Posted on 08/14/2020 7:13:50 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Perhaps the biggest example of the Western media's inherent biases surrounding its coverage of Sweden's approach to tackling COVID-19. Plenty of media outlets decried the country's "massive" fatality rate compared to its lockdown-favoring neighbors, but failed to add the context necessary to see that the difference was only a couple thousand deaths, and that Sweden's per capita mortality rate was still lower than Britain's, and other countries that favored lockdowns.
When Anders Tegnell, the architect of Sweden's strategy, said during an interview that he would have done things "differently" if given a second chance, the Western press, including the NYT, rushed to frame this as an admission of guilt for failing to order the types of restrictive lockdowns seen in other European countries. Tegnell later clarified that this isn't what he meant at all.
What's more, in Sweden, deaths have declined nearly to zero. And since the country's economy has remained open this whole time, there's little risk of resurgence when whatever minimal restrictions are still in place are finally lifted.
In a column published Thursday, The Telegraph's Allister Heath argued that Sweden's success at fighting the virus while minimizing economic damage elucidates the depth of the British medical establishment's incompetence, as it was Britain's health experts whose advice PM Johnson assiduously followed.
Read an excerpt from the column below (courtesy of the Telegraph):
So now we know: Sweden got it largely right, and the British establishment catastrophically wrong. Anders Tegnell, Stockholms epidemiologist-king, has pulled off a remarkable triple whammy: far fewer deaths per capita than Britain, a maintenance of basic freedoms and opportunities, including schooling, and, most strikingly, a recession less than half as severe as our own.
Our arrogant quangocrats and state experts should hang their heads in shame: their reaction to coronavirus was one of the greatest public policy blunders in modern history, more severe even than Iraq, Afghanistan, the financial crisis, Suez or the ERM fiasco. Millions will lose their jobs when furlough ends; tens of thousands of small businesses are failing; schooling is in chaos, with A-level grades all over the place; vast numbers are likely to die from untreated or undetected illnesses; and we have seen the first exodus of foreigners in years, with the labour market survey suggesting a decline in non-UK born adults.
Pandemics always come with large economic and social costs, for reasons of altruism as well as of self-interest. The only way to contain the spread of a deadly, contagious disease, in the absence of a cure or vaccine, is to social distance; fear and panic inevitably kick in, as the public desperately seeks to avoid catching the virus. A voluntary recession is almost guaranteed.
But if a drop in GDP is unavoidable, governments can influence its size and scale. Politicians can react in one of three ways to a pandemic. They can do nothing, and allow the disease to rip until herd immunity is reached. Quite rightly, no government has pursued this policy, out of fear of mass deaths and total social and economic collapse.
The second approach involves imposing proportionate restrictions to facilitate social distancing, banning certain sorts of gatherings while encouraging and informing the public. The Swedes pursued a version of this centrist strategy: there was a fair bit of compulsion, but also a focus on retaining normal life and keeping schools open. The virus was taken very seriously, but there was no formal lockdown. Tegnell is one of the few genuine heroes of this crisis: he identified the correct trade-offs.
The third option is the full-on statist approach, which imposes a legally binding lockdown and shuts down society. Such a blunderbuss approach may be right under certain circumstances if a vaccine is imminent or for some viruses for example, if we are ever hit with one that targets children and comes with a much higher fatality rate but the latest economic and mortality statistics suggest this wasnt so for Covid-19.
Almost all economists thought that Swedens economy would suffer hugely from its idiosyncratic strategy. They were wrong. Swedens GDP fell by just 8.6 per cent in the first half of the year, all in the second quarter, and its excess deaths jumped 24 per cent. A big part of Swedens recession was caused by a slump in demand for its exports from its fully locked-down neighbours. One could speculate that had all countries pursued a Swedish-style strategy, the economic hit could have been worth no more than 3-4 per cent of GDP. That could be seen as the core cost of the virus under a sensible policy reaction.
By contrast, Britains economy slumped by 22.2 per cent in the first half of the year, a performance almost three times as bad as Swedens, and its excess deaths shot up by 45 per cent. Spains national income slumped even more (22.7 per cent), and Frances (down 18.9 per cent) and Italys (down 17.1 per cent) slightly less, but all three also suffered far greater per capita excess deaths than Sweden. The Swedes allowed the virus to spread in care homes, so if that major failure had been fixed, their death rate could have been a lot lower still.
* * *
Source: Telegraph
Fearpers got the sads about no masks.
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.
“News is the first rough draft of history”
Maybe our experts should read the news from Sweden, learn from it, and stop repeating the mistakes we’re making.
lol. Fearper Karen.
Five months of Fear,
Fauci is a Fraud.
Stand-up you Fearbros
and Applaude Your god!
The U.S. response will go down in history as one of the most blatant abuses of power in our history — with the primary purpose to change the outcome of the November election.
Masks are required in all public transportation and terminals in Sweden. Sweden, which country has a very small population, didn’t do all that well with the epidemic, either. And Swedes tend to be traditionally very socially distanced from each other in public.
Link is to USSA, not USAA, an insurance and financial company. Too much caffeine affects my typing like that. ;-)
That’s USSA News, by the way. “United Socialist States of America.” I don’t care much for the name.
Yet we have 1,000 new deaths yesterday as per Worldometer. Are those #s real and what are the demographics behind them?
Thats not a triple whammy.
It’s a hat trick!
FR: Never Accept the Premise of Your Opponents Argument
Regarding lockdowns, the Orange Man Bad Left is once again rewriting history by moving the goalposts.
More specifically, not only do lockdowns have to be ordered early enough to be effective like PDJT did, but the original purpose of PDJTs lockdown was to prevent the medical system from being overloaded so that otherwise preventable COVID-19-related deaths wouldnt skyrocket.
Corrections, insights welcome.
Send "Orange Man Bad" federal and state government desperate Democrats and RINOs home in November!
Supporting PDJT with a new patriot Congress and state government leaders that will promise to fully support his already excellent work for MAGA and stopping SARS-CoV-2 will effectively give fast-working Trump a "third term" in office imo.
The weekly death count from all causes in the United States per the CDC has been on a steady decline since April. We are now either at or below the typical number of deaths for this time of year. The fear mongers have perfected their techniques to corrupt and skew the data, but the death count from all causes is based on actual death certificates and is more difficult to manipulate. Please take a look at these charts the CDC chart is in the middle of the page and can take a moment or two to load up. You cna change the measure from Covid deaths to Total Deaths:
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid_weekly/index.htm
The steep drop off at the end of the CDC chart is partially because of reporting lag, the first chart takes that into account.
I think that misses the point. We're talking about herd immunity in Sweden.
Assuming that you are correct and that the Swedes required masks on public transportation (big deal) and that the Swedes are more socially distant(sounds like a reach), all of that would only mean that the Swedes delayed their herd immunity and that they could have done it sooner.
It will be truly interesting to see where deaths stand at the end of the year. I was looking at Alabama statistics yesterday and came across something that was truly amazing.
Through yesterday Alabama had reported 1,821 total deaths from Covid-19. Amazingly Alabama reported 65 Covid-19 deaths with no comorbidity. So in the state of Alabama if you are healthy you have virtually NO CHANCE of dying from this disease. In other words in you get the disease and are healthy you have a 99.9987% chance of survival.
Ping to post 14 above.
in = if
Last April when tests in this area were unavailable unless you were a health-care worker or a celebrity, 11 people on the Fire Department that I retired from tested positive. Only 1 developed any symptoms before testing negative a couple of weeks later and he still had them... He has chronic allergies to pollen.
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