Tuesday, May 11, 2021

Daily new COVID-19 cases per million fell 62% in South Korea in the two months before vaccination began on Feb 25, and rose 70% in the two months after

South Korea, which has 7.2% of its population vaccinated with at least one dose, uses the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine on its frontline medical workers and the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine on the more numerous population in the long-term care arena: 

By the end of March, authorities plan to complete injecting the first doses to some 344,000 residents and workers at long-term care settings, who will receive the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines, and 55,000 frontline medical workers, who will receive shots developed by Pfizer and BioNTech.

COVID-19 cases fell without the aid of vaccines in South Korea, and rose again despite them.

Since vaccination began on Feb 25, deaths per million stands today only where it was when the effort first began two and a half months ago.

vaccination

cases

deaths



Sunday, May 9, 2021

The Chinese COVID vaccine is a giant nothing burger in Chile

The Chinese COVID vaccine is not preventing much of anything in Chile after three months.

84% of the COVID vaccine doses administered in Chile to date have been Chinese. The effort began in earnest in early February.

44% have received at least one dose of any COVID vaccine in Chile since that time.

Unfortunately, daily new cases per million is still up 44% since the vaccination effort began in early February. And daily new cases per million remains highly elevated compared with the lows of last November, achieved naturally long before any vaccines were available.

Why isn't vaccination producing a low rate similar to that?

Meanwhile deaths per million is still up, 17% since early February when the vaccination effort began. The rate is more than twice as high as it was last November when no vaccines were available at all.

Yet China is distributing these things like hotcakes, over 100 million doses so far, and the WHO is authorizing them for emergency use for the first time.

WHY?







Good a day as any to remember that Alan Greenspan in 2007 explicitly advocated for immigration to suppress the wages of skilled laborers

Greenspan: Let more skilled immigrants in :

"Our skilled wages are higher than anywhere in the world," he said. "If we open up a significant window for skilled workers, that would suppress the skilled-wage level and end the concentration of income."

Yeah, the problem isn't millionaires and billionaires concentrating wealth in their hands, it's the goddamn skilled laborers who must be stopped, the engineers, scientists, doctors and teachers, the crane operators, CDL truck drivers, machinists, drafters, plumbers, craftsmen, cooks and accountants.

 

Quaility Check, Vern: Even the ads at Drudge are misspelled

 

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Correlation is not causation: Daily new cases of COVID-19 fell 75% anyway in Africa even though barely 1% of the continent is vaccinated

The claim that COVID-19 vaccines save lives is not substantiated by declining cases and deaths.

Africa is a good example because it's the least vaccinated continent.

Daily new cases per million fell from 24 in January to 6 now, 75%, even though just 1% of its 1.34 billion people have been vaccinated with one dose.

Cases: Africa

Vaccinations: Africa










Compare North America, population 0.592 billion, the most vaccinated continent.

Over the exact same time period, daily new cases per million have fallen 79%, only just slightly more than in Africa.

The shape of the case graph is damn near indistinguishable from Africa's. You don't have to accept that it's even good data in Africa. Even its bad data, if it is bad, is a mirror image of so-called good North American data.

The idea that North American cases have fallen is because 31% have been vaccinated is preposterous.

Seasonal factors likely play the dominant role in this pandemic, and everything we do to influence it is just pushing on a string.


Cases: North America


  

Vaccinations: North America

You can now by-pass the entire medical bureaucracy and test yourself for COVID-19 easily, cheaply, and quickly right at home

 


Saturday, May 8, 2021

Johns Hopkins: 580k US COVID deaths as of Thursday May 6, 2021

 


Climate Update for KGRR: April 2021

Climate Update for KGRR: April 2021

Max T 80, Mean 79
Min T 16, Mean 22 (14th coldest on record-tie)
Av T 48.5, Mean 46.5
Precip 1.91, Mean 3.3 (18th driest on record)
Snow 0.3, Mean 2.4
Heating Degree Days 491, Mean 553
HDD season to date 5863, Mean 6395 (8.3% warmer than mean to date; season set to make the top 20 warmest on record)
Cooling Degree Days 3, Mean 5

Climate Update for KGRR: March 2021

Climate Update for KGRR: March 2021

Max T 74, Mean 66
Min T 13, Mean 7
Av T 41.2, Mean 34.1 (eighth warmest on record-tie)
Precip 1.51, Mean 2.45
Snow T, Mean 9.0 (second least snowy on record)
Heating Degree Days 728, Mean 952 (eighth warmest on record)
Cooling Degree Days 0, Mean 0

IHME in Washington State estimates US COVID-19 dead at 905k, world dead at 7 million

Some countries evidently are lying to save face, others are simply overwhelmed:

Covid-19 deaths in India, Mexico, and Russia — countries with the second, third, and fifth highest tolls (the U.S. has the number one spot) — were also vasty undercounted. ... Researchers additionally found that the tolls in Japan, Egypt, and several other countries are 10 times higher than the reported numbers.

Mediaite has the story here

The left is furious that it can't control VAERS

So it's smearing it.

You shouldn't let bogus reports filed with VAERS by malevolent individuals stop you from using the system to report an adverse event you experienced.

 

Friday, May 7, 2021

Mark Krikorian hits on the sorry truth about Trump and Elise Stefanik

MAGAworld pans Stefanik :

...

“She ties with a couple other Republicans for the worst career voting record on immigration in New York,” said Mark Krikorian, director of the anti-immigration Center on Immigration Studies, ticking off a few of her previous positions: a yes on H-2B visas, the Farm Workers Modernization Act, and the Hong Kong Refugee bill, and a no on Trump’s child border separation policies.

“Obviously, Republicans in New York are likely to be more liberal, just because that's the environment they're in,” Krikorian said. “I think everybody understands that. But even by the standards of New York state Republicans, she's bad on immigration.” ...

Krikorian, whose institute is not weighing in on the conference chair election, noted that while Cheney’s downfall was sparked by her criticism of Trump, what had truly tanked her was her ideology, bolstered by her family name: The Wyoming congresswoman’s neoconservative beliefs have no place in today’s GOP.

Stefanik’s positions weren’t much more palatable to the party base, in Krikorian’s view.

“Trump, in his gut, does think we should get out of Afghanistan, he does think there's too many illegal aliens coming over the border,” he observed. “It's not that he doesn't believe any of that stuff. It's just that he's kind of a narcissistic guy. And if people flatter him, he's for them, regardless of what they believe. And so the question is: Do you go for Trumpism? Or do you go for Trump?” 

The system which protects us from tyrants has done so only because we are, when all is said and done, still loyal to it. There was never any danger of a tyranny from Trump, who was easily the weakest president in living memory.

But Trump's character is clearly of the sort Aristotle warned us about. The thing is, we do little worrying about the proliferation of wretches like Stefanik who eventually make the rise of actual tyrants, dangerous men of strong, determined, and ruthless character, more likely.

"And for this reason tyrants always love the worst of wretches, for they rejoice in being flattered, which no man of a liberal spirit will submit to; for they love the virtuous, but flatter none."


Full-time employment as a percentage of civilian population climbed to 48.1% in April 2021

It's a long way from 2019, let alone from the Reagan-Bush-Clinton-Bush era.

If 50.4% had a full-time job in April 2021, 6 million more people would be working full-time than do.



 

Tuesday, May 4, 2021

The on-going housing bubble

I checked the value of my home on Zillow today.

It's nuts.

After 13 years the estimated price is up 6.5% per annum.

On the other hand, the house I previously owned and sold is up only 0.8% per annum over the same period.

Two entirely different houses, two entirely different locations, two completely different histories. What seems like a bubble living in my current house wouldn't seem like one living in my old one.

The best way I've found to think about this is to ask, How much of a house will my income buy? For bubble purposes nationally, even though housing is a regional and local matter, use median household income and median sales price.

Here's the chart of that data as currently available.



In 2020 the Median Sales Price of Houses Sold for the United States (MSPUS) averaged a new high of almost $337k. We don't yet have the median household income figure for 2020, but it's likely to be bad news, skewing the graph lower again as less income buys a smaller share of increasingly expensive housing.

As you can plainly see, the trend for the percentage of a house purchased by an income has been all downhill since the end of Reagan Bull in 2000. The percentage really fell a lot during the housing bubble which peaked in 2005-06, helping precipitate GFC1. Incomes fell a lot after the Great Financial Crisis because people lost their jobs by the millions and never got them back and so less income purchased less house. Housing prices bottomed in 2012 and then rebounded slowly. Incomes did not, however, and what you made just kept buying less in the low range of 19%. 

That all sucked. Obama really sucked. Sucked historically bad. Record-setting bad. 

You'll notice things really improved in 2019, however. That's because median household income shot up $5k to over $68k (Trump tax cuts), and the median sales price of a house actually fell $5k to $320k. Your higher income bought more of a slightly cheaper house, not as much as the good old days, but more.

Unfortunately in 2020 median sales price shot up almost $17k while millions upon millions lost their jobs. The feds enacted foreclosure forbearance so that 2.3 million homes whose owners lost their jobs never came onto the market. But desperate people who wanted out of cities snarfed up inventory. Demand far exceeded supply, so prices went up. 

But even at 21.5% in 2019 housing was nowhere near affordable like it was from 1987-2001. It was a nice, hopeful moment, while it lasted.

I'm guessing it's going to be quite a while, though, before we ever see even that again. 

Intersectionality means blacks never having to say sorry for calling NYC "Hymietown"

 Don't let me down, Hymietown.



Monday, May 3, 2021