COVID-19 Megathread 6: Return of the Omicron
       |           

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
July 17, 2025, 08:06:45 AM
News: Election Calculator 3.0 with county/house maps is now live. For more info, click here

  Talk Elections
  General Politics
  U.S. General Discussion (Moderators: The Dowager Mod, Abolish ICE, Tokugawa Sexgod Ieyasu, Utilitarian Governance)
  COVID-19 Megathread 6: Return of the Omicron
« previous next »
Pages: 1 ... 379 380 381 382 383 [384] 385 386 387 388 389 ... 455
Poll
Question: ?
#1
Yes
 
#2
No
 
Show Pie Chart
Partisan results

Total Voters: 116

Author Topic: COVID-19 Megathread 6: Return of the Omicron  (Read 609319 times)
Calthrina950
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 15,913
United States


P P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9575 on: February 02, 2022, 09:57:15 AM »

Yeah I'll take their meta analysis as a data point, but maybe something that looks at some of the remaining 99.9% of the lockdown studies will have a different conclusion.

They do make reference to opposing research that argues the lockdowns did have an impact, and they note that mask mandates may have had some impact. But on balance, the authors of this analysis are of the viewpoint that the policies imposed were not worth the benefits which they conferred.
Logged
compucomp
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 1,603


P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9576 on: February 02, 2022, 10:12:12 AM »

Day 1 of no restrictions here in Denmark. Feels great. Case numbers are extremely high - more than 40k a day (10 times more than the peak last winter)- but basically nobody gets seriously sick from Omicron here. The total number of people in intensive care is now a paltry 28 persons and is now the lowest since october, which was pre-Omicron. Basically, we have had record high infections throughout january while at the very same time the number of infected in intensive care has fallen by 60%. This is because basically everybody who needed intensive care from COVID had the Delta variant and now that we basically only have Omicron nobody needs intensive care anymore. The remaining 28 are mostly NOT there because of their Omicron infection, but just happen to have it. This is even more pronounced when you look at deaths, where pretty much everyone currently registrered as dying from COVID is actually dying WITH COVID instead, unlike earlier in the pandemic.  

I have supported restrictions and mandates since the beginning, but people need to start to realize that the Omicron variant really isn't very dangerous and that we have ALL the medical tools to combat this disease now in vaccines and therapeutics (most notably Paxlovid from Pfizer). I have no idea why other countries aren't doing like Denmark and the UK at this point. I imagine it has to be right around the corner.

Also, from a political perspective, democrats are gonna get killed if they insist on heavy restrictions way after they cease to be necessary.

EDIT: Forgot to mention that all restrictions were dropped by a united parliament. All parties/groups in parliament supported it, from the far left to the far right.

Our situation is complicated by higher numbers of deaths we’re seeing. It’s not clear whether this is because of lower vaccination numbers, stronger presence of comorbidities, or other things, but it’s giving our leaders pause.

I suspect it is coming in the next few weeks, though. We’ve already seen public health leaders giving the signals.
NY seems to be doubling down on restrictions despite the fact that Omicron peaked here three weeks ago, and now we are basically at the same case levels as we had when this mask mandate was put into effect, supposedly just to stop the holiday surge


I feel like we are in a world of phantom restrictions where no restrictions are ever actually imposed but anti-restriction people feel like they are being imposed anyway.

I think this is because of a couple of factors; many people have responded to the pandemic by adapting their behavior and cancelled social events like holiday parties; NYC restaurants reported mass cancellations of reservations in December. Also, firms (particularly hospitality) have responded to reduced demand and staffing shortages by cutting hours or shutting down. To anti-restriction people particularly here, even though the government didn't do anything, it still feels like a "lockdown" to them and thus they complain about it as if it were one. The big difference, and I've made this point before, is that they are no longer complaining about an overreaching government, but instead attacking their fellow citizens for taking the virus seriously, which is both deplorable and decidedly anti-freedom.
Logged
Zohranism is OUR future
Forumlurker161
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 17,158


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9577 on: February 02, 2022, 10:14:13 AM »

It’s one thing to argue the lockdowns were not worth it. I argue they were worth it only in spring 2020 and areas with high hospitalization rates to the point of overflow from there on out. It’s another to day they didn’t not reduce the virus at all, that’s ridiculous and would need a TON of evidence for such a counterintuitive claim (and no comparing New stork and Florida in March 2020 is not sufficient evidence, Taco Boy)
Logged
Can't Bear
Russian Bear
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,721
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9578 on: February 02, 2022, 10:36:31 AM »

Actually I think they were unconstitutional, but I have a hard time swallowing that they didn't flatten the death curve at all.

 Flattening the curve ~ same'ish totals, but lower peak.

Quote
EXPLAINER: “Flattening the curve”

One way to present information about an outbreak or epidemic is to show in a graph the number of cases of infected people over time.
A very high curve is created by a steep increase in the number of cases per day, followed by a quick decrease in the number of cases. A flatter curve is created by a more gradual increase in the number of cases per day and a more gradual decrease. Over a long period of time the number of people infected might be around the same, but the difference is the number of cases that occur each day
https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/searo/thailand/2020-03-19-tha-sitrep-26-covid19.pdf?sfvrsn=6f433d5e_2#:~:text=A%20flatter%20curve%20is%20created,that%20occur%20each%20day.
Logged
Can't Bear
Russian Bear
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,721
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9579 on: February 02, 2022, 10:51:44 AM »

I think this is because of a couple of factors; many people have responded to the pandemic by adapting their behavior and cancelled social events like holiday parties;

So you're saying people knows best? Yes! It's exactly the "freedom" way. You provide people with information and recommendation, but trust their judgement, contrary to authoritative way, when you force people, because you think, Government knows better. And this meta-analysis indicates, that the "freedom" way worked.
Logged
MATTROSE94
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,791
Ukraine


Political Matrix
E: -5.29, S: -6.43

P P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9580 on: February 02, 2022, 11:12:57 AM »

Day 1 of no restrictions here in Denmark. Feels great. Case numbers are extremely high - more than 40k a day (10 times more than the peak last winter)- but basically nobody gets seriously sick from Omicron here. The total number of people in intensive care is now a paltry 28 persons and is now the lowest since october, which was pre-Omicron. Basically, we have had record high infections throughout january while at the very same time the number of infected in intensive care has fallen by 60%. This is because basically everybody who needed intensive care from COVID had the Delta variant and now that we basically only have Omicron nobody needs intensive care anymore. The remaining 28 are mostly NOT there because of their Omicron infection, but just happen to have it. This is even more pronounced when you look at deaths, where pretty much everyone currently registrered as dying from COVID is actually dying WITH COVID instead, unlike earlier in the pandemic.  

I have supported restrictions and mandates since the beginning, but people need to start to realize that the Omicron variant really isn't very dangerous and that we have ALL the medical tools to combat this disease now in vaccines and therapeutics (most notably Paxlovid from Pfizer). I have no idea why other countries aren't doing like Denmark and the UK at this point. I imagine it has to be right around the corner.

Also, from a political perspective, democrats are gonna get killed if they insist on heavy restrictions way after they cease to be necessary.

EDIT: Forgot to mention that all restrictions were dropped by a united parliament. All parties/groups in parliament supported it, from the far left to the far right.

Our situation is complicated by higher numbers of deaths we’re seeing. It’s not clear whether this is because of lower vaccination numbers, stronger presence of comorbidities, or other things, but it’s giving our leaders pause.

I suspect it is coming in the next few weeks, though. We’ve already seen public health leaders giving the signals.
NY seems to be doubling down on restrictions despite the fact that Omicron peaked here three weeks ago, and now we are basically at the same case levels as we had when this mask mandate was put into effect, supposedly just to stop the holiday surge


I feel like we are in a world of phantom restrictions where no restrictions are ever actually imposed but anti-restriction people feel like they are being imposed anyway.

I think this is because of a couple of factors; many people have responded to the pandemic by adapting their behavior and cancelled social events like holiday parties; NYC restaurants reported mass cancellations of reservations in December. Also, firms (particularly hospitality) have responded to reduced demand and staffing shortages by cutting hours or shutting down. To anti-restriction people particularly here, even though the government didn't do anything, it still feels like a "lockdown" to them and thus they complain about it as if it were one. The big difference, and I've made this point before, is that they are no longer complaining about an overreaching government, but instead attacking their fellow citizens for taking the virus seriously, which is both deplorable and decidedly anti-freedom.
I would say that about 30% of the population will continue to follow very strict COVID precautions indefinitely and that certain states (California, Oregon, Hawaii, Washington, DC, New York, and Illinois) and institutions (colleges, private businesses, etc.) will keep their respective COVID NPIs in place for the long term.

It is really up to people to judge their risk calculus regarding COVID at this point. My risk calculus is less than others, though I still wear an N95 at my job and in certain settings. During the pandemic, I have travelled, attended mass events, and eaten out indoors, though I understand that for others, those activities represent a risk to them.
Logged
emailking
Atlas Star
*****
Posts: 20,154
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9581 on: February 02, 2022, 11:15:35 AM »

Flattening the curve ~ same'ish totals, but lower peak.

I agree as a mathematical exercise you can flatten a curve without reducing the area underneath it, but the CDC's simulations showed flattening would take deaths (in 2020) from millions to hundreds of thousands.
Logged
หมูเด้ง
Angry_Weasel
Atlas Legend
*****
Posts: 42,057
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9582 on: February 02, 2022, 12:54:25 PM »

Day 1 of no restrictions here in Denmark. Feels great. Case numbers are extremely high - more than 40k a day (10 times more than the peak last winter)- but basically nobody gets seriously sick from Omicron here. The total number of people in intensive care is now a paltry 28 persons and is now the lowest since october, which was pre-Omicron. Basically, we have had record high infections throughout january while at the very same time the number of infected in intensive care has fallen by 60%. This is because basically everybody who needed intensive care from COVID had the Delta variant and now that we basically only have Omicron nobody needs intensive care anymore. The remaining 28 are mostly NOT there because of their Omicron infection, but just happen to have it. This is even more pronounced when you look at deaths, where pretty much everyone currently registrered as dying from COVID is actually dying WITH COVID instead, unlike earlier in the pandemic.  

I have supported restrictions and mandates since the beginning, but people need to start to realize that the Omicron variant really isn't very dangerous and that we have ALL the medical tools to combat this disease now in vaccines and therapeutics (most notably Paxlovid from Pfizer). I have no idea why other countries aren't doing like Denmark and the UK at this point. I imagine it has to be right around the corner.

Also, from a political perspective, democrats are gonna get killed if they insist on heavy restrictions way after they cease to be necessary.

EDIT: Forgot to mention that all restrictions were dropped by a united parliament. All parties/groups in parliament supported it, from the far left to the far right.

Our situation is complicated by higher numbers of deaths we’re seeing. It’s not clear whether this is because of lower vaccination numbers, stronger presence of comorbidities, or other things, but it’s giving our leaders pause.

I suspect it is coming in the next few weeks, though. We’ve already seen public health leaders giving the signals.
NY seems to be doubling down on restrictions despite the fact that Omicron peaked here three weeks ago, and now we are basically at the same case levels as we had when this mask mandate was put into effect, supposedly just to stop the holiday surge


I feel like we are in a world of phantom restrictions where no restrictions are ever actually imposed but anti-restriction people feel like they are being imposed anyway.

I think this is because of a couple of factors; many people have responded to the pandemic by adapting their behavior and cancelled social events like holiday parties; NYC restaurants reported mass cancellations of reservations in December. Also, firms (particularly hospitality) have responded to reduced demand and staffing shortages by cutting hours or shutting down. To anti-restriction people particularly here, even though the government didn't do anything, it still feels like a "lockdown" to them and thus they complain about it as if it were one. The big difference, and I've made this point before, is that they are no longer complaining about an overreaching government, but instead attacking their fellow citizens for taking the virus seriously, which is both deplorable and decidedly anti-freedom.
I would say that about 30% of the population will continue to follow very strict COVID precautions indefinitely and that certain states (California, Oregon, Hawaii, Washington, DC, New York, and Illinois) and institutions (colleges, private businesses, etc.) will keep their respective COVID NPIs in place for the long term.

It is really up to people to judge their risk calculus regarding COVID at this point. My risk calculus is less than others, though I still wear an N95 at my job and in certain settings. During the pandemic, I have travelled, attended mass events, and eaten out indoors, though I understand that for others, those activities represent a risk to them.

Same here. I wear masks when I am told and have gotten the booster the weekend before Thanksgiving. However, as soon as I was vaccinated, I stopped wearing masks.
Logged
MATTROSE94
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,791
Ukraine


Political Matrix
E: -5.29, S: -6.43

P P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9583 on: February 02, 2022, 04:27:01 PM »

Day 1 of no restrictions here in Denmark. Feels great. Case numbers are extremely high - more than 40k a day (10 times more than the peak last winter)- but basically nobody gets seriously sick from Omicron here. The total number of people in intensive care is now a paltry 28 persons and is now the lowest since october, which was pre-Omicron. Basically, we have had record high infections throughout january while at the very same time the number of infected in intensive care has fallen by 60%. This is because basically everybody who needed intensive care from COVID had the Delta variant and now that we basically only have Omicron nobody needs intensive care anymore. The remaining 28 are mostly NOT there because of their Omicron infection, but just happen to have it. This is even more pronounced when you look at deaths, where pretty much everyone currently registrered as dying from COVID is actually dying WITH COVID instead, unlike earlier in the pandemic.  

I have supported restrictions and mandates since the beginning, but people need to start to realize that the Omicron variant really isn't very dangerous and that we have ALL the medical tools to combat this disease now in vaccines and therapeutics (most notably Paxlovid from Pfizer). I have no idea why other countries aren't doing like Denmark and the UK at this point. I imagine it has to be right around the corner.

Also, from a political perspective, democrats are gonna get killed if they insist on heavy restrictions way after they cease to be necessary.

EDIT: Forgot to mention that all restrictions were dropped by a united parliament. All parties/groups in parliament supported it, from the far left to the far right.

Our situation is complicated by higher numbers of deaths we’re seeing. It’s not clear whether this is because of lower vaccination numbers, stronger presence of comorbidities, or other things, but it’s giving our leaders pause.

I suspect it is coming in the next few weeks, though. We’ve already seen public health leaders giving the signals.
NY seems to be doubling down on restrictions despite the fact that Omicron peaked here three weeks ago, and now we are basically at the same case levels as we had when this mask mandate was put into effect, supposedly just to stop the holiday surge


I feel like we are in a world of phantom restrictions where no restrictions are ever actually imposed but anti-restriction people feel like they are being imposed anyway.

I think this is because of a couple of factors; many people have responded to the pandemic by adapting their behavior and cancelled social events like holiday parties; NYC restaurants reported mass cancellations of reservations in December. Also, firms (particularly hospitality) have responded to reduced demand and staffing shortages by cutting hours or shutting down. To anti-restriction people particularly here, even though the government didn't do anything, it still feels like a "lockdown" to them and thus they complain about it as if it were one. The big difference, and I've made this point before, is that they are no longer complaining about an overreaching government, but instead attacking their fellow citizens for taking the virus seriously, which is both deplorable and decidedly anti-freedom.
I would say that about 30% of the population will continue to follow very strict COVID precautions indefinitely and that certain states (California, Oregon, Hawaii, Washington, DC, New York, and Illinois) and institutions (colleges, private businesses, etc.) will keep their respective COVID NPIs in place for the long term.

It is really up to people to judge their risk calculus regarding COVID at this point. My risk calculus is less than others, though I still wear an N95 at my job and in certain settings. During the pandemic, I have travelled, attended mass events, and eaten out indoors, though I understand that for others, those activities represent a risk to them.

Same here. I wear masks when I am told and have gotten the booster the weekend before Thanksgiving. However, as soon as I was vaccinated, I stopped wearing masks.
Yeah. My job requires masks for its employees and some places I go to such as the Apple Store and pharmacies still require masks, so I wear my N95 there. When I got back to law school in August, I will start wearing the mask more because my school has very strict mask protocols. For the most part I became more lax wearing the mask when I got my booster shot in November. On a side note, I was around about 10 people who had Omicron without wearing masks around them and still tested negative. Maybe the vaccines are working good for me transmission wise?
Logged
GregTheGreat657
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 7,970
United States


Political Matrix
E: 1.29, S: -3.48

P P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9584 on: February 02, 2022, 05:03:59 PM »

COVID is endemic and we need to move on with our lives
Logged
GregTheGreat657
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 7,970
United States


Political Matrix
E: 1.29, S: -3.48

P P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9585 on: February 02, 2022, 05:06:19 PM »

Other than the family strategy I have already mentioned here, the next best way to get conservatives vaccinated in higher numbers is that Trump should go on national TV and say that anti-vaxxers are disloyal RINOs. A lot of people would begrudgingly get vaccinated just to prove that they aren't a RINO
Logged
100% pro-life no matter what
ExtremeRepublican
Moderators
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 12,480


Political Matrix
E: 7.35, S: 5.57

Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9586 on: February 02, 2022, 05:10:20 PM »

According to covidestim.org, the Rt is now below 1 in every state except Tennessee. It's down to 0.29 in Utah, 0.31 in Rhode Island, and 0.4 or lower in a host of other states.

Tennessee only reports data once a week, so the data is pretty old at this point.  Would guess its past peak in TN as well.

And, sure enough, this week's update shows cases beginning a sharp decline in Tennessee.
Logged
Horus
Sheliak5
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 15,072
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9587 on: February 02, 2022, 05:13:12 PM »

Other than the family strategy I have already mentioned here, the next best way to get conservatives vaccinated in higher numbers is that Trump should go on national TV and say that anti-vaxxers are disloyal RINOs. A lot of people would begrudgingly get vaccinated just to prove that they aren't a RINO

On the contrary Trump would lose a lot of support if he did this. His anti vax supporters hate the vaccine more than they love him.
Logged
Lief 🗽
Lief
Atlas Legend
*****
Posts: 47,042


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9588 on: February 02, 2022, 05:48:22 PM »

Day 1 of no restrictions here in Denmark. Feels great. Case numbers are extremely high - more than 40k a day (10 times more than the peak last winter)- but basically nobody gets seriously sick from Omicron here. The total number of people in intensive care is now a paltry 28 persons and is now the lowest since october, which was pre-Omicron. Basically, we have had record high infections throughout january while at the very same time the number of infected in intensive care has fallen by 60%. This is because basically everybody who needed intensive care from COVID had the Delta variant and now that we basically only have Omicron nobody needs intensive care anymore. The remaining 28 are mostly NOT there because of their Omicron infection, but just happen to have it. This is even more pronounced when you look at deaths, where pretty much everyone currently registrered as dying from COVID is actually dying WITH COVID instead, unlike earlier in the pandemic. 

I have supported restrictions and mandates since the beginning, but people need to start to realize that the Omicron variant really isn't very dangerous and that we have ALL the medical tools to combat this disease now in vaccines and therapeutics (most notably Paxlovid from Pfizer). I have no idea why other countries aren't doing like Denmark and the UK at this point. I imagine it has to be right around the corner.

Also, from a political perspective, democrats are gonna get killed if they insist on heavy restrictions way after they cease to be necessary.

EDIT: Forgot to mention that all restrictions were dropped by a united parliament. All parties/groups in parliament supported it, from the far left to the far right.

Our situation is complicated by higher numbers of deaths we’re seeing. It’s not clear whether this is because of lower vaccination numbers, stronger presence of comorbidities, or other things, but it’s giving our leaders pause.

I suspect it is coming in the next few weeks, though. We’ve already seen public health leaders giving the signals.
NY seems to be doubling down on restrictions despite the fact that Omicron peaked here three weeks ago, and now we are basically at the same case levels as we had when this mask mandate was put into effect, supposedly just to stop the holiday surge


I feel like we are in a world of phantom restrictions where no restrictions are ever actually imposed but anti-restriction people feel like they are being imposed anyway.

I think this is because of a couple of factors; many people have responded to the pandemic by adapting their behavior and cancelled social events like holiday parties; NYC restaurants reported mass cancellations of reservations in December. Also, firms (particularly hospitality) have responded to reduced demand and staffing shortages by cutting hours or shutting down. To anti-restriction people particularly here, even though the government didn't do anything, it still feels like a "lockdown" to them and thus they complain about it as if it were one. The big difference, and I've made this point before, is that they are no longer complaining about an overreaching government, but instead attacking their fellow citizens for taking the virus seriously, which is both deplorable and decidedly anti-freedom.
I would say that about 30% of the population will continue to follow very strict COVID precautions indefinitely and that certain states (California, Oregon, Hawaii, Washington, DC, New York, and Illinois) and institutions (colleges, private businesses, etc.) will keep their respective COVID NPIs in place for the long term.

It is really up to people to judge their risk calculus regarding COVID at this point. My risk calculus is less than others, though I still wear an N95 at my job and in certain settings. During the pandemic, I have travelled, attended mass events, and eaten out indoors, though I understand that for others, those activities represent a risk to them.

Same here. I wear masks when I am told and have gotten the booster the weekend before Thanksgiving. However, as soon as I was vaccinated, I stopped wearing masks.
Yeah. My job requires masks for its employees and some places I go to such as the Apple Store and pharmacies still require masks, so I wear my N95 there. When I got back to law school in August, I will start wearing the mask more because my school has very strict mask protocols. For the most part I became more lax wearing the mask when I got my booster shot in November. On a side note, I was around about 10 people who had Omicron without wearing masks around them and still tested negative. Maybe the vaccines are working good for me transmission wise?

Yeah for some reason the meme that vaccines offer zero protection against transmission of omicron has taken hold, when that is clearly not the case. I was exposed to people who were mostly likely infected at the time a couple of times in December and never tested positive (I tested like 4 times for various reasons over this time period). I know a family of four, where the youngest child (a one year old) was positive, but no one else in the home ever caught covid (all vaccinated, and the parents boosted).
Logged
Can't Bear
Russian Bear
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,721
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9589 on: February 02, 2022, 06:41:42 PM »

Today/yesterday Finland, Sweden and Switzerland (England, more?) followed Denmark. They said they will/aim to remove all the remaining restrictions this month.

If Biden is smart, he'll do something similar in ASAP and "own" going-back-to-normal momentum. It's clear, it's mostly over in a month. I'm afraid, he'll be scared of/sides with idiots forever-restrictioners as he did with Progressives vs Manchin, wait to long and lose BBB momentum.

God knows


Logged
GeneralMacArthur
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 12,157
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9590 on: February 02, 2022, 06:48:49 PM »

Today/yesterday Finland, Sweden and Switzerland (England, more?) followed Denmark. They said they will/aim to remove all the remaining restrictions this month.

If Biden is smart, he'll do something similar in ASAP and "own" going-back-to-normal momentum. It's clear, it's mostly over in a month. I'm afraid, he'll be scared of/sides with idiots forever-restrictioners as he did with Progressives vs Manchin, wait to long and lose BBB momentum.

God knows

He already did this last summer and everyone (including you) pounced as soon as Delta hit, so let's not pretend this is good-faith advice.
Logged
Tintrlvr
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,970


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9591 on: February 02, 2022, 08:08:30 PM »

Yeah for some reason the meme that vaccines offer zero protection against transmission of omicron has taken hold, when that is clearly not the case. I was exposed to people who were mostly likely infected at the time a couple of times in December and never tested positive (I tested like 4 times for various reasons over this time period). I know a family of four, where the youngest child (a one year old) was positive, but no one else in the home ever caught covid (all vaccinated, and the parents boosted).

I mean, we know this. The prevalence (per capita) of positive COVID tests right now among people with two vaccine shots (even ignoring boosters) is about a quarter of the prevalence among the unvaccinated. That's a bit closer a ratio than a sixth during the Delta wave and much closer than a twelfth when mass vaccination first happened, but it's still very significant, especially when a large majority of those double-vaccinated people got their second doses 8-10 months ago at this point. It's clear that the vaccines are still quite protective against transmission.
Logged
Can't Bear
Russian Bear
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,721
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9592 on: February 02, 2022, 08:14:46 PM »

Today/yesterday Finland, Sweden and Switzerland (England, more?) followed Denmark. They said they will/aim to remove all the remaining restrictions this month.

If Biden is smart, he'll do something similar in ASAP and "own" going-back-to-normal momentum. It's clear, it's mostly over in a month. I'm afraid, he'll be scared of/sides with idiots forever-restrictioners as he did with Progressives vs Manchin, wait to long and lose BBB momentum.

God knows

He already did this last summer and everyone (including you) pounced as soon as Delta hit, so let's not pretend this is good-faith advice.

Or, perhaps, I knew, you would think so and said it on purpose to hurt Biden!!!!



Tell me why are we so blind to see, that the ones we hurt are you and me?
Logged
Tintrlvr
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,970


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9593 on: February 02, 2022, 08:17:22 PM »
« Edited: February 02, 2022, 08:26:43 PM by Tintrlvr »

Actually I think they were unconstitutional, but I have a hard time swallowing that they didn't flatten the death curve at all.

If the argument is that most the benefit came from the voluntary locking down, then it doesn't make sense that the forced lockdowns were a problem.

If the argument is that people staying home and business closing didn't affect the death rate at all, then I don't understand how I haven't gotten a cold in 2 years or how 2 strains of the Flu are probably extinct.

The study notes how the social and economic costs associated with the lockdowns were not worth in the reduction in mortality rates, and that such reduction was of a very trifling or minimal nature. In other words, the lockdowns did little to stem the natural course of the virus.

I do think it's totally fair to say that the lockdowns came far too late to matter and that by the time people were hunkering down in mid-late March COVID was already everywhere.

More significantly, maybe, it's clear from China's example that you could completely stomp out original COVID and even Alpha and Delta (but maybe not Omicron), but you can only do that if you are willing to implement and, maybe more significantly, enforce much more severe lockdowns than places like the US or Western Europe ever tried. Australia had some success in that vein and clearly did save many lives with its strategy of harsh, repeated lockdowns until mass vaccination. The policies implemented by the US and Western Europe that were fleeting, largely suggestions and only loosely enforced were fairly clearly, looking retrospectively, never going to accomplish much in terms of infection reduction despite being nearly as economically damaging as truly serious lockdowns.

Still, it doesn't feel like we could have known this a priori. Australia and China (among others) show us that there was a lockdown approach that would have worked, so it's not the case that lockdowns generally can't work. The lesson perhaps is that you need to commit, one way or another; there was no reasonable halfway where you could both avoid mass death and severe economic consequences, and, by trying to find middle ground, the US and Western Europe ended up with both.
Logged
Calthrina950
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 15,913
United States


P P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9594 on: February 02, 2022, 08:44:49 PM »

Actually I think they were unconstitutional, but I have a hard time swallowing that they didn't flatten the death curve at all.

If the argument is that most the benefit came from the voluntary locking down, then it doesn't make sense that the forced lockdowns were a problem.

If the argument is that people staying home and business closing didn't affect the death rate at all, then I don't understand how I haven't gotten a cold in 2 years or how 2 strains of the Flu are probably extinct.

The study notes how the social and economic costs associated with the lockdowns were not worth in the reduction in mortality rates, and that such reduction was of a very trifling or minimal nature. In other words, the lockdowns did little to stem the natural course of the virus.

I do think it's totally fair to say that the lockdowns came far too late to matter and that by the time people were hunkering down in mid-late March COVID was already everywhere.

More significantly, maybe, it's clear from China's example that you could completely stomp out original COVID and even Alpha and Delta (but maybe not Omicron), but you can only do that if you are willing to implement and, maybe more significantly, enforce much more severe lockdowns than places like the US or Western Europe ever tried. Australia had some success in that vein and clearly did save many lives with its strategy of harsh, repeated lockdowns until mass vaccination. The policies implemented by the US and Western Europe that were fleeting, largely suggestions and only loosely enforced were fairly clearly, looking retrospectively, never going to accomplish much in terms of infection reduction despite being nearly as economically damaging as truly serious lockdowns.

Still, it doesn't feel like we could have known this a priori. Australia and China (among others) show us that there was a lockdown approach that would have worked, so it's not the case that lockdowns generally can't work. The lesson perhaps is that you need to commit, one way or another; there was no reasonable halfway where you could both avoid mass death and severe economic consequences, and, by trying to find middle ground, the US and Western Europe ended up with both.

An Austarlian style or Chinese style lockdown probably wouldn't have passed constitutional muster, would have greatly intensified political polarization, and possibly exacerbated the riots and other violence we saw during the summer of 2020. I think it would have also had more severe consequences, psychologically and morally, for Americans, and I'm not convinced that such policies would have "worked", per se. Even with imposing since rigorous lockdown policies, those two countries were not able to escape the pandemic. Not even New Zealand, which has sealed itself off from the world for most of the last two years, has been able to escape it. Coronavirus has invaded every country at this point.

And it's true that the United States didn't have the most extensive or vigorous lockdown, but the restrictions that were imposed did not yield the benefits that were promised. And in the long term, is it worth it for governments to pursue the same failed strategies in response to future crises? I would hope that they would modify their approach, taking into consideration the consequences of what has happened.
Logged
Raccoon
jamespol
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 8,355


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9595 on: February 02, 2022, 09:00:24 PM »

The endless covid arguments about what should have happened in the United States ? It is moot.

We do not have an economy that could have been locked down.  Our society was not able to be locked down.
Logged
Zohranism is OUR future
Forumlurker161
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 17,158


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9596 on: February 02, 2022, 09:03:54 PM »

Actually I think they were unconstitutional, but I have a hard time swallowing that they didn't flatten the death curve at all.

If the argument is that most the benefit came from the voluntary locking down, then it doesn't make sense that the forced lockdowns were a problem.

If the argument is that people staying home and business closing didn't affect the death rate at all, then I don't understand how I haven't gotten a cold in 2 years or how 2 strains of the Flu are probably extinct.

The study notes how the social and economic costs associated with the lockdowns were not worth in the reduction in mortality rates, and that such reduction was of a very trifling or minimal nature. In other words, the lockdowns did little to stem the natural course of the virus.

I do think it's totally fair to say that the lockdowns came far too late to matter and that by the time people were hunkering down in mid-late March COVID was already everywhere.

More significantly, maybe, it's clear from China's example that you could completely stomp out original COVID and even Alpha and Delta (but maybe not Omicron), but you can only do that if you are willing to implement and, maybe more significantly, enforce much more severe lockdowns than places like the US or Western Europe ever tried. Australia had some success in that vein and clearly did save many lives with its strategy of harsh, repeated lockdowns until mass vaccination. The policies implemented by the US and Western Europe that were fleeting, largely suggestions and only loosely enforced were fairly clearly, looking retrospectively, never going to accomplish much in terms of infection reduction despite being nearly as economically damaging as truly serious lockdowns.

Still, it doesn't feel like we could have known this a priori. Australia and China (among others) show us that there was a lockdown approach that would have worked, so it's not the case that lockdowns generally can't work. The lesson perhaps is that you need to commit, one way or another; there was no reasonable halfway where you could both avoid mass death and severe economic consequences, and, by trying to find middle ground, the US and Western Europe ended up with both.

An Austarlian style or Chinese style lockdown probably wouldn't have passed constitutional muster, would have greatly intensified political polarization, and possibly exacerbated the riots and other violence we saw during the summer of 2020. I think it would have also had more severe consequences, psychologically and morally, for Americans, and I'm not convinced that such policies would have "worked", per se. Even with imposing since rigorous lockdown policies, those two countries were not able to escape the pandemic. Not even New Zealand, which has sealed itself off from the world for most of the last two years, has been able to escape it. Coronavirus has invaded every country at this point.

And it's true that the United States didn't have the most extensive or vigorous lockdown, but the restrictions that were imposed did not yield the benefits that were promised. And in the long term, is it worth it for governments to pursue the same failed strategies in response to future crises? I would hope that they would modify their approach, taking into consideration the consequences of what has happened.
He said deaths were prevented, not cases for f**ks sake.
Logged
Calthrina950
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 15,913
United States


P P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9597 on: February 02, 2022, 09:04:22 PM »

Actually I think they were unconstitutional, but I have a hard time swallowing that they didn't flatten the death curve at all.

If the argument is that most the benefit came from the voluntary locking down, then it doesn't make sense that the forced lockdowns were a problem.

If the argument is that people staying home and business closing didn't affect the death rate at all, then I don't understand how I haven't gotten a cold in 2 years or how 2 strains of the Flu are probably extinct.

The study notes how the social and economic costs associated with the lockdowns were not worth in the reduction in mortality rates, and that such reduction was of a very trifling or minimal nature. In other words, the lockdowns did little to stem the natural course of the virus.

I do think it's totally fair to say that the lockdowns came far too late to matter and that by the time people were hunkering down in mid-late March COVID was already everywhere.

More significantly, maybe, it's clear from China's example that you could completely stomp out original COVID and even Alpha and Delta (but maybe not Omicron), but you can only do that if you are willing to implement and, maybe more significantly, enforce much more severe lockdowns than places like the US or Western Europe ever tried. Australia had some success in that vein and clearly did save many lives with its strategy of harsh, repeated lockdowns until mass vaccination. The policies implemented by the US and Western Europe that were fleeting, largely suggestions and only loosely enforced were fairly clearly, looking retrospectively, never going to accomplish much in terms of infection reduction despite being nearly as economically damaging as truly serious lockdowns.

Still, it doesn't feel like we could have known this a priori. Australia and China (among others) show us that there was a lockdown approach that would have worked, so it's not the case that lockdowns generally can't work. The lesson perhaps is that you need to commit, one way or another; there was no reasonable halfway where you could both avoid mass death and severe economic consequences, and, by trying to find middle ground, the US and Western Europe ended up with both.

An Austarlian style or Chinese style lockdown probably wouldn't have passed constitutional muster, would have greatly intensified political polarization, and possibly exacerbated the riots and other violence we saw during the summer of 2020. I think it would have also had more severe consequences, psychologically and morally, for Americans, and I'm not convinced that such policies would have "worked", per se. Even with imposing since rigorous lockdown policies, those two countries were not able to escape the pandemic. Not even New Zealand, which has sealed itself off from the world for most of the last two years, has been able to escape it. Coronavirus has invaded every country at this point.

And it's true that the United States didn't have the most extensive or vigorous lockdown, but the restrictions that were imposed did not yield the benefits that were promised. And in the long term, is it worth it for governments to pursue the same failed strategies in response to future crises? I would hope that they would modify their approach, taking into consideration the consequences of what has happened.
He said deaths were prevented, not cases for f**ks sake.

No reason for you to become angry at me.
Logged
Zohranism is OUR future
Forumlurker161
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 17,158


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9598 on: February 02, 2022, 09:05:50 PM »

Actually I think they were unconstitutional, but I have a hard time swallowing that they didn't flatten the death curve at all.

If the argument is that most the benefit came from the voluntary locking down, then it doesn't make sense that the forced lockdowns were a problem.

If the argument is that people staying home and business closing didn't affect the death rate at all, then I don't understand how I haven't gotten a cold in 2 years or how 2 strains of the Flu are probably extinct.

The study notes how the social and economic costs associated with the lockdowns were not worth in the reduction in mortality rates, and that such reduction was of a very trifling or minimal nature. In other words, the lockdowns did little to stem the natural course of the virus.

I do think it's totally fair to say that the lockdowns came far too late to matter and that by the time people were hunkering down in mid-late March COVID was already everywhere.

More significantly, maybe, it's clear from China's example that you could completely stomp out original COVID and even Alpha and Delta (but maybe not Omicron), but you can only do that if you are willing to implement and, maybe more significantly, enforce much more severe lockdowns than places like the US or Western Europe ever tried. Australia had some success in that vein and clearly did save many lives with its strategy of harsh, repeated lockdowns until mass vaccination. The policies implemented by the US and Western Europe that were fleeting, largely suggestions and only loosely enforced were fairly clearly, looking retrospectively, never going to accomplish much in terms of infection reduction despite being nearly as economically damaging as truly serious lockdowns.

Still, it doesn't feel like we could have known this a priori. Australia and China (among others) show us that there was a lockdown approach that would have worked, so it's not the case that lockdowns generally can't work. The lesson perhaps is that you need to commit, one way or another; there was no reasonable halfway where you could both avoid mass death and severe economic consequences, and, by trying to find middle ground, the US and Western Europe ended up with both.

An Austarlian style or Chinese style lockdown probably wouldn't have passed constitutional muster, would have greatly intensified political polarization, and possibly exacerbated the riots and other violence we saw during the summer of 2020. I think it would have also had more severe consequences, psychologically and morally, for Americans, and I'm not convinced that such policies would have "worked", per se. Even with imposing since rigorous lockdown policies, those two countries were not able to escape the pandemic. Not even New Zealand, which has sealed itself off from the world for most of the last two years, has been able to escape it. Coronavirus has invaded every country at this point.

And it's true that the United States didn't have the most extensive or vigorous lockdown, but the restrictions that were imposed did not yield the benefits that were promised. And in the long term, is it worth it for governments to pursue the same failed strategies in response to future crises? I would hope that they would modify their approach, taking into consideration the consequences of what has happened.
He said deaths were prevented, not cases for f**ks sake.

No reason for you to become angry at me.
I’m not angry lmfao, a bit puzzled with you though.
Logged
DINGO Joe
dingojoe
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 11,679
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #9599 on: February 02, 2022, 09:20:40 PM »

Johns Hopkins Study: Covid Lockdowns saved 0.2% of Lives at Enormous Economic and Social Costs in US/Europe.

https://sites.krieger.jhu.edu/iae/files/2022/01/A-Literature-Review-and-Meta-Analysis-of-the-Effects-of-Lockdowns-on-COVID-19-Mortality.pdf

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10466995/New-study-says-lockdowns-reduced-COVID-mortality-2-percent.html

Quote
'While this meta-analysis concludes that lockdowns have had little to no public health effects, they have imposed enormous economic and social costs where they have been adopted,' researchers wrote. 'In consequence, lockdown policies are ill-founded and should be rejected as a pandemic policy instrument.'

I said it in May 2020, when it wasn't socially acceptable, but now I'll say it again: worst public policy decision in decades.

I am curious to know how the situation would have turned out if our leadership had taken the same approach to the pandemic that the Scandinavian countries did, with fewer restrictions and more encouragement of social interaction.

I think your talking about Sweden which took a laissez faire approach and ended up with a death rate 5 or 6 times higher than Finland and Norway who were much stricter.  The Swedish equivalent of Fauci actually got sh**tcanned over it.
Logged
Pages: 1 ... 379 380 381 382 383 [384] 385 386 387 388 389 ... 455  
« previous next »
Jump to:  


Login with username, password and session length

Terms of Service - DMCA Agent and Policy - Privacy Policy and Cookies

Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Page created in 0.096 seconds with 9 queries.