Did Lockdown Work?
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@jon-nyc said in Did Lockdown Work?:
“We found that we are able to select a group of countries to make the same point we’ve been making since early March, with rationales changing by the week. Further, we found that, if you select the right metric and are careful about which countries to compare it with, Sweden did A-Ok.”
IOW: First draw your curves, then plot your points.
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Hey Ax!
I'm pretty sure one of the below digits is incorrect. George posted these, but it's unlikely he has any clue at all.
Only you are able, Ax. Only you.
Help me out here, would 'ya? Find the digit, save the world.
Thanks in Advance.
ID=782003117027014000123127094029118089052016006059021006029097008127094066011111020092034010029016033047045124069030026067014108051022030047038030074027020095116006020069011090109013100127114096084104067114093096064016021120104030112102083020102120105 -
I do not understand why there is so much initial research being done now, as opposed to the previous near-pandemics which should have been studied to formulate current policies.
In other words, I say to the "scientific community:" where the hell have you been, and why did you let politicians ignore your previous work?
We ended up with our pants down, so to speak. No masks, no equipment, no testing equipment, no internal drug manufacturing, etc. etc.And all studies seem to follow the same trajectory:
true today - false next week.
Tag, you're it!
Ta -
@Rainman said in Did Lockdown Work?:
Hey Ax!
I'm pretty sure one of the below digits is incorrect. George posted these, but it's unlikely he has any clue at all.
Only you are able, Ax. Only you.
Help me out here, would 'ya? Find the digit, save the world.
Thanks in Advance.
ID=782003117027014000123127094029118089052016006059021006029097008127094066011111020092034010029016033047045124069030026067014108051022030047038030074027020095116006020069011090109013100127114096084104067114093096064016021120104030112102083020102120105lol "4027020095" what a dumb ID. Omg can you even imagine a cool ID that had so much as a "02009" in it, much less "4027020095"? Omg mortifying.
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@Horace said in Did Lockdown Work?:
A test and trace system was less likely achievable than sufficient virus containment was. It seemed clear from the start that the only realistic positive outcome of the lockdown would be a delay in cases. The discussion at the time contained much fantasy, to make a lockdown seem more appealing.
Some day a thoughtful piece will be written on the realities of the possibility of a successful test and trace system in the US. It has become a centerpiece in the criticism of our response and we deserve to know the truth.
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@Rainman said in Did Lockdown Work?:
In other words, I say to the "scientific community:" where the hell have you been, and why did you let politicians ignore your previous work?
Try to understand. A rookie nurse accidentally autoclaved the lab's entire supply of Twinkies. We were in deep mourning for days. We were unable to get any work done. None. We couldn't even play Grand Theft Auto. When I say we mourned, baby, we mourned.
Now for the second part of your question. The politicians, those dirty rat bastards, threatened to cancel our grants for the next ten years if we didn't stop, as they put it, "calling us all the damn day and night bullshitting about some stupid vaccine breakthrough."
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@Rainman said in Did Lockdown Work?:
I do not understand why there is so much initial research being done now, as opposed to the previous near-pandemics which should have been studied to formulate current policies.
In other words, I say to the "scientific community:" where the hell have you been, and why did you let politicians ignore your previous work?
We ended up with our pants down, so to speak. No masks, no equipment, no testing equipment, no internal drug manufacturing, etc. etc.Scientists follow the money, they don't just start doing clever shit for no reason. It's the politicians you should be pointing the finger at.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Did Lockdown Work?:
It's the politicians you should be pointing the finger at.
I do. Guess which finger.
Seriously, I do take the time to email my representatives, at both the state and fed level. I have sent Trump numerous emails.
I'll keep it up, although I realize I cannot expect anything more than their generic "thanks for your email, and I am wonderful and care only about you" BS.And that's the most angering. We live in a representative democracy, where our representatives get into office and immediately go on a power trip, fall in line as told to do, and as an average American I might as well go holler at the moon.
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@Rainman said in Did Lockdown Work?:
And that's the most angering. We live in a representative democracy, where our representatives get into office and immediately go on a power trip, fall in line as told to do, and as an average American I might as well go holler at the moon.
I think I mentioned that during the Clinton Administration I redd that of the budget for the Dept of Education, the percent that directly benefitted the schools was 11%.
Which means 89% of the budget went to the support of the Dept of Education.
That was quite an object lesson. I think Congress operates much the same way. They're great at dashing around looking busy as hell, going back home a couple of times a year to kiss some babies, even passing the occasional piece of legislation that, you know, ordinary Americans actually care about. Otherwise, when the shit hits the fan, where are they? Kneeling someplace with colorful scarves draped around their necks and quivering with sensitivity.
Yeah, thanks for that.
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@Jolly said in Did Lockdown Work?:
Now, as for COVID response...In California, one of the most liberal states in the union, 60% of people have told COVID tracers to piss up a rope.
Americans, even for their own good, do not like to be told what to do.
Exactly. Sometimes, the good of society has to come before the good of the individual.
Personally, I have a lot of trouble understanding why people cannot understand that.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Did Lockdown Work?:
It's the politicians you should be pointing the finger at.
I wasn't done, given Cat's post in addition to 'ol Doc Phibes.
The finger is pointed at the media, politicians, and the educational establishment K-16, in reverse order.
What I cannot fight, even with emails, is the destruction I saw take place in public education during my 12 years. The direct indoctrination taking place in the classroom, carefully inserted even into PE and music classrooms. Heck, I even noticed when I was a college prof, how personal perspectives of faculty became quickly subservient to the ideology of the left. I learned to just shut up. And what the hell: even when I was an undergraduate, I experienced the nonsense of the "world music" classes and the fact that everyone was expected to agree that some flute playing in Africa was as important if not more important, than studying all those dead guys' music.
It's been going on for decades, and it all started in academics. Critical Theory, Social Justice, Intersectionalism, hiding under "Critical Thinking Skills" and similar.
Many of us adults lived through the beginnings of the movement, I guess we never expected so much to turn into societal destruction, it seemed that the nutty stuff would obviously die under its subjective "truth" -- but didn't.
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@taiwan_girl said in Did Lockdown Work?:
@Jolly said in Did Lockdown Work?:
Now, as for COVID response...In California, one of the most liberal states in the union, 60% of people have told COVID tracers to piss up a rope.
Americans, even for their own good, do not like to be told what to do.
Exactly. Sometimes, the good of society has to come before the good of the individual.
Personally, I have a lot of trouble understanding why people cannot understand that.
I don't. But then, I'm one of those pesky Americans...
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@Rainman said in Did Lockdown Work?:
It's been going on for decades, and it all started in academics. Critical Theory, Social Justice, Intersectionalism, hiding under "Critical Thinking Skills" and similar.
Many of us adults lived through the beginnings of the movement, I guess we never expected so much to turn into societal destruction, it seemed that the nutty stuff would obviously die under its subjective "truth" -- but didn't.
John McWhorter discussed this on a podcast released today called The Weeds. He too witnessed Critical Theory invent new usages for phrases such as White Supremacy, in what, at the time, was a secluded little space in academia. He remarked that you could draw a line from there to our current pop cultural acceptance of those ideas. So if anybody thinks those pseudo intellectuals dominating the -studies disciplines in our universities are a harmless bunch of quacks, realize their ideas have become ground truth for a large part of our culture.
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Upon reflection, I regret my anti-Congress rant, above. It was facile, cheap, oversimplified, overly self indulgent and in large part, probably wrong.
The truth is, Congresspeople probably do work very hard. The further truth is that the great majority of the work of governance is subterranean, the part of the iceberg you don't see. It's not unheard of that a Congressional committee will work weeks and months to effect a small change in some unknown (to us) sub-agency that results in great benefit to the people, and we the people never see the process.
Yes, government is way too big, probably too big for any oversight body to govern effectively. There's nobody to fix this, so we have no choice but to live with it. Hence, the dozens of committees on Capitol Hill. (And probably the dozens of liquor empties in the dumpsters behind the Senate and House office buildings every night.)
Yes, Congresspeople are scoundrelly in many ways -- scoundrelly and stupid and dishonest, power mad and egoistic, and often useless. But I was wrong to describe them as do-nothing layabouts.
The one thing I can't forgive, though, is their contributing to the political divisiveness that is so severely crippling the country. Instead of endeavoring to unite and heal, they are way too invested in pouring gasoline on the flames.
For that, a pox on both Houses.
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@Jolly said in Did Lockdown Work?:
@taiwan_girl said in Did Lockdown Work?:
@Jolly said in Did Lockdown Work?:
Now, as for COVID response...In California, one of the most liberal states in the union, 60% of people have told COVID tracers to piss up a rope.
Americans, even for their own good, do not like to be told what to do.
Exactly. Sometimes, the good of society has to come before the good of the individual.
Personally, I have a lot of trouble understanding why people cannot understand that.
I don't. But then, I'm one of those pesky Americans...
And that is what makes the US so great, but can also be why sometimes that it fails.