Ongoing coronavirus happenings

Another failure mode of our lack-of-healthcare system (coupled with a political ad).

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“tremendous”

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Swedish stores miss Finnish customers

Meanwhile, Lapin Kansa reports from the Swedish border town of Haparanda, where shops are feeling the effects of travel restrictions caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

The town’s Ikea is much quieter than usual, according to the store’s marketing manager, Henrik Eneros .

“Our customers’ purchasing habits have changed. We receive a lot of online and telephone orders, which we deliver to the Finnish side,” he told the paper.

The town’s COOP supermarket is also missing its cross-border customers, many of whom had been attracted by a new liquor store next door.

Store manager Christer Lundqvist told Lapin Kansa he was nervous about how long the travel restrictions could last.

“Hopefully this stop caused by the coronavirus will not last very long. In the summer, in addition to Finns, Norwegians will come to the city, and losing them would be a big setback,” he said.

“In summer, each week is like Christmas week,” he added.

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Probably not as much as the Norwegians miss the cheap Swedish booze. The collapse of the Norwegian krone has supercharged my dollars so I don’t mind shopping at the state monopoly store, but Norwegians have been arrested trying to sneak into Sweden to shop.

One of the real casualties of the pandemic in Europe has been Schengen; “open borders” are just a fond memory these days.

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This is lovely and good creativity

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Ironically this is not the case with Brexit Britain which has open borders with another country and different rules about travel. An increase in day trippers from the North has been associated with a spike of cases in Cavan (a border county in Ireland).

People are getting riled that the new legislation to allow the Gardai stop you and ask where you were going and could you please stop it thanks doesn’t apply to Northerners. Which duh, we can’t legislate in another country. Which is also something the Tories really should learn…

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This could as well be going to this topic.

I just got a message from family. The read the Rheinische Post and asked about my input on an opinion piece by Stefan Homburg, an economist, published today in the RP.

I’m not going to onebox this: https://rp-online.de/ panorama/ coronavirus/ wirtschaftsprofessor-stefan-homburg-warum-der-lockdown-unberechtigt-ist_aid-50253127

Do me a favour, please and do not click that link. I deliberately put blanks in it so you don’t. A google translate version follows:

Statistics contradict Lockdown

Guest contribution by Stefan Homburg

Opinion Hanover The economics professor and ex-advisor to the federal government, Stefan Homburg, rejects restrictions such as blocking contacts in the corona pandemic. In his guest contribution, he justifies his controversial thesis in the professional world with official figures.

Unlike in Sweden, for example, many people in Germany are extremely worried. They worry about being infected with the coronavirus and possibly dying from it. In this fear, they are reinforced by Chancellor Angela Merkel, who warns sharply of the easing of the lockdown that has been in effect since March 23.
The factual situation seems unclear to many, because the public debates mostly revolve around an ominous “reproduction number” that cannot be observed directly, but can only be estimated using mathematical methods. This article tries a different approach that doesn’t require math skills, just common sense. The accompanying figure shows all daily reported corona diagnoses in Germany, starting on March 2nd. The data comes from Johns Hopkins University. They are accessible to everyone free of charge on the Internet and make it possible to graphically depict and compare the situation in well over 100 countries.
If you look beyond the peaks, which are based on reporting delays, the illustration shows a pattern typical of epidemics: Viruses multiply faster and faster before development reaches a plateau and then subsides. In the case of influenza viruses, popularly refers to the shape of the curve as the “flu wave”. The figure here shows the corona wave accordingly. The same wave pattern also applies to other respiratory infections because it has a deeper reason: the more prevalent the virus is, the longer it will take to find people who are susceptible to further infection. The danger of a virus wave depends on how infectious the virus is and what health effects it has. Both factors are not yet known exactly in the corona virus,however, the overall effect is similar to that of the influenza virus in the opinion of the physicians and on the basis of the observed death rates, in Germany it is rather less. Mortality mainly affects people whose immune systems are weakened; the average age of the corona virus is 82 years.
The figure shows that the news peaked around March 30, and the corona wave subsided in April. No numbers game can fool this fact; it is obvious. What does this mean for the peak of infections? The figure also provides information about this, because the federal Robert Koch Institute (RKI) estimates that two to three weeks pass between infection and notification: a newly infected patient is initially symptom-free, and this incubation period is estimated at around five days. If symptoms occur, the patient goes to the doctor after a while, who takes a smear and sends it to a laboratory.
Positive test results are sent to the local health authorities, from there to the state health authorities and finally to the RKI, which collects and publishes the reports centrally. The delay of two to three weeks, averaged around 17 days, leads to an important conclusion.
Since the newly reported Corona cases peaked around March 30th, the actual new infections, which cannot be observed directly, must have reached their maximum around 17 days before, i.e. on March 13th. At that time, major events had been banned (March 9), while school closings (March 16) and large parts of the economy lockdown (March 23) followed later. The graphic is hardly compatible with the thesis that only school closings and lockdown prevented worse.
On the contrary, the graphic suggests that the virus spread would have stopped even without drastic measures. There are two further arguments for this. First, in late February and early March, all respiratory infectious diseases were in retreat. One may object that the lockdown also stopped the spread of influenza and other viruses. According to data from the RKI, respiratory diseases also automatically decreased in previous years towards the end of the cold season. At that time, as is well known, there was neither hysteria nor a lockdown.
The exponential increase assumed by the Federal Government has not occurred in South Korea, Sweden and Taiwan, either, which have waived lockdowns and take far milder measures. This was to be expected because epidemics only spread exponentially in the imagination of some politicians (and their preferred advisors). In reality, respiratory infections always follow the course of an “epidemiological curve” with an increasing and then decreasing rate of spread. In retrospect, this pattern can be seen in the data of many countries, regardless of whether they have damaged citizens and the economy through historically unprecedented measures.
Why is an economist concerned with these questions? Because epidemiologists don’t cure patients, which of course only doctors can do, but work with data, computer programs and mathematical models. In terms of qualifications, epidemiologists are often mathematicians and statisticians and they use the same methods as economists. Virologists, on the other hand, are biologists who study cell and virus interactions.
Politicians are familiar with the above figures and facts; she just doesn’t know how to get out of the number and continues to stir up fears. The politicians who are now supporting the swift lifting of the excessive measures will soon be ahead of the polls.

I didn’t try to fix mistranslated sentences this time, may do this later. No time right now, and I am fucking livid.

This regionally respected conservative-leaning newspaper, published in a ‘political powerhouse’ region of Northrhine-Westphalia, is giving him an opinion piece right now, only days after he published a blog post on a openly racist neocon platform complaining he is being painted as a villain on public broadcasters and calls this “gouvernmental desinformation”, aka fake news…

FUCK THIS SHIT RIGHT NOW.

And family contacts me and wants to have my opinion from a statisticians viewpoint.
I don’t even.

Same family members, by the way, want to visit us ASAP. And I caved in, because they are suffering, really big time, from depression. I want to help them. But this might get really problematic.

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5 posts were merged into an existing topic: Michael Moore: Planet of the Humans available for free

What it is about epidemiology, that suddenly everyone and their dog is an expert?

And there have been really impressive recent advancements. For example Perovskite solar cells may be extremely cheap to produce and their efficiencies have gone from less than 4% to more than 25% in last 20 years:
Perovskite solar cell - Wikipedia

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Nice, but thankfully we get to wave away any loony conspiracies on this one… there are two Cs in raccoon :slight_smile:

UNLESS OF COURSE THAT’S PART OF THE CONSPIRACY ZOMG!!!11!1!
"CC"s ARE WHAT DOCTORS PUT IN THEIR NEEDLES WHEN THEY INJECT YOU (WITH VIRUSES???)
IT’S ALL TRUE
foaming-at-mouth-emoji

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Lawmakers press for small business loans for payday lenders

These guys are to the financial industry like the meth pushers are to the pharmaceutical companies. (And yes, I realize that this is not a particularly complementary metaphor for my troubled industry… I’ll put my hair shirt on now… go nuts…)

The only thing worse than having them around is making them illegal, since it pushes the loan sharking trade underground and into the hands of people well versed in dealing with “tight regulatory situations”. (“tight…” as in “go to jail for doing that” tight)

Moral judgement meet societal cost assessment. Societal cost assessment, meet moral judgement. You guys should have lots to talk about…

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I knew they’d find a way to blame the virus on Obama.

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And on a hand lettered sign that obviously wasn’t designed by a conservative wingnut welfare shop.

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Mathematical genius: it just adds up. Oh, wait…

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