Which horse film is your favorite? This poll is closed. |
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Black Beauty | 2 | 1.06% | |
A Talking Pony!?! | 4 | 2.13% | |
Mr. Hands 2x Apple Flavor | 117 | 62.23% | |
War Horse | 11 | 5.85% | |
Mr. Hands | 54 | 28.72% | |
Total: | 188 votes |
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Sir John Falstaff posted:Right, but then it's a simple probation. I'm not sure there's a need for the intervening "please support your argument for why those people shouldn't have been parents in the first place," but if there is then I see a problem with the implementation. Naw I get what you're saying, and it's something we're aware of and discussing. For the time being the system seems to be working though even aside from these edge cases. For reference, I wouldn't have expected an argument in this case so much as a possible "sorry wrong forum" or "sorry just venting" which is the sort of thing I would take into consideration, almost certainly because I'm too nice
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# ? Jan 13, 2022 21:59 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 02:30 |
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VitalSigns posted:Make jobs pay people enough to raise a family on one income if they want, also make the government pay everyone enough to raise a family even if they don't work Yeah, that's a solution, but the argument being made is that parents are worthy of criticism for needing schools to watch their kids during the day. The fact that a society is possible that doesn't require both parents to work and somewhere to watch their kids doesn't mean that the parents can make that happen, so saying "you don't deserve to have kids because some other society that you don't live in can watch kids full time" is a bullshit argument. Parents have zero practical control over the economic system of the country they live in.
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# ? Jan 13, 2022 22:31 |
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Epic High Five posted:Naw I get what you're saying, and it's something we're aware of and discussing. For the time being the system seems to be working though even aside from these edge cases. FWIW I think the new process is a definite improvement. previously it definitely seemed to me like differing opinions were getting dogpiled in D&D, especially pessimistic posting. which is weird because the pessimists have been unquestionably closer to the mark on COVID and the failure of American/global governmental responses over the past 2 years.
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# ? Jan 13, 2022 22:32 |
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FistEnergy posted:FWIW I think the new process is a definite improvement. previously it definitely seemed to me like differing opinions were getting dogpiled in D&D, especially pessimistic posting. which is weird because the pessimists have been unquestionably closer to the mark on COVID and the failure of American/global governmental responses over the past 2 years. Glad to hear it! I personally agree. I'll drop this discussion for now since it's not COVID related, but with a reminder to catalogue any ideas/thoughts you have for the next round of feedback, and if you feel something is critical or would be an immediate improvement, to PM a mod
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# ? Jan 13, 2022 22:36 |
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Fritz the Horse posted:That's the moderation guideline right now - you can make any argument you like, but you need to be prepared to support it. I called out that part because I agree with you, the poster should defend it. After a few hours, they did not reply, so I issued them a day long probation. Thanks for the explanation
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# ? Jan 13, 2022 22:38 |
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Wang Commander posted:I think a better vaccine program would be able to do a lot more than we're willing to admit, but the costs would be massive and a lot of it would end up going straight down a drain. It's certainly closer to feasible than any of the camps. We came drat close to defeating covid with a sterilizing vaccine administered during a trough and were only thwarted by a refusal to mandate, continue at least some NPIs temporarily, and a refusal to acknowledge waning for early vaccinees. We still refuse to admit the necessity of boosting every 0.5-3 months depending on the waning study you're looking at that day. Hi there Wang Commander, are you actually saying that people need to be posted as much as twice a month? Or are you talking about initial doses, or perhaps making a joke related to your 30 boosters?
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# ? Jan 13, 2022 23:16 |
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And sidenote, the supreme court states that any mandate now needs to be done by Congress and Biden cannot unilaterally force it by executive action unless those jobs already had other mandated vaccinations. How do you propose doing any widespread vaccine mandate when it looks like it needs to pass the senate to be able to happen, and likely will still be blocked by the courts for at least 6 months?
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# ? Jan 13, 2022 23:24 |
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UCS Hellmaker posted:And sidenote, the supreme court states that any mandate now needs to be done by Congress and Biden cannot unilaterally force it by executive action unless those jobs already had other mandated vaccinations. I mean, "Let the Supreme Court enforce their ban" seems like a good idea to me. Not exactly a realistic idea, but it's an idea.
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# ? Jan 13, 2022 23:27 |
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ZarquonHigardi posted:I mean, "Let the Supreme Court enforce their ban" seems like a good idea to me. Not exactly a realistic idea, but it's an idea. Doesn't seem like much of an idea--"let the Biden Administration enforce its mandate" also is an option. If OSHA actually tried to assess a penalty against a company when SCOTUS has already invalidated the mandate, the company would just go to court and win.
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# ? Jan 13, 2022 23:32 |
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Sir John Falstaff posted:Doesn't seem like much of an idea--"let the Biden Administration enforce its mandate" also is an option. If OSHA actually tried to assess a penalty against a company when SCOTUS has already invalidated the mandate, the company would just go to court and win. Yeah, sorry, I know it would never work, as someone with a million comorbities I'm just being snippy about a terrible ruling from some rather terrible people.
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# ? Jan 13, 2022 23:37 |
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Henrik Zetterberg posted:Yeah, I've definitely picked up on this in here and just ignore it. Also stopped reading this thread every day because of all the doom-posting. Aaaaand the staff tested positive Woooooo! gently caress
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 00:49 |
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Professor Beetus posted:Hi there Wang Commander, are you actually saying that people need to be posted as much as twice a month? Or are you talking about initial doses, or perhaps making a joke related to your 30 boosters? Unfortunately there are in fact studies showing the third dose takes a week to kick in and is waning at five weeks with Omicron. If you're using the vaccines to reduce transmission the difference between 45 and 70% against infection is huge! https://twitter.com/kallmemeg/status/1474072056878804992?t=RcvzjeEaUS-gH31izkUNnQ&s=19 That's a tweet of the relevant chart from this briefing: https://t.co/lOqLhRGaU4
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 01:17 |
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Wang Commander posted:Unfortunately there are in fact studies showing the third dose takes a week to kick in and is waning at five weeks with Omicron. If you're using the vaccines to reduce transmission the difference between 45 and 70% against infection is huge! Immediately following the charts in the document is the disclaimer: quote:These results should be interpreted with caution due to the low counts and the possible biases
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 03:08 |
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https://twitter.com/arstechnica/status/1481034947506982914?s=20 https://twitter.com/CarlosdelRio7/status/1481670762658504705?s=20 Get your 2020 Republican talking points over here. They may be old and you may remember them as being too spicy but we’ve repackaged them to go down smoothly for all you liberal and democrats out there. Get your 2020 Republican talking points, only costs your dignity…
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 04:51 |
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Raere posted:Immediately following the charts in the document is the disclaimer: I hear you but that's true of pretty much everything with a novel virus that's only emerged in the last 6 weeks
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 05:46 |
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I think that for the sake of people's mental health that it's a good idea to not pay attention to the daily numbers for a month or two. Of course you should still be cautious as poo poo and mask, social distance and get vaccinated for your physical health
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 09:13 |
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lol yea stick to the horrific stories like thisquote:People don't die with diarrhoea - not in Australia. We are a developed country. We are ranked 6th in the world for life expectancy. The family called 3 times for an ambulance and were told each time they could not spare an ambulance to get to them. They didn't say why but we all know why. It's the same reason there are no apples on the shelves. They tell the family to get in their car and drive to the ED. He arrests in the car on his way to the hospital. He cannot be resuscitated. not trying to say you shouldn't take a break if you need it tho. also perth has +1 case today, kid who was in home quarantine already
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 10:40 |
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Well, in the UK, cases seems to have peaked and are turning down, though too early to say what the baseline they'll drop to, and also hospitilisations for people suffering primarily from covid have even started to drop in London and places infect first, so it's not entirely unreasonable that the US peak is a few more weeks away.
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 11:18 |
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Weasling Weasel posted:Well, in the UK, cases seems to have peaked and are turning down, though too early to say what the baseline they'll drop to, and also hospitilisations for people suffering primarily from covid have even started to drop in London and places infect first, so it's not entirely unreasonable that the US peak is a few more weeks away. just in time for the super bowl lmao
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 13:29 |
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Okay, so this question might be tangentially relevant for the thread, so I'll just drop it here. Maybe someone has something interesting to share. For a work-related (virtual) conference I'm asked to drum up a speaker. We are looking for someone with a background in epidemiology, or a statistician, or any model researcher, to tell a bunch of actuaries how the models work that predict COVID curves. Like, what flavors are there, what parameters and assumptions go in there, how are they validated, how well do they work, and so forth. The background is that the companies attending the conference all have actuaries who have tried themselves to assess how COVID will affect various insurances. However, they typically have no relevant experience. So for many companies, assessing the effects of COVID on their business has been more or less guesswork. We would like someone with COVID modelling experience to show them how these models work. Maybe that can spark some inspiration in some attendees for the next crisis. From my past experience in research, PhD students can often be motivated to talk about their work under the broad umbrealla of science outreach and personal networking (and if it's physical, a nice lunch). The format shouldn't be too challenging, it'd be a very informal workshop session. But I don't know what discipline to look for exactly and I'm hesitant to just cold-call a bunch of principal investigators or health departments who might have their hands full. Anyone know where best to start?
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 15:10 |
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virtualboyCOLOR posted:Get your 2020 Republican talking points over here. They may be old and you may remember them as being too spicy but we’ve repackaged them to go down smoothly for all you liberal and democrats out there. How are statements about a variant identified less than two months ago equivalent to Republican talking points from 2020? Do explain.
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 15:20 |
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tagesschau posted:How are statements about a variant identified less than two months ago equivalent to Republican talking points from 2020? Do explain. Covid is discovered in late 2019….republicans say to just let it runs its course. Covid variant is discovered late 2021…Dems say might as well let it run its course. I guess there is a SLIGHT difference. Also why does the a “variant” suddenly change the situation? I’ve seen a lot of “well it’s a variant” defense come up from Dem-sphere and it doesn’t make sense to me. Let’s say it’s a brand new pandemic entirely. How does that suddenly mean the Dems should be given a pass for their lack of response vs republicans lack of response in 2020?
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 15:27 |
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virtualboyCOLOR posted:I’ve seen a lot of “well it’s a variant” defense come up from Dem-sphere and it doesn’t make sense to me. You think R0 is completely irrelevant, and has no bearing on the truth of the 2019/2020 statements versus the 2021/2022 statements? Especially when omicron is one of the more infectious diseases ever measured? And you really should internalize the fact that the president cannot fail to do something he cannot do in the first place. You keep insisting that Joe Biden should just go in and mandate masking everywhere in Florida, for instance, even though he has no legal or practical power to do so.
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 15:38 |
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Denmark - 14 January 2022 I think I will be moving most of the older data to a Google Sheet or something soon. The Children are Burning: Last 7 days cases ( on each of 14 Jan - 13 Jan - 12 Jan - 11 Jan - 10 Jan - 07 Jan) split into three age groups so I don't have massive tables: 0-19 years 36.5% - 35.6% - 34.2% - 31.8% - 30.1% - 27% 20-39 years 33.8% - 34.7% - 36.1% - 38.2% - 39.1% - 40% 40+ years 29.8% - 29.7% - 29.6% - 30.0% - 30.7% - 33% So apparently as kids are getting it, ICU is clearing out. 60 COVID beds are the lowest in a month. pre:Table 1. Denmark Covid Cases reported per day (not on day tested!!!) ----------------------------------- Jan 14 23,614 new cases, 1519 reinfections, 215 new hospitalizations (757 total), 60 ICU (-4), 36 Vent (-2), 15 dead , 156 psych w/covid Jan 13 25,751 new cases, 1822 reinfections, 194 new hospitalizations (755 total), 64 ICU (-9), 38 Vent (-8), 20 dead , 153 psych w/covid Jan 12 24,343 new cases, 1614 reinfections, 215 new hospitalizations (751 total), 73 ICU (0), 46 Vent (0), 25 dead , 138 psych w/covid Jan 11 22,936 new cases, 1459 reinfections, 181 new hospitalizations (754 total), 73 ICU (-1), 46 Vent (-1), 14 dead , 136 psych w/covid Jan 10 14,414 new cases, 941 reinfections, 156 new hospitalizations (777 total), 74 ICU (-3), 47 Vent (-3), 9 dead Jan 09 19,248 new cases, 1327 reinfections, 126 new hospitalizations (723 total), 77 ICU (-1), 50 Vent (-2), 14 dead Jan 08 12,588 new cases, 984 reinfections, 161 new hospitalizations (730 total), 78 ICU (0), 52 Vent (-1), 28 dead Jan 07 18,261 new cases, 1482 reinfections, 186 new hospitalizations (755 total), 78 ICU (-4), 53 Vent (+4), 10 dead Jan 06 25,995 new cases, 2027 reinfections, 161 new hospitalizations (756 total), 82 ICU (+2), 47 Vent (-2), 11 dead Jan 05 28,283 new cases, 2083 reinfections, 204 new hospitalizations (784 total), 80 ICU (+3), 49 Vent (+2), 15 dead <-- NYE + Xmas ow Jan 04* 23,372 new cases, 1701 reinfections, 229 new hospitalizations (792 total), 77 ICU (+4), 47 Vent (+1), 15 dead <-- spike in hospital wow Jan 03* 8,801 new cases, 532 reinfections, 169 new hospitalizations (770 total), 73 ICU (-3), 46 Vent (-4), 5 dead Jan 02 7,550 new cases, 404 reinfections, 163 new hospitalizations (709 total), 76 ICU (+3), 50 Vent (+1), 15 dead Jan 01 20,885 new cases, 1049 reinfections, 139 new hospitalizations (647 total), 73 ICU (+0), 49 Vent (+0), 5 dead Dec 31 17,605 new cases, 1090 reinfections, 177 new hospitalizations (641 total), 73 ICU (-2), 49 Vent (-1), 11 dead Dec 30 21,403 new cases, 1123 reinfections, 178 new hospitalizations (665 total), 75 ICU (-2), 50 Vent (-2), 9 dead Dec 29 23,228 new cases, 1205 reinfections, 173 new hospitalizations (675 total), 77 ICU (+6), 52 Vent (+2), 16 dead Dec 28 13,000 new cases, 670 reinfections, 177 new hospitalizations (666 total), 71 ICU (+1), 50 Vent (+4), 14 dead Dec 27 16,164 new cases, 639 reinfections, 115 new hospitalizations (608 total), 70 ICU (-1), 46 Vent (-2), 7 dead Dec 26 14,844 new cases, 644 reinfections, 123 new hospitalizations (579 total), 71 ICU (-2), 43 Vent (+1), 13 dead Dec 25 10,027 new cases, 463 reinfections, 86 new hospitalizations (522 total), 73 ICU (-1), 44 Vent (+5), 10 dead Dec 24 11,229 new cases, 527 reinfections, 134 new hospitalizations (509 total), 74 ICU (+2), 39 vent (+1), 14 dead Dec 23 12,487 new cases, 613 reinfections, 158 new hospitalizations (541 total), 72 ICU (+6), 38 vent (+1), 15 dead Dec 22 13,386 new cases, 531 reinfections, 126 new hospitalizations (524 total), 66 ICU (-1), 37 vent (+2), 14 dead Dec 21 13,558 new cases, 501 reinfections, 121 new hospitalizations (526 total), 67 ICU (+1), 35 vent (+2), 17 dead Dec 20 10,082 new cases, (no reinf. data), 85 new hospitalizations (581 total), 66 ICU (+3), 33 vent (-2), 8 dead Dec 19 8,212 new cases Dec 18 8,594 new cases Dec 17 11,194 new cases Dec 16 9,999 new cases Dec 15 8,773 new cases, ??? reinfections, 96 new hospitalizations (508 total), 66 ICU (+0), 43 vent (-3), 9 dead Dec 13 7,799 new cases, ??? reinfections, 61 new hospitalizations (480 total), 64 ICU (-1), 42 vent (0), 9 dead Dec 12 5,989 new cases, ??? reinfections, 82 new hospitalizations (468 total), 65 ICU (+5), 42 vent (+6), 9 dead Dec 08 6,629 new cases, ??? reinfections, 72 new hospitalizations (461 total), 66 ICU (-1), 38 vent (-1), 7 dead Dec 01 5,120 new cases, ??? reinfections, 88 new hospitalizations (439 total), 35 ICU (+1), 35 vent (+1), 14 dead pre:Jan 13 11,077 (partial) Jan 12 22,445 Jan 11 22,648 Jan 10 23,244 Jan 09 16,329 Jan 08 13,573 Jan 07 14,431 Jan 06 15,415 Jan 05 17,577 Jan 04 23,697 Jan 03 25,618 Jan 02 19,905 Jan 01 8,630 Dec 31 9,727 Dec 30 19,226 Dec 29 17,244 Dec 28 21,955 Dec 27 22,616 Dec 26 10,966 Dec 25 7,853 Dec 24 7,054 pre:Table 3: ICU status (reported biweekly) ------------------------------ 03 January 331 ICU beds, 76 COVID, 32 available 27 December 316 ICU beds, 71 COVID, 62 available 20 December 317 ICU beds, 60 COVID, 59 available 13 December 319 ICU beds, 64 COVID, 39 available 06 December 310 ICU beds, 67 COVID, 10 available <-- squeaky bum time here 29 November 318 ICU beds, 61 COVID, 25 available pre:Table 4. Rates per 100,000 Unvaccinated Partial Full Unvaccinated Partial Full 14 JAN New cases: 435.1 416.8 324.5 Hospitalizations: 40.7 34.7 10.0 13 JAN New cases: 497.6 531.1 354.2 Hospitalizations: 41.0 38.3 9.8 12 JAN New cases: 474.2 457.2 333.0 Hospitalizations: 49.4 35.0 10.0 11 JAN New cases: 447.9 434.8 303.3 Hospitalizations: 40.3 34.9 10.1 10 JAN New cases: 292.3 276.6 192.2 Hospitalizations: 42.8 34.8 10.3 09 JAN New cases: 403.6 367.3 276.6 Hospitalizations: 40.6 35.3 9.4 08 JAN New cases: 264.2 245.5 186.6 Hospitalizations: 39.7 31.3 9.8 07 JAN New cases: 413.9 365.6 272.3 Hospitalizations: 41.3 30.6 10.2 06 JAN New cases: 566.3 561.1 398.6 Hospitalizations: 40.4 33.9 10.3 05 JAN New cases: 586.9 576.8 445.9 Hospitalizations: 43.0 30.6 10.5 04 JAN* New cases: 512.2 533.3 390.8 Hospitalizations: 43.6 28.9 11.0 03 JAN* New cases: 165.6 153.7 135.7 Hospitalizations: 42.2 23.4 10.5 02 JAN New cases: 152.8 150.7 124.7 Hospitalizations: 41.4 18.7 9.5 01 JAN New cases: 437.8 413.6 331.2 Hospitalizations: 38.6 18.4 8.6 31 DEC New cases: 341.1 334.2 300.2 Hospitalizations: 37.8 20.7 8.6 30 DEC New cases: 409.2 391.5 345.5 Hospitalizations: 39.4 21.1 8.9 29 DEC New cases: 443.6 446.0 377.4 Hospitalizations: 40.1 18.5 9.1 28 DEC New cases: 237.3 208.2 210.2 Hospitalizations: 40.5 16.9 8.6 27 DEC New cases: 304.4 324.9 263.3 Hospitalizations: 40.0 15.8 7.8 26 DEC New cases: 310.4 274.9 241.2 Hospitalizations: 39.0 15.4 7.3 25 DEC New cases: 181.6 162.1 161.5 Hospitalizations: 33.9 16.0 6.8 24 DEC New cases: 184.1 173.0 182.1 Hospitalizations: 34.5 14.9 7.1 23 DEC New cases: 237.1 202.6 197.9 Hospitalizations: 35.4 16.2 7.5 22 DEC New cases: 257.1 198.1 211.7 Hospitalizations: 34.2 15.3 7.3 21 DEC New cases: 270.1 226.2 207.8 Hospitalizations: 32.9 14.3 7.5 20 DEC New cases: 201.2 154.4 149.0 Hospitalizations: 34.0 15.6 7.7 17 DEC New cases: 252.1 199.3 172.9 Hospitalizations: 31.0 14.9 6.8 15 DEC New cases: 216.0 153.3 121.6 Hospitalizations: 31.3 11.7 6.7 13 DEC New cases: 215.3 131.3 100.8 Hospitalizations: 29.8 11.5 6.6 08 DEC New cases: 193.5 126.9 80.9 Hospitalizations: 27.5 8.7 6.5 01 DEC New cases: 162.4 102.1 59.84 Hospitalizations: 24.6 11.3 6.1 25 NOV New cases: 134.7 120.9 52.97 Hospitalizations: 21.9 7.2 5.9 pre:1.77% on 1 December 4.8% on 6 December 10% on 8 December 22% on 12 December 37% on 14 December 50% on 17 December 60% on 20 December 70% on 21 December 74% on 22 December 81% on 24 December 84% on 26 December 86% on 27 December 92% on 29 December 93.6% on 01 January 96% on 07 January Sources: https://covid19.ssi.dk/overvagningsdata/download-fil-med-overvaagningdata https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/242ec2acc014456295189631586f1d26 https://covid19.ssi.dk/virusvarianter/delta-pcr Rust Martialis fucked around with this message at 15:50 on Jan 14, 2022 |
# ? Jan 14, 2022 15:45 |
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oops wrong thread
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 15:49 |
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tagesschau posted:You think R0 is completely irrelevant, and has no bearing on the truth of the 2019/2020 statements versus the 2021/2022 statements? Especially when omicron is one of the more infectious diseases ever measured? This sounds an awful lot like “it’s (D)ifferent”. The initial version of Covid was also contagious which is why (incredibly flimsy) lockdowns were in place, mask mandates were in place, and distant learning was in place. The goal was to flatten the curve. Why are we not doing those same measures with an even MORE infectious variant that is overwhelming the healthcare system and causing an estimated 1 American to die every minute (going by 7 day average)? I’ll also request the same thing of you that I did Vox: virtualboyCOLOR posted:Vox I noticed that your specialty in this forum appears to be shooting down idea of a functioning government. Can you provide details on how we could actually flatten the line of covid infections? Saying “not much more than he has” is an option but it also means Joe is a complete and utter failure culpable of letting Covid rip through the American public per his own words: https://youtu.be/IauHea4H0L0
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 15:50 |
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virtualboyCOLOR posted:This sounds an awful lot like “it’s (D)ifferent”. Yes, different things are different. I'm glad you agree. virtualboyCOLOR posted:The initial version of Covid was also contagious which is why (incredibly flimsy) lockdowns were in place, mask mandates were in place, and distant learning was in place. The goal was to flatten the curve. Why are we not doing those same measures with an even MORE infectious variant that is overwhelming the healthcare system and causing an estimated 1 American to die every minute (going by 7 day average)? Using the example of Florida again, it's because Ron DeSantis doesn't want to. You seem to think Joe Biden can overrule DeSantis, either legally or practically, with the stroke of a pen, but that is not a reality-based view. You seem to think government is automatically ineffective if it's not a dictatorship that does the things you personally want. I'm not going to join you in that delusion.
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 16:04 |
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tagesschau posted:Yes, different things are different. I'm glad you agree. Ok. I’m pretty sure DeSantis doesn’t prevent the Biden admin ensuring the CDC places KN95 or better mask guidance in place, as well as proper isolation guidance (with required testing), or classroom guidance recommending distance learning. Biden can also lead his party to implement measures in Dem controlled states. That’s not a dictatorship or whatever nonsense you are banging on about. Can you answer the second part of my post? “Can you provide details on how we could actually flatten the line of covid infections?”
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 16:22 |
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virtualboyCOLOR posted:Ok. I’m pretty sure DeSantis doesn’t prevent the Biden admin ensuring the CDC places KN95 or better mask guidance in place, as well as proper isolation guidance (with required testing), or classroom guidance recommending distance learning. Biden can also lead his party to implement measures in Dem controlled states. That’s not a dictatorship or whatever nonsense you are banging on about. The CDC and other governmental scientific bodies are supposed to take marching orders directly from the White House? What color Sharpie do you think the president should use for that purpose? And DeSantis and the legislature can absolutely stymie the implementation in Florida of all of the things you list above. Even in New York State, a number of counties and localities are outright defying public-health orders they disagree with. virtualboyCOLOR posted:Can you answer the second part of my post? What, the misdirection you threw in there so you could pretend you weren't getting your rear end handed to you on the bogus claim that the Democrats are recycling Republican talking points from the start of the pandemic? Sure, I guess. virtualboyCOLOR posted:“Can you provide details on how we could actually flatten the line of covid infections?” There's not a lot that can be meaningfully done in the face of intransigent state and local authorities who will fight effective measures every step of the way. Why do you think the responsibility for fixing this lies solely with the president, and what do you think he is failing to do to flatten the curve? (Remember that your answer is limited to the powers he actually has, not the ones you imagine.)
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 17:20 |
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tagesschau posted:The CDC and other governmental scientific bodies are supposed to take marching orders directly from the White House? What color Sharpie do you think the president should use for that purpose? The CDC already changed their rules on masks and isolation per the direction of the Biden admin. Your sharpie comment is unwarranted. quote:
You keep blaming DeSantis (and I assume other republican governors). What is stopping Biden from being the party leader and requesting Dem governors issue mask mandates and distance learning? quote:
This is uncalled for given then I had provided mitigation efforts that were done in 2020 that are not being completed in 2022. It seems you are moving to insults rather than addressing the points I am making. quote:
So what was Biden going on about here: https://twitter.com/JoeBiden/status/1322320377943527424?s=20 This doesn’t leave any wiggle room on where the buck stops. It appears you are saying there is nothing the Biden admin can do and covid must simply run its course. It sounds as if you are agreeing with Trump: https://youtu.be/5Cs_1iYWIhI vvvv fair enough. However when suggestions are presented and shot down without an alternative I take issue with that. It comes across as complaining instead looking for potential solutions. (USER WAS PUT ON PROBATION FOR THIS POST) virtualboyCOLOR fucked around with this message at 18:28 on Jan 14, 2022 |
# ? Jan 14, 2022 17:46 |
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Honestly, coming from the UK (which is a centralised government) and now living in Canada (which is set up similar to the US but has a way stronger federal government), the US seems pretty ungovernable. The states and even municipalities can pretty much do whatever the gently caress they like and everything is so politically partisan, one of your two main parties low-key believes it's a Chinese hoax still and is actively courting people who believe that the vaccine is the devils plan. How the hell do you deal with that? edit: also vbC, every single post you've made in this thread is some variant on 'and that's why the Dems and Biden Are Terrible.' Like we get it, they haven't done great, but you've been shoehorning it in even when people are talking about other countries that having nothing to do with the 'Dems'
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 18:04 |
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enki42 posted:I don't know what the proposed solution is supposed to be that makes the parents worthy of having children. Is the point that we need to force people to be housewives and / or househusbands again? Because I don't see any other option, and for the most part one persons salary can't support a family unless you're fairly well off anyway. many progressive offices allow dogs, and, frankly, my 5 year old is much better at self-monitoring than a loving dog could ever be. Give her markers, a dollhouse and an ipad, tell her she has to play with drawing and the dollhouse for 60 mins to earn 30 mins on the iPad, and she'll basically alternate these things indefinitely with very little input. She even goes to the bathroom by herself! "Kid friendly offices" are clearly a thing of the post-covid, post-functional-public-ed world. And then it'll be like, your office also teaches your kid, and so if you work at Google your kid gets a generally better but also much more fascist education than if you worked at Yahoo\!. Alctel posted:How the hell do you deal with that? This is less dealing with anything than preparing for the inevitable Cabbages and VHS fucked around with this message at 18:17 on Jan 14, 2022 |
# ? Jan 14, 2022 18:14 |
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Cabbages and Kings posted:many progressive offices allow dogs, and, frankly, my 5 year old is much better at self-monitoring than a loving dog could ever be. Give her markers, a dollhouse and an ipad, tell her she has to play with drawing and the dollhouse for 60 mins to earn 30 mins on the iPad, and she'll basically alternate these things indefinitely with very little input. She even goes to the bathroom by herself! I don't know if I'd consider "your child's education is now provided by a corporation" an aspirational vision of the future, exactly. Also, this is very much a solution for the computer toucher office crowd. No one's bringing their kids to Walmart or an Amazon warehouse.
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 18:21 |
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virtualboyCOLOR posted:What is stopping Biden from being the party leader and requesting Dem governors issue mask mandates and distance learning? Addressed above: tagesschau posted:Even in New York State, a number of counties and localities are outright defying public-health orders they disagree with. But since one example isn't good enough for you, I'll throw in two other anecdotes from blue states. The sheriff of the country's most populous county, in California, outright refused to enforce a vaccine mandate for his staff. The mayor of Chicago is insisting that in-person schooling resume. None of this stems from Biden's action or inaction. virtualboyCOLOR posted:This is uncalled for It's perfectly justified. You said the Democrats were recycling Republican talking points from 2020. I pointed out why that isn't the case. You then changed the subject. virtualboyCOLOR posted:It appears you are saying there is nothing the Biden admin can do and covid must simply run its course. What can the Biden administration do to stop community spread of COVID in places where the state, county, and/or municipal authorities have decided that attempts to mitigate it are either not required or banned? virtualboyCOLOR posted:It sounds as if you are agreeing with Trump If you're not paying attention, perhaps it does. Alctel posted:Canada (which is set up similar to the US but has a way stronger federal government) Canada's federal government is actually much weaker. There are certain powers that Congress can grab for itself that are explicitly reserved to the provinces in Canada.
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 18:27 |
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enki42 posted:I don't know if I'd consider "your child's education is now provided by a corporation" an aspirational vision of the future, exactly. Also, this is very much a solution for the computer toucher office crowd. No one's bringing their kids to Walmart or an Amazon warehouse.
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 18:33 |
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tagesschau posted:Addressed above: Biden has not lead his party to put mask mandates and distance learning in place. Your example of Chicago is a great one because Biden should be publicly calling out Lightfoot for her callous behavior. Also I seem to recall there were actions taken when desegregation was going on and local counties didn’t abide by the rules. Something about enforcement using tools within the executive branch. quote:
I pointed out that Dems are using the same language as the republicans in 2020 that everyone is going to get covid anyway. You have not addressed how it is different other than there is a variant. It is still a virus and we are still in a pandemic. This as pedantic as complaint about about someone typing the number 4 instead of the word four. quote:
I have already said he ISN’T even doing anything in states and counties with Dem control. It sounds as if you are saying there is absolutely nothing Biden can do. I have asked you for examples of what he can do and all you have done is put your hand up and said “he can’t do anything”. Offer solutions. virtualboyCOLOR fucked around with this message at 18:42 on Jan 14, 2022 |
# ? Jan 14, 2022 18:37 |
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tagesschau posted:
Yeah I guess that's true. It's easy to forget because the way congress is currently setup means that Eternal Deadlock is pretty much baked into the system now, while a federal majority government (or a minority government with support) in a Westminster system can do whatever it wants pretty much.
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 18:45 |
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Attention VBC and tagesschau: If you're going to keep repeating the same arguments ad nauseum maybe it's time for you both to take a break. It's feeling very circular.
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 18:47 |
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Uk cases finally dropped underneath 100,000 today. https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/details/cases?areaType=overview%26areaName=United%20Kingdom#card-cases_by_specimen_date It is very much looking like it's following the South Africa pattern now, with deaths still not really having increased massively. https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/details/deaths#card-daily_deaths_with_covid-19_on_the_death_certificate_by_date_of_death
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 18:53 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 02:30 |
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Cabbages and Kings posted:We maintain a 2 week supply of water, a 6 week supply of food, various medications and antibiotics, and I am in the process of buying an AK-47 to supplement the random firearms, bows and blades that we use to scare off large predators and deal with suspiciously friendly raccoons. Don’t forget the bug out bag. https://twitter.com/BNODesk/status/1481808963507265538?s=20 Almost at a million cases a day for the 7 day average. https://twitter.com/BNODesk/status/1481427790692036610?s=20 Hospitals are overwhelmed so we may also see folks die from diarrhea because there aren’t enough beds / resources.
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# ? Jan 14, 2022 18:56 |