Posted on 07/21/2021 2:08:33 PM PDT by MNDude
I went to review Covid data from covidtracking.com.
They stopped recording (or reporting) data as of March 7. Not sure why.
As of that date 28,756,489 (38.5%) had tested positive for Covid while 74,582,825 tested negative.
That was a total of 103,339,314 tests administered total or roughly one test for every 3 Americans.
So what percent of all of USA (tested and untested) have been infected with Covid as of July 21? Based on those trends, it seems that 30% to 45% of the population has been infected already.
Yet, the only thing we hear the media talk about is medically vaccinated vs medically unvaccinated. (Roughly 50-50).
It seems there should be an enormous demographic of naturally vaccinated to consider in this equation.
I stink at math, so maybe I'm completely wrong. Am I missing something here?
They have to allow you that test. Go to Kroger to get it as someone posted upthread.
I know of two members of one family, who have not been together and do not live in the same part of the country who in the past two days have tested positive for COVID. Both have been vaccinated very early this year.
I am thinking, the efficacy of the vaccine is much shorter lived than we have been told and they are passing it off as the Delta variant. OR, the vaccine does not work for the Delta variant.
GFY
Indeed and I agree entirely. It’s as if We The People are firefighters being blamed for a house burning down. The burning house is, as you stated, thousands of disease carrying illegals pouring in here.
To go further with the fire fighter analogy it’s like trying to put out a fire with gasoline.
The increased number of people with acquired immunity and reduced pool of those likely to die from Covid can therefore skew vaccination effectiveness stats. Meanwhile last year also saw a steady decrease in new cases after mid April and then a substantial increase during July followed by a steady decline until a continued increase from mid September, basically paralleling but with lower numbers what we are could be seeing now if testing had not significantly decreased along the same periods.
Great point.
I still wonder if I didn’t have a very light case late Feb / early Mar 2020. I had a couple nights where I ran a light fever. Was a week or two back from a West coast trip, including changing planes in Seattle, an early hot spot.
All that that link was, was a search result with hundreds of listings, not to the specific web site.
I don’t know where you live.
Tell me where you live and I will search for you.
I thought you would be bright enough to add your location to the search bar, but evidently not.
So millions of illegals from gawd knows where are healthy, but Americans who have not received the COVID jab are not?
Well maybe if the disease wasn’t already rampant here the illegal alien theory could make sense, but realistically by the time they get anywhere major in the country it’s going to be past the 2week window of being able to spread it
People should just say illegal aliens are bad, but blaming aliens for higher covid numbers is just denial/deflection of the problem we have here dealing with it
Just answer the question.
So it’s your position millions of illegals from gawd knows where are healthy, but Americans who have not received the COVID jab are not? Right??
They are probably both a problem, honestly
And it’s more like thousands not “millions” if it matters
Might as well blame the high covid numbers in the US on women in the workplace or BLM or whatever else you don’t like
They are probably both a problem, honestly
You can't have it both ways slick.
be careful... ol joe might call you a lying dog faced pony soldier...
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