has everything to do with data manipulation and yes ChumpDumper, timing.... but you already knew that
uhhh....States with income tax will take the same hit. Incomes are down with unemployment and business closures.
has everything to do with data manipulation and yes ChumpDumper, timing.... but you already knew that
"The total announced Friday in Dallas County was the highest single-day amount of cases since the start of the pandemic. The previous high came just one day earlier, on Thursday....
https://abcnews.go.com/US/texas-sees...ry?id=71089826
Now look at their testing increases those days.
I hope they are collecting data on whether these people attended protests. We need to learn whether those conditions contribute to spread.
Yeah.
It could also coincide with the State "opening up", so it should be easy to tease what you wish to out of the numbers as we cant control these counts properly. As far as the contact tracing, you got a lot of overlap.
Then watch data from New York.
NY is not Texas.
Again controls.
we can do the comparison but we have to mention what might have skewed the data
Last edited by pgardn; 06-06-2020 at 03:06 PM.
here's some Hill Country people scrupulously respecting social distancing on the Frio River
https://www.hctc.net/resources/community/
Speaking of the Hill Country, Medina's cases more than doubled in the past 24 hours. Another backlog?
Nope, too soon for protesters to contribute to spread
You need to do more research. We on day 12 of protests.
Texas sees a record e in coronavirus cases amid protests
- The number of positive cases of the coronavirus has been increasing in Texas, particularly in Harris County and Dallas County.
- Dallas County hit a single-day high on Thursday with 285 new cases while Harris County recorded 222.
- Concerns over a e in new coronavirus cases have also risen amid widespread protests over police brutality across the US.
- Texas is currently entering its third phase of reopening.
https://www.insider.com/texas-houston-dallas-cororavirus-cases-increase- e-2020-6
Would be difficult to separate new cases based on reopening vs protests in Texas. Better to look at a state like CA, which has been locked down pretty hard.
What did your research tell you, asshat?
Dr Darrin
Pundit Cuck
You are not a serious person.
This was in the link I posted above:
" Dr. David Persse, medical director for the Houston Fire Department..... cautioned that the recent protests were unlikely to be the cause if there's a prolonged e in cases.
"If it stays at this, this sort of same rate of increase, then I definitely won't say you can blame the protests," Persse said. "If anything, it's going to be the reopening of society and people becoming fatigued, if you will, with the precautions we've asked them to take."
It gets old spoon feeding lazy ass talking piece of s like you. It's easier to just make fun of you and move on.
Then why the we quarantining and social distancing in the first place, you stupid ing cuck?
2+2=3 and 4
TheGreatYacht
There was always going to be a rise in infections once restrictions were lifted. The issue is how many infections the governments are willing to live with in what period of time. Since no governments are actually saying what those are we can only guess that they're fine with anything up to and maybe including full hospital capacity, maybe more. Who knows? We probably won't get to that point in many places, so everyone can keep quiet about it.
How many extra COVID cases/deaths are these rioters adding?
Yah, I mean what happens if we do get to full hospital capacity in the big cities? Seems to me we're just gonna keep going full steam ahead, masks recommended but not mandatory.
"This is a trend we’re definitely keeping an eye on,” said Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo. “If the numbers keep up in this direction, we could be headed to a place where we run out of hospital space, which obviously would be a problem.”
COVID-19 patients have occupied hospital intensive-care units in the nine-county Houston area at higher levels the first three days in June than they did on any single day in May, according to date compiled by the Southeast Texas Regional Advisory Council, a state group that coordinates the region’s emergency response to disasters. In Harris County, hospital admissions have increased at statistically significant levels the past two weeks......"
https://www.houstonchronicle.com/new...n-15321171.php
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