you go out when healthy during flu season or drive a car anytime during flu season.
Most of us do what we must to survive and take risks to support that end. That's a part of life we all accept. But when what we do puts others at risk we have a greater responsibility to do them only when necessary.
The flu is a horrible comparison because you become symptomatic within a day or so and when one does get ill it is only the most horrible among us that continue to go out and about. And we have a vaccine for the flu that usually does a pretty good job of reducing the transmission of the most dangerous seasonal flu strains.
So that is your takeaway from the data? If so we should close schools for the year for the flu too.
The
CDC says that so far this flu season (a particularly bad one) we're averaging about 65 deaths a day from the flu. That's the whole country. At the peak of this flu season, we were losing 583 people a WEEK. In 2018 (an even worse flu season) the most deaths we had was 1600 in a WEEK.
Nearly 2000 people died yesterday from covid19. We're averaging over 2k dead a DAY from covid19.
This is a ridiculous comparison.
Personally, I would consider this a "downward trajectory" (US numbers) since April 4.:
This is what a downward trajectory looks like:

That spot between April 7 and 11... that's the point where China lifted its lockdown.
Here's what we have:
