stevil
Godless and without morals
It is unfortunate that you don't listen.Yes it was. At no point did New Zealand "eliminate" the disease. Don't make me post the graph again...
I've told you what happened over here, but you don't listen and don't believe me.
I've tried to explain it as it is more nuanced that that graph. But anyway. We can't really converse in a productive way if you refuse to listen.
This isn't even the topic of conversation. This is just a distraction.Ballyhoo for you. Perhaps if every country were a geographically isolated island, they too could have controlled the virus better.
We are talking about the effectiveness of lockdowns and masks in buying time to get the population vaccinated and hence more protected from death from the disease.
NZ and Aus is one thing, but also a comparison of Norway, Finland and Denmark is a much better comparison vs Sweden.
As we know Corona virus was much more deadly to the elderly and vulnerable. There is very little value in comparing deathrates of 5 year olds when we are talking about the total population and the failure of the Swedish government to protect their population.Psst. Sweden didn't have horrendous death rates. Look at the charts I posted earlier. Overall mortality was largely unchanged in Sweden during the pandemic in almost every age group. In fact, in many age groups, mortality was LOWER in 2020 than in the historical data.
The death rates were absolutely horrendous. In 2020 they had 9,706 people die of Covid where as NZ had only 30 people die of Covid. And for a more direct comparison Norway had only 433 die, Denmark 1,312 and Finland 587. Sweden's approach was catastrophic.
Looking at your charts you can clearly see how horrendous 2020 was for Sweden especially for people over 35.
When comparing Sweden's 2020 overall deaths against the over all deaths for them in 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 we can see that clearly 2020 is a massive outlier, they went from (90,907, 90,982, 91,972, 92,185, 88,766 to all of a sudden 98,124. A jump of 6-8k more deaths and we see from their Covid deaths that year they had 9.7k Covid deaths which more than accounts for that jump in deaths.
NZ, Au, Norway, Denmark and Finland did not have that jump.
We all had a jump in 2022, because that is when we all opened back up, once our people were vaccinated and we incurred a jump in deaths. Albeit at a much lower rate than what Sweden experienced when the let the disease flow through their unvacinated population.
For some reason you are getting excited about Sweden's statistics in 2022 but in 2022 Sweden had 7,028 people die from Covid, additional to those that already died in 2020 and 2021.
The jumps in 2022 in overall deaths for NZ, Au, Fin, Den, Nor are all very much aligned with the Covid deaths experienced in those countries in that year, and are not attributed to lockdown related issues.
Anyway, I'm just repeating here what I've already said.
See that little blip around Feb/March? Zoom into that. That is when we had 30 people die. It looks small in the graph above because that shows what happened when Omicron came in and when we opened up in 2022.Why do you continually say things that are demonstrably false? Where do you see anything remotely resembling exponential growth at the beginning of the pandemic on this chart?
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But if you zoom into Feb/March 2020 you will see exponential growth. Luckily NZ was very quick to implement lock downs and we stamped this out and eliminated the disease entirely from society (except for quarantines at our border)
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