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Utopia Talk / Politics / everything usa is fake
The Children
Member | Tue Jul 28 11:36:08 http://www...ey_alter_civid19_data_america/ get WOKE, bitches. ur the one lying and cheatin. |
smart dude
Member | Tue Jul 28 11:45:47 Lightbulbs? Airplanes? The Internet? All fake? Meanwhile you still eat your food with literal sticks. Unless it's Doritos...oh, wait... |
Rugian
Member | Tue Jul 28 12:21:46 ...you know what, that actually is interesting. Is there a reliable source (aka not r/sino) that has an explanation for the sudden flatlining? |
Pillz
Member | Tue Jul 28 12:23:58 You achieved peak rona |
Rugian
Member | Tue Jul 28 12:28:25 Could be. Reimposition of shutdowns in various states over the last month no doubt played a role as well. Anyway, looking at the seven-day average for death counts shows that those are still on the increase, so guessing HHS isnt massaging those numbers. |
Habebe
Member | Tue Jul 28 12:29:15 Rugian, Jeff Hester apparently. YouTube reverse vampire and astrophysicist. |
The Children
Member | Tue Jul 28 13:42:43 eating with sticks isnt sipereior? lmao u figure that? |
Rugian
Member | Tue Jul 28 14:18:20 Well that guy apparently conducted his blue state/red state comparison by using states that voted Trump in 2016. I dont think that's an entirely accurate way of going about it. Even so, going through the seven-day rolling averages for the states with the largest number of new cases, the timing is interesting: -Florida (16% of total new cases): peaked at 12,000 average cases per day around July 16-18; since then has declined to 10,000/day -California (15% of total new cases): had a major increase in late June/early July, saw a slowdown around July 7, but still has gone from 8,500/day around June 16 to just under 10,000/day now -Texas (12% of new cases): had a large increase in late June/early July, then suddenly mostly stopped increasing around July 14, then had a manor drop between July 23 and today from 10,000 to 7,500 average cases/day -Georgia (6% of new cases): abruptly flatlined right around July 16 -Arizona (4% of new cases): peaked around July 6, has been steadily declining since then -Louisiana (4% of new cases): flatlined around July 20 -Tennessee (4% of new cases): data is more uneven, with a flatlining around July 6, a new spike starting on July 12, another flatlining around July 20, and what may be the start of a new spike on July 25 -North Carolina (3% of new cases): had a relatively slow increase in June and early July; flatlined around July 16 -Alabama (3% of new cases): major increase in late June/early July came to a sudden end around July 18 -South Carolina (2% of new cases): major increase in June/early July suddenly stopped on July 3, then restarted on July 10, then again stopped July 15 and has since turned into a decline -Illinois (2% of new cases): has been slowly increasing since June; no flatlining apparent -Missouri (2% of new cases): still peaking; no flatlining apparent -Ohio (2% of new cases): flatlined around July 13 Would want to understand these trends better. |
Habebe
Member | Tue Jul 28 14:57:30 Rugian, IIRC*** NY and WA had pretty sudden drop offs as well, so perhaps this is normal. |
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