This thread was deleted by a volunteer moderator. I certainly don't want a thread this big deleted so I've restored. THat being said, this thread has served it's purpose. I've closed it to new posts.
We have a new 2024 vaccine thread here. New people don't need to try to wade through 20,000 posts to figure out what is going on.
Rofl the guy was too lazy to look at House races. You know, the races where the vote was often very, very close. Top tier data science - just ignore the most important data and pretend it doesn't exist. Instead, sanctimoniously lecture your readers.
Paywalled. Have to assume it's false because it's sponsored by a Billionaire oligarch (Bezos). He's basically in bed with your boy Fauci.
I get that you're being ironic, but the Washington Post article describes a methodology for estimating an upper bound for a difference in partisan covid deaths and compares that to margins in close statewide elections. It concludes that the covid deaths likely were enough to fully explain the differences in any close statewide election. The closest was the Nevada senate race where the "covid contribution" might be about 2000 votes vs about 6000 vote margin of victory.
The analysis seems credible enough in concluding partisan covid death rate difference probably didn't make enough difference to significantly impact election outcomes.
Rofl the guy was too lazy to look at House races. You know, the races where the vote was often very, very close. Top tier data science - just ignore the most important data and pretend it doesn't exist. Instead, sanctimoniously lecture your readers.
Wait... did you write this oped, DanM?
No, but I do know that on December 31, 2021, 99.7% of all Americans who should have been alive on that day were, in fact, alive.
Q: when will western & northern Europe offer baby - toddler vax to its precious little ones?
A: Irrelevant. The countries of western and northern Europe have practically no little kids. Leaders can punt on the question of child vaccination because so few families are affected.
Paywalled. Have to assume it's false because it's sponsored by a Billionaire oligarch (Bezos). He's basically in bed with your boy Fauci.
I get that you're being ironic, but the Washington Post article describes a methodology for estimating an upper bound for a difference in partisan covid deaths and compares that to margins in close statewide elections. It concludes that the covid deaths likely were enough to fully explain the differences in any close statewide election. The closest was the Nevada senate race where the "covid contribution" might be about 2000 votes vs about 6000 vote margin of victory.
The analysis seems credible enough in concluding partisan covid death rate difference probably didn't make enough difference to significantly impact election outcomes.
I agree, but I would like to see it for some house races that were very close.
At the very least it's a significantly contributing factor.
Paywalled. Have to assume it's false because it's sponsored by a Billionaire oligarch (Bezos). He's basically in bed with your boy Fauci.
I get that you're being ironic, but the Washington Post article describes a methodology for estimating an upper bound for a difference in partisan covid deaths and compares that to margins in close statewide elections. It concludes that the covid deaths likely were enough to fully explain the differences in any close statewide election. The closest was the Nevada senate race where the "covid contribution" might be about 2000 votes vs about 6000 vote margin of victory.
The analysis seems credible enough in concluding partisan covid death rate difference probably didn't make enough difference to significantly impact election outcomes.
Yea.
I am sure voters pored over Covid deaths in all 50 states, assigned a GOP vs DEm value depending on the number of senator and congress people in each states, and then crunched the numbers and made their vote.
I get that you're being ironic, but the Washington Post article describes a methodology for estimating an upper bound for a difference in partisan covid deaths and compares that to margins in close statewide elections. It concludes that the covid deaths likely were enough to fully explain the differences in any close statewide election. The closest was the Nevada senate race where the "covid contribution" might be about 2000 votes vs about 6000 vote margin of victory.
The analysis seems credible enough in concluding partisan covid death rate difference probably didn't make enough difference to significantly impact election outcomes.
I agree, but I would like to see it for some house races that were very close.
At the very least it's a significantly contributing factor.
I bet if you look hard enough, you can find one podunk State legislature race where your theory can be loosely applied. Try New Hampshire. 400 State House seats for a population of 1.3 Million.
Tyson Foods Inc confirmed on Wednesday it eliminated a requirement that employees receive COVID-19 vaccinations, a step the company said improved meatpacking operations after plants closed in 2020 due to outbreaks among worke...
Rofl the guy was too lazy to look at House races. You know, the races where the vote was often very, very close. Top tier data science - just ignore the most important data and pretend it doesn't exist. Instead, sanctimoniously lecture your readers.
Wait... did you write this oped, DanM?
No, but I do know that on December 31, 2021, 99.7% of all Americans who should have been alive on that day were, in fact, alive.
I agree, but I would like to see it for some house races that were very close.
At the very least it's a significantly contributing factor.
I bet if you look hard enough, you can find one podunk State legislature race where your theory can be loosely applied. Try New Hampshire. 400 State House seats for a population of 1.3 Million.
This is... implicit admission that
1) There were a lot of COVID deaths
2) The majority of them have been preventable in the vaccine era
Vax mob mafia, you sure are facing a grim situation. Here's a suggestion - try upping the offer to a whole pizza. One slice alone is not enough to reel in the suckers.
****** "Pizza for a poke, slice for a shot, whatever you want to call it," said Ian's partner and manager, Ryan Donovan.
Uptake of fall Covid-19 booster shots remains anemic well into November, frustrating public-health experts who blame the lackluster interest on pandemic fatigue and insufficient outreach from officials.
About 31 million people in the U.S. have gotten the updated shots, or roughly 10% of people ages five and older, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The federal government purchased more than 170 million doses of the new bivalent boosters that target two Omicron subvariants and the original virus strain.