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HerStuddMuffin posted:I don’t know, I think it makes its point very clearly, if the point is that there’s a small outbreak in China and the rest of the world is freaking out over nothing (ok, over a common cold.) There's people way undershooting the severity of the issue by describing it like it's a common cold. Except the common cold doesn't really kill that many people.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 11:48 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 22:24 |
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The flu kills an order of magnitude or two more, yearly, without the world freaking out. The coronavirus family causes a respiratory disease colloquially known as the common cold, that’s not my fault. Combine the two informations and it’s not people like me who are downplaying the infection, it’s the world governments and media who are screaming like crazy about it and trying to create a panic to distract from their local crimes and misdeeds. So basically, yes, there’s a cold going around in China, and that map makes it perfectly clear. It also makes clear how much bullshit the whole mass hysteria is. I stand by my judgement that it is a good map for showing what it shows.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 12:53 |
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Yes it's a coronavirus, no it's not the common cold. The common cold doesn't have a 14% fatality rate for people aged 80+. COVID-19 is not the ebola zombie apocalypse, but thousands of people have died, and thousands more will continue to die. Ironically, washing your hands of it is not helpful.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 13:40 |
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The only thing that can stop the coronavirus is to break its back, put it in camel clutch, beat the gently caress out of it. Works Cited the_ironsheik. (2020, March 4). I BREAK THE CORONAVIRUS BACK PUT IT IN CAMEL CLUTCH BEAT THE gently caress OUT OF IT [Tweet]. https://twitter.com/the_ironsheik/status/1235180573594877953
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 13:43 |
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HerStuddMuffin posted:The flu kills an order of magnitude or two more, yearly, without the world freaking out. The coronavirus family causes a respiratory disease colloquially known as the common cold, that’s not my fault. Sure the flu kills way more, that's because the flu had already spread worldwide. If as many people got sars2 as flu, the former would most probably handily beat the latter in yearly deaths. We can't stop flu from going global each year for diverse reasons, but it is in our best interest to prevent sars2 from becoming pandemic. Saying it "goes around China" is disingenuous at this point, it has long since left that country and started spreading overseas. Also as said, sars/sars2 and mers don't cause "the common cold". There is a reason COVID-19 exists, it's the term to designate the disease sars2 engenders.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 14:18 |
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HerStuddMuffin posted:The flu kills an order of magnitude or two more, yearly, without the world freaking out. The coronavirus family causes a respiratory disease colloquially known as the common cold, that’s not my fault. what if there was a virus that only infected people who think they're smarter than every public health organization in the world
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 14:28 |
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Bullets have killed more people than atomic bombs and that’s why nuclear disarmament is a distraction.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 14:31 |
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Lutha Mahtin posted:what if there was a virus that only infected people who think they're smarter than every public health organization in the world In the modern era we call that Measles.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 15:07 |
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No, that one kills the moron's kids
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 15:10 |
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Fathis Munk posted:Sure the flu kills way more, that's because the flu had already spread worldwide. If as many people got sars2 as flu, the former would most probably handily beat the latter in yearly deaths. Yes it is a real disease that really kills real people and it’s really tragic, but things do need to be kept in perspective and at the end of the day it’s just an overblown cold, and the common cold also kills real old and real sick real people every year, except in complete obscurity.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 15:17 |
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I feel like if there was a threatening new disease that might end up even a fraction as nasty as flu, it would actually be kind of a big deal.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 15:25 |
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Governments all over the world have public health and flu shot campaigns every year and all of them are aware of the public health implications flu has. The difference is that we cannot prevent the globalization of flu anymore. There is a difference between already established diseases and a newly emergent one where we still have a chance to try and contain it before it becomes just another yearly killer. Also once more, covid19 is not just the common cold, just as flu is not a common cold.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 15:28 |
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HerStuddMuffin posted:My point isn’t that the flu kills orders of magnitude more every year, it is that it kills orders of magnitude more, every year, without every news organization and government in the world tripping over themselves to make it sound like the Black Death had Ebola’s love child. Your point seems to be that you're dumb as hell. The common cold has nothing like mortality rate of covid-19, not even close. When was the last time a 33 year old died of the common cold with no other health complications? annually in the UK 600 people die from flu. At the high estimate of 2% mortality rate then covid-19 would need to infect 30,000 people, at the low end (0.8%) that would be 75,000 people to hit 600 deaths. These are not big numbers when looking at the issues with controlling the spread. especially if they could be prevented. Aramoro has a new favorite as of 16:08 on Mar 4, 2020 |
# ? Mar 4, 2020 15:58 |
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Akshually the common cold doesn't have a mortality rate at all because it's a catch-all term that contains various different diseases.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 16:01 |
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The common cold is like the Trinity.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 16:34 |
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Actually I've changed my mind, I agree with the weirdo, this is all a conspiracy by Big Soap to push handwashing on us all and cause imbalances in our bodily humours.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 19:10 |
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We're starting to see outlook is very dependent on hospital capacity and most of the fatalities came when Wuhan facilities were overstressed. Other Chinese provinces and the other countries starting to break out have seen mortality closer to an average cold. If you read between the lines here it's not really good news though. If there's a real outbreak in the US it's going to be apocalyptic given how the hospital system is sized, priced, and utilized.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 19:59 |
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Platystemon posted:Bullets have killed more people than atomic bombs and that’s why nuclear disarmament is a distraction. This is a great line which I am going to steal and re-use in offline conversations to make myself sound smarter. Thanks.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 20:03 |
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Yeah, let’s just shelve the derail for a couple of months until the panic has died down and covid-19 has gone the way of SARS, the swine flu, and countless others before it. I’m sure the alarmist idiots will be very quick to congratulate themselves for stopping what undoubtedly would have been the next Spanish flu if not for their heroic efforts
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 21:47 |
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Whatever gets you to stop posting
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 22:00 |
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HerStuddMuffin posted:Yeah, let’s just shelve the derail for a couple of months until the panic has died down and covid-19 has gone the way of SARS, the swine flu, and countless others before it. I’m sure the alarmist idiots will be very quick to congratulate themselves for stopping what undoubtedly would have been the next Spanish flu if not for their heroic efforts What, you think someone would come into this thread and act incredibly smug? Surely not.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 22:42 |
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Pastry of the Year posted:The only thing that can stop the coronavirus is to break its back, put it in camel clutch, beat the gently caress out of it. gently caress me rigid this guy's a pro follow.
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# ? Mar 4, 2020 22:43 |
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HerStuddMuffin posted:Yeah, let’s just shelve the derail for a couple of months until the panic has died down and covid-19 has gone the way of SARS, the swine flu, and countless others before it. I’m sure the alarmist idiots will be very quick to congratulate themselves for stopping what undoubtedly would have been the next Spanish flu if not for their heroic efforts Tell us how you feel about the Y2K problem.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 01:03 |
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Ah yes, it's good that sars just decided to give up on its own without human precautions taken to stop it spreading. It's also good that avian and swine flus just don't do anything, without us having to monitor, vaccinate and cull infected animals. Really, viral pandemics aren't so bad are they. Maybe we should just ignore them and roll the dice!
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 08:34 |
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I work with the public, and I've heard a bunch of people say that they thought the virus is probably worse than is being reported in the media. From coworkers also. Never underestimate people's distrust of the media and willingness to accept conspiracy theories. I'm saying you could talk all you want with percentages and stats about the regular ol flu and how the virus isn't so bad and you wouldn't shift a lot of people's minds at all. Teriyaki Hairpiece has a new favorite as of 09:09 on Mar 5, 2020 |
# ? Mar 5, 2020 09:06 |
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HerStuddMuffin posted:Yeah, let’s just shelve the derail for a couple of months until the panic has died down and covid-19 has gone the way of SARS, the swine flu, and countless others before it. I’m sure the alarmist idiots will be very quick to congratulate themselves for stopping what undoubtedly would have been the next Spanish flu if not for their heroic efforts Swine flu infected a more than a tenth of the planet and killed hundreds of thousands of people, and covid-19 has a death rate orders of magnitude higher. I honestly don't know what point you're trying to make here, if covid-19 reaches anywhere near the spread of swine flu it will kill millions.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 10:20 |
Is there a name for the phenomena where a serious problem is discovered -> it hits the media and the general public gets concerned -> people like HSM say things like "why are you worried, remember the last time there was something like this and nothing happened?" -> a poo poo ton of resources and labor go into stopping the problem or mitigating the worst outcomes so the most serious predicted effects don't happen -> people like HSM say "See? I was right all along, you stupid panicking sheeple. "? Disease outbreaks are the most common example, but Y2K is probably the most well known. (With ozone depletion/the CFC ban as a dark horse. Climate denialists love to drop "Remember when the ozone layer was going to disappear?") Theris has a new favorite as of 11:45 on Mar 5, 2020 |
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 11:41 |
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It’s like not helping the boy who cried wolf because he cried wolf month and didn’t get eaten. Nevermind that that’s because the village rallied to defend the boy and the wolf’s pelt is currently on display in city hall. Acid rain is another instance that comes up frequently.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 12:13 |
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Theris posted:
Yeah. I entered the workforce as a programmer in the late 90s so I was there for the Y2K compliance testing and stuff. Sure enough the famous millennium bug was never going to cause a Mad Max-style collapse of civilization [1] but as anyone with an actual clue knows it would have been a hell of a lot more expensive and disruptive to not do anything in preparation and just clean up any messes afterwards. [1] Even two decades later we're still years and years of more environmental degradation away from that; Rome wasn't burned in a day.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 13:19 |
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Guys, it's fine. Trump says it's fine and we should all keep going to work and there's nothing to worry about. It's fine.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 15:36 |
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This isn't fine. https://twitter.com/finicalgal/status/1235147497758052352
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 16:00 |
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A virus is like a D&D random encounter list. Roll d100, results 1-35 gives you measles, 36-62 is whooping cough etc.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 16:21 |
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I think I or someone asks this every few months in this thread, but why do pie charts exist? Has anyone ever looked at a pie chart and said "yeah that's an accurate and cool representation of facts?"
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 16:56 |
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zedprime posted:I think I or someone asks this every few months in this thread, but why do pie charts exist? Has anyone ever looked at a pie chart and said "yeah that's an accurate and cool representation of facts?" If you're looking at portions of a whole that makes sense.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 16:57 |
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They basically shouldn't exist. But they're fine when percent-of-total data are super clear anyway (still inferior to a bar chart but fine), maybe kind of aesthetically simpler and bolder looking for an advertisement or whatever if the labels are simple. Not sure about that but maybe.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 17:01 |
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Pie charts are best for when you're more concerned with categories as fractions of the whole than their size relative to each other. It's easier to visualise "this segment is about a third", "this is about a fifth" etc with a pie chart than bars.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 17:10 |
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Nenonen posted:A virus is like a D&D random encounter list. Roll d100, results 1-35 gives you measles, 36-62 is whooping cough etc. I'd also think that "coming into contact" means very different things for, say, SARS vs HIV.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 17:36 |
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Yes,sure, we all went to middle school and learned pie charts show portions of a whole. What business, social, or scientific concepts are we only concerned with portions of a whole? Out of those, which have distributions that make you really interested in comparing slice sizes in a way histograms are harder to make your point? That is no cheating and saying elections those pie charts are some of the most deceptively useless.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 17:40 |
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zedprime posted:Yes,sure, we all went to middle school and learned pie charts show portions of a whole. There are some that are useful. For example, here's a single image that shows both a proper time to use a pie chart and a bad execution of it. The pie charts show total wealth in each of these three countries, by quintile: the US, where the top quintile has 84% of wealth; Sweden, where the top quintile has 36%; and a hypothetical country where everyone has exactly equal wealth. It's a good time to use a pie chart to help people visually see the differences between these three scenarios and help them pick preferences, which was the point. The USA one and the hypothetical equality one are both good and visually clear. The Sweden one is a huge mess because for some bizarre reason the slices are all mixed up so they don't go in an order that makes sense.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 17:57 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 22:24 |
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Pie charts are good for showing which percentage of pie charts that look like PacMan. It's around 75%.
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# ? Mar 5, 2020 17:58 |