The Coronavirus, not the beer

Seriously though. When does climate change become an emergency and we are not allowed to drive in a car with less than 3 people?

It could be that the legal code of states do not allow governors to claim anything (such as climate change) to be emergencies. Just a thought. I'm not a lawyer.
 
other than france (i mean when isn't there a riot or a protest happening there)

why is does it seem most every other first world country had a lockdown and they didn't have people screaming about haircuts and tyranny etc

what do you suppose that?

I guess the Italians realized the gravity of their situation. So while the mayors had to crack down a bit on people violating the lockdown it doesn't seem to have provoked much dissent. I think for countries like Italy that were staring into the abyss it has not been controversial. For countries that were not as hard hit, people have probably wondered what's the big deal. It has taken some explaining to get people to understand about exponential growth and how they could be the next Italy if they did not act now. But even with good public education there will some who just don't buy into the idea that millions could have died in this country if nothing was done. If that aint an emergency worthy of the invocation of emergency powers I don't know what is.
 
It could be that the legal code of states do not allow governors to claim anything (such as climate change) to be emergencies. Just a thought. I'm not a lawyer.

I'm just trying to understand the difference in the two situations. The orthodoxy kn climate change is we are headed on a path that will kill potentially hundreds of millions of pdollr.people.

How can the CCP virus be an emergency and not climate change?
 
I'm just trying to understand the difference in the two situations. The orthodoxy kn climate change is we are headed on a path that will kill potentially hundreds of millions of pdollr.people.

How can the CCP virus be an emergency and not climate change?

It's a good question. Maybe some of the lawyers around here can chime in.

My guess is emergency powers have do do in part with how quickly action is needed. In an emergency there isn't time for the legislature to weigh in. So certain powers are given to the executive to deal with those situations. In contrast, the legislature should weigh in on other important matters like climate change that don't require immediate action.
 
It's a good question. Maybe some of the lawyers around here can chime in.

My guess is emergency powers have do do in part with how quickly action is needed. In an emergency there isn't time for the legislature to weigh in. So certain powers are given to the executive to deal with those situations. In contrast, the legislature should weigh in on other important matters like climate change that don't require immediate action.

Please believe I'm being genuine here.

I'm concerned with how easily we have given up our freedoms during a situation where there is still a lot of uncertainty.
 
Please believe I'm being genuine here.

I'm concerned with how easily we have given up our freedoms during a situation where there is still a lot of uncertainty.

hmmm...no one is required to be consistent on all such matters, but i wonder if you and sturg were expressing similar reservations in real time when very poorly chosen one claimed emergency powers to reallocate funds toward building the wall
 
hmmm...no one is required to be consistent on all such matters, but i wonder if you and sturg were expressing similar reservations in real time when very poorly chosen one claimed emergency powers to reallocate funds toward building the wall

Trump won on a message for the wall. Yes Mexico was supposed to pay for it. We can argue whether or not that's truly happening from a macroeconomic standpoint. You are well equipped to do that.

Either way, funding was being denied despite winning on that message. It doesn't actually impact individual citizens rights and it will prove to be an effective use of resources.

I don't see the parallel here sir.
 
New cases are starting to bottom out or Sweden.

They are in a much better spot than almost all countries to get back to 'normal'.
 
Trump won on a message for the wall. Yes Mexico was supposed to pay for it. We can argue whether or not that's truly happening from a macroeconomic standpoint. You are well equipped to do that.

Either way, funding was being denied despite winning on that message. It doesn't actually impact individual citizens rights and it will prove to be an effective use of resources.

I don't see the parallel here sir.

seems like tyranny to me for the executive to unilaterally reallocate taxpayer dollars...if that is not tyranny what is...but i am not an expert on tyranny...i will wait for an expert to chime in
 
seems like tyranny to me for the executive to unilaterally reallocate taxpayer dollars...if that is not tyranny what is...but i am not an expert on tyranny...i will wait for an expert to chime in

Its fun to see when you completely try to escape a discussion because you realize your original point was meaningless.

Back to the actual discussion. I'd like to know why states can't unilaterally decide to ban car travel of less than 3 since there are projections for mass death due to climate change.
 
New cases are starting to bottom out or Sweden.

They are in a much better spot than almost all countries to get back to 'normal'.

Let's hope. I look at the 7 day numbers and they are starting to trend down.

Sweden cases for the 7 days ending May 3: 3,758

Sweden cases for prior 7 days: 4,377

So virus reproductive rate might be below 1 for them now. That would be big.
 
Let's hope. I look at the 7 day numbers and they are starting to trend down.

Sweden cases for the 7 days ending May 3: 3,758

Sweden cases for prior 7 days: 4,377

To virus reproductive rate might be below 1 for them now.

There is no question because once the uninfdctdd population dwindles the reproductive rate falls along with it.

Herd immunity was the only sensible approach while sheltering at risk.
 
Its fun to see when you completely try to escape a discussion because you realize your original point was meaningless.

i'm not the one who introduced the distinction between "whims of the executive" and laws passed by representatives of the people...see previous page of this thread

"But at least they are (usually) passed via representatives of the people.

Not the whims of an executive"---sturg
 
I'd like to know why states can't unilaterally decide to ban car travel of less than 3 since there are projections for mass death due to climate change.

Cuz climate change is a slowly developing phenomenon that allows the legislature plenty of time to weigh in or not according to its wisdom
 
Cuz climate change is a slowly developing phenomenon that allows the legislature plenty of time to weigh in or not according to its wisdom

Wait a second. Do we have time to reverse the damage already done to the environment? That is not the messaging that is being relayed.
 
Wait a second. Do we have time to reverse the damage already done to the environment? That is not the messaging that is being relayed.

I think that's a different argument. Which is the legislative branch has had plenty of time to act and failed to. The legislative branch is not perfect. Democracy is not perfect. Humans are not perfect. Imperfection on the part of the legislative branch should not (imo) be an argument for overriding our constitutional arrangements.
 
I think that's a different argument. Which is the legislative branch has had plenty of time to act and failed to. The legislative branch is not perfect. Democracy is not perfect. Humans are not perfect. Imperfection on the part of the legislative branch should not (imo) be an argument for overriding our constitutional arrangements.

So why would we give imperfect people such power?

If citizens rights can be restricted from this virus then I don't see an argument against doing the same for climate change.

This would be my primary concern. I think the 15-30 days was completely reasonable. We had no clue what we were dealing with but now with almost ALL the data showing its MUCH less deadly than previously thought the overreach to extend lockdowns is encroaching on tyranny from my perspective.
 
Tableau is able to process massive amounts of data instantly unlike excel. Tableau is useful for filtering massive amounts of data in a nice visual UI... plus it connects to many databases - specifically snowflake which I think is the biggest and fastest growing.

Python is definitely awesome - but I doubt you'll get too far on a free tutorial. I'll shoot you a few resources to get you started that are inexpensive if you want to go down that rabbit hole

I program most of my tools to manipulate weather data and calculate various parameters with Python... its probably the most used language within the National Weather Service. I love it, but when you have a ****load of grid points, it can be much slower than traditional languages. That's why most weather models are programmed in FORTRAN because while FORTRAN is a pain in the arse, it is ridiculously fast with massive grids/data arrays.
 
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