Sunday, March 29, 2020
NANCY PELOSI and her Socialist Democrats Wanted in the Corona Virus Bill. STEALING FROM AMERICA!
When I saw the bullshit that Nancy Pelosi and James Clyburn and the Social Democrat Thugs were packing the bill with, it reminded me of the "Flash Mob Thugs" and the Ferguson Looters who saw an opportunity to steal every thing they could from the store before they got caught!
Friday, March 27, 2020
I AM SURE THAT COVID 19 FATALITIES WILL BE MUCH LESS THAN PREDICTED BY THE OPPORTUNISTIC NEW WORLD ORDER GLOBALISTS.
WARNING ! We cannot trust current COVID-19 models:
THE NWO ORGANIZED "IMPERIAL COLLEGE STUDY IS COMPLETELY FLAWED!
By Eran Bendavid, Jay Bhattacharya, and Neeraj Sood
March 21, 2020
Extraordinary measures like shelter-in-place orders and quarantines are justified if unchecked, COVID-19 would kill millions.
However, we have not measured the single most important piece of information to know how deadly this virus really is and current estimates could plausibly be off by orders of magnitude.
Despite the dire forecasts of many epidemiologists and modelers, we have little reliable information that COVID-19 will kill millions of Americans even without shelter-in-place policies.
The fear of COVID-19 is based on its high estimated case fatality rate — about 2% to 4% of people with confirmed COVID-19 have died. So if 100 million Americans ultimately get COVID-19, an unthinkable 2 million to 4 million may die. We believe that the estimate is deeply flawed. The true fatality rate is the portion of those infected who die, not the deaths from among the identified positive cases. The number of cases is a misleading estimate of the number of infections because of selection bias in testing. Just how biased it is could make the difference between an epidemic with 2 million or 20,000 deaths. If the number of actual infections is much larger than the number of cases - orders of magnitude larger - then the true fatality rate is much lower as well. Is this plausible? The data to date suggest this is not only plausible but likely.
Population samples from China, Italy, Iceland, and the US provide relevant evidence. On or around January 31, countries sent planes to evacuate citizens from Wuhan . When those planes landed, the passengers on those planes were tested for COVID-19 and quarantined. After 14 days, the measured prevalence was 0.9%. If this was the prevalence in the greater Wuhan area on January 31, then, on a population of about 20 million people, greater Wuhan had 178,000 infections, about 30-fold more than the number of cases. Even if some of those infected would eventually turn into cases, the fatality rate was near 0.1%.
Next, the Italian town of Vò in Padua. On March 6, all 3,300 people of Vò were tested, and 90 tested positive, a prevalence of 2.7%. Applying that prevalence to the larger province of Padua (population 955,000) which had 198 reported cases, suggests there were actually 26,000 infections at that time -130-fold the number of reported cases, and a fatality rate of 0.03%.
In Iceland, deCode Genetics is partnering with the government to perform widespread testing. In a sample of nearly 2,000 entirely asymptomatic individuals, researchers estimated disease prevalence of just over 1%. Given that Iceland’s epidemic is weeks behind that in the US (their first case was reported on February 28), is it plausible that the proportion of the US population that has been infected is double, triple, or even ten-fold higher? Yes.
Finally, the best (yet very weak) evidence in the US comes from the National Basketball Association. Between March 11 and March 19, a number of NBA players and teams received testing. By March 19, 10 out of 450 rostered players were positive. Since not everyone was tested, that represents a lower bound on the prevalence of 2.2%. The NBA is not a representative population and maybe contact among players facilitated transmission. But if we extend the data to cities with NBA teams (population 45 million), we get at least 990,000 infections in the US. During those few days, the number of cases reported in the US was 72- to 773-fold lower. These numbers imply a fatality rate from COVID-19 orders of magnitude smaller than it appears.
The epidemic started in China sometime in November or December 2019.
The first confirmed US case was a person who traveled from Wuhan on
January 15, 2020, and it is likely that the virus entered before that: a
lot of people traveled from Wuhan to the US in December. Existing
evidence suggests that the virus is highly transmissible and that the
number of infections double roughly every three days. An epidemic seed
on January 1 implies that by March 4 about 2 million people in the US
were infected. We have had 118 COVID deaths to date from these 2
million infections, a mortality rate of 0.01% (one-tenth of the flu
mortality rate of 0.1%). By now, we may have had as many as 8 million
Americans infected, 2.5% of the population. If that is true, this should
be very reassuring news.
This does not make COVID-19 a non-issue. The daily reports from Italy and across the US show real struggles and overwhelmed health systems. However, dealing with and addressing a 20,000 or 40,000-death epidemic is very different from a 2 million-death epidemic. Given the enormous consequences of decisions around COVID-19 response, getting clear data to guide our decisions now is critical. We do not know the true infection rate in the US. Antibody testing of representative samples to measure disease prevalence (including the recovered) would provide immediate, actionable information.
If epidemic deaths are, as we believe, likely to be much more limited, then measures focused on older populations and hospitals are sensible. We will need to find ways to prevent hospitals from reaching a breaking point treating those COVID-19 patients such as rescheduling of elective procedures, repurposing of hospital resources to care for critically ill patients, and improved triaging. And we will need to focus on reducing risks for older adults and individuals with co-morbidities. A universal quarantine may not be worth the costs, and we should undertake immediate steps to evaluate the empirical basis of the models supporting it.
SO NOW....
Scientist and Imperial College author Neil Ferguson said Wednesday the coronavirus death toll is unlikely to exceed 20,000 and could be much lower if lockdown measures continue, according to New Scientist. He added that he is “reasonably confident” that Britain’s health system can handle the burden of treating coronavirus patients.
“There will be some areas that are extremely stressed, but we are reasonably confident — which is all we can be at the current time — that at the national level we will be within capacity,” Ferguson said.
The Imperial College had previously warned of modeling that suggested over 500,000 would die from the virus.
“This is a remarkable turn from Neil Ferguson, who led the @imperialcollege authors who warned of 500,000 UK deaths — and who has now himself tested positive for #COVID,” former New York Times reporter Alex Berenson wrote on Twitter.
Ferguson credited the U.K.’s lockdown for stopping the
spread of the virus, but as Berenson points out, the country “only began
its lockdown 2 days ago, and the theory is that lockdowns take 2 weeks
or more to work.” New data shows that the transmission rate of the
virus, the measure of how many other people a carrier usually infects,
is up from 2.5 to just over three, Ferguson said.
“That adds more evidence to support the more intensive social distancing measures," he said.
Fox News host Laura Ingraham said on Twitter following the revised projections, "Now that we are seeing that the ICU bed & vent projections from orig Imperial College study are almost certainly WRONG, it is critical that we think immed about staggered, gradual opening of our country with new protocols."
"The guy behind the doomsday Imperial College model now
says he expects UK not to run out of ICU beds and UK deaths 'unlikely to
exceed 20,000 and could be much lower,'" American Commitment President
Phil Kerpen tweeted.
Stanford scientists recently wrote an opinion article
suggesting that more information is needed before settling on a
coronavirus mortality rate and posited that mass quarantines aren’t
necessarily the most logical answer to combating the virus.
By Eran Bendavid, Jay Bhattacharya, and Neeraj Sood
March 21, 2020
Extraordinary measures like shelter-in-place orders and quarantines are justified if unchecked, COVID-19 would kill millions.
However, we have not measured the single most important piece of information to know how deadly this virus really is and current estimates could plausibly be off by orders of magnitude.
Despite the dire forecasts of many epidemiologists and modelers, we have little reliable information that COVID-19 will kill millions of Americans even without shelter-in-place policies.
The fear of COVID-19 is based on its high estimated case fatality rate — about 2% to 4% of people with confirmed COVID-19 have died. So if 100 million Americans ultimately get COVID-19, an unthinkable 2 million to 4 million may die. We believe that the estimate is deeply flawed. The true fatality rate is the portion of those infected who die, not the deaths from among the identified positive cases. The number of cases is a misleading estimate of the number of infections because of selection bias in testing. Just how biased it is could make the difference between an epidemic with 2 million or 20,000 deaths. If the number of actual infections is much larger than the number of cases - orders of magnitude larger - then the true fatality rate is much lower as well. Is this plausible? The data to date suggest this is not only plausible but likely.
Population samples from China, Italy, Iceland, and the US provide relevant evidence. On or around January 31, countries sent planes to evacuate citizens from Wuhan . When those planes landed, the passengers on those planes were tested for COVID-19 and quarantined. After 14 days, the measured prevalence was 0.9%. If this was the prevalence in the greater Wuhan area on January 31, then, on a population of about 20 million people, greater Wuhan had 178,000 infections, about 30-fold more than the number of cases. Even if some of those infected would eventually turn into cases, the fatality rate was near 0.1%.
Next, the Italian town of Vò in Padua. On March 6, all 3,300 people of Vò were tested, and 90 tested positive, a prevalence of 2.7%. Applying that prevalence to the larger province of Padua (population 955,000) which had 198 reported cases, suggests there were actually 26,000 infections at that time -130-fold the number of reported cases, and a fatality rate of 0.03%.
In Iceland, deCode Genetics is partnering with the government to perform widespread testing. In a sample of nearly 2,000 entirely asymptomatic individuals, researchers estimated disease prevalence of just over 1%. Given that Iceland’s epidemic is weeks behind that in the US (their first case was reported on February 28), is it plausible that the proportion of the US population that has been infected is double, triple, or even ten-fold higher? Yes.
Finally, the best (yet very weak) evidence in the US comes from the National Basketball Association. Between March 11 and March 19, a number of NBA players and teams received testing. By March 19, 10 out of 450 rostered players were positive. Since not everyone was tested, that represents a lower bound on the prevalence of 2.2%. The NBA is not a representative population and maybe contact among players facilitated transmission. But if we extend the data to cities with NBA teams (population 45 million), we get at least 990,000 infections in the US. During those few days, the number of cases reported in the US was 72- to 773-fold lower. These numbers imply a fatality rate from COVID-19 orders of magnitude smaller than it appears.
How can we reconcile these estimates with the epidemiological
modelers? First, the test used to identify cases - a PCR-based test - is
unable to catch people who were infected and recovered. Second, testing
rates were woefully low for a long time and typically reserved for the
severely ill. Together,
these facts imply that the confirmed cases are likely orders of
magnitude less than the true number of infections. Epidemiological
modelers have not adequately adapted their estimates for these facts.
This does not make COVID-19 a non-issue. The daily reports from Italy and across the US show real struggles and overwhelmed health systems. However, dealing with and addressing a 20,000 or 40,000-death epidemic is very different from a 2 million-death epidemic. Given the enormous consequences of decisions around COVID-19 response, getting clear data to guide our decisions now is critical. We do not know the true infection rate in the US. Antibody testing of representative samples to measure disease prevalence (including the recovered) would provide immediate, actionable information.
If epidemic deaths are, as we believe, likely to be much more limited, then measures focused on older populations and hospitals are sensible. We will need to find ways to prevent hospitals from reaching a breaking point treating those COVID-19 patients such as rescheduling of elective procedures, repurposing of hospital resources to care for critically ill patients, and improved triaging. And we will need to focus on reducing risks for older adults and individuals with co-morbidities. A universal quarantine may not be worth the costs, and we should undertake immediate steps to evaluate the empirical basis of the models supporting it.
SO NOW....
Imperial College scientist who predicted 500K coronavirus deaths in UK adjusts figure to 20K or fewer. OOOPS
SO WHY ARE WE PANICKED ? TIME TO GET BACK TO WORK!
A scientist who warned that the coronavirus would kill 500,000 people in the United Kingdom has presented evidence that if current measures work as expected, the death toll would drop to roughly 20,000 people or fewer.Scientist and Imperial College author Neil Ferguson said Wednesday the coronavirus death toll is unlikely to exceed 20,000 and could be much lower if lockdown measures continue, according to New Scientist. He added that he is “reasonably confident” that Britain’s health system can handle the burden of treating coronavirus patients.
“There will be some areas that are extremely stressed, but we are reasonably confident — which is all we can be at the current time — that at the national level we will be within capacity,” Ferguson said.
The Imperial College had previously warned of modeling that suggested over 500,000 would die from the virus.
“This is a remarkable turn from Neil Ferguson, who led the @imperialcollege authors who warned of 500,000 UK deaths — and who has now himself tested positive for #COVID,” former New York Times reporter Alex Berenson wrote on Twitter.
“That adds more evidence to support the more intensive social distancing measures," he said.
Fox News host Laura Ingraham said on Twitter following the revised projections, "Now that we are seeing that the ICU bed & vent projections from orig Imperial College study are almost certainly WRONG, it is critical that we think immed about staggered, gradual opening of our country with new protocols."
GET THE NUMBERS RIGHT! MORE PEOPLE DIE OF FLU AND CAR CRASHES ON US HIGHWAYS! BUT MARK MY WORDS WE WILL BE A DIFFERENT WORLD IF WE FALL FOR THIS GLOBAL SCHEME!!