Covid theory.. with supporting date.

Status
Not open for further replies.

L4Dawg

All-American
Oct 27, 2016
10,682
7,403
113
Me?? Ok Ronabro. Your the guy that has continually for 6 months propagated your Rona stuff on all message boards. I called out your lies and stories yet you still continue to bring as much negativity as you can find. I get it you enjoy the negative. But I'm the sick individual. Maybe just maybe your the sick individual. Most people on this board have called you out. I'm calling you out for your made up stories
Called out LOL. That's absolutely hilarious. Do I get to choose the weapons? Do we go to Dodge City or will Crawford do?

FYI: I haven't lied about the people I know/knew. I wish I WAS lying. You are one sad individual.
 

johnson86-1

All-American
Aug 22, 2012
14,584
5,066
113
Their high schoolers have just returned for the first time since march. Their people DID make prudent decisions without being forced to. We won't even do it with force. That's the whole point.

Their experts made prudent decisions. Their experts didn't do a bunch of stupid stuff and lie and then act surprised when some people disregarded their sensible and stupid advice while other people followed both sensible and stupid advice.
 

Sapsdawg

Redshirt
Nov 15, 2005
354
1
18
False, like so much else you post. You've changed your tune on Sweden a dozen times. Now I see you've changed from wait 2 weeks to wait 1.5 weeks.

https://www.thelocal.se/20200511/how-swedens-schools-have-adapted-to-the-coronavirus

https://www.tes.com/news/have-swedish-schools-really-carried-normal

https://www.usnews.com/news/best-co...eopened-schools-amid-the-coronavirus-pandemic

According to these stories the schools in Sweden never closed for 16 and under and remained open throughout this used to be pandemic, now casedemic.
 

pmack3641

Sophomore
Aug 9, 2019
475
177
43
Yep people that were concerned about the virus made up half of the problems of catching the virus or what the end results are. It’s a shame that 200k people most with underlying conditions died from it. If they only knew it was made up....
 
Last edited:

engie

Freshman
May 29, 2011
10,759
94
48
90% nature, 10% human behavior. The whole world has seen the same pattern regardless of what they did/didn't do. People go inside, the virus spreads. People go outside or turn off their AC, the virus slows. It makes it to 2-2.5% confirmed infections, it slows down.

Some of this stuff "may" have helped slow it down -- or it may have just run it's course. A lot of places that basically never came out of pretty good lockdowns are seeing spikes now. What do they all have in common? Low per capita initial infection rates.
 

Captain Ron

Junior
Aug 22, 2012
693
307
63
90% nature, 10% human behavior. The whole world has seen the same pattern regardless of what they did/didn't do. People go inside, the virus spreads. People go outside or turn off their AC, the virus slows. It makes it to 2-2.5% confirmed infections, it slows down.

Some of this stuff "may" have helped slow it down -- or it may have just run it's course. A lot of places that basically never came out of pretty good lockdowns are seeing spikes now. What do they all have in common? Low per capita initial infection rates.

I may not agree with the AC part, but the data supports the rest of your post. Example after example. Mandate or no mandate. I can’t wait to see what Hawaii eventually does if there is not a quick vaccine.
 

ckDOG

All-American
Dec 11, 2007
10,093
6,018
113
Do we really have the data to conclude this?

I may not agree with the AC part, but the data supports the rest of your post. Example after example. Mandate or no mandate. I can’t wait to see what Hawaii eventually does if there is not a quick vaccine.

I certainly think it's possible. I don't think the seroprevalence approach we have right now really touches anywhere near how many folks have been exposed to this thing. Combo with lower risk at younger ages and it wouldn't be surprising to see if we were at or near the tail end of this thing.

That said, I'm not sure how we conclude this based on seasonal graphs - especially if we are acknowledging that it's inherently more difficult to pass the virus along when it's warm and we spend more time outside. If anything, that means less people have been infected and it's even more important how people manage their behavior in the winter when it cools off and we tend to spend time inside closer quarters.

Also, on the topic of observations being similar be mandate vs no mandate. Does any data objectively exist to measure actual behavior? Policy certainly is verifiable but how do we know which areas ignore policy to distance and which areas are distancing but not bc they are compelled to do so by policy?
 

Jeffreauxdawg

All-American
Dec 15, 2017
8,871
7,935
113
I may not agree with the AC part, but the data supports the rest of your post. Example after example. Mandate or no mandate. I can’t wait to see what Hawaii eventually does if there is not a quick vaccine.

I will agree with Engie on the AC. I pulled data on the top 20 countries by cases in the Northern Hemisphere for about a week back in July. I also pulled data on AC sales by country from 2018. There was very high correlation between AC sales and cases.. Per Capita population was accounted for.. It was almost able to accurately predict what rank the country would be in weekly cases based in AC sales ranking. I will try to find it for you.

ETA. I only pulled the data on the top 20 countries by daily case counts from July 16-23. And only in the Northern Hemisphere. The countries with lots of AC's that didn't make the top 20 were Japan, China, South Korea, and Italy... Those countries have been outliers in all sorts of ways. But I am sure there are other holes in the data.

View attachment 17771
View attachment 17772
 
Last edited:

engie

Freshman
May 29, 2011
10,759
94
48
I may not agree with the AC part, but the data supports the rest of your post. Example after example. Mandate or no mandate. I can’t wait to see what Hawaii eventually does if there is not a quick vaccine.

There are cases where it's gotten aerosolized and infected a high percentage of large groups of people that never got close to each other sans being in the same buildings. It's obviously a worst case scenario, but it is happening.

That said, UV manufacturing for AC systems is catching up. At the end of this thing, we'll have effectively seen the end of stuff being spread through commercial ventilation IMO. Even worth putting in your house most likely as the price comes down from supply catching up.
 

Captain Ron

Junior
Aug 22, 2012
693
307
63
There are cases where it's gotten aerosolized and infected a high percentage of large groups of people that never got close to each other sans being in the same buildings. It's obviously a worst case scenario, but it is happening.

That said, UV manufacturing for AC systems is catching up. At the end of this thing, we'll have effectively seen the end of stuff being spread through commercial ventilation IMO. Even worth putting in your house most likely as the price comes down from supply catching up.

And I guess I should have said “I haven’t studied the data wrt AC to agree or disagree.”

I will say this, apparently the hepa filters do the trick on aircraft. Flight crews have a lower infection rate than the general population. If you consider the nature of the job and the fact social distancing is all but impossible, (and 99% do not wear a mask on the flight deck because of communication issues) that is pretty good supporting data.
 

L4Dawg

All-American
Oct 27, 2016
10,682
7,403
113
False, like so much else you post. You've changed your tune on Sweden a dozen times. Now I see you've changed from wait 2 weeks to wait 1.5 weeks.

https://www.thelocal.se/20200511/how-swedens-schools-have-adapted-to-the-coronavirus

https://www.tes.com/news/have-swedish-schools-really-carried-normal

https://www.usnews.com/news/best-co...eopened-schools-amid-the-coronavirus-pandemic

According to these stories the schools in Sweden never closed for 16 and under and remained open throughout this used to be pandemic, now casedemic.
Ugh.....that's what I said, high schoolers.
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.