Huskers93-97 Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 59 minutes ago, I am I said: 37 Clemson players. Half had symptoms. No hospitalizations. 430 tests total thereabouts. It’s Less than 10% with no bad illness. a Johns Hopkins doctor on the radio today said he thinks 10x people have had it nationally which would make for 20-25 million cases, with 125,000 deaths. That’s .5%, the flu is .1%... just some numbers I heard today...anyone else hear of how we’re doing or other national teams? If only we would put Dustin Hoffman in charge of the White House coronavirus task force this would all be over already. He cured the outbreak disease in like a week 2 1 Quote Link to comment
teachercd Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 10 minutes ago, Huskers93-97 said: If only we would put Dustin Hoffman in charge of the White House coronavirus task force this would all be over already. He cured the outbreak disease in like a week He did an amazing job!! Quote Link to comment
WyoHusker56 Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 1 hour ago, I am I said: 37 Clemson players. Half had symptoms. No hospitalizations. 430 tests total thereabouts. It’s Less than 10% with no bad illness. a Johns Hopkins doctor on the radio today said he thinks 10x people have had it nationally which would make for 20-25 million cases, with 125,000 deaths. That’s .5%, the flu is .1%... just some numbers I heard today...anyone else hear of how we’re doing or other national teams? The problem with comparing it to the flu is that humans have some built in immunity to the flu and a vaccine that helps prevent infections. So, only 25-50 million people a year get the flu and .1% die for somewhere around 25-60k deaths a year. And the age is even more skewed to the elderly as well as no long lasting effects. With Covid, we have no immunity and no vaccine to help prevent infections. So, let's say a really safe estimate is half of 330 million people get it before herd immunity slows the spread some and the death rate is 0.5%. That's 575,000 deaths or almost 10 years of flu deaths at the high end of estimates. In addition, we are only beginning to understand the long term effects this has on the body. 1 4 Quote Link to comment
runningblind Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 11 minutes ago, WyoHusker56 said: The problem with comparing it to the flu is that humans have some built in immunity to the flu and a vaccine that helps prevent infections. So, only 25-50 million people a year get the flu and .1% die for somewhere around 25-60k deaths a year. And the age is even more skewed to the elderly as well as no long lasting effects. With Covid, we have no immunity and no vaccine to help prevent infections. So, let's say a really safe estimate is half of 330 million people get it before herd immunity slows the spread some and the death rate is 0.5%. That's 575,000 deaths or almost 10 years of flu deaths at the high end of estimates. In addition, we are only beginning to understand the long term effects this has on the body. A very reasonable response. The bolded is what I feel like some people are underestimating and that may be a dangerous game to be playing if lung function is involved. 1 Quote Link to comment
I am I Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 I only compared it to the flu because that’s the closest illness it appears to be. I get it’s bad, I was just pointing out updates stats. so how are we fairing? Do we have a few that have it? 1 Quote Link to comment
Branno Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 3 hours ago, I am I said: I only compared it to the flu because that’s the closest illness it appears to be. I get it’s bad, I was just pointing out updates stats. so how are we fairing? Do we have a few that have it? The problem with stats is that they make it easy to hide reality. Let’s say this guess (because it is just that, an estimate not actual statistics) that 20 million Americans contracted COVID-19 is accurate. While yes that brings the death rate down to .5%, you have to remember that equates to 120k actual dead people. 20 million is roughly 10% of the US population. Which means we’ve only seen 10% of the deaths. If we don’t stop the spread we’re talking 1.2 million deaths. .5% is a very large number of deaths for any disease, especially one that spreads as quickly and easily as COVID-19. This is not the flu. 3 Quote Link to comment
Huskers93-97 Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 I don’t follow the virus stats very close, but my understanding is we are doing a better job of treating people, they have a steroid that reduces your chance of serious complications and some medical experts are saying the virus is showing signs of losing strength. With all that said it seems the rate of death seems to be declining so I think .5 will probably go down more over time. Does anyone know what age group makes up most of the recent deaths? I know to start it was mostly elderly but then we saw reports of some young people too. Quote Link to comment
Toe Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 You know, I once read a story about a kid in a gang who got shot, and was absolutely shocked to find how much it hurt. He thought that when you got shot, you died, and that was pretty much it. Some of these people who treat COVID-19 as a thing where 'either you live or you die and that's pretty much it' remind me of that kid... 2 Quote Link to comment
Cdog923 Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 15 hours ago, 84HuskerLaw said: Define welfare. Safety from attack international. yes. By act of Congress per powers given it in the Constitution. yes. General welfare? no. very little. Thats really a state local deal. Up until the mid '30s, this might have been the defining interpretation. The New Deal and the court cases that followed it evolved that thought process, though. I found this reading particularly interesting: https://www.acslaw.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/ACS_KeepFaith_Chap-4.pdf, this quote in particular - Quote The lesson of the New Deal is thus similar to the lesson of Brown: constitutional interpretation that is untethered to social context and unresponsive to the lived experience of the American people cannot keep faith with a charter of government designed to endure and meet the challenges facing each generation, and will not long command legitimacy. 1 Quote Link to comment
teachercd Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 So we know that most colleges are having students on campus. To me that means the season will be about as normal as can be. I think the question is more about what happens after about the first 3 weeks. Quote Link to comment
I am I Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 16 positive tests of 302 NBA players as they move to start their season. None hospitalized or showing any serious symptoms. that’s 5% positive rate. Quote Link to comment
Cdog923 Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 49 minutes ago, teachercd said: So we know that most colleges are having students on campus. To me that means the season will be about as normal as can be. I think the question is more about what happens after about the first 3 weeks. This is my main thought too, and we talked about it in your status regarding OPS, but I'm of the mind that we'll have as "normal" of a start to the school year as the Powers That Be want, but by the middle of the semester, we'll be back to distance learning. I could see the football season starting, but being cancelled somewhere in the middle as a result. 3 Quote Link to comment
teachercd Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 1 minute ago, Cdog923 said: This is my main thought too, and we talked about it in your status regarding OPS, but I'm of the mind that we'll have as "normal" of a start to the school year as the Powers That Be want, but by the middle of the semester, we'll be back to distance learning. I could see the football season starting, but being cancelled somewhere in the middle as a result. I could totally see this happening. Quote Link to comment
Huskers93-97 Posted June 27, 2020 Share Posted June 27, 2020 28 minutes ago, Cdog923 said: This is my main thought too, and we talked about it in your status regarding OPS, but I'm of the mind that we'll have as "normal" of a start to the school year as the Powers That Be want, but by the middle of the semester, we'll be back to distance learning. I could see the football season starting, but being cancelled somewhere in the middle as a result. So what your saying is it’s possible we go undefeated this year? 2 Quote Link to comment
Popular Post Huskers93-97 Posted June 27, 2020 Popular Post Share Posted June 27, 2020 2 hours ago, Toe said: You know, I once read a story about a kid in a gang who got shot, and was absolutely shocked to find how much it hurt. He thought that when you got shot, you died, and that was pretty much it. Some of these people who treat COVID-19 as a thing where 'either you live or you die and that's pretty much it' remind me of that kid... Not at all. I think a lot of people are tired of people moving the goal post just to make sure the majority of people are guilted into feeling the same way they do. First it was we gotta social distance to protect hospitals from getting overloaded, then they weren’t overloaded anymore so it switched to oh we will have to hide in our houses because we gotta protect the elderly it’s not just about you, now that death rate is going down it’s changed to oh well there can be long term health risks for some people. Point being from the beginning if the risk was possible long term health risks I don’t think we would have closed the country for that. There are risks with everything in life and a virus is part of living in this world, do I believe we should take precautions absolutely. I just disagree with the severity of the precautions and the long terms effects those could have on our economy and country. We are not all going to agree and I don’t expect us to, I am not trying to change your beliefs and I don’t think your stupid for being more cautious than me 1 7 3 1 Quote Link to comment
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