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OT: COVID-19 thread #4

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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#141 » by Bluewaterheaven » Sat Dec 5, 2020 3:53 pm

jnrjr79 wrote:
jmajew wrote:
TheSuzerain wrote:I 100% disagree.

An external crisis is literal gold to an incumbent. The GOP's negligence on this was pretty shocking. Trump coasts to re-election if he takes the pandemic seriously and takes authoritarian measures to get it under control.


I can't recall an external crisis like this in any election year with an incumbent. I'm only 37 though so its highly possible I just don't recall or aren't knowledgeable enough on it. I will say this, I can't imagine Democrats allowing Trump to take authoritarian measure. They were already worried about him being an authoritarian...you think they would have actually let him do it and not push back?

I think the fact we live in a democracy and so does western Europe is a big reason why none of our countries got it under control.


So how about Australia, New Zealand, Taiwan, South Korea, etc.?


Homogeneous populations on islands or peninsulas that can easily control population movement and don’t have a pesky constitution preventing a total lockdown. Also Taiwan and South Korea have a history of harsher dictators.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#142 » by Dresden » Sat Dec 5, 2020 4:37 pm

coldfish wrote:
2018C3 wrote:Yea, this does not sound truthful to say now, But my relative was working in Wuhan.

While talking to family members before, we brought up the possibility among ourselves, but the information put out always said it did not arrive here until later.

My nephew got sick first, and then after Christmas most of the people at the party also got sick. It could have just been a normal seasonal flu that got passed around, but who knows.

Its not the first Christmas party that took me out, another time we got together at a restaurant a few days after Christmas, and I ended up having someone drive to a hospital with food poisoning. That time I literally thought I was going to die, but was fine a few days later.

I have a large extended family that still keeps in touch, so different sections get together on different days around the holidays. Sometimes I can't even remember how they are all related. Also some of the people are not even related and just friends of my grandparents extended families.

My grandparents had a large group of friends that got together at there house when they were still alive, and the various families became close and try to continue the tradition. It gets harder to do every year.


Just to note, there is overwhelming scientific evidence that covid was circulating globally in December.

https://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/covid-may-have-been-in-la-as-early-as-december-2019
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-06-virus-italy-december.html
https://abcnews.go.com/Health/coronavirus-us-early-december-2019-study/story?id=74479234

There is other stuff.

Also, it was leaked that Trump was being briefed on it in December.

CNN released data showing it had been circulating in China for a while before December.

Regardless, the initial timeline given to the public is laughably wrong.


Not to beat a dead horse, but there is not "overwhelming scientific evidence" of this. The titles to two of the articles you posted say it "may" have or was "likely" here in December. That's quite a bit short of "overwhelming evidence" when they qualify it like that.

And while there is some evidence pointing to that possibility, if that was true, you'd have to explain why, if it was present earlier, no one detected that it was a novel coronavirus at that time? We've seen how badly it devastated nursing homes when it arrived in NY and Boston in Feb-Mar of 2020. If it had really been circulating widely before that time, why didn't we see the same sort of spike in nursing home deaths back in December, or earlier?

And another point- China is condemned for not realizing there was a new corona virus afoot sooner than when it was announced on Dec. 31st, but you could ask the same question about these other places where it supposedly was active, such as LA or Italy. Why didn't they start doing some forensic research on the spike in pneumonia cases they were seeing? Apparently all it took in China was one blood sample being sent to specialty lab to discover the presence of Covid 19- so why wasn't that done in these other places?

There is a lot we don't know about when and where and how it originated. Maybe one day they will sort this out, maybe we will never know.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#143 » by coldfish » Sat Dec 5, 2020 5:26 pm

Dresden wrote:
coldfish wrote:
2018C3 wrote:Yea, this does not sound truthful to say now, But my relative was working in Wuhan.

While talking to family members before, we brought up the possibility among ourselves, but the information put out always said it did not arrive here until later.

My nephew got sick first, and then after Christmas most of the people at the party also got sick. It could have just been a normal seasonal flu that got passed around, but who knows.

Its not the first Christmas party that took me out, another time we got together at a restaurant a few days after Christmas, and I ended up having someone drive to a hospital with food poisoning. That time I literally thought I was going to die, but was fine a few days later.

I have a large extended family that still keeps in touch, so different sections get together on different days around the holidays. Sometimes I can't even remember how they are all related. Also some of the people are not even related and just friends of my grandparents extended families.

My grandparents had a large group of friends that got together at there house when they were still alive, and the various families became close and try to continue the tradition. It gets harder to do every year.


Just to note, there is overwhelming scientific evidence that covid was circulating globally in December.

https://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/covid-may-have-been-in-la-as-early-as-december-2019
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-06-virus-italy-december.html
https://abcnews.go.com/Health/coronavirus-us-early-december-2019-study/story?id=74479234

There is other stuff.

Also, it was leaked that Trump was being briefed on it in December.

CNN released data showing it had been circulating in China for a while before December.

Regardless, the initial timeline given to the public is laughably wrong.


Not to beat a dead horse, but there is not "overwhelming scientific evidence" of this. The titles to two of the articles you posted say it "may" have or was "likely" here in December. That's quite a bit short of "overwhelming evidence" when they qualify it like that.

And while there is some evidence pointing to that possibility, if that was true, you'd have to explain why, if it was present earlier, no one detected that it was a novel coronavirus at that time? We've seen how badly it devastated nursing homes when it arrived in NY and Boston in Feb-Mar of 2020. If it had really been circulating widely before that time, why didn't we see the same sort of spike in nursing home deaths back in December, or earlier?

There is a lot we don't know about when and where and how it originated. Maybe one day they will sort this out, maybe we will never know.


Here is another one:

The coronavirus may have infected a small number of people in the United States as early as Dec. 13, more than a month earlier than researchers had thought, according to scientists who analyzed blood samples taken from American Red Cross donations.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/01/health/coronavirus-december-arrival.html

There are countless other examples but there is no amount of scientific data I can show you to change your mind so I'm not going to bother. Regardless, whenever someone has objectively gone back and done a scientific study they find evidence that global spread started in December. It wasn't last September or this January. Very consistently, around the planet, the data points to December.

And this isn't some small data sample. Many countries have done it and when they do, they get the same result.

And another point- China is condemned for not realizing there was a new corona virus afoot sooner than when it was announced on Dec. 31st, but you could ask the same question about these other places where it supposedly was active, such as LA or Italy. Why didn't they start doing some forensic research on the spike in pneumonia cases they were seeing? Apparently all it took in China was one blood sample being sent to specialty lab to discover the presence of Covid 19- so why wasn't that done in these other places?


https://komonews.com/news/coronavirus/seattle-flu-study-allegedly-tested-samples-for-covid-19-against-federal-state-guidelines

This is a local doctor who started testing for Covid on her own in Washington state very early on. She found it. When she notified authorities, their response wasn't to investigate. It was the same as China's. They shut her down and threatened her.

I can post anecdotal stories from Italy along the same vein.

This is a massive global screw up. Just because China screwed up, it doesn't absolve Trump of his mistakes or the CDC of theirs. People are acting like Trump here and trying to treat it like a political problem to shift blame. If we don't admit reality and try to fix the real problems, we are doomed to repeat them.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#144 » by moorhosj » Sat Dec 5, 2020 8:55 pm

Bluewaterheaven wrote:Homogeneous populations on islands or peninsulas that can easily control population movement and don’t have a pesky constitution preventing a total lockdown. Also Taiwan and South Korea have a history of harsher dictators.


So much wrong with this comment. Australia and New Zealand are not homogenous (30% of Australians are foreign-born) and each of the countries have a Constitution.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#145 » by DuckIII » Sat Dec 5, 2020 10:50 pm

Axolotl wrote:9% out of NBA players tested positive for coronavirus last week. Out of the total US population for the whole year 4% have tested positive. I wonder why these numbers are so wildly disproportionate.


Because 100% of the cited population of NBA players are engaged in face to face physical activity with each other, without masks, indoors, many hours a day.

And virtually none of the rest of us do stuff like that in those conditions with that much frequency and duration.

Plus what Doug said.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#146 » by dice » Sun Dec 6, 2020 1:47 am

Bluewaterheaven wrote:
jnrjr79 wrote:
jmajew wrote:
I can't recall an external crisis like this in any election year with an incumbent. I'm only 37 though so its highly possible I just don't recall or aren't knowledgeable enough on it. I will say this, I can't imagine Democrats allowing Trump to take authoritarian measure. They were already worried about him being an authoritarian...you think they would have actually let him do it and not push back?

I think the fact we live in a democracy and so does western Europe is a big reason why none of our countries got it under control.


So how about Australia, New Zealand, Taiwan, South Korea, etc.?


Homogeneous populations on islands or peninsulas that can easily control population movement and don’t have a pesky constitution preventing a total lockdown. Also Taiwan and South Korea have a history of harsher dictators.

what does a homogenous population have to do with it?

as for the island thing, north america is effectively a large island. i think it's more a population center (density) thing

new zealand has been very generous in its government support of those suffering financially due to lockdowns. economic support goes a long way toward convincing people to quarantine
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#147 » by dice » Sun Dec 6, 2020 1:48 am

DuckIII wrote:
Axolotl wrote:9% out of NBA players tested positive for coronavirus last week. Out of the total US population for the whole year 4% have tested positive. I wonder why these numbers are so wildly disproportionate.


Because 100% of the cited population of NBA players are engaged in face to face physical activity with each other, without masks, indoors, many hours a day.

not in the offseason. not to that degree, anyway. particularly during a pandemic
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#148 » by DuckIII » Sun Dec 6, 2020 3:11 pm

dice wrote:
DuckIII wrote:
Axolotl wrote:9% out of NBA players tested positive for coronavirus last week. Out of the total US population for the whole year 4% have tested positive. I wonder why these numbers are so wildly disproportionate.


Because 100% of the cited population of NBA players are engaged in face to face physical activity with each other, without masks, indoors, many hours a day.

not in the offseason. not to that degree, anyway. particularly during a pandemic




Offseason is over though and has been, practically speaking, for awhile now. We know from our own boards these guys are training together, face to face, including playing 5 on 5 and have been for weeks if not months.

I love basketball. I am excited for the Bulls to begin this new era. The Illini are a Final Four contender. And on a personal level, my three sons play ball. My junior would have been a starter in varsity this year on what would have been my town’s first competitive basketball team in a decade. My 7th grader was to have his first year of school ball this year on a team I coached the last 4 years, and they had a legitimate chance to advance deep into state this year. They are loaded for a small town like ours. And I now head coach (or would have coached) our 4th grade boys team in which my youngest plays, in our first year traveling.

I want basketball to begin on all levels so bad that my frustration makes my heart race at times.

But man, it’s poorly suited to COVID. I disagreed with Pritzker punting fall outdoor sports, even including football and soccer. But basketball just screams high risk to me. And the data looks like it’s supporting that view so far. Not just the NBA infection rates. Over 50 NCAA division 1 men’s games have been cancelled already and the season just started on 11/25. Nothing suggests it won’t get much, much worse either.

I hate believing that. I hated saying no when my oldest was invited to go play in private tourneys across the river in St. Louis. But I can’t lie to myself about what this looks like, no matter how badly my family wants to hoop and be hoop fans.

I think infection rates are going to skyrocket within programs without a bubble.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#149 » by The 6ft Hurdle » Sun Dec 6, 2020 3:39 pm

dice wrote:
Bluewaterheaven wrote:
jnrjr79 wrote:
So how about Australia, New Zealand, Taiwan, South Korea, etc.?


Homogeneous populations on islands or peninsulas that can easily control population movement and don’t have a pesky constitution preventing a total lockdown. Also Taiwan and South Korea have a history of harsher dictators.

what does a homogenous population have to do with it?

as for the island thing, north america is effectively a large island. i think it's more a population center (density) thing

new zealand has been very generous in its government support of those suffering financially due to lockdowns. economic support goes a long way toward convincing people to quarantine

I was just about to ask about the correlation/causation between a country's economic infrastructures, their COVID-19 quarantine orders, and their overall health outcomes; a lot of anxiety about quarantining is due to the issue that people face: how the heck will I provide for my family?
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#150 » by Dresden » Sun Dec 6, 2020 4:42 pm

coldfish wrote:
Dresden wrote:
coldfish wrote:
Just to note, there is overwhelming scientific evidence that covid was circulating globally in December.

https://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/covid-may-have-been-in-la-as-early-as-december-2019
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-06-virus-italy-december.html
https://abcnews.go.com/Health/coronavirus-us-early-december-2019-study/story?id=74479234

There is other stuff.

Also, it was leaked that Trump was being briefed on it in December.

CNN released data showing it had been circulating in China for a while before December.

Regardless, the initial timeline given to the public is laughably wrong.


Not to beat a dead horse, but there is not "overwhelming scientific evidence" of this. The titles to two of the articles you posted say it "may" have or was "likely" here in December. That's quite a bit short of "overwhelming evidence" when they qualify it like that.

And while there is some evidence pointing to that possibility, if that was true, you'd have to explain why, if it was present earlier, no one detected that it was a novel coronavirus at that time? We've seen how badly it devastated nursing homes when it arrived in NY and Boston in Feb-Mar of 2020. If it had really been circulating widely before that time, why didn't we see the same sort of spike in nursing home deaths back in December, or earlier?

There is a lot we don't know about when and where and how it originated. Maybe one day they will sort this out, maybe we will never know.


Here is another one:

The coronavirus may have infected a small number of people in the United States as early as Dec. 13, more than a month earlier than researchers had thought, according to scientists who analyzed blood samples taken from American Red Cross donations.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/01/health/coronavirus-december-arrival.html

There are countless other examples but there is no amount of scientific data I can show you to change your mind so I'm not going to bother. Regardless, whenever someone has objectively gone back and done a scientific study they find evidence that global spread started in December. It wasn't last September or this January. Very consistently, around the planet, the data points to December.

And this isn't some small data sample. Many countries have done it and when they do, they get the same result.

And another point- China is condemned for not realizing there was a new corona virus afoot sooner than when it was announced on Dec. 31st, but you could ask the same question about these other places where it supposedly was active, such as LA or Italy. Why didn't they start doing some forensic research on the spike in pneumonia cases they were seeing? Apparently all it took in China was one blood sample being sent to specialty lab to discover the presence of Covid 19- so why wasn't that done in these other places?


https://komonews.com/news/coronavirus/seattle-flu-study-allegedly-tested-samples-for-covid-19-against-federal-state-guidelines

This is a local doctor who started testing for Covid on her own in Washington state very early on. She found it. When she notified authorities, their response wasn't to investigate. It was the same as China's. They shut her down and threatened her.

I can post anecdotal stories from Italy along the same vein.

This is a massive global screw up. Just because China screwed up, it doesn't absolve Trump of his mistakes or the CDC of theirs. People are acting like Trump here and trying to treat it like a political problem to shift blame. If we don't admit reality and try to fix the real problems, we are doomed to repeat them.


Coldfish- I don't really have a horse in this race- if the evidence eventually points to an earlier circulation of Covid globally before the conventionally accepted timeline, I won't dispute it. I just don't think we have that evidence yet.

The Seattle article you linked to says that samples were taken starting in December for a flu study. It then says that:

"The New York Times has reported that Chu and her staff began running tests of the flu samples before the lab was certified to do so and during a time when the testing procedures were not certified as well.

But in doing so, it detected participants that had presumptive tests for Covid-19 including a teenager at a Renton area high school. The school closed for a time as a precaution."

The article doesn't say when this high school student was tested. It could have been December, it could have been January. It's not clear when that happened. It does indicate it was before the generally accepted first case of Wash St. was declared, but it doesn't say how much earlier.

And the study (or the Covid testing part of it), was shut down because they didn't have authorization to test for Covid. Which I agree does sound fishy, but probably isn't part of a govt scheme to silence the doctors, but just regulatory nonsense about wanting to make sure standards were being following.

And in The NY Times article about antibodies being picked up in December, it also mentions that

"At least one prominent virus researcher was wary of how the findings were interpreted online and in news reports. Trevor Bedford, an epidemiologist at the University of Washington who has been deeply involved in genetic studies of how, when and where the virus has spread, said in a series of tweets that he thought the study could be identifying people who had antibodies to other human coronaviruses, which cause common colds, although he did not rule out that it may have picked up some cases of travelers infected in other countries."

So the proof is not definitive at all. And there are other reports of finding the virus in samples taken from sewers in Italy as early as last September- how can that be explained? How could the virus have been present that far back, and yet the death spikes didn't happen until 6 months later?

All of these scattered reports may indicate an earlier presence of the virus, but there are question marks about all of them.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#151 » by dice » Sun Dec 6, 2020 6:23 pm

DuckIII wrote:
dice wrote:
DuckIII wrote:
Because 100% of the cited population of NBA players are engaged in face to face physical activity with each other, without masks, indoors, many hours a day.

not in the offseason. not to that degree, anyway. particularly during a pandemic




Offseason is over though and has been, practically speaking, for awhile now. We know from our own boards these guys are training together, face to face, including playing 5 on 5 and have been for weeks if not months.

I love basketball. I am excited for the Bulls to begin this new era. The Illini are a Final Four contender. And on a personal level, my three sons play ball. My junior would have been a starter in varsity this year on what would have been my town’s first competitive basketball team in a decade. My 7th grader was to have his first year of school ball this year on a team I coached the last 4 years, and they had a legitimate chance to advance deep into state this year. They are loaded for a small town like ours. And I now head coach (or would have coached) our 4th grade boys team in which my youngest plays, in our first year traveling.

I want basketball to begin on all levels so bad that my frustration makes my heart race at times.

But man, it’s poorly suited to COVID. I disagreed with Pritzker punting fall outdoor sports, even including football and soccer. But basketball just screams high risk to me. And the data looks like it’s supporting that view so far. Not just the NBA infection rates. Over 50 NCAA division 1 men’s games have been cancelled already and the season just started on 11/25. Nothing suggests it won’t get much, much worse either.

I hate believing that. I hated saying no when my oldest was invited to go play in private tourneys across the river in St. Louis. But I can’t lie to myself about what this looks like, no matter how badly my family wants to hoop and be hoop fans.

I think infection rates are going to skyrocket within programs without a bubble.

i tried watching part of an illini game. couldn't do it. first of all, college ball is just glorified AAU at this point. then there are the sleeveless jerseys that make them look like children. worst of all is all the people on the sideline pulling their masks on and off. gotta talk? take the mask off! :banghead:
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#152 » by DuckIII » Sun Dec 6, 2020 7:15 pm

dice wrote:i tried watching part of an illini game. couldn't do it. first of all, college ball is just glorified AAU at this point. then there are the sleeveless jerseys that make them look like children. worst of all is all the people on the sideline pulling their masks on and off. gotta talk? take the mask off! :banghead:


College ball is inferior to the NBA, by a notable margin. I really only watch it now when Illinois is good, if there is a specific prospect I want to see, or the NCAA tourney.

And that thing with the masks is true of all sports being played now. It’s ridiculous. Happens in NCAA and NFL football constantly as well.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#153 » by Dresden » Sun Dec 6, 2020 9:02 pm

Giuliani has tested positive for Covid.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#154 » by HomoSapien » Sun Dec 6, 2020 11:58 pm

A friend of mine got Covid back in August, recovered and then had a stroke a few weeks ago. He's only 35. He said the doctors believe that it was related to Covid and then caused by an overabundance of caffeine. Luckily he seems to be recovering really well without too many big side effects. Scary ****...stay safe everyone.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#155 » by kulaz3000 » Mon Dec 7, 2020 12:23 am

Dresden wrote:Giuliani has tested positive for Covid.


This is the photo they used on the article about Giuliani gettting Covid-19 on Australias biggest online newspaper.

This image will forever be assosicated with Giuliani now.

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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#156 » by kulaz3000 » Mon Dec 7, 2020 12:25 am

HomoSapien wrote:A friend of mine got Covid back in August, recovered and then had a stroke a few weeks ago. He's only 35. He said the doctors believe that it was related to Covid and then caused by an overabundance of caffeine. Luckily he seems to be recovering really well without too many big side effects. Scary ****...stay safe everyone.


Yep, there is still a great amount of unknown for the long term effects of people who have had and recovered from Covid. It's scary stuff.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#157 » by jnrjr79 » Mon Dec 7, 2020 4:09 pm

Bluewaterheaven wrote:
jnrjr79 wrote:
jmajew wrote:
I can't recall an external crisis like this in any election year with an incumbent. I'm only 37 though so its highly possible I just don't recall or aren't knowledgeable enough on it. I will say this, I can't imagine Democrats allowing Trump to take authoritarian measure. They were already worried about him being an authoritarian...you think they would have actually let him do it and not push back?

I think the fact we live in a democracy and so does western Europe is a big reason why none of our countries got it under control.


So how about Australia, New Zealand, Taiwan, South Korea, etc.?


Homogeneous populations on islands or peninsulas that can easily control population movement and don’t have a pesky constitution preventing a total lockdown. Also Taiwan and South Korea have a history of harsher dictators.


This is silly. The infection in the US didn't come in from land border crossings (which, FWIW, are pretty easily closed down anyway). They came from people flying in.

And I have no idea what you mean by a history of harsher dictators. Those places are free societies.

And, FWIW, Australia has a diverse populous - calling it "homogenous" is not accurate.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#158 » by jnrjr79 » Mon Dec 7, 2020 4:11 pm

dice wrote:
Bluewaterheaven wrote:
jnrjr79 wrote:
So how about Australia, New Zealand, Taiwan, South Korea, etc.?


Homogeneous populations on islands or peninsulas that can easily control population movement and don’t have a pesky constitution preventing a total lockdown. Also Taiwan and South Korea have a history of harsher dictators.

what does a homogenous population have to do with it?

as for the island thing, north america is effectively a large island. i think it's more a population center (density) thing

new zealand has been very generous in its government support of those suffering financially due to lockdowns. economic support goes a long way toward convincing people to quarantine



Korea and Taiwan are way more dense than the US, yet have done much better at controlling the virus.

I agree the US has done much less economic safety net stuff that would help people accede to lockdowns and that is likely one of our bigger problems.
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#159 » by Dresden » Mon Dec 7, 2020 7:09 pm

China has been vaccinating some of it's people for a few months now- Russia for maybe a month or so. They had not passed tests on human subjects, from what I know. It's too bad we can't get data from those countries as to how well it's working. Maybe it's too soon to know?
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Re: OT: COVID-19 thread #4 

Post#160 » by Dresden » Tue Dec 8, 2020 2:25 am

Ok, so this is not very different from what Chinese authorities did to Dr. Li, who was interrogated by police after alerting colleagues of a possible new SARS outbreak:

Florida state police raid home of Rebekah Jones, data scientist who challenged DeSantis on coronavirus statistics

Mon, December 7, 2020, 5:03 PM PST Yahoo

Law enforcement authorities in Tallahassee, Fla., on Monday raided the home of a data scientist who had been fired by Gov. Ron DeSantis after refusing to manipulate numbers.

In the months since her firing, Rebekah Jones has continued to publish coronavirus statistics independently, while also issuing warnings on Twitter and cable news. DeSantis, meanwhile, has continued to downplay the severity of the epidemic, which has killed nearly 20,000 Floridians.

Jones posted video of the raid, which was conducted by Florida state police Monday morning. She said the police “took all my hardware and tech,” for which they obtained a warrant following a Department of Health complaint.

“They pointed a gun in my face,” Jones said in her message, which was shared by thousands of people. “They pointed guns at my kids.”

In a second message, Jones described how the state police “took my phone and the computer I use every day to post the case numbers in Florida, and school cases for the entire country.”

Jones put the blame for the raid squarely on the governor. “This was DeSantis,” she wrote. “He sent the gestapo.” The Gestapo was the secret police of Nazi Germany. DeSantis’s office did not respond to a Yahoo News request for comment.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement said in a statement that it executed the warrant after receiving a complaint “from the Department of Health regarding unauthorized access to a Department of Health messaging system which is part of an emergency alert system, to be used for emergencies only.”

The statement further said that when “agents arrived, they knocked on the door and called Ms. Jones in an attempt to minimize disruption to the family. Ms. Jones refused to come to the door for 20 minutes and hung-up on agents.”

The warrant appears to be related to a Nov. 10 message sent over the Health Department’s emergency alert system to 1,750 employees. “Speak up before another 17,000 people are dead,” said the message, the contents of which were first published by the Tampa Bay Times. “You know this is wrong. You don’t have to be a part of this. Be a hero. Speak out before it’s too late.”

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