Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Increase in daily new cases, per 100,000 people (i.e. adjusted for population size)
None of this is a surprise. If you looked at those charts in the context of other states, you'd see that they all had very low case #s during the shut down (vs. states like DC & MD, much less NY), and case ##s were always going to go up when they reopened. It is odd that people who live in DC look at this chart and come to the conclusion that DC is doing great and Arizona is a disaster (with DC at 14,000+ cases per million and AZ at 5,900). Plus, you all lost the "everyone needs to stay at home until the virus is gone" argument when you cheered, & participated in, the crowds of protestors. Absent a vaccine, the states will probably all converge to the same number of cases, more or less (with some variation for population density) and the only question will be how long it takes them to get there.
check out total confirmed cases per capita:
http://www.91-divoc.com/pages/covid-visualization/?fbclid=IwAR31GHXuyL1QxPp5xKusUXXQg2e0EEpwm9_oqEadVpooHw8CusCDSmUeBPg
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Increase in daily new cases, per 100,000 people (i.e. adjusted for population size)
None of this is a surprise. If you looked at those charts in the context of other states, you'd see that they all had very low case #s during the shut down (vs. states like DC & MD, much less NY), and case ##s were always going to go up when they reopened. It is odd that people who live in DC look at this chart and come to the conclusion that DC is doing great and Arizona is a disaster (with DC at 14,000+ cases per million and AZ at 5,900). Plus, you all lost the "everyone needs to stay at home until the virus is gone" argument when you cheered, & participated in, the crowds of protestors. Absent a vaccine, the states will probably all converge to the same number of cases, more or less (with some variation for population density) and the only question will be how long it takes them to get there.
check out total confirmed cases per capita:
http://www.91-divoc.com/pages/covid-visualization/?fbclid=IwAR31GHXuyL1QxPp5xKusUXXQg2e0EEpwm9_oqEadVpooHw8CusCDSmUeBPg
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Increase in daily new cases, per 100,000 people (i.e. adjusted for population size)
None of this is a surprise. If you looked at those charts in the context of other states, you'd see that they all had very low case #s during the shut down (vs. states like DC & MD, much less NY), and case ##s were always going to go up when they reopened. It is odd that people who live in DC look at this chart and come to the conclusion that DC is doing great and Arizona is a disaster (with DC at 14,000+ cases per million and AZ at 5,900). Plus, you all lost the "everyone needs to stay at home until the virus is gone" argument when you cheered, & participated in, the crowds of protestors. Absent a vaccine, the states will probably all converge to the same number of cases, more or less (with some variation for population density) and the only question will be how long it takes them to get there.
check out total confirmed cases per capita:
http://www.91-divoc.com/pages/covid-visualization/?fbclid=IwAR31GHXuyL1QxPp5xKusUXXQg2e0EEpwm9_oqEadVpooHw8CusCDSmUeBPg
Anonymous wrote:Increase in daily new cases, per 100,000 people (i.e. adjusted for population size)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Some skill:
ARIZONA has crossed the rubicon...[b] its epidemic now exceeds Brazil and Peru to be one of the hardest hit regions in the world. [/b]
Because if they are in trouble.. then looking at the numbers Maryland and Virginia should long ago run for cover..
see and compare..
Lets' fact check: Please take a note of the numbers for Brazil and Peru and compare them with the image below with cases in Arizona, Maryland and Virgina..
![]()
Brazil and Peru: Today's stats:
![]()
and here is Arizona, Maryland and Virginia..
![]()
The only thing that crossed the proverbial Rubicon is Dude's imagination.
Anonymous wrote:Arizona has still way less cases per million then MD and VA, See above...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Some skill:
ARIZONA has crossed the rubicon...[b] its epidemic now exceeds Brazil and Peru to be one of the hardest hit regions in the world. [/b]
Because if they are in trouble.. then looking at the numbers Maryland and Virginia should long ago run for cover..
see and compare..
Lets' fact check: Please take a note of the numbers for Brazil and Peru and compare them with the image below with cases in Arizona, Maryland and Virgina..
![]()
Brazil and Peru: Today's stats:
![]()
and here is Arizona, Maryland and Virginia..
![]()
The only thing that crossed the proverbial Rubicon is Dude's imagination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Comparing Arizona to Spain or Peru is outlandish. Also and perhaps offensive to those countries who endured so much.
Quick glance at the screen shot side by side of the countries and the Arizoa stats from wordometer worth million words:
Umm it’s per capita
Amazing. All that effort Making screenshots for nothing. Sad!