FORUMS FORUMS






RLFANS.COM
Celebrating
25 years service to
the Rugby League
Community!

   WWW.RLFANS.COM • View topic - US Presidential election 2020
::Off-topic discussion.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Moderator12594
JoinedServiceReputation
Jun 01 200717 years124th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
9th May 24 22:447th May 24 17:34LINK
Milestone Posts
10000
15000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Leicestershire.
Signature
'Thus I am tormented by my curiosity and humbled by my ignorance.' from History of an Old Bramin, The New York Mirror (A Weekly Journal Devoted to Literature and the Fine Arts), February 16th 1833.
Moderator

Re: US Presidential election 2020 : Sun Jan 17, 2021 10:37 am  
I found this article from September last year interesting and persuasive. With hindsight, also prophetic, regarding the aftermath of the US election.

https://www.noemamag.com/welcome-to-the ... -twenties/

I think the historical examples of the Corn Laws-Peterloo-Whig reform and FDR’s New Deal are powerful because they will evoke positive responses across the political spectrum. I think the point about some liberal priorities being important (to liberals at least) and legitimate, but not really offering a solution to the underlying problems is fair. Not that you can’t have both greater social justice and economic reforms, but we do have to talk about both to get there.
I found this article from September last year interesting and persuasive. With hindsight, also prophetic, regarding the aftermath of the US election.

https://www.noemamag.com/welcome-to-the ... -twenties/

I think the historical examples of the Corn Laws-Peterloo-Whig reform and FDR’s New Deal are powerful because they will evoke positive responses across the political spectrum. I think the point about some liberal priorities being important (to liberals at least) and legitimate, but not really offering a solution to the underlying problems is fair. Not that you can’t have both greater social justice and economic reforms, but we do have to talk about both to get there.
RankPostsTeam
First Team Player1004No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Dec 11 20203 years157th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
9th May 24 08:567th May 24 07:21LINK
Milestone Posts
1000
2500
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: US Presidential election 2020 : Mon Jan 18, 2021 11:36 am  
The Ghost of '99 wrote:
Canadian cities are as densely populated as British cities. And the vast majority of Canadians - 80%+ live in those big cities.

They have a great, vast country. But nobody is living in most of it. Population density over an entire country is irrelevant.


There are vast distances between these cities: Toronto to Montreal is c350 miles, Toronto to Vancouver c2,700 miles so infection can be contained a lot more easily in large communities with plenty of distance between large conurbations rather than England where there are very small distances between concentrated conurbations?

How do you explain why Belgium has had such a bad time of it - population is c1,000 sq mile - there has to be a correlation?
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Moderator12488No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
May 07 200717 years220th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
13th Oct 23 16:277th Mar 23 15:21LINK
Milestone Posts
10000
15000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Durham
Signature
Huddersfield Giants 2013 over achievers

Huddersfield Giants 2014 under achievers ??????????
Moderator

Re: US Presidential election 2020 : Mon Jan 18, 2021 12:01 pm  
Zoo Zoo Boom wrote:
There are vast distances between these cities: Toronto to Montreal is c350 miles, Toronto to Vancouver c2,700 miles so infection can be contained a lot more easily in large communities with plenty of distance between large conurbations rather than England where there are very small distances between concentrated conurbations?

How do you explain why Belgium has had such a bad time of it - population is c1,000 sq mile - there has to be a correlation?


My 14 year old son has a better understanding than you seem to



density in South Korea is 1,366 people per mile yet they have not had a bad a time as the UK plus being closer to China and with more links to the pandemic starting.

In Brazil it is 68.57 per mile but they have a huge number of deaths


That above should suggest that Other factors other than population density comes into it. One of the key factors in determine how bad Covid has struck has been political decisions on how best to deal with it ( although there are many other factors )

But in the top 10 worst affected countries the correlation between Covid is who is running the country ie politicians who denying it, refusing lockdowns, promoting herd immunity , effective dictatorships etc are big factors ie Brazil bolsonaro, Us Trump, Uk Boris, Russia Putin etc etc


Yes Canada may have big differences in distance between cities and maybe 200 years ago before people had Aeroplanes or Trains or Cars that might have made a difference BUT now people travel large distances very quickly . They don’t just travel on dog sled and horses . If you are in a pub in a big city in Belgium or Canada the virus spreads the same way
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Player Coach3092No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 26 200618 years66th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
10th Mar 23 22:1119th Feb 23 21:41LINK
Milestone Posts
2500
5000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Signature
"Brian McDermott, with a wry smile, nods when asked if he remembers a specific incident which made him realise he was a prick. 'I do', he murmurs."

Re: US Presidential election 2020 : Mon Jan 18, 2021 1:11 pm  
Zoo Zoo Boom wrote:
There are vast distances between these cities: Toronto to Montreal is c350 miles, Toronto to Vancouver c2,700 miles so infection can be contained a lot more easily in large communities with plenty of distance between large conurbations rather than England where there are very small distances between concentrated conurbations?

How do you explain why Belgium has had such a bad time of it - population is c1,000 sq mile - there has to be a correlation?
I don't have anything to add to what DG says.
I don't understand why you can't get your head around what aren't terribly complicated concepts. Of course there is a correlation between how tightly packed people are at a very, very localised level - i.e. inside a supermarket or a pub. But that simply doesn't translate upwards to population density over a city, let alone a county/state or country. There are far more important variables than that random metric.
RankPostsTeam
First Team Player1004No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Dec 11 20203 years157th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
9th May 24 08:567th May 24 07:21LINK
Milestone Posts
1000
2500
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: US Presidential election 2020 : Mon Jan 18, 2021 1:12 pm  
Durham Giant wrote:
My 14 year old son has a better understanding than you seem to



density in South Korea is 1,366 people per mile yet they have not had a bad a time as the UK plus being closer to China and with more links to the pandemic starting.

In Brazil it is 68.57 per mile but they have a huge number of deaths


That above should suggest that Other factors other than population density comes into it. One of the key factors in determine how bad Covid has struck has been political decisions on how best to deal with it ( although there are many other factors )

But in the top 10 worst affected countries the correlation between Covid is who is running the country ie politicians who denying it, refusing lockdowns, promoting herd immunity , effective dictatorships etc are big factors ie Brazil bolsonaro, Us Trump, Uk Boris, Russia Putin etc etc


Yes Canada may have big differences in distance between cities and maybe 200 years ago before people had Aeroplanes or Trains or Cars that might have made a difference BUT now people travel large distances very quickly . They don’t just travel on dog sled and horses . If you are in a pub in a big city in Belgium or Canada the virus spreads the same way


I didn't say population density was the only cause but it will have been a contributory factor. Whilst you might get movement of people it will not be as prevalent as say movement between Leeds and Manchester - easy to go 30 miles in a car not so easy to do 300 or 2,000 Ottawa to Edmonton? Are you saying it is all political decisions that caused such a bad outcome?
RankPostsTeam
First Team Player1004No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Dec 11 20203 years157th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
9th May 24 08:567th May 24 07:21LINK
Milestone Posts
1000
2500
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: US Presidential election 2020 : Mon Jan 18, 2021 1:14 pm  
The Ghost of '99 wrote:
I don't have anything to add to what DG says.
I don't understand why you can't get your head around what aren't terribly complicated concepts. Of course there is a correlation between how tightly packed people are at a very, very localised level - i.e. inside a supermarket or a pub. But that simply doesn't translate upwards to population density over a city, let alone a county/state or country. There are far more important variables than that random metric.


How do you explain the huge increases in York and Harrogate - Mr. know-it-all?
RankPostsTeam
First Team Player381No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Sep 14 20204 years316th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
7th Apr 21 07:486th Apr 21 15:17LINK
Milestone Posts
250
500
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: US Presidential election 2020 : Mon Jan 18, 2021 1:33 pm  
Zoo Zoo Boom wrote:
How do you explain the huge increases in York and Harrogate - Mr. know-it-all?

The more people are tested, the more cases there will be.
RankPostsTeam
First Team Player1004No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Dec 11 20203 years157th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
9th May 24 08:567th May 24 07:21LINK
Milestone Posts
1000
2500
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: US Presidential election 2020 : Mon Jan 18, 2021 2:55 pm  
WestEndThinker wrote:
The more people are tested, the more cases there will be.


So you are saying the cases were the same/thousand but not showing any symptoms - but all of a sudden they all started showing symptoms and the rate when up - are you for real?
DHM 
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Player Coach8893
JoinedServiceReputation
May 25 200618 years292nd
OnlineLast PostLast Page
22nd Apr 24 09:0818th Apr 24 14:09LINK
Milestone Posts
5000
10000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Garth's Darkplace.
Signature
"Well, I think in Rugby League if you head butt someone there's normally some repercusions"

Re: US Presidential election 2020 : Mon Jan 18, 2021 9:41 pm  
Durham Giant wrote:
My 14 year old son has a better understanding than you seem to



density in South Korea is 1,366 people per mile yet they have not had a bad a time as the UK plus being closer to China and with more links to the pandemic starting.

In Brazil it is 68.57 per mile but they have a huge number of deaths


That above should suggest that Other factors other than population density comes into it. One of the key factors in determine how bad Covid has struck has been political decisions on how best to deal with it ( although there are many other factors )

But in the top 10 worst affected countries the correlation between Covid is who is running the country ie politicians who denying it, refusing lockdowns, promoting herd immunity , effective dictatorships etc are big factors ie Brazil bolsonaro, Us Trump, Uk Boris, Russia Putin etc etc


Yes Canada may have big differences in distance between cities and maybe 200 years ago before people had Aeroplanes or Trains or Cars that might have made a difference BUT now people travel large distances very quickly . They don’t just travel on dog sled and horses . If you are in a pub in a big city in Belgium or Canada the virus spreads the same way


Indeed. A lot of "amateur epidemiologists" have been giving us the benefit of their opinion on daytime TV recently, including talking about "just shielding the over 80's as they are the only ones dying and letting the rest of us live normally" . Well, look at the numbers - around 50% of all deaths are in the 40-80 age bracket. No suggestions on how you would do that obviously.
There is absolutely no doubt that countries who have acted to initially effect a strong lockdown, and followed that with quarantine procedures to prevent re-entrance of infection and swift, decisive action when infection re-appears are currently way better off than those who have dragged their feet every time measures are needed.

I get it. People are really suffering now, both with and without the disease and wishing there was a better way. I do think that had this disease been awkward and a vaccine was going to take much longer then we would be faced with some very tough decisions and strategy may have been different. You must get business (small business's in particular) and the economy working again at some point or we all suffer more (eventually). But it happens that Covid 19 is not a particularly difficult one to create a vaccine for (it's all relative of course). I have heard it described by the people who first characterized it in the West as "clumsy". I have known since about June that we would have a vaccine deployed around end of November - beginning of December. In fact if the FDA hadn't been so worried about US public opinion on vaccines the AZ vaccine would have been with us before the Pfizer vaccine. If I knew that then the government knew that, so that's had a big bearing on strategy so far.

There will be other global pandemics of this nature, it's inevitable, but if we do not learn the lessons of what worked and what didn't and if we listen to those who think there is a radical approach that we didn't try that would have worked brilliantly (herd immunity, selective shielding etc) then we will have a disaster of even greater proportions than we have now. This isn't the first pandemic we've had and it's not the first highly infectious disease to spread through a region of the world. There are people who study this stuff and are "experts" in what works and what doesn't. We should listen to them.
RankPostsTeam
First Team Player1004No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Dec 11 20203 years157th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
9th May 24 08:567th May 24 07:21LINK
Milestone Posts
1000
2500
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: US Presidential election 2020 : Tue Jan 19, 2021 2:26 pm  
DHM wrote:
Indeed. A lot of "amateur epidemiologists" have been giving us the benefit of their opinion on daytime TV recently, including talking about "just shielding the over 80's as they are the only ones dying and letting the rest of us live normally" . Well, look at the numbers - around 50% of all deaths are in the 40-80 age bracket. No suggestions on how you would do that obviously.
There is absolutely no doubt that countries who have acted to initially effect a strong lockdown, and followed that with quarantine procedures to prevent re-entrance of infection and swift, decisive action when infection re-appears are currently way better off than those who have dragged their feet every time measures are needed.

I get it. People are really suffering now, both with and without the disease and wishing there was a better way. I do think that had this disease been awkward and a vaccine was going to take much longer then we would be faced with some very tough decisions and strategy may have been different. You must get business (small business's in particular) and the economy working again at some point or we all suffer more (eventually). But it happens that Covid 19 is not a particularly difficult one to create a vaccine for (it's all relative of course). I have heard it described by the people who first characterized it in the West as "clumsy". I have known since about June that we would have a vaccine deployed around end of November - beginning of December. In fact if the FDA hadn't been so worried about US public opinion on vaccines the AZ vaccine would have been with us before the Pfizer vaccine. If I knew that then the government knew that, so that's had a big bearing on strategy so far.

There will be other global pandemics of this nature, it's inevitable, but if we do not learn the lessons of what worked and what didn't and if we listen to those who think there is a radical approach that we didn't try that would have worked brilliantly (herd immunity, selective shielding etc) then we will have a disaster of even greater proportions than we have now. This isn't the first pandemic we've had and it's not the first highly infectious disease to spread through a region of the world. There are people who study this stuff and are "experts" in what works and what doesn't. We should listen to them.


An interesting post - this issue is so many experts with very differing opinions - who is right? Ferguson is an interesting expert - never got a prediction even close.

You quote 50% between - my understanding is 80%+ of the death are occurring in the over 75's

Are we saying those that have had the virus also have a degree of protection - we have c3.5m positive cases so if you add that to the 4m already vaccinated that should give c8m with a degree of protection. If the current continues at c40k a day you will have c5m positives plus 16.5m vaccinated that is c22m if you take off the c10m under 15's you should have 40% of the population with some form of protection by mid Feb?

The problem is now even with a vaccine there doesn't seem to be clarity about what they can achieve - do they stop the spread - doesn't appear so - does it stop people getting ill - doesn't appear so - it will prevent the most vulnerable from death if they get it. Does this really offer a way back to normality? I will definitely have the jab I am not in denial.

The government keep changing the goal posts about removing restrictions - first it was R number, then it was pressure on the NHS, then it was number of infections, then was the vaccine role out - there is surely a limit as to how long this can continue without the medicine being worse than the illness? What are the chances of schools going back before Easter?
PreviousNext

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 105 guests

REPLY

Subject: 
Message:
   
Please note using apple style emoji's can result in posting failures.
Use the FULL EDITOR to better format content or upload images, be notified of replies etc...

Return to The Sin Bin


RLFANS Recent Posts
FORUM
LAST
POST
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
2m
Game - Song Titles
Wanderer
36208
3m
BORED The Band Name Game
Wanderer
58131
9m
DoR - New Coach - Investor & Adam - New signings
Dave K.
1090
10m
London Away
Dave K.
67
13m
Bradford next
1315trinity
65
23m
Transfer Talk / Rumour thread V4
leedsbarmyar
8941
31m
Widnes v Dons Sun 5/5/24 at 3pm
Jemmo
26
34m
Shopping list for 2025
Marcus's Bic
1698
37m
Rumours thread
Dannyboywt1
1248
Recent
Squads - Leopards v Devils
LeythIg
3
FORUM
LAST
VIEW
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
1m
Betting 2024
karetaker
82
1m
BORED The Band Name Game
Wanderer
58131
1m
Squads - Leopards v Devils
LeythIg
3
1m
Rumours thread
Dannyboywt1
1248
1m
Wakefield S/F
AgbriggAmble
25
1m
Am I missing something
KaeruJim
42
2m
Widnes v Dons Sun 5/5/24 at 3pm
Jemmo
26
2m
Recruitment rumours and links
rubber ducki
2442
2m
Squad for HKR
matt_wire
25
3m
Zak signs for Hull
Bent&Bon
10
FORUM
NEW
TOPICS
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
TODAY
Freedom of connections dating for open relationships
WIZEB
4
TODAY
Luke Yates
WYSIWYG2
3
TODAY
Warrington Wolves Frustrate Hull KR As They Go Top
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
Hull fc
Deadcowboys1
2
TODAY
Charnley signs
WYSIWYG2
2
TODAY
Tonights game v HKR
The Speculat
43
TODAY
Shay rent
SingaporeFax
4
TODAY
Zak signs for Hull
Bent&Bon
10
TODAY
Hull
Deadcowboys1
3
TODAY
The Brick Community Stadium
Jason65
18
TODAY
Squads - Leopards v Devils
LeythIg
3
TODAY
RD 11 Catalan Dragons A
batleyrhino
16
TODAY
Ticket for a fiver
Reboot
3
TODAY
WIRE YED Prediction Competition Hull KR Home
Mr Snoodle
17
TODAY
Squad for HKR
matt_wire
25
TODAY
Wakefield S/F
AgbriggAmble
25
TODAY
Isaiah Vagana
Luppylad
21
TODAY
Olly Holmes Gone
WYSIWYG2
2
TODAY
Hudds a
CobraCraig
34
TODAY
Brad Martin
WYSIWYG2
8
TODAY
Reminder about the programme fair and a bit more news too
glee
1
TODAY
Best Great Britain XiII to never play in nRL
giddyupoldfe
5
TODAY
2024 Southstandercom Prediction Competition Week 11
Les Dyl's re
35
TODAY
Super League app
Or thane
6
TODAY
Attending Forum
upthetrin92
11
TODAY
Widnes Vikings Win Thriller Against Doncaster
RLFANS News
1
NEWS ITEMS
VIEWS
Warrington Wolves Frustrate Hu..
242
Widnes Vikings Win Thriller Ag..
1263
Leigh Leopards and Castleford ..
1346
Simple Rhinos Victory Compound..
1027
Stunning Second Half Sees Wiga..
1119
Leeds Rhinos Battle Hard for W..
2625
Salford Red Devils Battle Hard..
2639
Leigh Leopards Masterclass Des..
2684
Saints Snatch Win With Lomax D..
3048
Wakefield Trinity Too Strong F..
3264
Catalans Dragons Destroy Hull ..
2966
Warrington Wolves Break Leigh ..
3417
Huddersfield Giants Fight Back..
2579
France v England International..
3641
Warrington Stun St Helens In C..
4652
RLFANS Match Centre
Matches on TV
Table 'boards.stats_fixtures' doesn't exist