Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In your second quote, there is no number of any kind.
I don't understand this. Are you saying if there's no number you don't believe it or think it's false or would you like the link or what? At its peak over 11 weeks ago, over 13,000 deaths a week were being attributed to CV. Now it's a little over 3,000.
According to the CDC, the pandemic started March 8th and continued until June 13. The CDC is about 1 month behind in logging fatalities but since CV fatalities have dropped each of the last 4 weeks, there is a strong assumption the US has not been in a pandemic since June 13.
Now if you want to make the assumption the increasing case count of CV will lead to a late summer or fall pandemic, that's a different path. But the hot spots of testing and hospitalizations in the 13 states continue to be in highly dense population centers. They also are in a much lower age category and, so far, those ages have been highly resistant to severe health consequences.
When did CDC say the pandemic ended June 13? Do you have a link for that?
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid19/excess_deaths.htm
It doesn't say anything about the pandemic being over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In your second quote, there is no number of any kind.
I don't understand this. Are you saying if there's no number you don't believe it or think it's false or would you like the link or what? At its peak over 11 weeks ago, over 13,000 deaths a week were being attributed to CV. Now it's a little over 3,000.
According to the CDC, the pandemic started March 8th and continued until June 13. The CDC is about 1 month behind in logging fatalities but since CV fatalities have dropped each of the last 4 weeks, there is a strong assumption the US has not been in a pandemic since June 13.
Now if you want to make the assumption the increasing case count of CV will lead to a late summer or fall pandemic, that's a different path. But the hot spots of testing and hospitalizations in the 13 states continue to be in highly dense population centers. They also are in a much lower age category and, so far, those ages have been highly resistant to severe health consequences.
When did CDC say the pandemic ended June 13? Do you have a link for that?
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid19/excess_deaths.htm
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In your second quote, there is no number of any kind.
I don't understand this. Are you saying if there's no number you don't believe it or think it's false or would you like the link or what? At its peak over 11 weeks ago, over 13,000 deaths a week were being attributed to CV. Now it's a little over 3,000.
According to the CDC, the pandemic started March 8th and continued until June 13. The CDC is about 1 month behind in logging fatalities but since CV fatalities have dropped each of the last 4 weeks, there is a strong assumption the US has not been in a pandemic since June 13.
Now if you want to make the assumption the increasing case count of CV will lead to a late summer or fall pandemic, that's a different path. But the hot spots of testing and hospitalizations in the 13 states continue to be in highly dense population centers. They also are in a much lower age category and, so far, those ages have been highly resistant to severe health consequences.
When did CDC say the pandemic ended June 13? Do you have a link for that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tony nominee Nick Cordero passed away today at age 41. He spent 3 months in the ICU and suffered a lot (including a leg amputation). RIP
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=tA0Krpcyr60&feature=youtu.be
Tragic, of course. But, INCREDIBLY irresponsible to not report this as an EXTREMELY rare outcome among that age cohort. Why would the media do that? Honestly is never rewarded in their never ending quest to extend the virus epidemic well beyond its actual impact, because that gets eyes and clicks. Disgusting and terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Tony nominee Nick Cordero passed away today at age 41. He spent 3 months in the ICU and suffered a lot (including a leg amputation). RIP
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=tA0Krpcyr60&feature=youtu.be
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In your second quote, there is no number of any kind.
I don't understand this. Are you saying if there's no number you don't believe it or think it's false or would you like the link or what? At its peak over 11 weeks ago, over 13,000 deaths a week were being attributed to CV. Now it's a little over 3,000.
According to the CDC, the pandemic started March 8th and continued until June 13. The CDC is about 1 month behind in logging fatalities but since CV fatalities have dropped each of the last 4 weeks, there is a strong assumption the US has not been in a pandemic since June 13.
Now if you want to make the assumption the increasing case count of CV will lead to a late summer or fall pandemic, that's a different path. But the hot spots of testing and hospitalizations in the 13 states continue to be in highly dense population centers. They also are in a much lower age category and, so far, those ages have been highly resistant to severe health consequences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In your second quote, there is no number of any kind.
I don't understand this. Are you saying if there's no number you don't believe it or think it's false or would you like the link or what? At its peak over 11 weeks ago, over 13,000 deaths a week were being attributed to CV. Now it's a little over 3,000.
According to the CDC, the pandemic started March 8th and continued until June 13. The CDC is about 1 month behind in logging fatalities but since CV fatalities have dropped each of the last 4 weeks, there is a strong assumption the US has not been in a pandemic since June 13.
Now if you want to make the assumption the increasing case count of CV will lead to a late summer or fall pandemic, that's a different path. But the hot spots of testing and hospitalizations in the 13 states continue to be in highly dense population centers. They also are in a much lower age category and, so far, those ages have been highly resistant to severe health consequences.
DP. I suppose that you have looked at the responses by every other country and think that only Sweden and Brazil are responding properly to this not-pandemic.