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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]
petegz28 11:13 AM 03-16-2020
Originally Posted by penguinz:
Confirmed numbers are low because they are not testing and will not test unless you show all the symptoms or have been in documented contact with someone who has tested positive.

Just about everyone will be exposed at some point to this virus.
Preemptive testing is good but not what it's cracked up to be. It's a snapshot in time. You can take the test today and find out in 2 days you don't have it. Except right after you took the test you got exposed and actually do have it.

It's better for everyone to test those showing symptoms right now.

I would go as far as to say that I would bet a lot if not most people have been exposed to it already.
[Reply]
Jerm 11:13 AM 03-16-2020

BREAKING: Italy reports 3,233 new cases of coronavirus and 349 new deaths, raising total to 27,980 cases and 2,158 dead https://t.co/eUoE2b20hL

— BNO Newsroom (@BNODesk) March 16, 2020


Jesus Christ....
[Reply]
Kiimo 11:14 AM 03-16-2020
We are living in a period of history that will far eclipse 9/11 and people here still saying it isn't a big deal because they can't understand the response from the entire world and want to keep their gyms open.

I'll post it again even though some idiot downvoted it for the media company it came from. This is the blueprint of the future before this shit gets locked down.

this guy rules

pic.twitter.com/67pId4kC4i

— rat king (@MikeIsaac) March 13, 2020

[Reply]
BWillie 11:15 AM 03-16-2020
Originally Posted by Jerm:


Jesus Christ....
Please don't say the lords name in vain or Stevieray will hit you with some red. I don't want your reputation to be tarnished. Serious business.
[Reply]
SuperBowl4 11:15 AM 03-16-2020
Can one get a second opinion/test if first one is positive?
[Reply]
Monticore 11:15 AM 03-16-2020
Originally Posted by FAX:
That was a little vague, I suppose.

I have things going on here and multitasking isn't my strong suit. Please allow me to elaborate.

I'm not suggesting that COVID-19 is a bio-weapon unleashed upon us by the Yellow Man ... although I wouldn't put it past them. (I've long been concerned that we would be invaded by the Chinese using young girls with Machine Gun Bras to storm our beaches - but that's another story).

I'm also not suggesting that this is a globalist conspiracy promulgated by pedophiles and human traffickers in order to evade justice.

I'm saying that the numbers don't add up to justifying the panic response. There is a mountain of data available out there that spans decades regarding viruses (the dreaded "V" word). Due to time restrictions on my part, there is far too much raw data for me to post here, so I'll use a simple example;

The CDC relies on something called "weekly influenza surveillance data" in order to project how virulent and/or deadly certain flu viruses "might be". This data is then used as a baseline for their projections. The system is inherently flawed because it relies on lab results (which might be conducted in hospital or on an outpatient basis). The CDC knows that lab results are not ALWAYS accurate and they just live with the variance. Additionally, not all flu issues are reported, so there's that. Okay so far.

They also use something called the U.S. Influenza Surveillance System which is a kind of polling method that samples roughly 8% of the US population. They've done that for about 10 years or so. This "system" uses WHO data, data from the National Respiratory and Enteric Virus Surveillance System (NREVSS), plus a bunch of public health and clinical labs. This data is compiled in order to estimate the effect of a virus on the human population and this is the data they use to make projections. It's how they track things like H1 and H2 by geography and demographics then prioritize vaccine efforts. That makes sense.

Then the problems begin to emerge.

Professional virologists know that viruses are constantly changing. Viruses do that to survive (just like us). Because labs are checking for "known" viruses (read Novel Influenza A, for example), there is no guarantee that COVID-19 or any other variant of the Coronavirus would ever be identified in past general lab analyses. In fact, it's extremely unlikely. There are a hundred+ viruses that want to (and regularly do) infect human beings. You can't and don't check for every possible mutation. The labs that report to the CDC's Flu Surveillance System couldn't even afford to try ... let alone technically accomplish that goal on a regular or reliable basis. And remember, these viruses are constantly evolving and mutating. It's a perpetually moving target.

The CDC currently estimates the (non-corona) "seasonal flu" will kill 22,000 people in the USA during the 2019/2020 season. It could be as many as 55,000. Who knows? They don't. It's a projection based on "best available" data that is inherently flawed. Okay. We can live with that and we do.

Now we have this ...

Potential COVID-19 mortality rates being widely reported by the American mass media don't seem to compute. They are commonly reporting that the global mortality rate of the flu is somewhere in the neighborhood of 0.1%. They then compare that to COVID-19 and claim the "death toll" can be as much as 10x higher. Well, the global mortality rate of the seasonal flu is not 0.1% ... not if you use "confirmed cases" (as reported by the CDC system) as the baseline. If you do that, the mortality rate of seasonal flu is closer to 10% ... if not higher based on unreported or poorly reported "cause of death" cases. Why would they use the 0.1% number in the comparisons to COVID-19 which are currently estimated by the WHO at 3.4% of "confirmed" cases? You tell me.

Finally, the virologists I've been resourcing are coming to the opinion that COVID-19 (or variants thereof) may have been around a long time. In other words, coronavirus itself is nothing particularly new and people have been walking around with some variant for years. Several of these specialists have raised my red flag by commenting on the "feedback loop" created between politicians and medical advisers (including those who have a vested, profit interest in policy changes or investment) that has led to the reaction we have seen in the US.

It's fair to say that the US has the best health care system in the world. Our system surpasses Italy's, Spain's, the UK's, Canada's, etc., etc. No reasonable person would argue that point. We are not Italy and we have not imported Wuhan workers to make soft leather vests. We are different.

In short, I'm unconvinced that we're not being sold a bunch of politically-motivated overkill and undue panic.

FAX
I am not convinced this is benefiting any specific political party in any of the countries being affected by this virus, also in many surveys those countries you listed tend to score higher when it comes to overall health care scores including life expectancy.
[Reply]
Bugeater 11:17 AM 03-16-2020
Originally Posted by FAX:
That was a little vague, I suppose.

I have things going on here and multitasking isn't my strong suit. Please allow me to elaborate.

I'm not suggesting that COVID-19 is a bio-weapon unleashed upon us by the Yellow Man ... although I wouldn't put it past them. (I've long been concerned that we would be invaded by the Chinese using young girls with Machine Gun Bras to storm our beaches - but that's another story).

I'm also not suggesting that this is a globalist conspiracy promulgated by pedophiles and human traffickers in order to evade justice.

I'm saying that the numbers don't add up to justifying the panic response. There is a mountain of data available out there that spans decades regarding viruses (the dreaded "V" word). Due to time restrictions on my part, there is far too much raw data for me to post here, so I'll use a simple example;

The CDC relies on something called "weekly influenza surveillance data" in order to project how virulent and/or deadly certain flu viruses "might be". This data is then used as a baseline for their projections. The system is inherently flawed because it relies on lab results (which might be conducted in hospital or on an outpatient basis). The CDC knows that lab results are not ALWAYS accurate and they just live with the variance. Additionally, not all flu issues are reported, so there's that. Okay so far.

They also use something called the U.S. Influenza Surveillance System which is a kind of polling method that samples roughly 8% of the US population. They've done that for about 10 years or so. This "system" uses WHO data, data from the National Respiratory and Enteric Virus Surveillance System (NREVSS), plus a bunch of public health and clinical labs. This data is compiled in order to estimate the effect of a virus on the human population and this is the data they use to make projections. It's how they track things like H1 and H2 by geography and demographics then prioritize vaccine efforts. That makes sense.

Then the problems begin to emerge.

Professional virologists know that viruses are constantly changing. Viruses do that to survive (just like us). Because labs are checking for "known" viruses (read Novel Influenza A, for example), there is no guarantee that COVID-19 or any other variant of the Coronavirus would ever be identified in past general lab analyses. In fact, it's extremely unlikely. There are a hundred+ viruses that want to (and regularly do) infect human beings. You can't and don't check for every possible mutation. The labs that report to the CDC's Flu Surveillance System couldn't even afford to try ... let alone technically accomplish that goal on a regular or reliable basis. And remember, these viruses are constantly evolving and mutating. It's a perpetually moving target.

The CDC currently estimates the (non-corona) "seasonal flu" will kill 22,000 people in the USA during the 2019/2020 season. It could be as many as 55,000. Who knows? They don't. It's a projection based on "best available" data that is inherently flawed. Okay. We can live with that and we do.

Now we have this ...

Potential COVID-19 mortality rates being widely reported by the American mass media don't seem to compute. They are commonly reporting that the global mortality rate of the flu is somewhere in the neighborhood of 0.1%. They then compare that to COVID-19 and claim the "death toll" can be as much as 10x higher. Well, the global mortality rate of the seasonal flu is not 0.1% ... not if you use "confirmed cases" (as reported by the CDC system) as the baseline. If you do that, the mortality rate of seasonal flu is closer to 10% ... if not higher based on unreported or poorly reported "cause of death" cases. Why would they use the 0.1% number in the comparisons to COVID-19 which are currently estimated by the WHO at 3.4% of "confirmed" cases? You tell me.

Finally, the virologists I've been resourcing are coming to the opinion that COVID-19 (or variants thereof) may have been around a long time. In other words, coronavirus itself is nothing particularly new and people have been walking around with some variant for years. Several of these specialists have raised my red flag by commenting on the "feedback loop" created between politicians and medical advisers (including those who have a vested, profit interest in policy changes or investment) that has led to the reaction we have seen in the US.

It's fair to say that the US has the best health care system in the world. Our system surpasses Italy's, Spain's, the UK's, Canada's, etc., etc. No reasonable person would argue that point. We are not Italy and we have not imported Wuhan workers to make soft leather vests. We are different.

In short, I'm unconvinced that we're not being sold a bunch of politically-motivated overkill and undue panic.

FAX
We're tiptoeing on a conversation that would probably be better suited for the DC thread. But I'll say this much...I'm not real comfortable putting my trust into a group of people who have done little, if anything, to earn that trust. But I don't have a choice.
[Reply]
penguinz 11:17 AM 03-16-2020
Originally Posted by petegz28:
Preemptive testing is good but not what it's cracked up to be. It's a snapshot in time. You can take the test today and find out in 2 days you don't have it. Except right after you took the test you got exposed and actually do have it.

It's better for everyone to test those showing symptoms right now.

I would go as far as to say that I would bet most people have been exposed to it already.
My wife has all the symptoms currently and they will not test her because she has not been near any of the confirmed cases. That is total BS. She has been told to just go to the hospital if breathing becomes more of an issue and temp starts going up and tylenol won't bring down.

That is total BS.
[Reply]
SuperBowl4 11:17 AM 03-16-2020
Originally Posted by BWillie:
Please don't say the lords name in vain or Stevieray will hit you with some red. I don't want your reputation to be tarnished. Serious business.
It could be the Spanish version of Jesus for christs sake!
[Reply]
ToxSocks 11:18 AM 03-16-2020
Originally Posted by penguinz:

Just about everyone will be exposed at some point to this virus.
If everyone will be exposed, why bother social distancing etc?
[Reply]
Kiimo 11:19 AM 03-16-2020
Originally Posted by Detoxing:
If everyone will be exposed, why bother social distancing etc?
To slow the spread and give medical facilities the ability to tackle it without being overwhelmed
[Reply]
Demonpenz 11:19 AM 03-16-2020
Originally Posted by FAX:
That was a little vague, I suppose.

I have things going on here and multitasking isn't my strong suit. Please allow me to elaborate.

I'm not suggesting that COVID-19 is a bio-weapon unleashed upon us by the Yellow Man ... although I wouldn't put it past them. (I've long been concerned that we would be invaded by the Chinese using young girls with Machine Gun Bras to storm our beaches - but that's another story).

I'm also not suggesting that this is a globalist conspiracy promulgated by pedophiles and human traffickers in order to evade justice.

I'm saying that the numbers don't add up to justifying the panic response. There is a mountain of data available out there that spans decades regarding viruses (the dreaded "V" word). Due to time restrictions on my part, there is far too much raw data for me to post here, so I'll use a simple example;

The CDC relies on something called "weekly influenza surveillance data" in order to project how virulent and/or deadly certain flu viruses "might be". This data is then used as a baseline for their projections. The system is inherently flawed because it relies on lab results (which might be conducted in hospital or on an outpatient basis). The CDC knows that lab results are not ALWAYS accurate and they just live with the variance. Additionally, not all flu issues are reported, so there's that. Okay so far.

They also use something called the U.S. Influenza Surveillance System which is a kind of polling method that samples roughly 8% of the US population. They've done that for about 10 years or so. This "system" uses WHO data, data from the National Respiratory and Enteric Virus Surveillance System (NREVSS), plus a bunch of public health and clinical labs. This data is compiled in order to estimate the effect of a virus on the human population and this is the data they use to make projections. It's how they track things like H1 and H2 by geography and demographics then prioritize vaccine efforts. That makes sense.

Then the problems begin to emerge.

Professional virologists know that viruses are constantly changing. Viruses do that to survive (just like us). Because labs are checking for "known" viruses (read Novel Influenza A, for example), there is no guarantee that COVID-19 or any other variant of the Coronavirus would ever be identified in past general lab analyses. In fact, it's extremely unlikely. There are a hundred+ viruses that want to (and regularly do) infect human beings. You can't and don't check for every possible mutation. The labs that report to the CDC's Flu Surveillance System couldn't even afford to try ... let alone technically accomplish that goal on a regular or reliable basis. And remember, these viruses are constantly evolving and mutating. It's a perpetually moving target.

The CDC currently estimates the (non-corona) "seasonal flu" will kill 22,000 people in the USA during the 2019/2020 season. It could be as many as 55,000. Who knows? They don't. It's a projection based on "best available" data that is inherently flawed. Okay. We can live with that and we do.

Now we have this ...

Potential COVID-19 mortality rates being widely reported by the American mass media don't seem to compute. They are commonly reporting that the global mortality rate of the flu is somewhere in the neighborhood of 0.1%. They then compare that to COVID-19 and claim the "death toll" can be as much as 10x higher. Well, the global mortality rate of the seasonal flu is not 0.1% ... not if you use "confirmed cases" (as reported by the CDC system) as the baseline. If you do that, the mortality rate of seasonal flu is closer to 10% ... if not higher based on unreported or poorly reported "cause of death" cases. Why would they use the 0.1% number in the comparisons to COVID-19 which are currently estimated by the WHO at 3.4% of "confirmed" cases? You tell me.

Finally, the virologists I've been resourcing are coming to the opinion that COVID-19 (or variants thereof) may have been around a long time. In other words, coronavirus itself is nothing particularly new and people have been walking around with some variant for years. Several of these specialists have raised my red flag by commenting on the "feedback loop" created between politicians and medical advisers (including those who have a vested, profit interest in policy changes or investment) that has led to the reaction we have seen in the US.

It's fair to say that the US has the best health care system in the world. Our system surpasses Italy's, Spain's, the UK's, Canada's, etc., etc. No reasonable person would argue that point. We are not Italy and we have not imported Wuhan workers to make soft leather vests. We are different.

In short, I'm unconvinced that we're not being sold a bunch of politically-motivated overkill and undue panic.

FAX
Yep
[Reply]
SupDock 11:20 AM 03-16-2020
Originally Posted by FAX:
That was a little vague, I suppose.

I have things going on here and multitasking isn't my strong suit. Please allow me to elaborate.

I'm not suggesting that COVID-19 is a bio-weapon unleashed upon us by the Yellow Man ... although I wouldn't put it past them. (I've long been concerned that we would be invaded by the Chinese using young girls with Machine Gun Bras to storm our beaches - but that's another story).

I'm also not suggesting that this is a globalist conspiracy promulgated by pedophiles and human traffickers in order to evade justice.

I'm saying that the numbers don't add up to justifying the panic response. There is a mountain of data available out there that spans decades regarding viruses (the dreaded "V" word). Due to time restrictions on my part, there is far too much raw data for me to post here, so I'll use a simple example;

The CDC relies on something called "weekly influenza surveillance data" in order to project how virulent and/or deadly certain flu viruses "might be". This data is then used as a baseline for their projections. The system is inherently flawed because it relies on lab results (which might be conducted in hospital or on an outpatient basis). The CDC knows that lab results are not ALWAYS accurate and they just live with the variance. Additionally, not all flu issues are reported, so there's that. Okay so far.

They also use something called the U.S. Influenza Surveillance System which is a kind of polling method that samples roughly 8% of the US population. They've done that for about 10 years or so. This "system" uses WHO data, data from the National Respiratory and Enteric Virus Surveillance System (NREVSS), plus a bunch of public health and clinical labs. This data is compiled in order to estimate the effect of a virus on the human population and this is the data they use to make projections. It's how they track things like H1 and H2 by geography and demographics then prioritize vaccine efforts. That makes sense.

Then the problems begin to emerge.

Professional virologists know that viruses are constantly changing. Viruses do that to survive (just like us). Because labs are checking for "known" viruses (read Novel Influenza A, for example), there is no guarantee that COVID-19 or any other variant of the Coronavirus would ever be identified in past general lab analyses. In fact, it's extremely unlikely. There are a hundred+ viruses that want to (and regularly do) infect human beings. You can't and don't check for every possible mutation. The labs that report to the CDC's Flu Surveillance System couldn't even afford to try ... let alone technically accomplish that goal on a regular or reliable basis. And remember, these viruses are constantly evolving and mutating. It's a perpetually moving target.

The CDC currently estimates the (non-corona) "seasonal flu" will kill 22,000 people in the USA during the 2019/2020 season. It could be as many as 55,000. Who knows? They don't. It's a projection based on "best available" data that is inherently flawed. Okay. We can live with that and we do.

Now we have this ...

Potential COVID-19 mortality rates being widely reported by the American mass media don't seem to compute. They are commonly reporting that the global mortality rate of the flu is somewhere in the neighborhood of 0.1%. They then compare that to COVID-19 and claim the "death toll" can be as much as 10x higher. Well, the global mortality rate of the seasonal flu is not 0.1% ... not if you use "confirmed cases" (as reported by the CDC system) as the baseline. If you do that, the mortality rate of seasonal flu is closer to 10% ... if not higher based on unreported or poorly reported "cause of death" cases. Why would they use the 0.1% number in the comparisons to COVID-19 which are currently estimated by the WHO at 3.4% of "confirmed" cases? You tell me.

Finally, the virologists I've been resourcing are coming to the opinion that COVID-19 (or variants thereof) may have been around a long time. In other words, coronavirus itself is nothing particularly new and people have been walking around with some variant for years. Several of these specialists have raised my red flag by commenting on the "feedback loop" created between politicians and medical advisers (including those who have a vested, profit interest in policy changes or investment) that has led to the reaction we have seen in the US.

It's fair to say that the US has the best health care system in the world. Our system surpasses Italy's, Spain's, the UK's, Canada's, etc., etc. No reasonable person would argue that point. We are not Italy and we have not imported Wuhan workers to make soft leather vests. We are different.

In short, I'm unconvinced that we're not being sold a bunch of politically-motivated overkill and undue panic.

FAX
Which virologists are suggesting that the virus that causes Covid-19 has been around a long time?

I'm really trying to find your data

I see that we have had around 18k influenza hospitalizations this year, and 260000 positive tests.

How does that even come close to a 10 percent case fatality? That's not even a 10 percent hospitalization.
[Reply]
FAX 11:20 AM 03-16-2020
I should also like to say that it probably doesn't matter at this point. The horse is out of the barn.

People will believe what they "want" to believe. I'm not trying to change that because I know I can't and pissing up ropes is not my idea of good times. My actual idea is simply this; there are gobs of data available and I encourage you guys to dive into that pool of information. Knowledge helps.

Things may be dire. They may not be dire. That is where we are and we have no choice other than to deal with it.

I'm just a dude playing a dude disguised as another dude. And this particular, individual dude isn't completely sold on the overall response we've seen (to date) related to this health threat.

FAX
[Reply]
Jerm 11:21 AM 03-16-2020
Originally Posted by SuperBowl4:
Can one get a second opinion/test if first one is positive?
I would think so but I'm sure they'd make you pay for it out of pocket...
[Reply]
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