
when almost all of it looks more like this:

Comparing numbers to produce a league table, particularly one to show the public that you're doing relatively well like the UK govt is doing, is silly and pointless. But epidemiology deals in comparing populations, and information from around the world is being collected, collated, and analysed by scientists, medics, and public health officials every day to help them better understand the expression of the disease in their local populations and yo deal with the situation on the ground. Those comparisons are a normal and necessary part of epidemiological study and the differences between how the disease is expressed and addressed in developed populations, like the South Asian and Australasian countries compared to Europe and the US, is important and informative.Scot Dutchy wrote:...
So what are you trying to prove Joe? He says it will take years before you can make a comparison but Hermit reckons you can make it now in a pissing up the wall contest. I am not against making comparisons but at this moment in time it is not possible which is what the good prof is saying. So what are trying to prove by agreeing with me. Of course we have to learn from each other but making a pissing up the wall contest is not helpful. What do you achieve by making league tables especially based on data that is accepted as not being trustworthy.
Now we see the anti-conservative bias inherent in the system, eh?Twitter and Facebook imposed their toughest restrictions so far on President Donald Trump on Wednesday evening, after he incited his supporters to storm the U.S. Capitol in Washington in an attempt to overturn his election loss. Both companies temporarily suspended the President from posting on their platforms and removed several of his posts, but stopped short of permanently banning him.
What I have proved is what I stated above Scot, and has nothing to do with league tables. Reread Spiegelhalter's tweet and contemplate the meaning of the two words I've bolded.Scot Dutchy wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 7:20 amSo what are you trying to prove Joe? He says it will take years before you can make a comparison but Hermit reckons you can make it now in a pissing up the wall contest. I am not against making comparisons but at this moment in time it is not possible which is what the good prof is saying. So what are trying to prove by agreeing with me. Of course we have to learn from each other but making a pissing up the wall contest is not helpful. What do you achieve by making league tables especially based on data that is accepted as not being trustworthy.Joe wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 1:31 amWow, I never thought I'd say this, but Seth was right about something.Scot Dutchy wrote: ↑Wed Jan 06, 2021 11:18 pmJoe that load of crap was worthy of a Trump supporter. Your are just pathetic.BTW. The Prof you claim supports your position appears to see the value of international Covid comparisons in this tweet.On another forum Seth wrote:Engaging in personal attacks simply shows the weakness of your rhetorical skills and your lack of valid arguments.
Additionally, this article in the International Journal of Epidemiology argues for such an effort, while acknowledging the difficulties, and makes a comparison similar to Hermit's
And that's the difference between the approach of professionals and that of dilettantes on the internet. The pro's figure out how to make these comparisons because they must.The issue was that, although it is difficult to reliably compare COVID-19 population fatality rates between countries, it is also quite clear that some countries (e.g. UK, USA, Italy, Spain, Belgium, France) have markedly higher burdens of COVID-19 mortality than others (e.g. New Zealand, Australia, Singapore, South Korea, Germany). Although one could not say definitively that the UK was the worst in the world, it was performing worse than some countries which had tried alternative control strategies, and there are things that we can learn from that contrast.
Indeed, epidemiology is built on the idea of studying differences between populations. Much of what we have learnt about the causes of disease has had its origins in comparisons of countries.3,4 For example, in the 1950s, it was realized that colorectal cancer risks were high in Europe and low in Africa, possibly due to dietary differences in fibre from fruit and vegetable intake. Similarly, liver cancer was common in Asia, which eventually provided a link to hepatitis B. International differences in cervical cancer incidence and mortality suggested an infectious cause, later established as human papillomavirus (HPV).
COVID-19 is different. The causative agent, SARS-CoV-2, is clear; the task is to learn how to best block the virus’s transmission and to prevent infections from progressing to severe disease and death.
As the pandemic unfolds, there are numerous natural experiments in progress, as countries adopt different approaches. Although international comparisons are often disparaged because of different data quality and fears of the ‘ecological fallacy’, if done carefully they can play a major role in our learning what works best for controlling COVID-19.3 Furthermore, these natural experiments are yielding clear results within weeks or months (e.g. on the success of the Asian approaches). Thus, there needs to be more thoughtful and thorough analyses of country differences, done by experienced epidemiologists, as it is probably the most important and most valid evidence for informing COVID-19 policy in real time.
And after all, what is the alternative? It is impossible or unethical to randomize a lockdown, or other aspects of physical distancing. There could be trials of intensive population testing,5 or prophylactic treatment of household contacts, but few have been launched to date. And all the time, the COVID-19-clock ticks relentlessly on, accumulating more deaths and more survivors with debilitating long-term health problems.
I wonder what you'll call me for the temerity of pointing that out.![]()
I suggest you show more grace and humility than the British PM, and comply with the request. After all, Hermit hasn't offered up a league table.Polite request to PM and others: please stop using my Guardian article to claim we cannot make any international comparisons yet. I refer only to detailed league tables-of course we should now use other countries to try and learn why our numbers are high
Help, help! Trump's being repressed!L'Emmerdeur wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 4:10 pmI think it was already noted that Twitter has blocked Tweetolini's account. Facebook has done the same (including Instagram). Zuckerberg had previously refused to allow Facebook employees charged with tamping down the spread of misinformation to hold Trump to the same standards as other users in that regard.
'Facebook and Twitter Finally Locked Donald Trump's Accounts. Will They Ban Him Permanently?'
Now we see the anti-conservative bias inherent in the system, eh?Twitter and Facebook imposed their toughest restrictions so far on President Donald Trump on Wednesday evening, after he incited his supporters to storm the U.S. Capitol in Washington in an attempt to overturn his election loss. Both companies temporarily suspended the President from posting on their platforms and removed several of his posts, but stopped short of permanently banning him.
So we are to assume that the stated reasons are just a cover story for the anti-conservative bias these corporations are expressing toward Trump and other lying fascists who spread toxic misinformation?
If you like.L'Emmerdeur wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 4:43 pmSo we are to assume that the stated reasons are just a cover story for the anti-conservative bias these corporations are expressing toward Trump and other lying fascists who spread toxic misinformation?
Sounds difficult. I'm supposed to apply science to the question, but I'm likely to fail because my understanding of the concept is clouded by my political opinions. If only I were a clear-eyed leftie like yourself who isn't deceived, and gets so much useful information from people like Crowder and Pool.Cunt wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 4:46 pmIf you like.L'Emmerdeur wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 4:43 pmSo we are to assume that the stated reasons are just a cover story for the anti-conservative bias these corporations are expressing toward Trump and other lying fascists who spread toxic misinformation?
Or you could try science.
I keep tripping at the first step though...getting an agreed 'right' and 'left' issues list, to test whether bans are one-sided.
Lots of lefties don't think their ideas are political, rather they think of them as irrefutable science.
Of course it's bias, Daggles. Don't be a stupid cunt. Those companies are biased towards protecting their income stream. They feared losing sponsorships if they did not put Trump on ice until the moral outrage about his recent behaviour has abated.
Ah, but Crowder and Pool and so forth are on a different level? They've broken through the veil and can reliably inform a benighted individual like myself about reality? Or is it simply that by contradicting the myopic lefties they regularly hit upon the truth, because lefties are so often completely wrong?
Not being a political scientist, I wouldn't presume to claim I have a scientific answer to that. However, you seem to have hit upon a reliable means of discovering political bias, and no doubt it's thoroughly scientific.
No, because they try to be open about their bias.L'Emmerdeur wrote: ↑Thu Jan 07, 2021 5:18 pmAh, but Crowder and Pool and so forth are on a different level? They've broken through the veil and can reliably inform a benighted individual like myself about reality? Or is it simply that by contradicting the myopic lefties they regularly hit upon the truth, because lefties are so often completely wrong?
Nope. I can see bias when it is plain, and acknowledged.Not being a political scientist, I wouldn't presume to claim I have a scientific answer to that. However, you seem to have hit upon a reliable means of discovering political bias, and no doubt it's thoroughly scientific.
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