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Author Topic: COVID19 Math  (Read 157 times)

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Offline SeanJohnson

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COVID19 Math
« on: August 31, 2020, 01:04:31 PM »
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  • In light of the CDC's recent revelation that only 9,600 people have died of COVID19 without comorbidities, I decided to do a little math to arrive at the true risk of healthy people really dying of COVID19 (if such a thing exists):

    1) If you divide that number indiscriminately over the 50 states, you come to 192 deaths/state.

    2) But the manufactured crisis has been running 6 months, so if you further divide these 192 dead/state by six months, you have 32 dead/state/month.

    3) Now, in Minnesota, we have approximately 5,500,000 residents.  So if you divide those 32 dead/month against 5,500,000 in the state, your mathematical odds of dying from COVID19 in Minnesota in any given month = 0.00000582%

    The next time someone gets in your face for not wearing a mask, you might want to run this math by them.

    PS: If you lived in California or New York, where the population is several timed larger than Minnesota, the percentages or chance of you dying from COVID19 are exponentially smaller, since you are dividing this 32 dead figure by a much larger population.  But even if we used the population for Wyoming (i.e., the least populated state in the country, at 586,107), your odds there of dying from COVID19 still only amount to 0.0000546%!  In California (with a population of 39,144,818) your chance shrinks to 0.00000082%!

    PPS: If you think its not fair to indiscriminately distribute the 9,600 alleged COVID19 deaths evenly across states, you still get ana ultra-low chance of death by taking the alleged 6,000,000 COVID19 cases, and dividing them by 9,600 alleged COVID19 deaths (i.e., =0.0016 mortality rate for those without comorbidities).
    Rom 5: 20 - "But where sin increased, grace abounded all the more."