RiverDog wrote:I posted this link earlier in the thread. I'd like you to take a look at the graphs that compare the different countries that have been hit the hardest by the coronavirus. Pay particular attention to the 2nd graph, the growth rate in deaths rate of each country once deaths reach 100:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/202 ... untry.html
We are the only country that has seen their death rate increase after deaths reached 100. Italy, Spain, France, the UK, even Iran didn't see the delay in response that we've experienced despite the fact that we had more advanced warning than any of the others, inexcusable for a country like ours with the resources we have.
RiverDog wrote:I could excuse him from some degree of blame based on the fact that hindsight is 20/20 if he were to admit that we made some mistakes and vow to learn from them. But he still doesn't get it, advocating "full churches" on Easter, saying that there is "no way" he was going to cancel the Republican convention, vowing to restart the economy, etc.
Being the narcissist that he his, Trump lacks the ability to be self critical and learn from his mistakes. A few days ago, I saw a reporter asked him to rate his response on a scale of 1 to 10, and true to form, he gave himself a 10.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I can't see it and I'm not signing up for the New York Times. I have no interest in another membership.
I'm not sure how other nations calculate the death rate. We're a much bigger nation and New York I think we all knew was getting slaughtered. Or if the chart you posted is even a relevant statistic.
Aseahawkfan wrote:And as you continue to blame Trump, then tell me why Cuomo didn't better prepare for this? He runs New York. If you don't know your canned sardine state is in trouble, not sure why you should be running it. If we want to start tossing blame, we can toss it everywhere as far as preparation around the world. I see the usual suspects are focusing on Trump when none of the governors or leaders in America were sounding the alarm loud enough. Not in Congress, not in the states, and not at the top. So this is usual cherry picking by the peanut gallery. I didn't even see people on here freaking out at first.
Aseahawkfan wrote:So you can do your usual Trump blaming, while the evidence is clear the entire world was unprepared for this including the leaders of many nations. So you can keep the pretense up if it further confirms your anti-Trump bias. It isn't true. And it's BS.
RiverDog wrote:It tracks deaths, which is more accurate than reported cases as it's not dependent on sampling. It's not completely accurate as it doesn't take into account pre-existing conditions or quality of care, but it is as good of a number as we'll find in trying to track the spread.
Basically they started their graph after a country reached 100 deaths attributed to COVID-19, with percent of increase on the vertical axis, the date on the horizontal axis. Every one of the countries that have had over 100 deaths...Italy, China, France, Germany, Iran, et al, show their percent of increase on a significant decline except for the US.
Sure, Cuomo has some accountability as there's things that state and city governments could have done, but it's not anywhere near the same degree that rests with Trump. First of all, Cuomo wasn't privy to intelligence briefings like Trump was, and secondly, the federal government has far more resources to deploy in the event of a national emergency than does any state, even a large state like NY. When a hurricane or flood strikes, you don't hear about state governments taking action, you hear about FEMA, the Corps of Engineers, NOAA, etc. About the only agencies that a state can call upon is the National Guard, their DOT's, state and local police.
Now you know better than that. There have been a number occasions where I've defended Trump. This is RiverDog you're talking to, not Hawktalk.
Aseahawkfan wrote:What is the point of the number? Are they making some kind of argument with it? It is more fear-mongering with cherry picked numbers?
Aseahawkfan wrote:We have no idea what those intelligence briefings stated. It did not seem like anyone around the world was taking it seriously. I find blaming Trump disingenuous and false. The entire world was unprepared for this as near as I can tell. China was not very forthcoming with their information. Even now I think they under-reported the problem to make themselves look good which may well have caused the rest of the world to under prepare. That argument can be made too. Then what? We spend time blaming China for something they can't control either?
Aseahawkfan wrote:Sorry, the only point I'll maybe join you and the others in criticizing Trump besides his dumb talk if is he tries to push that April 15th date which we are not going to make. May 1st or June is my earliest date of return and we might not make that if this continues to blow up as it is in Italy.
Aseahawkfan wrote:This is appearing more and more as though China was an extremely bad neighbor that severely under-reported this virus's effect.
RiverDog wrote:They are not making any point, they are simply showing a graphic comparing countries that have reported 100 or more deaths, and they are using percent increase of deaths by day. In other words, if you have 100 deaths on Monday and Tuesday 10 more people died, your rate of increase would be 10%. Italy's rate of increase when they hit 100 deaths was about 37% on about March 2nd, peaked at 40% on about March 6th and has been on a steady decline since, only increasing at a rate of about 15% today. France and the UK showed very steep declines after they hit 100. Spain initially showed an increase but the last few weeks have been on a decline. There is a difference in that we are more populated than those countries so theoretically we'd hit our 100 earlier, but as I said, we had more lead time to prepare. It would be interesting to see it pro rated to take into account the size of the country, but the plots are so dramatic that I doubt that you'd see a huge adjustment in the rates.
There are reports that Trump began receiving briefings in January and by the end of that month, nearly every briefing had a warning that it was going to hit us hard. You can choose to discount it if you like, but it sure fits with previous complaints about Trump not even bothering to read his daily intelligence briefings and his constant feuding with the intelligence community. Add that to the fact that he's been downplaying this event even in the face of irrefutable evidence, constant misrepresenting facts that have to be corrected or amended, ect, and a picture begins to take shape.
The April 15th date isn't the only dumb thing Trump has come up with. They now have this half baked proposal to break down the outbreak by county rather than state and allow businesses in "low risk" counties to restart. There are many areas that have natural lag times, for example, eastern Washington is going to be behind western Washington simply because it takes a number of weeks for enough people to commute across the mountains from the Seattle area and spread the virus. I've seen a number of medical professionals going ballistic over this proposal. Even the Chairman of the Federal Reserve has come out and said not to get preoccupied with the economy, that the priority is getting the country back on its feet first.
Trump's motivation is that he wants the economy back up and running because it will help his chances of re-election, not because it's good for the country. You cannot trust him not to put his interests above the country's.
April is going to be a horrendous month. Michigan's deaths are doubling every two days, same rate as we've been seeing in New York. Same with Louisiana and New Jersey. Georgia's death total is doubling every 3 days, as is California. Washington state is actually in pretty good relative shape, doubling every 9 days.
Aseahawkfan wrote:You believe those unconfirmed reports, not me. I'm slightly supportive of Trump resisting the urgings of his intelligence staff. Intelligence and military staff are very agenda driven. The people Trump had around him are very hawkish and pro-war. I'm glad he is not very hawkish or pro-war. So I am glad he resisted their call outs for a much softer, more restrained policy.
Aseahawkfan wrote:If Trump ignored the warnings about how hard we would be hit, seems so did most of the world. So not seeing how you can fault him for something most of the world did. I still believe the primary reasons this occurred worldwide is because China under-reported and is still under-reporting the case and death tally to protect their economic and trade position.
.Aseahawkfan wrote:We aren't going to make April 12th. We'll be lucky to make May 1st.
Aseahawkfan wrote:At the end of this all, I think people will need to reassess their tolerance for Chinese lying. Not just America,but the entire world. If China lied about the virus, they need to be isolated and hammered until they capitulate around the world. No more lying and keeping information controlled in situations like this. I cannot at all imagine they were telling the truth.
RiverDog wrote:What I am saying is that based on what we know of both Trump's managerial habits and the statements that he's made since January that the reports of his ignoring or discounting intelligence given to him makes perfect sense. We'll find out for sure in a year or so after Congress investigates...and they will investigate no matter which party is in the majority, just like they did after the Kennedy assassination, like they did after 9/11, after Katrina, after the Challenger accident, and so on. This could tar and feather him more than his impeachment trial.
The rest of the world didn't have the advantage of seeing how the disease was impacting other countries. We did.
As far as China goes, I'm with you. I don't believe a thing they say. But that doesn't excuse our response to the virus.
Agreed. I have a vacation to Iceland planned for June 8th-20th. I'm hoping it will be safe to travel by then but I'm prepared to postpone it.
Hopefully there'll be some good to come from this where we all cooperate when it comes to fighting a truly common enemy like this. It's going to be difficult to penetrate closed societies like China and Russia, but they have to realize that it's in everybody's best interest to cooperate.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Don't pull a Trump on this one. Don't try to spread a lie that is provably false. We did not have time to prepare. We were already in the middle of this when governments around the world got started. We had no real advance notice, just people that don't seem to realize we didn't just suddenly blow up with COVID, it was already occuring. It's March 27th right now. And people been on ventilators for weeks that are dying now, dating back to January and February.
If you want to help spread lies to attack Trump, have at it. I"m not falling for crap.
Agreed. I have a vacation to Iceland planned for June 8th-20th. I'm hoping it will be safe to travel by then but I'm prepared to postpone it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Get your money back when you can.
Aseahawkfan wrote:China's control of information like this is a detriment to world safety and can no longer be tolerated. If they can't understand that, they should be isolated.
Aseahawkfan wrote:https://www.marketwatch.com/story/abbott-labs-receives-fda-approval-for-rapid-covid-19-test-2020-03-27
Rapid test approved and getting shipped. Hopefully this works.
RiverDog wrote:Another point: I see where Gov. Cuomo has delayed the NY presidential primary election until sometime in June. Bernie Sanders, in the interest of the health of his campaign workers and supporters, needs to concede NOW and put an end to his charade of a campaign that has zero chance of winning. The remaining primaries should be cancelled and their convention moved back into August.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Until we see Italy and Europe slowdown, we have no timetable for this virus. Italy is about to hit a .002 of population mortality rate. That would be 66000 people here. If they blow by that without slowing down, we're going to hit it more than likely. I would think our culture and society is somewhere between Germany/South Korea, the United Kingdom, and Italy and Spain. So we'll probably fall into a mortality rate somewhere in that region. So until we see Italy and Spain slow down, we're in for a rough ride.
80000 is one of the more believable numbers I've seen. I think we will likely hit that number. This is just starting.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The April 12th date is a pipe dream. Trump had better wake up to the fact this is not the flu, not something that is going to calm down, and it is going to rip us up. If he doesn't manage it as well as possible listening to his experts, then he's going to be out of office soon enough as the death rate continues to climb.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I keep listening to these pro-Trump people making excuse after excuse and trying to reason their way as to why this won't be as bad as Italy or whatever place or what not and the cases and deaths just keep on rising spitting in their faces. Viruses don't give a crap about politics. They don't care about your assumptions. They don't care about dates or families or anything of the like. They are just here to breed and kill until we stop them using our tools or our immune systems finally resist them.
People can cast blame, make excuses, pray to their gods, argue, and do all they like, the virus don't care one bit. Right now if we could talk to this virus, it is laughing at April 12th for a return to work date, rubbing its hands, and foaming at the mouth for more breeding space. "Send all them people back to work and back into the theaters. I need to breed and kill some more."
Hawktawk wrote:More great news Everyone is gonna wind up being exposed to this...
Hawktawk wrote:More great news Everyone is gonna wind up being exposed to this...
Aseahawkfan wrote:I don't want people panic because this disease has been circulating since January or December worldwide. Now we're testing for it and attributing deaths to it rather than assuming the flu or pneumonia from something else. Like Cuomo said, the people dying right now have been on ventilators, some for weeks. This didn't happen overnight like it is being assumed by people watching the media. It's been with us a while and is now being tracked. All we're seeing is the growth in testing and tracking it and attributing deaths previously thought to be something else.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I'm hoping people both take this seriously, but at the same time understand that this is not as though the virus just started to spread but has been here and we just started testing for it.
RiverDog wrote:Yes, it's a mystery as to how long it's been circulating. I'm certain that sometime after this is all said and done, they'll nail it down pretty good, but it's a moot point now.
Just from my own random sampling, it seems to me that people are taking this seriously.
Aseahawkfan wrote:My sample is mixed. Some are taking it seriously, some are blowing it off. Some of the pro-Trump crowd is using it to blame China, blame the Democrats, and generally act like this is being over-blown by the media to bring down Trump. Slowly even these people are coming around, but I think we'll have to see that death toll rise to where we think it is going for some of these politicized idiots to realize we've gone beyond politics and need everyone on-board regardless of which party you come from. This is a problem threatening all of America (and the world) and no one has time for petty politics any more. Not sure what death threshold we have to pass for that happen, but hopefully sooner rather than later.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Not that the Democrats aren't making their own hay attacking Trump,but some of these pro-Trump people trying to act like things aren't as bad as they appear to be going need to wake up. This is going to be bad, terrible. And it's just starting, not ending or at it's worst point, but just starting the epi curve climb more than likely. We're probably going to have quite a few days like Italy.
Hawktawk wrote: As Dr Fauci said matter of factly this morning it could kill between 100 and 200 k in the current best case scenario although he cautioned it's a fluid situation that could change on a daily basis.Currently one country reports no new cases, China and urn purchases suggest their reporting may be off by 40 or 50 times the actual amount. S Korea has begun to descend the curve ,the other country to do so I believe but they were one of the best in the world at mobilizing mass drive up testing, having tested 12 of every 100 citizens. America is 2 in 100 and really didn't test more than a few hundred people nationwide for weeks as this spread.
This country lost a month in testing and distancing after the height of the threat was known in a nation of 327 million people.Fauci said as much this morning" its was a failure of government' .
Its alot of peoples fault. If we had tests and test criteria to identify hotspots as well as distancing a month earlier we wouldn't be having nearly this type of discussion. Its altered the trajectory of the world and certainly america.
Sucks
Aseahawkfan wrote:My math was bad earlier. I want to correct that. Italy passed the .0001 of total population. That is a much smaller percentage, though still 33000 deaths for us. Italy is about to pass the .0002 of total population. I prefer tracking total population to see if measures to slow it have been effective and how truly dangerous it the disease is on a population level. If Italy hits .0002 of population, that would be 66000 for us. It looks likes Italy deaths slowed a bit. I hope that trend continues.
Hawktawk wrote:As I posted elsewhere as of yesterday Quincy washington had 25 confirmed cases after having none a few days earlier. And this is a hispanic orchard, vineyard and ag community. Large close families, high rates of diabetes, older persons often overweight and in poor health and quite possibly a cultural, hygiene and language barrier. Their culture teaches throwing TP in the ttrash for instance due to poor plumbing, something I dealt with regsrding my hispanic employees running golf courses.
Anyone who thinks just opening up these more remote areas such as eastern washington or the midwest is a great idea for the next couple weeks at is delusional. Every state is seeing a rise in cases, deaths etc. WA is actually leveling off a bit in new cases which is encouraging and understandable since Inslee was weeks ahead of trump on the social distancing for which he has become a constant target of Trump during briefings. As for as I know WA and NY are the only states leveling off a bit in new cases at all and deaths in NYC are occuring at a rate of every 9.5 minutes . As Biden said on MTP this AM its a "false choice" to say open now and save the economy because if we completely relaxed restrictions now we might kill 2 million people.
As Dr Fauci said matter of factly this morning it could kill between 100 and 200 k in the current best case scenario although he cautioned it's a fluid situation that could change on a daily basis.Currently one country reports no new cases, China and urn purchases suggest their reporting may be off by 40 or 50 times the actual amount. S Korea has begun to descend the curve ,the other country to do so I believe but they were one of the best in the world at mobilizing mass drive up testing, having tested 12 of every 100 citizens. America is 2 in 100 and really didn't test more than a few hundred people nationwide for weeks as this spread.
This country lost a month in testing and distancing after the height of the threat was known in a nation of 327 million people.Fauci said as much this morning" its was a failure of government' .
Its alot of peoples fault. If we had tests and test criteria to identify hotspots as well as distancing a month earlier we wouldn't be having nearly this type of discussion. Its altered the trajectory of the world and certainly america.
Sucks
Aseahawkfan wrote:We're thoroughly infected. This stuff been spreading since January or December unseen. We don't even know the extent of it and won't until more testing is done. I do wish they would start antibody testing soon. We need to know not only who is infected, but who has already been infected. This could help with decision making and a cure if we have a lot of people with blood with antibodies we can inject in other people. We can start blood donation with antibodies on a large scale. Nice thing about blood donation is it is unlikely to do much harm and has a good possible outcome with low downside risk. We know barring some blood disease that transfusing someone else with blood is mostly harmless.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I wouldn't get caught up in this "we lost a month" stuff. No one knows that for certain at all. Looking at other nation is not a measure of how we handle things. Each nation seems to be handling things differently. Some better than others. I figure we'll fall somewhere between given our size, freedom, and lack of respect for authority in general. And if we lost a month, so did everywhere else save perhaps South Korea. This is one of those once in a century pandemics and so far not even close to 1918 in mortality, which I doubt it will come close to reaching.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I was watching how the South Koreans handle this. Everyone has masks and the South Korean medical staff are highly recommending masks for everyone as their main expert said it helped stop the spread of previous outbreaks in South Korea. He said masks are plentiful in South Korea, but not so much elsewhere. The South Koreans are very organized. They even have an app for tracking people during quarantine they force you to install on your cell phone. If you move to an area not within the phone's range, then they will contact you and tell you to get back in quarantine. Their people follow the guidelines or suffer the consequences. Would Americans tolerate that level of tracking? Hard to say. I'm doubtful.
RiverDog wrote:I seriously doubt that the virus was here and spreading since December, but we'll find out once they've been able to collect more information on how it spread.
Even besides the fact that DJT has been and continues to be downplaying the crisis, the government failed miserably. There was a 6 week delay in having tests ready as we didn't want to use what Europe and Asia had, we had to develop our own. Heck, I have the personal experience with my own brother-in-law to validate that fact. I still haven't heard a good explanation why we couldn't have used the test everyone else was using until we had developed our own. They had to have known that the critical element in testing was timeliness. You said it yourself, the one weapon we have is testing. Symptoms are so delayed and easily confused with other common ailments that the only way of having a reasonable assurance if a person is infected is to perform a test.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Did you ever find out if your brother-in-law was positive?
RiverDog wrote:Yes, he tested negative. It took him 10 days to get the results, part of what was so screwed up about our testing program. At the start, there was only one lab in the nation, in Atlanta I believe, that the CDC had authorized to process the test. UW received approval to process the tests shortly before he was tested and they had a huge backlog in processing the tests, leading to the delay in getting results.
In the meantime, he had to remain in self quarantine and his wife started showing symptoms. Both are healthy now, though. Thanks for asking!
Oh, and here's a timeline of the problems incurred by the CDC that insisted that they create their own test:
https://www.businessinsider.com/us-coro ... ine-2020-3
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