rswyan
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It works, just slow. I saw a delay of several seconds the first time, and again the first time I reviewed the draft of my post. Quick thereafter.Link doesnt work.Here's an article linked from Digg that has individual curves (like above) for several places including state of Washington, California, NYC. And in particular Massachusetts where they say testing is late and inadequate so the curve will be steeper.
Don't be Italy
Strange. Your version went right to it.

Likely too late at this point ... although the steps our Governor has taken are promising.
Can only hope more get onboard.
Basically he's acting to shutdown vectors for the spread within the local "community" (aka Ohio) by dramatically limiting contacts within larger groups.
Given the high transmissibility, it's a good/smart move ... and within his authority (at least so far)
I have a somewhat different assessment.
I agree... at this point. And at the risk of starting CV #5...Nope ... at this point, the phobia needs to be at far more basic level: ... your fellow individual human being ... regardless of where they hail from.
In this particular instance, it isn't a bad thing.
I agree... at this point. And at the risk of starting CV #5...
Your words... "Basically he's acting to shutdown vectors for the spread within the local "community" (aka Ohio) by dramatically limiting contacts within larger groups.
Given the high transmissibility, it's a good/smart move ... and within his authority (at least so far)"
Where do you draw the line?
Seems the same actions were being put forward at macro level a few weeks ago. Glad someone is not leading from behind.
Personally, I think we (media 24/7) are overreacting in the grand scheme of things.
Lots of people will be/are being hurt by this no doubt, but I think it seems we are easily distracted by the shiny object... good or bad.
Hard to blame the media though because in our world now, it needs to 'sell'.
I hope I am wrong that this is as serious as being touted. We don't know where this is leading... but that is life.
Strange. Your version went right to it.
Given that we have 5 times the population, if we can keep the number of those who are infected and in a need of critical care to the same as Italy, we will be doing very well.Duplicating Italy is inevitable now. Social distancing can only slow down the contagion curve, not cancel it.
Repeating the chart I posted a few pages back:
![]()
Duplicating Italy is inevitable now. Social distancing can only slow down the contagion curve, not cancel it.
Repeating the chart I posted a few pages back:
![]()
Now plot that for the regular flu.
Campers and hikers use them a lot. I've seen them in several outdoors type stores like Dick's.Yesterday while at the shipping store locally, I saw a big shipment of cased MRE's coming in the door.
I had never seen that before. Didn't know you could order civilian MRE's.
Stocking a shelter?
What's regular flu got to do with this?
The CDC estimates that, on average, about 8% of the U.S. population gets sick with the flu each season.
Coronavirus Disease 219 vs. the Flu | Johns Hopkins Medicine
Deaths so far for the Coronavirus is 80. CDC estimated that influenza (flu) has resulted in between 9 million 45 million illnesses, between 140,000 810,000 hospitalizations and between 12,000 61,000 deaths annually since 2010. So about 120-6,100 deaths per year due to the flu.
H1N1 swine flu has killed as many as 17,000 Americans, including 1,800 children, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported
Where is the hysteria for the flu? Why weren't schools and business shut down for the swine flu?
Oh yes, the mainstream news hate Trump and want to see him blamed for the present day virus.
Quit feeding the hysteria!