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#281 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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I wonder what the numbers need to be to declare HIV, TB and a plethora of other infectious diseases over! Why don't they?! It wasn't easy to convince The Atheist of the fact, but he only recently discovered that Covid-19 kills more people than other infectious diseases. Maybe he should consider if that might be the reason why it's not declared over. He could make it so easy on himself if he reduced all his posts about the pandemic to: SARS-CoV-2 will continue to kill people, but I don't give a **** because the majority are older than 65 and/or frail. And those who aren't don't really matter because it's much easier to ignore them than to ignore somebody wearing a face mask because that reminds us that there's a pandemic going on. The dead and dying are much more discreet than people masking up. They don't make it so conspicuous that the virus is still spreading, mutating, evolving, maiming and killing. |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#282 |
The Grammar Tyrant
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 34,492
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What a complete load of utter garbage - there isn't a single person has ever written in any covid thread that "shedding" is anything other than lunatic conspiracist nonsense.
You seem to be having fun setting fire to strawmen of your own design right now. Good game. Again conflating two different things incorrectly - the list of logical fallacies you're posting is way past hilarious now. Nobody said covid was over, just the pandemic. While continuing to flat-out lie about what I said. I admitted to making a mistake by leaving a word out of my post. Your dishonest posting seems to have no limit. That's getting close, and if you were honest and had said: SARS-CoV-2 will continue to kill people, but I don't give a **** because the majority are older than 80 and/or frail... ...you'd have hit my position dead on. I really don't care that people who would be dead within weeks or months are sent early by covid, it saves a lot of tax dollars. And as marting showed you in the covid thread - and you conveniently ignore because it doesn't suit your scenario - people now dying of covid are either unvaccinated (and I certainly don't care) or are very old and very ill. Yet another idiotic strawman - nobody gives a toss about people wearing masks other than conspiracist loons, and none of them are participating in the thread. I do, however, think it's unconscionable that Chinese parents insisting their children wear masks in 28-degree heat all day at school. But hey, at least they're keeping the paranoid people happy. |
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The point of equilibrium has passed; satire and current events are now indistinguishable. |
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#283 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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I'll give The Atheist a chance to correct the 'mistakes' he has made in his most recent post, be it "by leaving a word out" or whatever other excuses he can come up with.
And then I'll pull it apart and show his 'mistakes' for what they are. |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#284 |
The Grammar Tyrant
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 34,492
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The point of equilibrium has passed; satire and current events are now indistinguishable. |
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#285 |
Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 4,488
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I don't think that's true. While it's true the situation's far less dire now, obviously, but I don't think we're quite there, yet, where no one gives, or should give, a toss. I think it makes sense to stay careful, within reason, and without going overboard. If your work requires you to expose yourself to lots of people --- in a manner of speaking, heh, you know what I mean --- and if distancing and even constant masking can make it difficult for you to function (given other people's reaction to you, among other things), then I can understand going easy. Things are much safer now, after all. But if you're able to, then why not stay careful for a few months more, until we're fully sure it's over? I don't see any downside to staying cautious --- within reason, and within the limits of what one's work necessitates. That's prescriptive, or at least my version of it. As far as what is, rather than what ought to be, I agree, probably more than 50% no longer give a toss, either out of necessity, else due to temperament. But I don't think it's 99%. Plucking numbers off of thin air, my impression is at least 25% or so do give something of a toss. And at least 10% still give more than a toss. Again, purely subjective estimates, those. And I'm among that last. Like I said, having persevered so long, it seems silly not to hold on for a few months more, even if in retrospect that turns out overly cautious. Provided one's work and life situation permits it. Why go out of your way to court trouble, simply from being unable to stay patient for a few months more? |
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#286 |
Illuminator
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Mexico
Posts: 3,153
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In the area I live in people use masks because the place they are mandates it. Three steps outside and its no mask.
No "karen" incidents, no loud protests either. The shock of it all is over. Many if not most here are vaccinated and feeling safe in the vaccine=resistance thing we were all told. Most of the extremely vulnerable were the first wave of deaths which is unfortunate but historically inevitable. The frequency of old person house cleaning loads coming through my work are very few. There used to be a lot more a year ago. The kids scrap everything not sellable nor modern. The disease is not over. It is with us for a few centuries more at least. Everyone seems to know that too. Maybe that is why there are no loud protests now. Between high survival rates and vaccine hype people have not been as worried. Don't blame the public for believing what the government told us was true. Most followed the guidelines more or less. As best we could at least. |
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#287 |
The Grammar Tyrant
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 34,492
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I'm just not seeing it anywhere I know about. The population has put it in the past, in the enormous majority of people.
I think "a few more months" is ridiculously optimistic. Covid is now an endemic disease and needs to put in with all the others as something to be watched, vaccinated against, and continuing research done to see if we can knock the little bastard off. Having it retain pandemic status is crazy in 2023, and might well be counter-productive when the next pandemic arises, as it surely will. We got lucky with the H1N1 'flu, and only slightly unlucky with covid, and the way that's gone we should be looking for ways to bolster response to next pandemic, not spend years crying wolf for a disease that now kills fewer people than suicide and homicide. I think NZ's response is spot on, as we've been for most of the pandemic - we now have no enforceable rules for the disease. [quote=Chanakya;14020842]I don't see any downside to staying cautious --- within reason, and within the limits of what one's work necessitates.]/QUOTE] People are still welcome to be cautious. I live in an area where about 30% of the population are Chinese and they're largely still wearing masks and that's fine. I'm not so fine with kids being made to wear them all day in NZ heat, however. It's 28 degrees every day, and kids as young as 5 are being forced to wear masks inside and out all day by their parents. I think that's not just stupid, but also dangerous and pointless. They've got to take them off to eat, and even on sunny days the kids are cramped together to eat outside, so if covid's around, they'll get it anyway. n rainy days kids sit 35 to a room to eat lunch, so there's no way of avoiding exposure. I'm sure different countries are treating it differently, but I only see western groups, and masks are rare as rocking horse poop. There you go - that's news to me, Mexico must be one of the last places with mandates. Yeah, I think that's not a bad summary - I'd give the world a mild pass for covid. Most people acted and took it seriously, and we were lucky it wasn't anywhere near as contagious early on as it is now. Had we started with the infectiousness of omicron with the severity of delta, we'd be in a much different place today. |
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The point of equilibrium has passed; satire and current events are now indistinguishable. |
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#288 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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Sometimes numbers are difficult. Sometimes people don't get them right because they don't give a toss.
Then there are the children. Won't anybody think of the children?! Exactly! When people are in denial about the actual, already existing ways to avoid exposure and insist that not even trying is the way to go, preventable diseases do indeed become unavoidable, the natural order of things. Ordinary children obviously no longer count in a society that doesn't prioritize their health. However, some parents obviously still care. But who can those weird, insensitive parents be? Are they the allegedly 0.001% of the population who still gives a toss? Are they Chinese or other minority groups (Māori?) who don't count? Or do they come from countries that prioritize children's health?
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Cumulative confirmed COVID-19 deaths in New Zealand, March 7, 2022 to March 6, 2023 |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#289 |
The Grammar Tyrant
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 34,492
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Your love affair with Cuba is hilarious.
They love their kids so much! https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-64811310 |
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The point of equilibrium has passed; satire and current events are now indistinguishable. |
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#290 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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This is The Atheist having fun pretending that I accused anybody of having "written in any covid thread" that vaccine shedding is real. My link was to an article in Health about the delusion that "people who had received a COVID vaccine could "shed" the virus to others and cause harm." I never claimed that it had been posted in an ISF thread. In other words: This is The Atheist is having fun setting fire to a strawman of his own design. The pandemic isn't over, but some people think that it will go away if only they pretend it's over, and they panic unless everybody else pretends that it's over, too.
Quote:
This is the part of the pandemic that seems to be difficult for The Atheist to grasp: It isn't over just because to pretend that it is. This is me correcting The Atheist's claim, highlighting his lie in a quotation, and providing him with links that prove him wrong (post 2,725). This is The Atheist doubling down, accusing me of "total dishonesty" and a "failed attempt at lying," and trying to prove his accusation with a quotation that proves me right and him wrong. This is me pointing out his lie for the third time. And this is The Atheist pretending that he just made the mistake of leaving ""non" out of the sentence" and pretending that that was all he did. And no sooner has it been established that COVID-19 is the infectious disease: The fact that's the number 1 infectious disease is irrelevant. I think we all know The Atheist's attitude to the lives of people who "are older than 80 and/or frail" (I think he forgot to bold the word frail). As for his claim that the majority are older than 80, I am not sure that he is right. When I look at COVID-19 deaths at Weekly Updates by Select Demographic and Geographic Characteristics (COVID-19) (CDC, 2019 to Mar 1, 2023), there are 589,426 in the 75+ age bracket and 524,135 younger than that, but it is safe to assume that about 50% of COVID-19 deaths are in people younger than 80! And that is the whole point of The Atheist's posts about the pandemic: He doesn't care about people's lives, he doesn't care about people's health (even though bad health costs "a lot of tax dollars"), and he repeats [url=http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=14001918#post14001918]his usual lie about "people who would be dead within weeks or months" (see post 250) as if that is the reality of the pandemic. I have no idea what marting is supposed to have shown me and I am supposed to have ignored. It is so convenient to lie about these things when you don't provide any links. And since he is an expert on conveniently ignoring posts, I will take the opportunity to remind him of post 234 (Dec 30, 2022) and post 251 (Jan 11, 2023) in this thread. It has been convenient for him to ignore them no matter how many times I remind him. See post 288. |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#291 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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Yes, Cuba loves children and prioritizes children's health. Unlike The Atheist, Cuba doesn't invent a false dichotomy between immunizing children against Covid-19 and immunizing them against other diseases, as if it would be impossible to do both: 'Let's keep the priorities straight by refusing to immunize children against a disease using an effective vaccine with no serious side effects'. Unlike The Atheist's priorities, Cuban health care is based on science, as it should be, whereas The Atheist in the case of children advocates what the anti-vaxxers refer to as natural immunization by Covid-19 infection, i.e. let children get infected, so they can learn to live (or die) with the virus! Cuba even cares about old people, even the 80+ (very much unlike The Atheist). Cuba doesn't pretend that SARS-CoV-2 is ... Again: Cuba's health care is science-based - unlike the tall tales told by The Atheist: New Zealand road deaths in 2022: 373 - a little more than the average of recent years and yet no comparison to the SARS-CoV-2 death toll: New Zealand Covid-19 deaths in 2022: 2,280 Cuba Covid-19 deaths in 2022: 208 It is obvious that even the hypocritical strategy of allegedly prioritizing the lives of young people over the lives of old or frail people whose toe tags have allegedly already been written is based on a false dichotomy. You can do both: Care for lives and health of the old as well as the young. And some countries do care! |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#292 |
Philosopher
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Sweden
Posts: 7,693
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God I wish I lived in a totalitarian communist hellhole.
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We would be a lot safer if the Government would take its money out of science and put it into astrology and the reading of palms. Only in superstition is there hope. - Kurt Vonnegut Jr And no, Cuba is not a brutal and corrupt dictatorship, and it's definitely less so than Sweden. - dann |
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#293 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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I see no reason why you shouldn't make your wish come true. Do it! Judging by the North-Korea-style appeal to false authority that seems to characterize a majority of Swedish skeptics, I don't think you will have any problems fitting in.
The New Totalitarians: The Swedish COVID-19 strategy and the implications of consensus culture and media policy for public health (SSM Population Health Vol 14, June 2021/ScienceDirect) Evaluation of science advice during the COVID-19 pandemic in Sweden (Humanities & Social Sciences Communications, Mar 22, 2022 (correction July 15, 2022)) Coronavirus: Should We Aim for Herd Immunity Like Sweden? (Thomas Pueyo, June 9, 2020 (update Nov 22, 2020) I think the North Korean numbers are as unreliable as Sweden's promise to protect the old and infirm while the rest of the population was exposed to its state epidemiologist's attempts to achieve herd immunity by infection. I wonder if Kim Jung-Un did worse than Anders Tegnell. As for Cuba, the country is just a little larger than Sweden, so I see no reason to use the "relative to population" function: Cumulative confirmed COVID-19 deaths Even though the pandemic isn't over, the epidemics can actually be considered to be over in a few countries that didn't buy into Kulldorff's Great Barrington libertarianism. |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#294 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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Who's next after XBB.1.5 'Kraken'? XBB.1.16 'Arcturus', apparently.
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'Don't worry. This is not an super-spreader event. It is already everywhere and it's definitely not news!'
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#295 |
The Grammar Tyrant
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 34,492
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Meanwhile, in the real world, where panic about covid is dead and buried, like the very old, frail people it's still killing, even ultra-cautious Japan just removed travel restrictions.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/travel/news/...r-restrictions |
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The point of equilibrium has passed; satire and current events are now indistinguishable. |
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#296 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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The real world is what The Atheist always ignores whenever he is confronted with it. For instance when he declared that flu deaths in New Zealand "are ~500 a year, and omicron's going to be much lower than that", and yet:
But that was in 2022, and The Atheist's attitude to his own predictions is always: Let bygones be bygones, and ignore them if they don't suit him. So how about 2023, then? Let's see: Cumulative confirmed COVID-19 deaths in New Zealand from Jan 1 to April 17, 2023: 2,331 --> 2,716, i.e. 385 COVID-19 deaths in New Zealand so far this year, so again in 2023 omicron's death toll is not going to be "much lower than" 500. How much higher it will be remains to be seen. Winter in NZ hasn't even started yet. There are also The Atheist's repeated lies about the death toll of COVID-19 compared to deaths in traffic: "It's a risk, but to me, it's on par with the risk of driving to the clinic." Road deaths in NZ in 2023 so far: 110. Not even one third of COVID-19 deaths. Old lives matter! Frail lives matter! But ageists and ableists don't see it that way, which is why they celebrate any change in policy anywhere that sacrifices those lives. The also ignore it when a country like Japan "still recommends travellers and locals wear masks in appropriate situations, such as “crowded commuter trains and buses”" even when it's mentioned in an article they link to. |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#297 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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Tess Finch-Lees: The Covid pandemic isn't fully over and we've been too quick to ignore the continuing risks (Independent.ie, July 9, 2023)
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#298 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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US flying blind to potential COVID-19 resurgence, experts say, as states scale back on testing, data reporting (ABC News, Mar 22, 2022)
Unreliable numbers, but still:
Quote:
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So there is reason to assume that Biden's heat-wave advice will help spread the virus:
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Damned if you do, and damned if you don't. |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#299 |
Philosopher
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 6,827
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Now that we moved from isolation to relying on vaccinations to keep the virus at bay, we have to return to some kind of 'normal' and let it rip. Unfortunately that means more people will die, but it's now down to an acceptable risk for most of us.
I walked past the movie theater yesterday and saw there was one screening that I would like to see. I would to like go with friends, but that would probably mean a crowded theater and none us are comfortable with that. Maybe next year. |
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We don't want good, sound arguments. We want arguments that sound good. |
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#300 |
Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 4,488
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The prospect of people dying, we ourselves, or more likely the old and infirm among us, can that ever be acceptable? Well okay, it can be, but should it? I'd suggest "letting it rip" as far as the essentials, but exercising restraint, within bounds and not going overboard with the restraint like in past times, for things that aren't essential. And yes, sure, one man's essential is another's not-essential. If someone's quality of life is very substantially dented by not watching a movie on a big screen, or by not drinking in a pub rather than in private or not at all, well then that's valid enough for them. But the unquestioned and unquestioning gathering in masses as in times past, it might not hurt to question that, a bit, for as long as that questioning does not become completely nutso. IMV we're not there yet. |
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#301 |
Critical Thinker
Join Date: Apr 2023
Posts: 458
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#302 |
Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 4,488
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Can't make out if this is sarcasm, or literally meant. "Can't imagine not smoking, not copulating indiscriminately, not drinking to excess, not eating indiscriminately, not questioning if that outing in public is something we really need to do, watching out to make sure we don't utter racist sexist slurs, damn that's no way to live." Like that. If meant that way, then I agree! But probably aimed wrong, because Roger Ramjets wasn't saying anything totally weird, a small disagreement of degree rather than of kind, I'd say. But if you meant that literally, then I disagree. Sure, general healthy living's cool, but if there's specific risks, then those must be addressed on their own terms. General platitudes, while not completely irrelevant, go only so far. |
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#303 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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Body of work. I'm surprised hydroxychloroquine isn't mentioned in addition to diet, exercise and vitamin D.
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#304 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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Some kind 'normal' would be the #DavosStandard for everybody, which would be the opposite of letting it rip. And it would also mean that those of us who are not the most of us might be able to venture into a cinema, a concert or other public venues without having to fear for their health and life. I consider going to watch the two Barbenheimer movies, but I'll probably buy my tickets online for a show in a fairly big movie theatre with few tickets sold. And I'll wear a face mask. That's as close as one can get to the #DavosStandard without being a Davos billionaire. |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#305 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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Still not over. And it may be on the rise again according to WHO.
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#306 |
Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 4,488
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Thanks for posting that! I no longer follow Covid news, like I used to. Unless that is it jumps out at one, which it no longer does. This forum is the one place where I still continue to check these two threads --- and that other thread, the main Covid thread, had fallen off of my Subscriptions list, with a new volume of that ongoing discussions in place now, that I never noticed. Have put that new thread in my Subscriptions list now. |
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#307 |
Philosopher
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 6,827
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We don't want good, sound arguments. We want arguments that sound good. |
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#308 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Yokohama, Japan
Posts: 28,687
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Haven't looked at the stats in months, but it does appear to be mostly over:
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/ At the peak of the pandemic there were over 10,000 deaths per day, compared to around 200/day over the last month or two. I have been vaccinated 4 times and don't plan to get any more. I have neither tested positive nor even felt like I was ill since then. The Japanese government plans to stop offering free vaccines next year. Here's an interesting story about how free Covid testing was used to steal from the government: Fraudulent COVID testing scheme in Japan using staff saliva pulled in $140,000 per day
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A fool thinks himself to be wise, but a wise man knows himself to be a fool. William Shakespeare |
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#309 |
Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 4,488
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Finally read that thread, that you’d linked to and I’d bookmarked the other day. (Yeah, short enough thread, but only got around to actually reading it just now.) Agreed, Covid is “still not over.” Heh, it was it was interesting to see the, the passions in that thread, with completely opposing viewpoints about whether we still need to bother with precautions, and each side coming down hard on the other. Me, I think either choice is cool, at this time, and it's a personal thing, really. ...Those times, when we'd (very rightly) look on with horror at those cross-eyed morons that kept insisting that masks weren't needed, that vaccines are neither useful nor safe, the deliberate parties to spread infection, we'd see them as completely demented, and a danger both to themselves and to the rest of us. Those times are clearly past. But nor are we quite there, IMV, where someone still taking precautions should be looked on as some kind of nutjob. ...I'd say it's a personal thing, at this point, like I said. (And of course, for the personal thing to be based on facts and reason, one would need to keep on with what's happening on the Covid front. Not many do that nowadays, I guess.) |
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#310 |
Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 4,488
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Interesting and informative posts both, snipped for brevity. ...What that got me wondering about, is ongoing vaccinations. Should we keep getting these vaccines on an ongoing basis, maybe once a year? ...That is, for the old and those with "co-morbidities", sure, they should, that's kind of a no-brainer, but I mean the rest of us? eta: Although, I guess if one's to be consistent, then those who do believe that some reasonable precautions still make sense, should also keep up with vaccine doses. |
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#311 |
Philosopher
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 6,827
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Of course you should. New variants are coming out all the time, and cases are on the rise. Even if you are immune to older variants you may still be vulnerable to new ones.
Plenty of young, fit, healthy people were laid low by covid, and some even died from it. Many are suffering from 'long covid' too - even those who don't realize it. If you had a simple, safe, cheap way to avoid that, why wouldn't you take it? So it's a 'no-brainer' for everyone. And not just Covid. I get the flu vaccine every year too, and any other one on offer. You may say that's a no-brainer for me because I'm old (I am 65), but I remember getting the flu in my 20's and it was no joke. I'd take the slight inconvenience of getting vaccinated over that no matter how old I was. |
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We don't want good, sound arguments. We want arguments that sound good. |
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#312 |
Philosopher
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 6,827
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Are they? Some of the demented are no longer a threat because they are dead, but the rest are still a threat. The only difference now is that we do have vaccines which offer reasonable protection - at least for current variants.
But vaccines are not perfect. The more people don't take them, don't test and self-isolate, and don't wear masks if potentially infected, the harder it will be to keep the virus at bay. These morons are preventing us from stamping it out, increasing the risk of a variant evolving that is much more deadly and that we have no protection against. Actually there are so many morons out there now that another pandemic is pretty much guaranteed. The only good thing is that the authorities will (hopefully) treat the next one more seriously. |
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We don't want good, sound arguments. We want arguments that sound good. |
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#313 |
Philosopher
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 6,827
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We don't want good, sound arguments. We want arguments that sound good. |
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#314 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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Very much unlike the flu, SARS-CoV-2 isn't really seasonal:
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![]() Three countries that vaccinate everybody, including young children, and Denmark where we didn't vaccinate young children, and antivaxxer USA: Cumulative confirmed COVID-19 deaths per million people USA, Denmark, Cuba, Japan, Singapore (Our World in Data) Notice that many countries have stopped reporting. Of the five countries, I think that Cuba and Denmark are the only ones that still do. (Yes, Cuba hasn't had any COVID-19 deaths since August, 2022.) Notice also the population densities of Singapore and the USA: Singapore 8,592 per km2 (22,254 per mi2); USA: 37 per km2 (96 per mi2). And as for "the rest of us": If people don't want their children to get diabetes or MIS-C, they should get them boosted. If they themselves also don't want to get diabetes, they should get a booster shot, too. SARS-CoV-2 is not the common cold, and maybe it never will be. Verified: COVID-19 Infection Increases Diabetes Risk Cedars-Sinai, Feb 14, 2023) The minimizers don't know what they are talking about. And they don't want to know. |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#315 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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Very bad news
The reason why it appears to be mostly over and why you now see "around 200/day over the last month or two" is that most countries have stopped reporting!!! See my link to Our World in Data in my post above! If you are not a mimizer yourself, make sure you don't get fooled by them and don't spread their iies! It's nowhere near over. It's on the rise with new variants. As for Japan, see angrysoba's latest post. A similar thing happened in Sweden, only worse: People paid to be able to certify that they didn't have COVID-19 (for entry into other countries), and they issued certificates without ever examining the samples. Ingenious way to spread Swedish 'herd immunity by infection' to the world. |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#316 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#317 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Yokohama, Japan
Posts: 28,687
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It should be of interest to the police and to taxpayers here in Japan, of which I am one. It took a newspaper to uncover the story, apparently. The government had been none the wiser.
Maybe some sort of auditing system could have found this earlier. The fake tests were given to people who didn't exist. The people who spit into the test tube existed, of course, but they didn't use their own names or other details for the accompanying paperwork. They were fictitious identities. Maybe if the government had actually checked some of them sampled at random, they could have found that some of the people aren't real. Given that we should have expected something like this, as you say. |
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A fool thinks himself to be wise, but a wise man knows himself to be a fool. William Shakespeare |
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#318 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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I forgot to mention that Denmark won't be boosting 'children' younger than 65 this fall. At least, that's what the health authorities have been saying so far. I also don't know if the Danish health authorities pay any attention to CDC announcements. A couple of the leading Danish virologists and epidemiologists seem to be listening more to the Brownstone Insitute. One of them, Christine Stabell Benn, has become a member of Florida's Public Health Integrity Committee, which doesn't bode well. I don't know how libertarian health-care professionals managed to get in charge of Denmark's pandemic response. |
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#319 |
Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 19,223
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I'm surprised to see that New Zealand covers the pandemic news much the same way media everywhere else does:
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It is also surprising that people in NZ can have "fourth or fifth infection" already. This was news in 2021: Ed Sheeran tests positive for Covid-19 (BBC, Oct 24, 2021) This isn't news in 2023:
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/dann "Stupidity renders itself invisible by assuming very large proportions. Completely unreasonable claims are irrefutable. Ni-en-leh pointed out that a philosopher might get into trouble by claiming that two times two makes five, but he does not risk much by claiming that two times two makes shoe polish." B. Brecht "The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions." K. Marx |
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#320 |
Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 4,488
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Roger Ramjets, dann, I guess I agree, about the (ongoing) vaccines.
What I was wondering is, whether now after all this time, and after having already gotten a boost via the vaccines we've all already taken in, and add to that that over these many months we may well have actually built up sizeable "herd immunity" --- back then a fiction, but now maybe not so --- so that, while in general vaccines are not a bad idea, but whether one really needs to, for the Corona virus specifically, and more than for all of the other things going around. ...And like I said, I did realize how internally inconsistent that doubt of mine turns out to be, given that in terms of masking and distancing I continue to take care when I can. It's inconsistent to abide by the one but not the other: if one is to doubt the necessity of ongoing vaccines, then it makes sense to also doubt the necessity of these precautions; and inasmuch as one prefers to take these precautions when possible, it makes sense to avail of the vaccines as well, specifically for the Corona virus I mean to say. Haven't really given this thing much thought in recent days/weeks/months. This last exchange has clarified that thought in my mind, for which thanks! |
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