The Coronavirus, not the beer

Same **** is happening in SF.

Who wanna live in these ****hole liberal utopias?

My older son is relocating from Atlanta to San Francisco next month. He's been plotting his return to California for a while. He should be able to score a nice deal on an apartment.
 
My older son is relocating from Atlanta to San Francisco next month. He's been plotting his return to California for a while. He should be able to score a nice deal on an apartment.

Good deal, may need one less dem vote in Georgia this November haha

I saw NYC last December and I plan on visiting SF next year... well, if covid allows
 
Good deal, may need one less dem vote in Georgia this November haha

I saw NYC last December and I plan on visiting SF next year... well, if covid allows

He's always been the most politically conservative of my three kids. But he's done a sharp turn left during the past few years. I don't talk much politics with him, but he and I have had pretty much the same reaction.

San Francisco is very beautiful viewed from a distance. From the Marin County side and also from the Oakland hills. I used to drive up to Grizzly Peak Blvd in the hills and there are places to park and watch the sunset. It is the best free thing in the world, with or without your recreational drug of choice. It is also impossibly romantic, so bring your wife or lady friend.
 
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Covid-19 is known to be particularly risky for the elderly. For many minorities, the disease is killing them in the prime of their lives.

Among people in the U.S. who died between their mid-40s and mid-70s since the pandemic began, the virus is responsible for about 9% of deaths. For Latino people who died in that age range, the virus has killed nearly 25%, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of death-certificate data collected by federal authorities.

The data show how deaths from the coronavirus are skewing younger for many minorities, a stark disparity that offers a clear picture of the pandemic’s outsize impact on vulnerable populations.

This is especially the case for Latino people, in part because their high representation in jobs ranging from health aides to meatpacking have made it harder for some of them to dodge the virus, and because many have poorer access to care, according to public-health experts.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-...-many-minorities-11597582801?mod=hp_lead_pos4
 
Covid-19 is known to be particularly risky for the elderly. For many minorities, the disease is killing them in the prime of their lives.

Among people in the U.S. who died between their mid-40s and mid-70s since the pandemic began, the virus is responsible for about 9% of deaths. For Latino people who died in that age range, the virus has killed nearly 25%, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of death-certificate data collected by federal authorities.

The data show how deaths from the coronavirus are skewing younger for many minorities, a stark disparity that offers a clear picture of the pandemic’s outsize impact on vulnerable populations.

This is especially the case for Latino people, in part because their high representation in jobs ranging from health aides to meatpacking have made it harder for some of them to dodge the virus, and because many have poorer access to care, according to public-health experts.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-...-many-minorities-11597582801?mod=hp_lead_pos4

This is why the virus killing Americans doesn't bother OO.
 
This is why the virus killing Americans doesn't bother OO.

Looking at some of the charts in the WSJ article, covid deaths per capita is significantly higher for hispanics age 65-74 than for whites aged 75-84. Put another way being 65 and hispanic puts you at as great a risk of dying from covid as a white person age 80.

Moving to younger groups, a hispanic person aged 55-64 has twice the risk of dying of covid as a white person aged 65-74.

Blacks and hispanics aged 45-54 have about the same risk as a white person aged 65-74.

The above reflects the combination of a higher probability of getting infected if you are a minority and a worse outcome once you are infected if you are a minority.
 
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I say hello back.

What did they do?

Had a coordinated strategy to combat the virus that everyone got on board with. Actually listened to the health experts and didn't try to inject their own unprofessional opinions into national the policy for combating the virus. Didn't encourage behavior that led the public to distrust the medical community. Didn't further divide an already divided country.


Just to name a few.
 
Had a coordinated strategy to combat the virus that everyone got on board with. Actually listened to the health experts and didn't try to inject their own unprofessional opinions into national the policy for combating the virus. Didn't encourage behavior that led the public to distrust the medical community. Didn't further divide an already divided country.


Just to name a few.

Continue use of the subway and encouraging congregation in Chinatown listening to the experts?
 
Had a coordinated strategy to combat the virus that everyone got on board with. Actually listened to the health experts and didn't try to inject their own unprofessional opinions into national the policy for combating the virus. Didn't encourage behavior that led the public to distrust the medical community. Didn't further divide an already divided country.


Just to name a few.

I guess I'll ask again...

What

Did

They

Do?

What was the coordinated strategy?
 
Had a coordinated strategy to combat the virus that everyone got on board with. Actually listened to the health experts and didn't try to inject their own unprofessional opinions into national the policy for combating the virus. Didn't encourage behavior that led the public to distrust the medical community. Didn't further divide an already divided country.


Just to name a few.

Do you admit that trump did try to cancel flights from China as soon as he could, while the democratic leaders called it racist and encouraged people to Go out and mingle?
 
[Tw]1295348768108433408[/tw]

This is the only reason NY has low infection rates as predicted months ago by someone on this board.
 
I guess I'll ask again...

What

Did

They

Do?

What was the coordinated strategy?

The details vary from place to place. But there are some commonalities. Bringing infection rates low enough before re-opening so that contact tracing had a chance for effectiveness. Being cautious in terms of re-opening in terms of staggering which kinds of establishments can open at a point in time, giving authorities a chance to evaluate the impact on transmission. And taking seriously the inevitable spikes that occur.

The sunbelt states basically neglected those things (reflecting a decision by governors to listen to very poorly chosen one rather than experts). So you had re-openings where basically there was no staggering to allow for careful evaluation. There was no serious contact tracing program. Infection rates in some cases were still high (5% or higher positive test returns). And the messaging around the sunbelt re-openings led people to think they no longer had to be careful. Belatedly, states like Arizona and Texas realized that they needed a different kind of messaging. And people in those states started behaving differently.

Another area of difference was the lockdowns themselves. Data on things like cell phone mobility show that the lockdowns in many states produced smaller reductions in mobility. So we had shorter lighter lockdowns. Sunbelt states reopened in a cavalier manner. They were not in a position to trace and detect outbreaks. States were slow to detect and respond to spikes. So those outbreaks spread much more widely than in the countries that have taken things seriously.

End result: deaths reported since the end of June

France 563
Italy 619
Germany 259
Spain 1,250
Canada 428
United States 41,442

Our response has been tragically incompetent and the results bear that out. Other countries learned from what happened in March and April and figured out a strategy that worked for them. We didn't.
 
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So if I'm reading your post right the difference seems to be they locked down for longer and more aggressively than the US.

That about cover it?
 
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