-
• #10127
Wuhan is now open, people from there being HEAVILY discriminated against.
So there is a distinct Wuhan dialect/accent that marks them out when they travel?
-
• #10128
It’s because they have names like Ghostface Illah
-
• #10129
Yes, but even easier to tell is to look at someone's ID card, which states where you are from - you have to show ID to do tons of stuff and there are spot checks too. Local building management knows where everyone is from (we have to register our addresses with the police) so Wuhan people who live in other cities may have a hard time getting to their own apartment as the building management sometimes won't let them in. A friend told me that cars with Hubei registration plates (there's a separate identifier for every province) are having a hard time driving in other provinces as no one will let them park or access private roads etc.
-
• #10130
That excess deaths planning document that was linked in here weeks ago and seemed to me, at that point, rather unlikely to come into effect is pretty much playing out in NYC now. Scary stuff.
-
• #10131
It looks like the US is going stratospheric in terms of cases:
1 Attachment
-
• #10132
Lots of testing and a big population though, it’s bad but comparisons are hard to make currently. I think we’ll only be able to tell in a year, comparing annual deaths with the average over the last couple years and then scaling that to population size. Decent chance it’ll be America First, mind.
-
• #10133
Yes, partially due to massively increased testing in NY, but not in terms of deaths. They've actually been doing surprisingly 'well' overall in that regard, so far, considering how bad their overall response is, and how many things like religious congregations were still going on.
-
• #10134
It's criminal that the US government didn't intervene earlier, history wasn't going to judge this administration kindly anyway but this could be Trump's defining legacy... Crazy...
-
• #10135
Yes - agreed, I imagine all those lines are incomparable. It's an arresting difference though.
-
• #10136
Yeah there was a point the WHO made: more testing, more case detection is good and shouldn't be seen as something to hide if we are to sort the problem globally.
-
• #10137
Yeah dunno why they left the UK off those stats.
Of course the key factors are health, age and genetics.
So it is inevitable that certain countries will be hit a lot harder.
Of course also limiting these factors by testing, tracking and confining.
-
• #10138
Of course the key factors are health, age and genetics.
I think the key factor is government response.
-
• #10139
I think the key factor is government response.
Agree, we left it way too late trying to “keep business going as long as possible”.
-
• #10140
There's a video doing the rounds of a George W press conference to promote influenza pandemic planning/response strategy which makes for interesting viewing...
-
• #10141
Let's hope history doesn't repeat when 'opening back up' happens. I worry that we are to some extent getting used to those huge daily death tolls and their impact has lessened over the last few weeks.
-
• #10142
Not sure why the UK is left off - they should be there instead of Iran by most metrics on that website.
Interestingly though - according to the same website the US has done a lot more tests than everyone else on that chart (like, ten times more than some), but order of magnitude of tests is similar to Germany (only 50% more).
-
• #10143
Once 'we' unfortunately broach the thousand barrier,
I think it will open up a new level of lamentation. -
• #10144
That would have be covered in the last sentence.
-
• #10145
according to the same website the US has done a lot more tests than everyone else on that chart
Well... you are reaching a point with that number though where you have to start taking into account that the US has a lot more people than all other countries on that list apart from China and India. And once you look at it as 'tests per million inhabitants', the US is a lot less impressive. Though again, when you break it down into the different states, you can see NY is ahead of all other US states in terms of testing by quite a bit.
-
• #10146
That's one weird looking motherfucker.
-
• #10147
Horrible to think about this.
-
• #10148
.... genetics.
So it is inevitable that certain countries will be hit a lot harder.Eh? So which are the countries with inferior gene pools then?
-
• #10149
Woah. Nobody said anyone was inferior! Same as trying to turn this into some bullshit Political stance.
Should have been prepped 10 years ago.
-
• #10150
Not that the original comment has anything to do with "inferior genes" but some gene pools are more likely impacted by some problems, no? That's just logical. Like, I'm more likely to get sunburnt than Italians and Dutch are taller etc. Some diseases will impact some genetic groups more.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/07/bame-groups-hit-harder-covid-19-than-white-people-uk
It's too early to tell if this is a result of the virus or the environment or other factors.
Are people still going on about this? sheesh