I'd rather hope to be discussing things with people intelligent enough to know the difference between a fact which is unhelpful and one which is wrong. — Isaac
The graph I just posted (if true or close to true) demonstrates the basic problem, as it would mean (if everyone got the disease) about double total deaths in the year — boethius
If you really want me to go into the calculations that explain my position, I can do so. — boethius
In other words, with overlap we only need to re-assign resources (which everyone agrees is doable), without overlap we need to produce a net increase in resources (which many think is not doable, so why bother >> herd immunity bullshit). — Isaac
5. We will have to come out of lockdown soon (partially) and continued promotion of the idea that Covid-19 is some random reaper stalking the land takes resources away from those who really need them as the hysterical-selfish (by far the largest population group) panic-buy themselves their ppe/food parcel combo (Disney-themed, Bluetooth-enabled version, only £9.99 on Amazon), — Isaac
while doctors make do with paper towels and some sellotape. — Isaac
there's no way to re-assign resources from the future to the present. — boethius
In the US this would be socialism and "a republican" administration doesn't want to set precedents that socialism can help on some issues — boethius
Yes, that's what I've been repeatedly asking you to do. — Isaac
There is. Loans, postponing leave, postponing retirement, postponing investment plans. There's all sorts of ways of borrowing from the future. — Isaac
Right. So you're wrong when you say that governments can deal with these problems through rationing then aren't you? — Isaac
I gave lot's of reasons why there is no such subgroup of "weakest heart" as lot's of factors affecting real death from heart disease are in the future and therefore Covid cannot select for. — boethius
My whole position is based on a well known statistical fact that as selection from a group becomes a small, the chance of colliding with some other small selector is small — boethius
A loan doesn't help a doctor today treat a Covid patient, only real material and human resources (which cannot come from the future) — boethius
Government have already implemented rationing successfully, even some chains voluntarily implemented rationing. — boethius
if you want to debate your arguments even assuming your premise, the above simply doesn't hold. — boethius
No, you gave a small number of minor factors without any citations to back them up and nothing to counter the cited evidence I provided of the major factors which do overlap. — Isaac
Yes, and you've yet to demonstrate, with evidence, that the selection is small (relative to the group {at most risk}, nor that there is 'some other' selector rather than exactly the same one. — Isaac
That or they're dying of intubation. During the Civil War (spoiler alert, South lost), soldiers did whatever they could to avoid being treated because the treatment usually killed them. — Hanover
Makes sense. The sign for "you've contracted the virus and have a pre-existing immune system problem" is where the sign language guy bends over the Governor and simulates impregnating him. — Hanover
Why don't you just take it up with the experts, they both have blogs. I can't be bothered with this condescending "I'll teach you where you've gone wrong" crap. — Isaac
Prof Sir David Spiegelhalter {Professor of Mathematical Statistics at Cambridge), - "there will be a substantial overlap, Many people who die of Covid [the disease caused by coronavirus] would have died anyway within a short period," — Isaac
That does not mean there will be no extra deaths - but, Sir David says, there will be "a substantial overlap".
"Many people who die of Covid [the disease caused by coronavirus] would have died anyway within a short period," he says.
Knowing exactly how many is impossible to tell at this stage. — BBC
Prof Neil Ferguson, the lead modeller at Imperial College London, has suggested it [the deaths of those who would have died anyway] "might be as much as half or two thirds of the deaths we see, because these are people at the end of their lives or who have underlying conditions. — Isaac
“What we really need is the ability to put something in their place. If we want to reopen schools, let people get back to work, then we need to keep transmission down in another manner.
“And I should say, it’s not going to be going back to normal. We will have to maintain some level of social distancing – a significant level of social distancing – probably indefinitely until we have a vaccine available.”
He said that despite the “billions of pounds per day” cost to the economy – by putting in place infrastructure to tackle the virus – it was a “small price to pay” to tackle the outbreak of the virus.
Pressed on whether the government was moving towards an exit strategy, Prof Ferguson went on: “I’m not completely sure. I would like to see action accelerated. I don’t have a deep insight into what’s going on in government but decisions certainly need to be accelerated and real progress made. — independent reporting a BBC 4 interview
In otherwords, this expert does not support your position but has made an ambiguous easily misunderstood statement about a lack of knowledge. — boethius
— Andrew M
I fully admit the graph doesn’t tell the story: it just shows that short-term Covid risks are numerically similar to annual risks (on average). So getting Covid might roughly double the risk of dying this year. That’s it.
Interesting. From the statistics I've seen, the global death totals as projected annually for this year do not mark an anomaly. — Merkwurdichliebe
Go back a few weeks and people in the US were saying ‘no problem here!’ Because once you’re infected you don’t drop dead on the spot. There is a substantial lag between infection and death in most cases - we’re talking in excess of a month in some cases. — I like sushi
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