Sunday, September 8, 2024
The Feds are renewing the COVID-19 hospitalization reporting requirement effective Nov 1 despite an actually lower current infection peak than in previous years
I couldn't believe it when I saw it, but it's true.
The pandemic emergency ended in May 2023.
Required reporting of hospitalizations expired in April 2024, after which "The number of hospitals regularly reporting data decreased by nearly two thirds."
Are the Feds preparing for the general?
https://www.cdc.gov/nwss/rv/COVID19-nationaltrend.html
https://www.cdc.gov/ncird/whats-new/updated-hospital-reporting-requirements-for-respiratory-viruses.html
https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/fy-2025-hospital-inpatient-prospective-payment-system-ipps-and-long-term-care-hospital-prospective-0
Saturday, September 7, 2024
Trend for Oceanic Nino Index 1951-2024
The 2023-2024 season ended with the May-June-July measuring period. The last two measuring periods of the season came in at .4 and .2, which were not anomalous.
The sum of the season's anomalies was 15.4, not to be confused with size of the actual El Nino.
The El Nino lasted twelve months, ending in March-April-May 2024, overlapping with the 2022-2023 season by two periods and measuring a total anomaly of 16.1, or 1.34 on average. The El Nino was still considered strong (1.5-1.9) however because there were at least three consecutive such anomalous measuring periods measuring between 1.5 and 1.9. There were six such consecutive periods this time, and only one was 2.0 (in the very strong category).
The new season has begun with a .1 reading, also not anomalous.
The overall long term trend for the eastern tropical Pacific sea surface temperature anomaly still lands just slightly below 0 since 1951.
The trend of ever-higher warm anomaly seasons looks broken, but the trend of ameliorating cold anomaly seasons looks intact.
When you have to write articles like this with eight weeks to go lol
Kamala Harris’s effort to depict herself as a candidate of safe but forward-looking change
(as opposed to the decidedly unsafe and reactionary change represented
by Donald Trump) has unsurprisingly spurred a host of GOP attacks on a cherry-picked assortment
of unpopular or at least questionable-sounding policy positions from
her past, ranging from support for a single-payer health-care system and
sympathy for undocumented immigrants to opposition to fracking and to
aggressive policing tactics.
Friday, September 6, 2024
Full time jobs as a percent of population fell in August 2024 to 49.98, to 49.67 for the first eight months of the year, which is worse than both 2023 and 2022
Bad news.
Full time as a percent of population:
Jan-Aug 8-month average
Thursday, September 5, 2024
Wednesday, September 4, 2024
CBS News just lies through its teeth about heat deaths
Extreme heat is the No. 1 cause of weather-related deaths in the U.S., a risk that grows as temperatures rise.
From the story here.
This isn't even debatable in the slightest degree:
Cold-related deaths outnumber heat deaths in all countries
What’s consistent in these studies is that cold-related deaths vastly outnumber those from heat.
In the Global Burden of Disease study, cold-related deaths were around four times higher than heat-related ones.
The study that estimates that 7.7% of deaths were attributed to temperature found that 7.3% were from cold temperatures; 0.4% were from heat.
In the “5 million death” study, 9.4% of deaths were related to sub-optimal temperatures. 8.5% were cold-related, and 0.9% were heat-related. This skew was true across all regions.
You can see these results in the chart below.
Globally, cold deaths are 9 times higher than heat-related ones. In no region is this ratio less than 3, and in many, it’s over 10 times higher. Cold is more deadly than heat, even in the hottest parts of the world.
More.
Twenty years of data:
German party Alternative für Deutschland wins in Thuringia, comes in close second in Saxony, still frozen out of governance by CDU member who heads German intelligence
For the first time ever, the right-populist Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) won a state election. In Thuringia, the party gained 32.8 per cent of the votes – nearly 10 points ahead of the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), which came in second with 23.6 per cent. In Saxony, the AfD won 30.6 per cent and came just 1.3 per cent behind the leading CDU. ...
Meanwhile, the three parties of the ruling coalition government lagged far behind. Combined, their vote share amounted to less than 15 per cent in Saxony and just over 10 per cent in Thuringia. ... The AfD’s gains are not a one-off slip-up, but a continuation of its successes. The party was already the second-strongest force in both federal states in the last state elections in 2019. On a national level, the AfD came second in the EU elections this June. ...
The attempt to combat the AfD by merely dismissing it as beyond the pale clearly isn’t working. Even those who don’t like the AfD, but are principled democrats, can see the problem with freezing out a party that just won a democratic election. ... The polls are crystal clear about which topics matter most to voters – rising crime rates, unregulated migration, a sinking standard of living and the growing influence of radical Islam. These are all real, rational concerns.
More.
Tuesday, September 3, 2024
Deportations are 24/7 all of a sudden under Biden without a new law having been passed, which means he could have simply done this at any point in his presidency but chose to let in millions instead
All these people cut in line ahead of legal immigrants who have to wait years for green cards.
One law for them, another for these, brought to you by Democrats.