Clinamenic
Binary & Tweed
Perhaps some incisive analysis from @CorpseysEvilTwin ?
Bingo! Well done, you've got it. This is precisely what has happened, its uncontroversial.
I really see no point in addressing anything else you've said since Ive already responded and you've ignored it all repeatedly. Look after yourself.
Point taken, and a very fair one at that.You know I love you Stan, and I appreciate that shit stirring is your thing, but this is serious business.
One of my best friends lost his mother after a hospital acquired covid case in April. I know people who have been disabled by this virus.
Well I'm still alive, so frankly, who cares?The most susceptible people have died already so even were it as virulent you would still have far fewer deaths. The salient excess deaths are of young and middle-aged people who were never particularly susceptible.
*makes unsupported claim that every government on earth has spontaneously and independently begun suppressing infection rates*
"It's uncontroversial!"
Because of the way they are counted, the lax criteria.More pertinently, if the pandemic effectively ended when omicron came along, why have nearly half of all covid deaths happened since?
I don't know what data you're using, but if Worldometers.info can be regarded as reliable, then 3/4 of all UK deaths from covid occurred before late November 2021, when the first omicron case was recorded here. And obviously it would have taken some time for that variant to become dominant.More pertinently, if the pandemic effectively ended when omicron came along, why have nearly half of all covid deaths happened since?
You don't get to choose that, I'm afraid, unless you're particularly assiduous in being a biological NOT-gate, like Padraig.Please don't think that just because droid is wrong here, it means I'm on your "side."
Exactly as I've said. But it seems likely to me that the vast majority of the damage was done a couple of years ago. If a lot of people have suffered lasting organ damage as a result of infections when virulent strains were running wild through the population, it stands to reason they're going to more vulnerable to serious illness or death from any primary cause. And if rates are rising now, then duh, it's late autumn and the cold weather is coming in, isn't it? Exactly the time of year when people come down with colds and flu. So if there's a larger than usual pool of vulnerable people, then you're going to see an increased death rate compared to pre-pandemic levels.
I hate to be blunt but we're getting clogged up with people who shouldn't be here.