CptBeaky wrote:
I say this with forethought and if I get banned, so be it. You Sir, are a moron. In the UK alone we have had excess deaths of over 60,000. That is on top of the regular deaths we expect. This is much worse than "a bad flu season". even if the mortality rate is 0.1% (which we think it is higher), because their is no natural immunity in the world for this novel disease that equates to 7.5 bn x 0.001 = 7.5 million deaths. Globally flu kills between 290,000 and 650,000 people per year (10,000 in the UK). We are already at 711,000 (46,000 in the UK).
If you want a discussion about "evidence" try looking at some facts first.
CptBeaky, thank you for your reply.
I’ve never been called a moron before, so thank you for a new experience in my otherwise humdrum sort of day.
I must however apprise you of the fact that I have not been granted a knighthood by Her Maj the Q, so the title ‘Sir’ is at present inaccurate. Although I live in hope that one day I may get the opportunity to ‘take the knee’.
“It’s a new virus and we don’t know anything about it”
Coronaviruses have been in circulation for centuries, causing various illnesses from the common cold to the more recent MERS and SARS outbreaks.
The identified gene sequence of SARS-CoV-2 shows it’s related to the 2002 SARS virus SARS-CoV - note the similar name that the 2019 version has been given.
So… is this virus really ‘new’?
“There is no immunity against it”
Most people have had previous exposure to other illnesses caused by various coronaviruses (such as the common cold) and developed immunity to these.
Why should SARS-CoV-2 be different?
I would suggest you read this article which is a translation of the original published in the Swiss magazine Weltwoche (World Week) on 10 June 2020 by Beda M Stadler, the former director of the Institute for Immunology at the University of Bern.
Another good source of information with graphical representations of ONS data can be found at InProportion2.
With respect, 711,000 is nowhere near 7.5 million – have you been using the Professor Ferguson modelling method here?
You know, the one that was proven time after time to be wildly inaccurate in predicting:
2002 BSE – between 50 and 50,000 deaths (actually 177 in the UK)
2005 Bird Flu – 200 million deaths worldwide (actually 282 between 2003 and 2009)
2009 Swine Flu – 65,000 UK deaths (actually 457)
Edited by user 06 August 2020 19:21:30(UTC)
| Reason: Added attribution for original quote