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this is a discussion within the Saints Community Forum; Originally Posted by burningmetal I don't know, for the life of me, why any of us are bothering to talk to you, but here I go again: You sit there and ADMIT that you picked a model, even though it ...
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#1 |
1000 Posts +
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 1,340
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Re: Do you see a 2020 season happening?
Originally Posted by burningmetal
The model that I used wasn't outdated, Ferguson still stands by it completely if lockdown is lifted. If anything he has become even more pessimistic if social distancing doesn't continue cause he thinks the virus is a bit more transmissible.![]()
Surfaces aren't even a primary source of spread, people are. The virus on surfaces or even if it's on your hands is very unlikely to infect you. It is mainly person to person transmission through air. The humidity can't kill something that is inside of someone else. A person can go a day or two and test negative and still have the virus because the virus load in their nasal passages is too low to detect. After this wave, we'll get imported cases and the whole process will begin again. You act as if there is no historical precedent for this. It's doing what most influenza pandemics have done, gone and come in waves. The Lancet study pretty much confirms this isn't over and is pretty much impossible to stop multiple waves. Also, I don't want people to stay in their homes. The economy would fall apart. There has to be some sort of plan. We don't have a plan. You can either send the younger people back into the work force, get them infected... maybe like 20-30% which would slow down the rate of transmission quite substantially. Or you can isolation dance and go in and out of lockdown for a long period of time. We haven't even had a significant portion of our population get the virus. Why would it be more manageable the second time? Because of the heat? There have been several coronaviruses that have thrived in the heat (Mers, Sars). You are making assumptions on things that historical data doesn't back up. When a virus is transmissible from person to person through the air, it makes it very hard for the heat and humidity to stop it. We don't have to have 1.6 million people die, but if we prematurely declare victory and everyone goes out and doesn't give a **** we're going to end up with a lot of infections. |
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#2 |
1000 Posts +
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Re: Do you see a 2020 season happening?
Originally Posted by hitta
The model IS outdated. They are merely moving the goal posts in trying to say their numbers will prove accurate when lockdown is lifted. In real science, you don't get to move the goal posts. You have to make a series of predictions that you would expect to see, if your hypothesis, or "model", is accurate. If any of those predictions are off, you have to start over with a new set of predictions. You can't say "well, it's wrong for now, but it'll be right later". Nope. That would have required that you predicted your first prediction would come up short. But then, that would mean your first prediction was just a guess, and not actually science. Which is, in fact, all these faulty models are. Guesses.![]()
And you still miss the main point about surface spread. Sure, it might spread more through the air. "Might". But in order for this thing to make a comeback, with all of us stuck in our homes, we'd have to be constantly touching surfaces that contain the virus, for people to keep getting sick. But the virus isn't going to last long on surfaces. So the question is, how many people are going to be sick in the summer months to be ABLE to spread it by air? Not many. Once more, I did NOT say it will be 100% gone. But it will be very mild. Nothing that we don't deal with in a year in, year out basis. You keep shouting from the rooftops "IT'S GOING TO COME BACK, WE CAN'T STOP IT!". Nobody is telling you there won't be a trace of it. But between the heat, and our immune systems building a natural defense to this virus, it will be even less of a big deal than it already is. We can't build immunity by hiding from the virus. And I am not making assumptions, nor does historical data fail to back me up. This information comes from real scientists who actually study infectious diseases and know their history and tendencies. Government paid "science" never provides accurate data. That's how you end up with a prediction that the bird flu would kill 150 million people, and yet, to date, it has killed 350 people in 20 plus years. And as for this: "There have been several coronaviruses that have thrived in the heat (Mers, Sars)."... Total lie. https://www.huffpost.com/entry/coron...b6beedb4e8af9b "Looking back at SARS, one study identified an 18-fold increase of infections in colder temps compared to warmer days. Another report looked at how the virus behaved in different environments and found that its viability rapidly declined at higher temperatures and humidity levels. The researchers found the SARS virus became increasingly inactivated as temperatures and humidity rose. Similarly to SARS, MERS — which was mostly spread from animals to humans — also seemed to be stronger in cold, dry weather. Researchers in one study stated, “coronaviruses have been shown to exhibit strong seasonal variation in natural hosts.” They found that that colder, drier conditions increased the risk of MERS transmission from camels to humans." And that is the freaking Huff Post. They aren't exactly on my side of the political spectrum, lest you believe I've got an agenda. The heat will slow it significantly, period. We have a treatment that is working (even though the fake science community refuses to acknowledge it), and we will build "herd" immunity faster by having been exposed to it, rather than hiding from it. |
If I had a nickel for every time I heard that, the NFL would fine and suspend me.
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