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TopicPolitics Containment Topic 326: Quarantine Vogue
Corrik7
10/06/20 11:01:27 AM
#345:


Runemistress posted...
No it's really not.

2010 - 2011: 37,000 deaths
2011 - 2012:12,000 deaths
2012 - 2013: 43,000 deaths
2013 - 2014: 38,000 deaths
2014 - 2015: 51,000 deaths
2015 - 2016: 23,000 deaths
2016 - 2017: 38,000 deaths
2017 - 2018: 61,000 deaths
2018 - 2019: 34,157 deaths

Even if we're generously rounding up, you don't really come close to 100k/year. The average over that period looks to be rounded up to 40,000. Not even half of 100,000.

As far as vaccines go, less than half the population gets the vaccine. The percent of adults who got their flu shot for the 2017-2018 season was 45.3%.

It's also important to note that 200,000 more people could die this year from Covid19. That's the estimates, which would put Covid at 400k/year.

Furthermore, we don't count Flu Deaths the same way we count Covid19 deaths. For Flu deaths, the CDC errs on the side of caution. Their estimates try to account for unreported cases. Something Covid19 does not.

https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/past-seasons.html

Yeah I think I was thinking of the worldwide death numbers or something.

Either way, again, you have to compare to initial onset without immunity, vaccine, and therapeutics to the coronavirus. That is common sense. Then when you get that far you can then begin the this is a 100 year advanced society vs that.

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