Not cool. Glad this pointless display stayed out of the city yesterday
https://www.kmov.com/2022/03/02/local-f ... -mandates/
https://www.kmov.com/2022/03/02/local-f ... -mandates/
Visitors have been allowed back for a while now, they are just supposed to do a COVID screening form online beforehand. Not sure if that requirement will drop soon.symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Mar 04, 2022^Gateway Festival is back on their quad this summer. Makes me happy. Are visitors allowed back yet?
Is that a negative consequence? Like, "on no, we saved all those lives for nothing?" If a bridge collapses nobody says "we wasted decades inspecting bridges for absolutely no reason".dbInSouthCity wrote: ↑Mar 06, 2022This isn’t a 5th wave in Hong Kong. It’s the first wave. Negative consequence of zero covid is that at some point you’ll get a omicron variant type where it will be impossible to execute zero covid
This surge is only a consequence in the sense that it's relative to an abnormally safe baseline. That's like seeing someone get shot and saying "this surge in being shot is a negative consequence of not deliberately shooting yourself in the foot every day".gone corporate wrote: ↑Mar 07, 2022^I'd say experiencing the worst Covid surge in the world is a negative consequence.
I bolded the part that requires more explanation.Ebsy wrote: ↑Mar 09, 2022The outbreak in Hong Kong is very bad in absolute terms, and is killing many elderly unvaccinated people who likely would have lived had they been vaccinated. The outbreak there is way past the point of control and has in fact been made substantially worse by the "zero covid" policies pursued by the Chinese government.
It's getting more severe in China...chris fuller wrote: ↑Mar 11, 2022China locks down a city of 9 million amid a new spike in COVID-19 cases
By The Associated Press
Friday, March 11, 2022
https://text.npr.org/1085985036
not going to help with inflation when you look at what is made in that towngone corporate wrote: ↑Mar 14, 2022It's getting more severe in China...chris fuller wrote: ↑Mar 11, 2022China locks down a city of 9 million amid a new spike in COVID-19 cases
By The Associated Press
Friday, March 11, 2022
https://text.npr.org/1085985036
CNBC: China Covid spike: Shenzhen shuts production, Shanghai closes schools
Now would be a good time to stock up on any manufactured products.gone corporate wrote: ↑Mar 14, 2022It's getting more severe in China...chris fuller wrote: ↑Mar 11, 2022China locks down a city of 9 million amid a new spike in COVID-19 cases
By The Associated Press
Friday, March 11, 2022
https://text.npr.org/1085985036
CNBC: China Covid spike: Shenzhen shuts production, Shanghai closes schools
This might be the best leading indicator we have left, apart from looking at other countries, but it seems like STL data is always a few weeks old.chris fuller wrote: ↑Mar 15, 2022It aint over: U.S. Sewer Data Warns of a New Bump in Covid Cases After Lull
Data from wastewater can spot a rise in infections before it shows up through positive tests
I'm a bit skeptical of this finding.chris fuller wrote: ↑Mar 21, 2022The surprising link between Covid-19 deaths and ... internet access
https://www.vox.com/22979086/covid-pandemic-deaths-mortality-broadband-internet-access
25% of Americans don't have broadband access in their homes, and the numbers tend to be disproportionately high in that group among those without any college education and those who make under $30K per year. It shouldn't be shocking that people who have less access to information are less likely to be vaccinated or to fully grasp the importance of NPI measures.MarkHaversham wrote: ↑Mar 21, 2022I'm a bit skeptical of this finding.chris fuller wrote: ↑Mar 21, 2022The surprising link between Covid-19 deaths and ... internet access
https://www.vox.com/22979086/covid-pandemic-deaths-mortality-broadband-internet-access
What does it mean to be essentially "too poor to get internet access, controlling for socioeconomic status"? That's a nonsensical concept. And if the lack of internet is due to poor local infrastructure, that is likely to correlate highly with the availability of healthcare services (i.e. nobody lives across the street from a hospital but can't get internet). An older person who doesn't have internet because they just can't comprehend it is also more likely to have be less mentally sharp, which could be a causal factor.
Basically, this whole article screams "correlation != causation" to me.
