packgrad said:
Equally amazing how they don't see this but so willingly attack our country.
You can love your country and also criticize it and want it to be better. The two ideas are independent.
Y'all means ALL.
packgrad said:
Equally amazing how they don't see this but so willingly attack our country.
PackBacker07 said:packgrad said:
Equally amazing how they don't see this but so willingly attack our country.
You can love your country and also criticize it and want it to be better. The two ideas are independent.
packgrad said:PackBacker07 said:packgrad said:
Equally amazing how they don't see this but so willingly attack our country.
You can love your country and also criticize it and want it to be better. The two ideas are independent.
Just don't put blame on China.
cowboypack02 said:There was a reporter who said she overheard it from someone yesterday during the press conference. I dunno if she actually heard it or not but its actually kinda funnypackgrad said:
Reporter asks if someone in White House is calling it Kung Flu? Important question.
wilmwolf80 said:cowboypack02 said:There was a reporter who said she overheard it from someone yesterday during the press conference. I dunno if she actually heard it or not but its actually kinda funnypackgrad said:
Reporter asks if someone in White House is calling it Kung Flu? Important question.
Everybody is Kung Flu fighting
It's spreading fast as lightning
I would comment and agree with you, but RWW would delete my post for "derailing the thread."King Leary said:
China started this by caging wild animals including bats and various endangered species in confined spaces with thousands of human beings. Having zero health standards and then they covered up cases and information after the initial outbreak.
That's not really up for debate. Plus they're repeat offenders...SARS.
That doesn't even mention all the human rights violations that go on in China on a daily basis. They (the govt) are the bad guys in this whole situation.
Just listen to the CDC.Bas2020 said:
Does anybody in this country actually believe even 50% of anything the media says at this point ?
They've dug their own hole .
What REALLY needs to happen is to stop all these unnecessary shutdowns (of business, sports, etc), and to lift and reverse them. Not the government putting the citizenry in further debt -- on top of destroying the economy.GoPack2008 said:This is absolutely the sort of thing that's needed.PackBacker07 said:
PackBacker07 said:King Leary said:
China started this by caging wild animals including bats and various endangered species in confined spaces with thousands of human beings. Having zero health standards and then they covered up cases and information after the initial outbreak.
That's not really up for debate. Plus they're repeat offenders...SARS.
That doesn't even mention all the human rights violations that go on in China on a daily basis. They (the govt) are the bad guys in this whole situation.
Yes, China has a long history of human rights violations, but not sure how that has to do with COVID-19? They covered up cases, yes, but also mobilized for containment in ways the Western world cannot (not saying this right). My point is this is a non-citizen virus, and because the first known animal-human transmission was in China, that doesn't make it a "Chinese Virus." Some are using that name to stir up resentment and I really don't understand why?
I think that the threat of these viruses (swine flu, etc) is completely overblown -- but I 100% agree with your concern about being dependent on other nations for our food supply. As a nation, we should be completely independent and able to grow and produce food for ourselves.vanuel said:
Our vulnerability is much greater than most people realize. Much of our food supply chain is tied to China. The question is not if swine flu will decimate U.S. livestock, but when. That's only one example. People in the know are aware, but how do you stop it. This is not a new problem. The Chinese government has consistently shown an unwillingness to clean this stuff up. The U.S. has been very complacent, but it is much harder and more expensive of a problem to deal with downstream. The Chinese government has now thrown out Western news organizations and two days later declared the outbreak beaten and it wants to get back to business. It has a familiar ring. We will see, but the past is not encouraging.
Can't read this story. But the "regular" flu kills up to 650,000 per year worldwide. If they are basing this "2.2 million death" prediction based upon the initially claimed higher death rate of coronavirus ("3.4%" or whatever it was), then I believe this prediction is deeply flawed. That initial death rate was based upon only the confirmed number of cases of coronavirus, which were confirmed via testing. But only a very small percentage of the population has been tested. In reality, probably 20+ times people have already had coronavirus (versus the number confirmed via testing), and the vast majority had mild symptoms and have completely recovered. The true death rate of cornoavirus is, therefore, much lower than initially claimed.Ground_Chuck said:
NY times story about the inertial college report that's changed US and U.K. policy.
Report projected that if the US did nothing (nonshutdowns, quarantines), we'd have 2.2 million deaths.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nytimes.com/2020/03/16/us/coronavirus-fatality-rate-white-house.amp.html
GuerrillaPack said:Can't read this story. But the "regular" flu kills up to 650,000 per year worldwide. If they are basing this "2.2 million death" prediction based upon the initially claimed higher death rate of coronavirus ("3.4%" or whatever it was), then I believe this prediction is deeply flawed. That initial death rate was based upon only the confirmed number of cases of coronavirus, which were confirmed via testing. But only a very small percentage of the population has been tested. In reality, probably 20+ times people have already had coronavirus (versus the number confirmed via testing), and the vast majority had mild symptoms and have completely recovered. The true death rate of cornoavirus is, therefore, much lower than initially claimed.Ground_Chuck said:
NY times story about the inertial college report that's changed US and U.K. policy.
Report projected that if the US did nothing (nonshutdowns, quarantines), we'd have 2.2 million deaths.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nytimes.com/2020/03/16/us/coronavirus-fatality-rate-white-house.amp.html
You have to figure that these numbers are going to explode.IseWolf22 said:
Up to 98 cases in NC. We're crossing the 100 mark today.
Only 2,500 tests have been performed, total, in the state.
GuerrillaPack said:
I think that the threat of these viruses (swine flu, etc) is completely overblown -- but I 100% agree with your concern about being dependent on other nations for our food supply. As a nation, we should be completely independent and able to grow and produce food for ourselves.
Incidentally, the swine flu outbreak in 2009 was much more deadly than this supposed coronavirus -- killing 12,469 people in the United States, with 274,000 hospitalizations and 60.8 million infections.
But the regular flu kills about that same amount every year -- including 22,000 in the United States this 2019-2020 flu season.
PackBacker07 said:GuerrillaPack said:
I think that the threat of these viruses (swine flu, etc) is completely overblown -- but I 100% agree with your concern about being dependent on other nations for our food supply. As a nation, we should be completely independent and able to grow and produce food for ourselves.
Incidentally, the swine flu outbreak in 2009 was much more deadly than this supposed coronavirus -- killing 12,469 people in the United States, with 274,000 hospitalizations and 60.8 million infections.
But the regular flu kills about that same amount every year -- including 22,000 in the United States this 2019-2020 flu season.
- Swine Flu (should we call it the American Flu?): .02% death rate (worldwide, per Reuters)
- Novel Coronoavirus/COVID-19: conservative 1-2% death rate
If you extrapolate COVID-19 to the American Flu infection number, it comes out to 608,000-1,216,000 US deaths. MATH!
Why would we call Swine flu American Flu? It originated in Mexico so wouldn't it be correct to call is Mexican Flu?PackBacker07 said:GuerrillaPack said:
I think that the threat of these viruses (swine flu, etc) is completely overblown -- but I 100% agree with your concern about being dependent on other nations for our food supply. As a nation, we should be completely independent and able to grow and produce food for ourselves.
Incidentally, the swine flu outbreak in 2009 was much more deadly than this supposed coronavirus -- killing 12,469 people in the United States, with 274,000 hospitalizations and 60.8 million infections.
But the regular flu kills about that same amount every year -- including 22,000 in the United States this 2019-2020 flu season.
- Swine Flu (should we call it the American Flu?): .02% death rate (worldwide, per Reuters)
- Novel Coronoavirus/COVID-19: conservative 1-2% death rate
If you extrapolate COVID-19 to the American Flu infection number, it comes out to 608,000-1,216,000 US deaths. MATH!
Per the CDC, the first case was in the USA? Who knows.cowboypack02 said:
Why would we call Swine flu American Flu? It originated in Mexico so wouldn't it be correct to call is Mexican Flu?
https://virologyj.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1743-422X-6-207
This is an assumption. And I will give you that the extrapolation is an assumption as well, to show contrast. But to deny that 1% > .02%, that I do not understand. Point being, incomplete data is incomplete. So for people to downplay the severity because they point to final numbers of other diseases is comical, at best.packgrad said:
Incomplete data leads to inaccurate extrapolation. Bad math. China flu peaks in the USA next week then starts tapering off.
In a suburb county and we have about a handful of confirmed cases, but there are 100+ in an official quarantine. Was reported we started the week with 15 tests on hand and only used 4. So, numbers are under-reported.vanuel said:You have to figure that these numbers are going to explode.IseWolf22 said:
Up to 98 cases in NC. We're crossing the 100 mark today.
Only 2,500 tests have been performed, total, in the state.
PackBacker07 said:This is an assumption. And I will give you that the extrapolation is an assumption as well, to show contrast. But to deny that 1% > .02%, that I do not understand. Point being, incomplete data is incomplete. So for people to downplay the severity because they point to final numbers of other diseases is comical, at best.packgrad said:
Incomplete data leads to inaccurate extrapolation. Bad math. China flu peaks in the USA next week then starts tapering off.
I saw earlier that we have nowhere remotely enough reagent to run these tests, so even with the kits we are still ****ed some kind of proper. Almost comical, except that a lot of people are going to suffer terrible fates.bsorry11 said:In a suburb county and we have about a handful of confirmed cases, but there are 100+ in an official quarantine. Was reported we started the week with 15 tests on hand and only used 4. So, numbers are under-reported.vanuel said:You have to figure that these numbers are going to explode.IseWolf22 said:
Up to 98 cases in NC. We're crossing the 100 mark today.
Only 2,500 tests have been performed, total, in the state.