Crazy crazy crazy


If we ever get through all this craziness and Axpona kicks back up meet me on the second floor at the bar. I’m buying the first round. Stay safe friends.
arch2
Here is a quick question, are the recommended kinds of food, stockpiles and ammo consistent regardless of whichever camp someone happens to be in? For instance, is one camp or the other recommended to stockpile more or less than another camp?
Almost the whole left end of their international data scatterplot is driven by 19 African countries with very low vax rates, but there are a host of reasons why the rates of Covid-19 infection are exceedingly low in Africa, among them are: early border closures, 55% rural, just 3% over the age of 65, open air ventilation in homes, very low median age of 19.7 years, lower expression of ACE-2 receptor which is the gateway for lung infection, and far fewer pre-existing conditions like diabetes, hypertension etc.  Without those dubious data points clustered to the lower left, the trendline would have the opposite and expected slope.  Here is a link that explains the reason for low Covid cases in Africa.



Then why do these African countries seem to get almost every virus besides COVID-19.
@ghasley Ask Pfizer. That is your master now, you have no choice... if Master says 3 boosters, you get in line. If Master says 8, you’d better roll up them sleeves no questions asked.
Pfizer knows all.  It is omnipotent.
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@invalid the increases are counted week over week, of the same county vs same county, same country over same country. It is not an Africa vs US situation, it is an Africa vs Africa data set.
Year over Year, Covid cases and Deaths in August are up 300%, despite vaccinations being administered to well over half the population, and the most vulnerable population being almost completely vaccinated.
The vaccine has failed by any and all abject measures. (AND THAT IS  WHY BOOSTETRS ARE BEING MANDATED)

P.S. Read the methodology used in the study

Methods

We used COVID-19 data provided by the Our World in Data for cross-country analysis, available as of September 3, 2021 (Supplementary Table 1) [4]. We included 68 countries that met the following criteria: had second dose vaccine data available; had COVID-19 case data available; had population data available; and the last update of data was within 3 days prior to or on September 3, 2021. For the 7 days preceding September 3, 2021 we computed the COVID-19 cases per 1 million people for each country as well as the percentage of population that is fully vaccinated.

For the county-level analysis in the US, we utilized the White House COVID-19 Team data [5], available as of September 2, 2021 (Supplementary Table 2). We excluded counties that did not report fully vaccinated population percentage data yielding 2947 counties for the analysis. We computed the number and percentages of counties that experienced an increase in COVID-19 cases by levels of the percentage of people fully vaccinated in each county. The percentage increase in COVID-19 cases was calculated based on the difference in cases from the last 7 days and the 7 days preceding them. For example, Los Angeles county in California had 18,171 cases in the last 7 days (August 26 to September 1) and 31,616 cases in the previous 7 days (August 19–25), so this county did not experience an increase of cases in our dataset. We provide a dashboard of the metrics used in this analysis that is updated automatically as new data is made available by the White House COVID-19 Team (https://tiny.cc/USDashboard).