You can't be this dumb, can you? Science.... yeah right.
The death rate is calculated based on the known figures of infections and deaths. You did it yourself in an earlier post;
So, it doesn't matter that not everyone who is exposed to COVID-19 will catch it, nor does it matter that, in the early days, fewer than 60% of cruise ship passengers and/or fewer than 40% of a choir caught the virus.
We're only dealing with known cases, so as long as there are 180.000 known infections a day, with a mortality rate of 2%, 3600 people will still die from covid-19 every day, notwithstanding your pathetic attempt to argue that the actual infection rate is much higher and thus the mortality rate much lower. That's not science, that's a mumbo jumbo argument for argument's sake.
The bottom line in all of this is simply that you don't like lockdowns and you will say anything to rationalize your opposition to them.
Yes, it is called SCIENCE.
I am still waiting for any of you to supply a single source to back up the claim that "many" survivors are going to suffer serious health issues. So far, this has not been the case, as I have documented with CDC and Johns Hopkins links.
"So, it doesn't matter that not everyone who is exposed to COVID-19 will catch it." Phew! What?! That is beyond stupid. Yes, the transmission rate of a virus most certainly does matter, for obvious reasons. If only, say, 40% of the U.S. population would ever catch COVID-19, then it makes no sense to base your response policy on models that assume that 330 million Americans could get infected and that therefore project wild death numbers based on that false assumption, right? Right? You understand why this is self-evidently true, right?
"so as long as there are 180.000 known infections a day, with a mortality rate of 2%, 3600 people will still die from covid-19 every day." 180,000 infections and 3600 deaths per day? WHERE? If you're talking about the entire planet/worldwide, then 3,600 deaths per day, which equals 432K deaths per year, would put COVID-19 on the same level as the common flu (400K-500K deaths per year), and far, far behind diabetes (4 million deaths per year), road accidents (800K deaths per year), Alzheimer's (2.2 million deaths per year), stroke (5.8 million deaths per year), and heart disease (9.8 million deaths per year), among several other leading worldwide causes of death.
https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/the-top-10-causes-of-deathWe, the U.S., have been averaging about 800 deaths per day since mid-July. If that rate were to continue to the end of the year, that would be an additional 37,600 deaths in the U.S., plus the 245K who have already died, giving us a grand total of 282,600 deaths for the year. That is not terribly more than the number of Americans who died from the Asian Flu in 1958 (216,000 adjusted for current population), during which we did not close schools, or businesses, or churches, etc., and therefore did not cause tens of millions of people to lose their jobs, did not cause tens of thousands of people to wipe out their life savings waiting for restrictions to end, did not cause tens of thousands of businesses to shut down (about 30% of which would never come back), and did not senselessly force tens of millions of school kids to stay home.
"Like what? Opening up states, allow mass gatherings and do away with masks and social distancing? What.... do tell?"Well, first of all, let's remember that states that opted for no lockdowns or only mild lockdowns did just as well as, or better than, states that opted for harsh lockdowns. So your assumption that lockdowns were the correct approach is flawed from the outset. I have asked you guys several times to address this fact, but you keep ignoring it.
Florida (21M) -- 17.5K deaths/875K cases // MILD LOCKDOWN
New York (19.4M) -- 33.5K deaths/561K cases // HARSH LOCKDOWN
Georgia (10.6M) -- 8.7K deaths/408K cases // MILD LOCKDOWN
Michigan (10M) -- 8.3K deaths/275K cases // HARSH LOCKDOWN
A rational person willing to be honest would look at these numbers and conclude that the harsh lockdowns were not necessary to combat the virus.
Here is the approach that many disease experts and other scholars have suggested:
Focus protective measures on the two high-risk groups: the elderly and the medically ill.
Reopen schools, since people aged 1-24 face a much lower risk of death from COVID-19 than they do from the common flu. Require teachers over the age of 35, or those who are medically ill regardless of age, to wear masks at school. Require teachers who are over 65 to both mask and social distance.
Allow mass gatherings but require the elderly and the medically ill to mask and to social distance, until they can be vaccinated. For sporting events, we could even designate a reasonably sized section of seating for the elderly and the medically ill, and still require them to mask--again, until they can be vaccinated.
Allow "non-essential" businesses (they're surely essential for those who own them and who depend on them for income) to operate at full capacity, but require elderly and medically ill customers to mask, and require workers who serve/interact with them to mask during service/interaction.
If we had followed this approach from the beginning, we would have suffered far, far less economic damage, both as a nation and in many cases as individuals, and our death numbers would probably be lower than they are now, or at least no worse.