I find it "very, very weird" that you find scientific evidence "very, very weird".
It seems now you seem to finally understand that NZ completely removed the virus from general population and had no community transmission,
Yes, for a very brief period of time. As I've said all along, NZ successfully suppressed the disease for a very short period of time before it came raging back. I haven't wavered on that.
although you are now clinging to a WHO definition of "eliminated" (probably something to be used in a context outside a global pandemic) and somehow using that definition to determine that it is not worth having an elimination strategy because..... Hmmmm, I'm trying hard to link the because, "because you can't call it illimination unless you do it for a full year"??
Well, I've learned that definitions of words are unimportant to you (and in some cases, even using the right word is simply too much to ask), but disease elimination means that you have had no transmission for a year. There has to be a threshold. Otherwise, some dubious people who want to toot their own horn might claim that they "eliminated" disease by stopping transmission for a mere 100 days. That's not really that great of an accomplishment, and it's certainly not indicative of "eradication". It's a suppression of the disease for a fleeting period of time.
Our goal wasn't to qualify for the WHO definition of the term "eliminated" so that we could then use that label and say it is WHO approved that we use that label. LOL
Well, that's good, because you did not. I mean, you can continue to claim that you did, but you'll just be propagating misinformation.
We did it to save lives, so we could keep people safe and alive until they got vaccinated, and then we opened the borders up because we were protected as much as we could be, and we needed some normality. I guess we could have tried to stay closed in order to meet that 1 year definition, but that's just silly.
So you seem to be tacitly admitting that disease suppression was only viable if you stayed "closed", which, if I recall correctly from your earlier comments, it was never the goal to stay closed indefinitely. So again, the NZ strategy from the beginning was to take advantage of the unique geographic features of the country to suppress the disease for a short period of time. Bonus points if they could convince the masses that the unique geographic features of the island were less important than cloth masks and social distancing. "Eradication" was
never the end goal. Suppression of disease transmission was ALWAYS the goal.
We saved lives, people died at the vaccinated rate, not the unvaccinated rate which is factors of magnitude larger.
Well, that depends on what age group you look at. As I've already pointed out the pre-vaccination IFR for COVID was already
very low, for pretty much all age groups under 70. Here's that data again in case you forgot.
The median IFR was 0.0003% at 0-19 years, 0.003% at 20-29 years, 0.011% at 30-39 years, 0.035% at 40-49 years, 0.129% at 50-59 years, and 0.501% at 60-69 years.
The infection fatality rate (IFR) of COVID-19 among non-elderly people in the absence of vaccination or prior infection is important to estimate accurately, since 94% of the global population is younger than 70 years and 86% is younger than 60 years. In systematic searches in SeroTracker and...
www.medrxiv.org
When the IFR is already 0.0003%, it's hard to make that much lower. Did you know that children were at a greater risk of dying in a bicycle accident than they were in dying from COVID? It's true. Check the numbers.
The collateral damage of people wearing mask was minimal, next to none.
Those parents of children who are now years behind in their learning would strongly disagree. I'm not sure you're capable of seeing the bigger picture. Your myopic focus on COVID deaths causes you to be unable to see or admit that there were harms that were inflicted on the least vulnerable population (our children) that were a direct result of masking and social distancing policies. Schooling was disrupted for many students for a year or more. Milestones in their lives, like graduations, were robbed from them from people who didn't really care about them at all. And the results are devastating.
Learning loss has been profound. The repercussions from the foolish masking and social distancing rules (which drove school closures) will be felt for decades to come. Additionally, It's well-established that better education is associated with better health. Ultimately, these measures hit poor communities the hardest. They were already at a disadvantage, and in the name of trying to "protect" them, the government agencies simply introduced them to more lifelong disadvantages.
You can pretend like none of this matters. In fact, I expect you will. But the bottom line is the collateral damage of the foolish mitigation measures was severe and will be felt for decades to come.
The collateral damage on the economy was large and that was the cost of saving lives.
I see you're dutifully repeating the propaganda you've swallowed.
It just depends really if you are pro-life or not, and how much dollars and impact on the economy you are willing to bear in order to save people's lives.
This time around it was the elderly and the immuno compromised that were at risk.,
"This time around?" Diseases will
always put the elderly and immunocompromised at greater risk. Heck, the reason why is literally in the name of the second group of people you listed.
next time maybe it is the children or perhaps people your age? Dunno.
Be very afraid! The next pandemic could be coming for.... YOU!!!!!!!!
