It amazes me how many epidemiologists and infectious disease experts there are...especially on eGriz.
grizindabox said:It amazes me how many epidemiologists and infectious disease experts there are...especially on eGriz.
WaGriz4life said:EverettGriz said:But he hasn't been, Yukon.
Facts, truth and accuracy still matter, even if they don't on whatever channel you may watch.
What has Fauci been correct on? Why doesn't South Dakota have thousands of people dead since they didn't go in to lockdown? Why aren't thousands of essential workers, such as myself, dying all over the place since it is so infectious and dangerous?
These are real questions I would like answers to if you have them. Fauci does not have those answers, because he was wrong in his assessment of how lethal this virus is.
EverettGriz said:WaGriz4life said:What has Fauci been correct on? Why doesn't South Dakota have thousands of people dead since they didn't go in to lockdown? Why aren't thousands of essential workers, such as myself, dying all over the place since it is so infectious and dangerous?
Yep we all agreed to flatten the curve. Time to open up.
EverettGriz said:WaGriz4life said:What has Fauci been correct on? Why doesn't South Dakota have thousands of people dead since they didn't go in to lockdown? Why aren't thousands of essential workers, such as myself, dying all over the place since it is so infectious and dangerous?
These are real questions I would like answers to if you have them. Fauci does not have those answers, because he was wrong in his assessment of how lethal this virus is.
As far as I'm aware, Fauci has been correct on nearly every substantive question. I've seen no legitimate, unbiased reporting to suggest otherwise.
Early on in the other thread (before it turned into a political shit show), I predicted that after the successful implementation of social distancing, people would come out of the woodwork to decry how it wasn't necessary, hospitals weren't over run, etc. I couldn't have been more right, unfortunately. I guess ultimately that's a good thing....
My apologies if it doesn't fit neatly into whatever narrative you prefer, but social distancing has been 100% effective in what it was put in place to do (which never was about saving lives directly, but rather saving lives by not having overrun health care systems).
The reason SD doesn't have many deaths (so far) is because the entire state has built in social distancing naturally. That said, their trend line ain't pretty. To date, Noem has been lucky. Will it continue after the disaster in the meat packing industry? I guess we'll see. I suspect there may still be some communities in SD that get gut punched.
In either event, I'd rather not gamble my parent's lives on luck. I think I'll listen to the experts, and not some blubbering moron with an agenda on some "news" channel. And I'm glad that nearly 80% of Americans agree with me.
WaGriz4life said:EverettGriz said:But he hasn't been, Yukon.
Facts, truth and accuracy still matter, even if they don't on whatever channel you may watch.
What has Fauci been correct on? Why doesn't South Dakota have thousands of people dead since they didn't go in to lockdown? Why aren't thousands of essential workers, such as myself, dying all over the place since it is so infectious and dangerous?
These are real questions I would like answers to if you have them. Fauci does not have those answers, because he was wrong in his assessment of how lethal this virus is.
I appreciate that EG. I really do. In the case of your friends I’m sorry to hear that. We’re obviously way more effected by personal experience with everything. If you lose a family member to a drunk driver you’ll be way more invested in that cause. We know the stats on drunk driving deaths. They’re sky high. We all know the numbers, but for some of us they hit closer to home.EverettGriz said:ILTC, thanks for the compliment.
Do I personally think this has been overblown? Hell NO. But then, I live in a hot spot zone. One of my friends had his Mom die on a Wednesday and his Dad on that Friday, and he couldn't see them, say goodbye to them, tell him he loved them, or even have a funeral for them. Another friend is a hospital administrator. He spent three 18 hour days drawing up an ethical document to determine who lives and who dies at their hospital when it got overrun (not IF it got overrun, WHEN it got overrun. Because without social distancing, it would have). Said it was the worst, most agonizing 3 days of his life. Another friend is a firefighter. He has 3 people who were healthy in the morning die in his aid car on the way to the hospital that evening. I could go on and on, but I suspect you get the idea.
That all said, if I'm sitting in Shelby, Montana, I'm probably saying this entire thing is overblown. But as for me, I know with every fiber of my being that had we not social distanced, we'd be in a very, very, very dark place as a nation right now.
Now, as an economist am I troubled by what's taken place? Of course. But it's my firm belief that had we not taken the steps we did, the damage to the economy would have been worse by a magnitude so great it likely would never have recovered.
EverettGriz said:ILTC, thanks for the compliment.
Do I personally think this has been overblown? Hell NO. But then, I live in a hot spot zone. One of my friends had his Mom die on a Wednesday and his Dad on that Friday, and he couldn't see them, say goodbye to them, tell him he loved them, or even have a funeral for them. Another friend is a hospital administrator. He spent three 18 hour days drawing up an ethical document to determine who lives and who dies at their hospital when it got overrun (not IF it got overrun, WHEN it got overrun. Because without social distancing, it would have). Said it was the worst, most agonizing 3 days of his life. Another friend is a firefighter. He has 3 people who were healthy in the morning die in his aid car on the way to the hospital that evening. I could go on and on, but I suspect you get the idea.
That all said, if I'm sitting in Shelby, Montana, I'm probably saying this entire thing is overblown. But as for me, I know with every fiber of my being that had we not social distanced, we'd be in a very, very, very dark place as a nation right now.
Now, as an economist am I troubled by what's taken place? Of course. But it's my firm belief that had we not taken the steps we did, the damage to the economy would have been worse by a magnitude so great it likely would never have recovered.
PlayerRep said:This info is from April 26:
"About 1,850 of the state’s 2,212 coronavirus cases have been reported in Minnehaha County, which is South Dakota’s most populous county and the location of a large outbreak at a pork processing plant. More than 1,000 COVID-19 cases have been tied to the Smithfield Foods plant in Sioux Falls. [So, 362 cases in the rest of the state.]
Smithfield closed the plant indefinitely last week because of the outbreak and faced complaints that it wasn’t doing enough to protect its workers.
One new death was reported Sunday, leaving the South Dakota total at 11. Health officials said 64 people were hospitalized." [Think deaths are now 12, so less than MT's death count.]
https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/south-dakota/articles/2020-04-26/south-dakota-covid-10-cases-grow-additional-death-reported
BadlandsGrizFan said:Yukon said:Don't trust Fauci. He doesn't make the decisions. He just gives bad advice. He has been wrong on every front. If he had it his way, nothing would ever open.....ever.
Time to count the morons again. 1
WaGriz4life said:grizindabox said:It amazes me how many epidemiologists and infectious disease experts there are...especially on eGriz.
It amazes me how quickly Americans are willing to give up their civil liberties over a disease that has a 99.7% survival rate.
It also amazes me how wrong the infectious disease experts have been.
I don’t like that top experts can throw out models with enormous amounts of lives lost. 2-3 million American lives lost. Then they have the power to force us to stop working, stop going to school, and stay in our homes. Then they can use the numbers of tiny amounts of deaths to show how great we’re doing. That scares the hell out of me. How easily people blindly follow orders, (myself included) when information is gained daily is shocking.
Of the numbers we actually have, the death rate is tiny. It’ll only get smaller as the months go on.
reinell30 said:When was the last death in US caused by natural causes? OH I know, it was before Covid-19 was announced. Folks, if you feel ill stay home and stay away from people, take responsibility for yourselves! You don't need an expert in DC to tell you you're sick and what you should do...call your local hospital and they will tell you what to do. If you have pre-existing health problems, you know what you should be doing? The media is nothing but Doom and Gloom and Americans eat it up!
Let's play some football!
ilovethecats said:reinell30 said:When was the last death in US caused by natural causes? OH I know, it was before Covid-19 was announced. Folks, if you feel ill stay home and stay away from people, take responsibility for yourselves! You don't need an expert in DC to tell you you're sick and what you should do...call your local hospital and they will tell you what to do. If you have pre-existing health problems, you know what you should be doing? The media is nothing but Doom and Gloom and Americans eat it up!
Let's play some football!
You didn't hear that there has been a miraculous cure for the flu, influenza, heart disease and cancer?! Because somehow....some way....all those forms of death are lower than they have been in the last 15 years! I can't put my finger on it, but the only LOGICAL conclusion a person can make is there is a cure for these ailments. Which is great news!![]()
EverettGriz said:ILTC, I appreciate the intelligent and reasonable discourse. It's certainly a marked change from many posters on this issue.
I don’t like that top experts can throw out models with enormous amounts of lives lost. 2-3 million American lives lost. Then they have the power to force us to stop working, stop going to school, and stay in our homes. Then they can use the numbers of tiny amounts of deaths to show how great we’re doing. That scares the hell out of me. How easily people blindly follow orders, (myself included) when information is gained daily is shocking.
So while i understand -- and agree completely -- with this sentiment, would be be better off blindly following the orders of politicians versus the recommendations of multiple subject experts?
Of the numbers we actually have, the death rate is tiny. It’ll only get smaller as the months go on.
Again, I believe anyone who focuses on the death rate is mistaken. The mortality rate wasn't the concern that drove the stay at home orders, although it is running a staggering 5.8% of confirmed cases). The primary concern was the hospitalization rate, and the number of those patients who would need ICU care. There are only 46,000 ICU beds in America. Even with social distancing and marked slowing in increased cases, some models project we'll be at ICU capacity on May 13th.
I'm very curious to get your thoughts on what would have happened if we hadn't social distanced.
reinell30 said:When was the last death in US caused by natural causes? OH I know, it was before Covid-19 was announced. Folks, if you feel ill stay home and stay away from people, take responsibility for yourselves! You don't need an expert in DC to tell you you're sick and what you should do...call your local hospital and they will tell you what to do. If you have pre-existing health problems, you know what you should be doing? The media is nothing but Doom and Gloom and Americans eat it up!
Let's play some football!
EverettGriz said:ILTC, I appreciate the intelligent and reasonable discourse. It's certainly a marked change from many posters on this issue.
I don’t like that top experts can throw out models with enormous amounts of lives lost. 2-3 million American lives lost. Then they have the power to force us to stop working, stop going to school, and stay in our homes. Then they can use the numbers of tiny amounts of deaths to show how great we’re doing. That scares the hell out of me. How easily people blindly follow orders, (myself included) when information is gained daily is shocking.
So while i understand -- and agree completely -- with this sentiment, would be be better off blindly following the orders of politicians versus the recommendations of multiple subject experts?
Of the numbers we actually have, the death rate is tiny. It’ll only get smaller as the months go on.
Again, I believe anyone who focuses on the death rate is mistaken. The mortality rate wasn't the concern that drove the stay at home orders, although it is running a staggering 5.8% of confirmed cases). The primary concern was the hospitalization rate, and the number of those patients who would need ICU care. There are only 46,000 ICU beds in America. Even with social distancing and marked slowing in increased cases, some models project we'll be at ICU capacity on May 13th.
I'm very curious to get your thoughts on what would have happened if we hadn't social distanced.