cbr said:I recall a clear figure of 50-60 million. There were less than 2 billion people 100 years ago.Infection_Ag11 said:cbr said:Iirc it infected about that many and killed well over 10%Forum Troll said:VaultingChemist said:
Shanked Punt will like these articles.
First tweet kind of loses credibility after claiming that 27 percent of the earth's population died from spanish flu.
It infected about 30% of the global population and killed about 3%
cbr said:
There's a ****load of those videos. The theory espoused is that the virus also attacks the heart, which has no symptoms until heart attack. At first i was skeptical, but kore and more of these videos of people dropping dead keep coming out.
Wonder why none of this type of information is coming out of China?Quote:
Coronavirus is capable of living on the surfaces as long as nine days, remaining infectious, according to the group of German researchers. Scientists from Greifswald and Bochum claimed in their report released on Friday that its average lifetime is four to five days at room temperature.
"Cold and high humidity increase their lifespan even further," Gnter Kampf from the Institute for Hygiene and Environmental Medicine at the University Medical Center in Greifswald warned.
I think it unlikely a lot of US citizens will lose their jobs. We still haven't seen the widespread spread of the virus in US cities. Most economists think this will be a few months drag on the economy at worst....not a depression.Mr.Infectious said:k2aggie07 said:
10% economic loss is not a blip. That's a depression.
It's also world wide.
By itself the US can weather supply disruptions. There may be some empty shelves and slow downs but it's not a complete killer. How many storage units and barns are full to the brim with "stuff" we can't keep in our houses? Buying used and flea markets will become super popular.
BUT a lot of people will lose their jobs. Retail, Commercial Real Estate, Mortgage Brokers, Restaurant staff, cleaning crews etc ....
The unemployment rate has the potential to skyrocketed with this.
Citation pleaseQuote:
That would explain the massive smoking equipment spraying everywhere.
Do you remember in not the last CDC press conference, but one of the ones before they were saying they were having issues with the tests. Sometimes the patient would be negative, the next day positive, the next time negative, etc. They admitted they were having a hard time as well.VaultingChemist said:
CCP propaganda to explain the small number of cases or did they really not know?
k2aggie07 said:
I imagine it gives a better picture than not having been.
I know they can be brutal. But they also maintain power by keeping their constituents fed, clothed, and so on. And a great many people in China are not in the CCP, and are not necessarily political. In some respects their system is akin to federalism, but the amount of local control changes over time with different leaders.
It's not like North Korea.
TAMUallen said:
There could be a massive revolt but the timing isnt ideal for either side. However, if the party starts to be viewed as the protected (from the virus or as the cause itself) while the citizens start falling off in massive numbers then threatened people act in extraordinary ways
Now THAT is very illuminating observation. So you do see that here, or in Europe, or even South America---that response would be off the dial in its implication. I even think it would be for Russia. But you are saying no, not for China. The bold then is true? If that is true, then it might explain some of their ire at us "making it bigger than it is" -- without them grasping that to us such shut downs are mind-boggling. Hmmm....John Francis Donaghy said:TAMUallen said:
There could be a massive revolt but the timing isnt ideal for either side. However, if the party starts to be viewed as the protected (from the virus or as the cause itself) while the citizens start falling off in massive numbers then threatened people act in extraordinary ways
I'm not arguing that there's going to be a revolt. I'm arguing that quarantining a few cities of people for a couple of weeks is not an unusually heavy-handed response for the Chinese.
We in the US would see that as an unheard of response to an apocalyptic scenario. China routinely imprisons it's own citizens hundreds of thousands at a time. Having a few cities of people stay home for a week or so is not the Defcon 1 level reponse some in this thread are assuming it is. They run their country very differently than a western power, and you have to view their actions in light of their norms, not ours.
MicheIangeIo said:
Too bad people don't give a **** about the flu which has killed 9,000 people this year thus far as they do Ebola and coronavirus. People would wait days to get a vaccine for one of those but millions of people still fail to get a flu shot.
k2aggie07 said:
It's not unusual? When was the last time it happened?
John Francis Donaghy said:k2aggie07 said:
It's not unusual? When was the last time it happened?
The last time what happened? China's leadership imposing its will on its own people to do what they think what they think is best for the country at the expense of a particular group of its own citizens?
Pretty much all the time.
Flu kills about 0.1% of the people it infects, and my wife almost died from it several years ago (she is allergic to the vaccines so she can't take them).MicheIangeIo said:
Too bad people don't give a **** about the flu which has killed 9,000 people this year thus far as they do Ebola and coronavirus. People would wait days to get a vaccine for one of those but millions of people still fail to get a flu shot.
k2aggie07 said:
You said " quarantining a few cities of people for a couple of weeks is not an unusually heavy-handed response for the Chinese."
Can you give an example like this? Ever? This seems pretty unusual to me.
Quote:
I find is fascinating, and highly improbable, that there are no cases in Africa...