Paragon
Member #42 if by Bus
Cool story, bro.
you brought it up. just wanted to add to your story
Cool story, bro.
you brought it up. just wanted to add to your story
you brought it up. just wanted to add to your story
No, you did. You’re so angry you’re ready to fight. I’m sitting here laughing at your stupidity.
You need to get laid, or jerk off, or do something with your time besides constantly hitting refresh on this thread.
If we were to fight, would we have to use 8’ long sticks? Or would we stay in our cars and throw rocks or something at each other? Social distancing and all.
I was runner-up in pugil sticks in my weight class at Parris Island
edit: and I had the 2 red bars on my PT shirts, I was in the fatbody weight class
No, you did. You’re so angry you’re ready to fight. I’m sitting here laughing at your stupidity.
You need to get laid, or jerk off, or do something with your time besides constantly hitting refresh on this thread.
You have a very weird perception of things. Very wrong and very weird. I guess you don't have any idea what pugil sticks are
ignorance must indeed be bliss
Surprising study: Urban density doesn't cause more COVID-19 infections, even promotes lower death rates
Crowded city streets, subways, and buses are among the most likely places to become infected with COVID-19 over the past few months. Surprisingly, however, a new study from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health concludes that densely populated spaces aren’t actually linked to higher infection rates.
Even more confounding, the study’s analysis indicates that crowded, dense locations are associated with lower coronavirus death rates.
“These findings suggest that urban planners should continue to practice and advocate for compact places rather than sprawling ones, due to the myriad well-established benefits of the former, including health benefits,” says study lead author Shima Hamidi in a release. PhD. Hamidi is an assistant professor of American Health in Environmental Challenges in the university’s Department of Environmental Health and Engineering.
Lots of recent polls have indicated that plenty of Americans are considering packing up and leaving cities and urban areas in favor of more open spaces due to the coronavirus. The study’s authors say such decisions may be misguided.
“The fact that density is unrelated to confirmed virus infection rates and inversely related to confirmed COVID-19 death rates is important, unexpected, and profound,” Hamidi explains. “It counters a narrative that, absent data and analysis, would challenge the foundation of modern cities and could lead to a population shift from urban centers to suburban and exurban areas.”
After accounting for a variety of factors (metro size, age, race, education), the study concludes that doubling the activity density of a given area would result in a 11.3% reduction in coronavirus deaths. How is this possible? Researchers theorize it’s because of faster, more widespread adoption of social distancing in urban areas, as well as superior medical services.
So what are the factors that increase rates? The authors say that a higher overall county population, a higher number of residents over 60, a smaller proportion of college graduates, and higher proportions of African American residents are all associated with greater infection and death rates.
You have a very weird perception of things. Very wrong and very weird. I guess you don't have any idea what pugil sticks are
ignorance must indeed be bliss
You literally make no sense. I think you're so worked up you can't remember what you've posted, or maintain a legible idea via the written word.
It is.
Taking things WAY too seriously on the internet is not bliss. I keep telling myself to stop trolling you, but you just keep on.
Well, I got things to do. Have fun.
I cant comment on the giz ongoing between . . . . but at first knee jerk reaction I would say that Johns Hopkins is wrong. Like the earth is flat wrong. In virtually EVERY scenario the dense urban cores have the highest infection rates. To suggest otherwise is . .. trying to stir shit up or get publicity. Not worth discussing it's so far out there. What's next ? Mosquito borne ???
You literally make no sense. I think you're so worked up you can't remember what you've posted, or maintain a legible idea via the written word.
It is.
Taking things WAY too seriously on the internet is not bliss. I keep telling myself to stop trolling you, but you just keep on.
Well, I got things to do. Have fun.
So what are the factors that increase rates? The authors say that a higher overall county population, a higher number of residents over 60, a smaller proportion of college graduates, and higher proportions of African American residents are all associated with greater infection and death rates.
40,000 new cases today in the nation.
Age range from 20-44
40,000 new cases today in the nation.
Age range from 20-44
good thing none of them got infected protesting. might be Darwinism rolling on.
Reports are saying, ICE detention centers are seeing large increases. In San Diego county 2 weeks ago, we were seeing ~125 a day of new cases. As of the last 6 days, ~375 a day ...with today being 426 new cases.
But it's not really contagious...
it's obviously not really contagious. if it were really contagious, it wouldn't take weeks to see those increases.
do you not remember the bouncy ball simulations and shit? Each infected person will infect 1 other person every day for 7 days and the exponential growth of 35%+ results in doubling every day or every other day.
that was the narrative we were sold on, so no, it's not really contagious at this point, though it is still contagious, and it's not really deadly at this point, though it is still deadly.
"Cases" A numeric defined by nothing. But probably meaning the swab test. Are these people sick ? Do they show symptoms ? Are they contagious ? None of this is disclosed or discussed in the fucking joke that what was once our main line to information, the media. Clouds of numbers, all twisted by anyone to serve their individual purpose, du jour. Hospital shit, WHO shit, CDC shit. Johns Hopkins just sucked a big dick, fuck them fucking bullshitters. All a sticky nasty diarhea that needs to be flushed. Exhibit "A" Sacramento County, USA. "Cases are skyrocketing, Hospital ? are surging. Well, been at 66 deaths for 1.3 million people for over three weeks, no new croakers. Hospital cases means exactly what ? 19 Covid in ICU for the entire County. OMG !!! Suck a dick. They went to the ER and then were sent home to recover in SIP ? I dunno ? Fuck this sit I am turning it off. Meaninful data. Cambodia, flooded by chinese construction and short squat men seeking hookers in the back alleys. No controls, no nuthing. Look at the Covid cases there. Gimme a fucking break. Cough, sneeze, gotta go to Costco and bugger wipe everything I can touch. Found the Irate Meme thing assholes
.... I want to see the ICU’s being flooded and body bags piling up like were rumored in NYC. Nothing.
I read today where there are some labs that have a 100% infection reported per test
Do you realize what you just said? I mean you are stating that you WANT people to die.
What the hell is wrong with you? :)
Definitely not what I said. What I implied was that if this is something we should be worry about, then let's see real evidence...not of ABC or whoever that was taking footage from an Italian hospital and saying it was NYC.
You said on multiple occasions, that the virus "wasn't very contagious" so yeah, how's that go again?
You said on multiple occasions, that the virus "wasn't very contagious" so yeah, how's that go again?
this virus is still nowhere near as contagious as initially projected it may be. hell, the USA mortality rate dropped back below 4% today and the growth of cases is still being shown among younger folks, likely indicating that our massive increase in testing is capturing much more of the mild case spread that we were aware was occurring all along.
the virus isn't getting more deadly and haven't heard or seen anything about it mutating to be a less deadly version. It still isn't airborne and they came out a while back and said that even contact surface transmission was much lower than expected.
so i'd wager it is still going well.