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Nzoner's Game Room>***NON-POLITICAL COVID-19 Discussion Thread***
JakeF 10:28 PM 02-26-2020
A couple of reminders...

Originally Posted by Bwana:
Once again, don't come in this thread with some kind of political agenda, or you will be shown the door. If you want to go that route, there is a thread about this in DC.
Originally Posted by Dartgod:
People, there is a lot of good information in this thread, let's try to keep the petty bickering to a minimum.

We all have varying opinions about the impact of this, the numbers, etc. We will all never agree with each other. But we can all keep it civil.

Thanks!

Click here for the original OP:

Spoiler!

[Reply]
Discuss Thrower 09:13 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by BleedingRed:
/Agenda
Some agendas are more equal than others.
[Reply]
Mecca 09:13 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by petegz28:
And that's going to happen regardless. There is no magic number or magic date where people will just pull a 180. So again, it's disingenuous to say had they waited longer they would have been been busier. They may be but there is no way of knowing that. But what we do know is regardless of when things open I think it is safe to assume you aren't going to see droves of people rushing back out.
His point he made to me about it was this....

If this is the norm most everyone will lose their job because they'll need like 2 employees. Which doesn't help the unemployment problem and secondly the people that returned to work before losing their job again will have been exposed more than they would have been before so to him it's a lose, lose situation.
[Reply]
Marcellus 09:13 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by 'Hamas' Jenkins:
In 2017-8, a bad year for the flu, 2/100,000 people aged 18-49 died of influenza.

In New York City, 16.53 people aged 18-44 per 100,000 have died of COVID-19 already.

You were wrong about this two months ago, you were wrong about this two weeks ago, you were wrong about this two hours ago, and you'll be wrong about it tomorrow.
NYC shows 3.5 per 100,000 not 16.5. There have been 309 deaths total under 50 with 244 of them having underlying conditions that include only -

Originally Posted by :
[1] Underlying illnesses include Diabetes, Lung Disease, Cancer, Immunodeficiency, Heart Disease, Hypertension, Asthma, Kidney Disease, and GI/Liver Disease.
Notice obesity is not listed as an underlying condition.


And hey lets use the one city that is an outlier and ignore the other 310MM people in the country that would drive the numbers down right?

No I am not wrong.
[Reply]
Mecca 09:14 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by BleedingRed:
Yay global depression were millions die of starvation, and because of malnutrition die of other shit! HOOZAH we beat COVID!
People die of starvation everyday, if we as a country really cared about that we'd have done something years and years ago.
[Reply]
Donger 09:14 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by petegz28:
And? So have a million others.
I would imagine that anyone near POTUS is being tested daily. Guess it slipped through.

Anyway, that's all that I'll say on the subject here, since others are doing what they do.
[Reply]
petegz28 09:17 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by Mecca:
His point he made to me about it was this....

If this is the norm most everyone will lose their job because they'll need like 2 employees. Which doesn't help the unemployment problem and secondly the people that returned to work before losing their job again will have been exposed more than they would have been before so to him it's a lose, lose situation.
This isn't the norm though. Might be for the near term but 2 employees working is better than 0. You can speculate all the scenarios you want.

So it's like this:

Don't wanna open your business? Don't.
Don't wanna go back to work? Don't.

We have 33 mil unemployed right now so the argument of people losing their job has come and gone.
[Reply]
ghak99 09:18 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by Mecca:
I'm not saying everyone feels that way but I'm hearing survival of the fittest arguments these days, we aren't exactly a nation of compassion that's for sure.
Freedom has a cost. It always has and always will. We live in a country who values it, even if it's been eroded recently.

It's why so many people laughed at the plans many of the medical community kept spouting. It simply wasn't/isn't possible to implement them here. You had to be detached from reality or flawed by emotion to even accept their possibility at the scale required.

The revolution meme where one side spouts "where your masks" and the other side replies with "Fuck you" is more real that many accept. This is the United States of America. We play by our own rules, even if it is our downfall at times.

If the people could physically see the enemy, you might have been able to rally a few more troops to turn the tide for a few more weeks. Months?? ...no way in hell.
[Reply]
Monticore 09:18 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by IowaHawkeyeChief:
Please expand on your word salad... Are you talking about S. Korea... China?

Why do you just ignore 33 million unemployed and growing and the human costs in health and death that this will cost if it isn't rectified?

Oh, wait, are you talking about NY and sending Covid-19 patients back to Nursing homes? If so, my bad, that shouldn't have happened.
Predicting the future of the unemployed is harder than predicting the future of the dead, which also contributes to the economy, it needs to be a balance and the plan they put in places takes every thing into account t with the information we have at this juncture.
[Reply]
Marcellus 09:19 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by Monticore:
Predicting the future of the unemployed is harder than predicting the future of the dead, which also contributes to the economy, it needs to be a balance and the plan they put in places takes every thing into account t with the information we have at this juncture.
How hard is it to predict how fucked you are at >10% unemplyment?
[Reply]
Discuss Thrower 09:21 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by ghak99:
Freedom has a cost. It always has and always will. We live in a country who values it, even if it's been eroded recently.

It's why so many people laughed at the plans many of the medical community kept spouting. It simply wasn't/isn't possible to implement them here. You had to be detached from reality or flawed by emotion to even accept their possibility at the scale required.

The revolution meme where one side spouts "where your masks" and the other side replies with "Fuck you" is more real that many accept. This is the United States of America. We play by our own rules, even if it is our downfall at times.

If the people could physically see the enemy, you might have been able to rally a few more troops to turn the tide for a few more weeks. Months?? ...no way in hell.
Worth pointing out that popular opinion wasn't on the side of the Patriots during the Revolutionary War.
[Reply]
'Hamas' Jenkins 09:22 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by IowaHawkeyeChief:
Please expand on your word salad... Are you talking about S. Korea... China?

Why do you just ignore 33 million unemployed and growing and the human costs in health and death that this will cost if it isn't rectified?

Oh, wait, are you talking about NY and sending Covid-19 patients back to Nursing homes? If so, my bad, that shouldn't have happened.
South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Iceland, Vietnam, etc.

No one is arguing the economic costs of this or denying that 33 million people are currently unemployed. But yours is a bad faith argument on its surface and to its core. It assumes that all of those jobs that are lost will be forever lost, which is wholly incorrect. It also assumes that removing restrictions from the economy, when 70% of people oppose doing so, will somehow lead to all of these jobs coming back. It also assumes that opening up the economy won't have a secondary public health impact that leads to further economic disruption when the spread of the virus gets far worse.

The people making the sound arguments for the health of the economy are those urging for a reduction in caseload before opening up the economy, not those who think that you can just wish this away by plowing towards herd immunity. Past studies have demonstrated that locales that enacted harsher lockdown measures suffered less loss of life and better or no worse economic disruption than areas that didn't limit the spread of infectious pandemics like the 1918 flu.
[Reply]
Monticore 09:22 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by Marcellus:
How hard is it to predict how ****ed you are at >10% unemplyment?
Will they be unemployed for ever?
The elderly are part of the economy, hospitals, drug companies, nursing home a lot of jobs revolve around them as well, I know not everyone with get in their feet at the same time or ever again , but the will still get the opportunity.
[Reply]
BleedingRed 09:25 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by 'Hamas' Jenkins:
South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Iceland, Vietnam, etc.

No one is arguing the economic costs of this or denying that 33 million people are currently unemployed. But yours is a bad faith argument on its surface and to its core. It assumes that all of those jobs that are lost will be forever lost, which is wholly incorrect. It also assumes that removing restrictions from the economy, when 70% of people oppose doing so, will somehow lead to all of these jobs coming back. It also assumes that opening up the economy won't have a secondary public health impact that leads to further economic disruption when the spread of the virus gets far worse.

The people making the sound arguments for the health of the economy are those urging for a reduction in caseload before opening up the economy, not those who think that you can just wish this away by plowing towards herd immunity. Past studies have demonstrated that locales that enacted harsher lockdown measures suffered less loss of life and better or no worse economic disruption than areas that didn't limit the spread of infectious pandemics like the 1918 flu.
4 countries that are islands (South Korea is effectively a island) and one I wouldn't trust any health reporting from.

Hows Europe doing?
[Reply]
'Hamas' Jenkins 09:25 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by Marcellus:
NYC shows 3.5 per 100,000 not 16.5. There have been 309 deaths total under 50 with 244 of them having underlying conditions that include only -



Notice obesity is not listed as an underlying condition.


And hey lets use the one city that is an outlier and ignore the other 310MM people in the country that would drive the numbers down right?

No I am not wrong.
https://www1.nyc.gov/site/doh/covid/covid-19-data.page

Rates by age: 16.53 deaths/100K

https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/doh/down...y-05062020.pdf

557 confirmed deaths 18-44 and 115 probable

Are you ever right about anything?
[Reply]
IowaHawkeyeChief 09:25 AM 05-07-2020
Originally Posted by dirk digler:
When talking about flu or H1N1 you are using CDC estimates not actual numbers. Right now we have confirmed laboratory deaths way higher than either of those estimates from CDC.

When this pandemic ends the CDC will do an after action estimate and you can bet that estimate will be dramatically higher than probably those 2 combined.
This just isn't true. We are testing anyone that dies in the hospital or at home who had symptoms of Covid-19 from the start. In fact, the CDC is having anyone with similar symptoms to Covid-19 be list as a probable Covid-19 deaths and those are in all of the counts we see. When comparing deaths this year to probable deaths during previous years for the same time period, we are under in some weeks and over in some, but the over is less than amount of Covid deaths. H1N1, killed more young and healthy, it's just a fact, and the CDC admitted they didn't have testing capabilities to test everyone who they thought had H1N1 at the time. This has been linked previously in this thread.
[Reply]
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