Well august 6th & 9th 1945 are obvious omissions for starters.Hope you fact checked this.
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Well august 6th & 9th 1945 are obvious omissions for starters.Hope you fact checked this.
what do they mean by 'deadly' though?
more than 2,461 people died in america last tuesday. seems that on average, 8000 people die every day in the states anyway.
You know, really good, savage, amazingwhat do they mean by 'deadly' though?
So, has anyone got any well-written pieces that take a look at the countries who have done well vs those who don't?
I know people have been slicing the data all sorts of ways to suit all sorts of arguments, and the data is very imprecise worldwide because of different methodologies and reporting, but has anyone come across anything good written in what appears to be good faith?
Is it yeah?I was running numbers in my head the other day. The death rate per capita in the US is still half of the UK's at its worst. But the UK's worst was back in April. The US has had a lot more time to sort stuff out. I assume their death rate will only go up.
Fundamentally it is Trump and friends making things as bad as possible for the next guy. Now he's killing people for likes and retweets.
Near the beginning I remember reading an argument that you can’t really do a whole US per capita comparison with somewhere like the UK and Ireland because it’s such a large area. There are areas where Covid is burning through people and areas where it’s not really that bad (not sure how true that is now), and the per capita numbers average that out.Maybe that's a totally useless metric, I dunno. I can tell you, you were right to avoid the covid news.
I've a mate who works in a hospital on the west coast, not a medic but some sort of admin roll. He told me months ago that the government were only counting deaths where people had a confirmed positive rest, but not people who had pretty obviously died of but hadn't been testedHow well are the US taking the actual numbers though? The UK were only recording something like 75% or 80% the actual death toll, I think?
Right.I've a mate who works in a hospital on the west coast, not a medic but some sort of admin roll. He told me months ago that the government were only counting deaths where people had a confirmed positive rest, but not people who had pretty obviously died of but hadn't been tested
They call that excess deaths over here.
Kinda scary how grim April and May were, looking at this:
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