Try your reading skills with that article I referenced. Then report back on this guy's science background. Anyone can compile "data". The use, or misuse, of such data comes with figuring out what the data say. That requires considerable training in statistics and if the data are related to a particular area, e.g. health and medicine, considerable training in that area as well. Your "scientist" by all accounts has neither. Posting shit to a blog does NOT make you competent to do scientific analysis.
Results 3,421 to 3,430 of 7634
Thread: Covid-19
-
11-14-2020, 05:28 AM #3421
- Join Date
- Jan 2008
- Location
- Now in Section 106 (Row L), after stints in Sections 104 and 105.
- Posts
- 3,421
Xavier always goes to the NCAA tournament...Projecting anything less than that this season feels like folly--Eamonn Brennan, ESPN (Summer Shootaround, 2012)
-
11-14-2020, 06:41 AM #3422
Washington DC has had an inside and outside mask mandates for months now, is one of the most liberal/“FoLlow the ScienCe!” city in America and their cases shot up. For those who claim to follow the science, there sure are a lot of countries and cities with full mask mandates that aren’t doing too well. It’s almost as if this virus will rip through our population regardless.
-
11-14-2020, 07:57 AM #3423
So the long predicted surge is happening as we move indoors. Mask wearing slows the virus, nothing's going to stop it until we have a vaccine and even then only half the population wants to get it. What would the DC numbers be if nobody wore a mask? Double? Triple?
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-...k/art-204854492023 Sweet 16
-
11-14-2020, 08:32 AM #3424
-
11-14-2020, 09:28 AM #3425
- Join Date
- Mar 2008
- Posts
- 2,619
LOL - this is the 2nd time you've called me out thinking that I "make some shit up" - after providing authoritative links - like the CDC...
And again, I have to laugh at you for not considering the "science" or "common sense" when it comes to wearing masks at the grocery store. So let me post what "the science" actually says one more time for you (note the source is the CDC - is that good enough for you?):
Current guidance based on community exposure, for people exposed to people with known or suspected COVID-19 or possible COVID-19:
• Individual who has had close contact (< 6 feet)** for ≥15 minutes***
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019...endations.html
"So where did that 15-minute part of the guideline come from? Gurley says it's based on earlier data from China on who was being infected and how infections occurred. "Even when they found lots and lots of very casual, quick contacts, that's not where they saw evidence of transmission," she says [Emily Gurley, an epidemiologist and contact-tracing expert at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health].
Instead, she says, infections were occurring when people had "meaningful" amounts of close contact – such as traveling, dining or living together – that had a higher probability of resulting in transmission. She says the 15-minute guideline is a way to help contact tracers quantify which types of interactions were long enough to be meaningful in this context."
https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsan...15-minute-rule
So, in short, the <6 feet, ≥15 minutes contacts just ain't happening in grocery stores (at least with me)....
-
11-14-2020, 09:53 AM #3426
- Join Date
- Feb 2008
- Location
- Springboro OH
- Posts
- 1,813
Do you think the article you posted was new and groundbreaking? That’s the article that spawned the breakdown I posted. Did you read that? More importantly, did you review his work to form your own opinion, or did you just let the media’s slanderous hit job create your thoughts? I know the answer, and thank you for again proving my point.
As to Kyle’s qualifications, I am a scientist by training and practice, I’ve had rigorous statistics classes as part of my training, and I have read his work. Is it perfect? publishable? No. But he’s a critical, outside the box thinker with enough analytical skills to advance a concept. He is more than qualified for the entry level position. And you’re dead wrong about the need for “extensive training in that area”. Some of the best in their fields have learned on the job. And not that it really makes a difference but he does have qualifying professional experience beyond “being an Uber driver”. Funny that wasn’t mentioned.
Now, put on your critical thinking cap and ask yourself, “why would the media spend time smearing an entry level hire?”"...treat 'em with respect, or get out of the Gym!"
-
11-14-2020, 10:13 AM #3427
- Join Date
- Mar 2008
- Posts
- 2,619
-
11-14-2020, 10:21 AM #3428
I have no doubt the virus would have continued to spread, I just have to believe the rate of the spread could be contained to some degree. Even if it is by a small amount (which I doubt), it’s worth the small the small inconvenience. If nothing else, I just don’t want to be rude to the cashier at the grocery store who has to go home to her mother who has an underlying condition.
To search for links that say masks don’t matter is silly. The overwhelming amount of evidence and the general understanding according to the most widely respected sources say that they DO in fact matter. I’m not getting into a pissing match over that. There is more than enough evidence to say they help, and even if it’s just a little, why would you NOT do what helps.
I’d be ashamed of myself if I didn’t show other people this minimal amount of respect. How hard is it? Why would you whine like a child over this. Just act like an adult, even if it’s not fun to wear the stinkin’ mask in indoor public places.
-
11-14-2020, 11:12 AM #3429
Common Sense. Most of the expert medical advice currently available suggests that mixing the coronavirus and large crowds is not a good idea. Seems to bear out with Sturgis, WH parties and secret service infections from rallies to name a few. Look for more with the maskless rally today.
2023 Sweet 16
-
11-14-2020, 11:42 AM #3430
- Join Date
- Jan 2012
- Posts
- 18,692
Bookmarks