greenmark wrote: ↑Mon Jan 11, 2021 5:59 pm
Can you substantiate that comment. "weak correlation between restrictions and deaths". You are out of your mind. Look at the graphs across the UK and the world.
The only thing different in the uk now compared to March is that Covid is taking people that would have died anyway (statistically, at least).
But isn't that what health workers flagged early on. The winter surge, plus covid was a big risk, thats why they asked us to behave responsibly. Whingeing about the efficacy of restrictions or the inconvenience that they imposes really cheeses me off. Just do the right thing! It isn't 'the new normal'. It will be over sometime soon. Not adhering to the advice is going to extend the inconvience and cost lives.
Think about that before you breach the advice.
Lots of things about this whole thing seem off which makes me very sceptical. I just like to question the logic and wonder why the mainstream refuses to discuss 40+ scientific papers which show a weak correlation between restrictions and total deaths. I don't really know what I can say on that other than many scientists have done the research and shown the results, but no one has proved that they do work so weighing up both sides leaves me with the first opinion.
If there really was a risk of overwhelming the NHS then why were Nightingale hospitals closed? You do know that the same flu scare "NHS set to be overwhelmed" article has been in the media every year for at least the last 8 years. There has also been clear manipulation in making it look like there's less hospital beds than previous years. There's also the fact many staff are forced to self-isolate because of a positive test result or being close to someone who had it, even if they aren't neccesarily ill which is a paradox of it's own. This week of the year is always one with the highest deaths, I believe 2100+ per day is the average in the UK but the mainstream is only showing Covid deaths with no context and hiding everything else + previous years.
"Following the rules" I believe is Government behavioural psychologist social disapproval tactic 101 to divide and conquer. In reality I don't believe the external environment can be controlled the same way you can't force the BF market to do what you want. There's no point blaming individuals for not standing on the special dot in the Sainsburys queue as if doing that would have made a difference. Viruses are a part of life and our immune systems rely on them to survive much the same way bacteria is part of life and is needed to break things down. You only have to look at the Native American tribes to see what happens to those who shield for too long. Why not shield the 1% and let the 99% carry on?
The saving lives narrative isn't really logical when you realise the many knockon effects of restrictions. I think most people are simply thinking with emotions more than logic