Yup, chair. We have facts, and you have nothing but propaganda.
Possibly. But it is also possible that the exact opposite is true.
Yup, chair. We have facts, and you have nothing but propaganda.
Possibly. But it is also possible that the exact opposite is true.
Yup. But only if you have hope that your flat earth theory is correct.Possibly. But it is also possible that the exact opposite is true.
A couple of things to point out before I get to the CDC report. I'm comfortable with changing my mind on a topic even when I realize how stupid I look when I have to do it. Knowing how to lose is an important skill that I've gotten pretty good at. And I've had my mind changed on TOL which is why I like it here and seek out the people who's ideas are the best opposition to my own and wouldn't bother being here otherwise. Secondly, I think you are smart and could be great opposition to the truth (or, a great ally of the truth), but you disengage too quickly. My above argument has a weak spot if you'd only look into it a little harder - it would be a good exercise for a person like you even if it takes some time and discomfort to find it.wait and see. It is pointless trying to convince most people on this site of anything at all, largely because most here have alternate facts.
Excess Deaths Associated with COVID-19
Figures present excess deaths associated with COVID-19 at the national and state levels.www.cdc.gov
Honestly- I think you are one of the few who actually think here. I disengage largely because it is basically impossible to have a rational discussion on this site, let alone convince someone. I'm considering simply bailing out of here, as some have already done.A couple of things to point out before I get to the CDC report. I'm comfortable with changing my mind on a topic even when I realize how stupid I look when I have to do it. Knowing how to lose is an important skill that I've gotten pretty good at. And I've had my mind changed on TOL which is why I like it here and seek out the people who's ideas are the best opposition to my own and wouldn't bother being here otherwise. Secondly, I think you are smart and could be great opposition to the truth (or, a great ally of the truth), but you disengage too quickly. My above argument has a weak spot if you'd only look into it a little harder - it would be a good exercise for a person like you even if it takes some time and discomfort to find it.
Now, on to the CDC report that says there are 300k excess deaths in 2020 in the US. I read the report long before you brought it up here. Did you read it? If you did, then could you tell us what these 300k excess deaths are in excess of? Or in other words, as any economist would ask, 300k compared to what?
I haven't read it and don't care to and have no idea whether its accurate and I'm making no argument about any of that one way or the other but just to answer the question you've asked...A couple of things to point out before I get to the CDC report. I'm comfortable with changing my mind on a topic even when I realize how stupid I look when I have to do it. Knowing how to lose is an important skill that I've gotten pretty good at. And I've had my mind changed on TOL which is why I like it here and seek out the people who's ideas are the best opposition to my own and wouldn't bother being here otherwise. Secondly, I think you are smart and could be great opposition to the truth (or, a great ally of the truth), but you disengage too quickly. My above argument has a weak spot if you'd only look into it a little harder - it would be a good exercise for a person like you even if it takes some time and discomfort to find it.
Now, on to the CDC report that says there are 300k excess deaths in 2020 in the US. I read the report long before you brought it up here. Did you read it? If you did, then could you tell us what these 300k excess deaths are in excess of? Or in other words, as any economist would ask, 300k compared to what?
That is almost true, from a certain point of view. I guess the ivory towner point of view? From the layman point of view, the obvious common sense point of view you just listed, it is a little less than 200k. That's because an amount of growth in the number of deaths is *expected*. And that would be from the growth of population, and the growth of the aging population. The Boomer bubble is almost now at 60-80 years old and they are dying at an increased rate. And the country will just have more deaths because there are more people year over year. This increase is *expected*, but it is counted in the excess deaths. It's not a new thing for 2020, but they sure didn't make it clear how they count excess deaths. This year the growth is a little over 100k, which should be subtracted from the 300k.I haven't read it and don't care to and have no idea whether its accurate and I'm making no argument about any of that one way or the other but just to answer the question you've asked...
The 300k "excess deaths" is referring to deaths in excess of what would otherwise have been expected across the same span of time given a normal death rate in the U.S.
Excess deaths has been a commonly used metric in statistical analysis of all kinds of morbidities for probably hundreds of years or for many decades at the very least. The expected increase in death would be totally irrelevant to the excess death number because they are just that, expected deaths. Expected deaths is sort of the opposite of excess deaths.That is almost true, from a certain point of view. I guess the ivory towner point of view? From the layman point of view, the obvious common sense point of view you just listed, it is a little less than 200k. That's because an amount of growth in the number of deaths is *expected*. And that would be from the growth of population, and the growth of the aging population. The Boomer bubble is almost now at 60-80 years old and they are dying at an increased rate. And the country will just have more deaths because there are more people year over year. This increase is *expected*, but it is counted in the excess deaths. It's not a new thing for 2020, but they sure didn't make it clear how they count excess deaths. This year the growth is a little over 100k, which should be subtracted from the 300k.
But the real devil in the details is the other almost 200k excess deaths were among the young. You know, the set of people that weren't dying of COVID even if they tried. And they died of a lot of things that could loosely (for the most part) be attributed to lockdowns and mask mandates. If there were any excess *COVID* deaths, at all, since they were concentrated in a small age range we should have seen an absolute spike. Granted, it did go up, but not enough to get out of the noise. And also granted, NY seems to have had a spike that tends in the direction we should have seen in the rest of the country if you listen to the CDC, but it's such an anomaly that a curious scientist would wonder what was REALLY going on.
So excess deaths should be a non-story due to lack of excess deaths. If there was anything to investigate it should be about the effects of the lockdowns and mask mandates. But scientists are bought and paid for, and people like chair have no curiosity.