SamKat

www.skegley.blogspot.com The Blog of Sam Kegley. Many of my posts to this site are forwarded from trusted friends or family which I acknowledge by their first Name and last initial. I do not intend to release their contact info.

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Dystopian Logic ... Thx Ron W and Alax T !




DYSTOPIAN LOGIC...... We are living in a Bizarre World
To: 


It's been awhile since I've sent anything, but so much of the below content hits home.  Alex






DYSTOPIAN LOGIC...... We are living in a Bizarre World:
• If a dude pretends to be a woman, you are required to pretend with him.
• Somehow it’s un-American for the census to count how many Americans are in America.
• Russians influencing our elections are bad, but illegal Mexicans voting in our elections are good.
• It was cool for Joe Biden to "blackmail" the President of Ukraine, but it’s an impeachable offense if Donald Trump inquires about it.
• Twenty is too young to drink a beer, but eighteen is old enough to vote.
• Sexualizing children is bad, but 11-year-old drag queens are good.
• Illegals aren't required to show ID, but citizens can't buy cough medicine without it.
• Citizens are fined if they don’t buy their own health insurance, and then they are forced to buy it for illegals.
• People who have never owned slaves should pay slavery reparations to people who have never been slaves.
• Inflammatory rhetoric is outrageous, but harassing people in restaurants is virtuous.
• People who have never been to college should pay the debts of college students who took out huge loans for useless degrees.
• Immigrants with tuberculosis and polio are welcome, but you’d better be able to prove your dog is vaccinated.
• Irish doctors and German engineers who want to immigrate must go through a rigorous vetting process, but any illiterate Central-American gang-banger who jumps the southern fence is welcome.
• $5 billion for border security is too expensive, but $1.5 trillion for “free” health care for illegals is not.
• If you cheat to get into a college you go to prison, but if you cheat to get into the country you go to college for free.
• Politicians who say that the President is not above the law put illegal immigrants and themselves above the law.
• People who say there is no such thing as a gender are demanding a female President.
• Illegals don’t pay taxes, but they get tax refunds.
• We see other countries going Socialist and collapsing, and it seems like a great plan for us.
• Voter suppression is bad, but not allowing the President to be on the ballot is good.
• Fourth-of-July parades are bad, but parades of women dressed as vaginas are good.
• Some people are held responsible for things that happened before they were born, and other people are not held responsible for what they are doing right now.
• Criminals are catch-and-released to hurt more people, but stopping them is bad because it's a violation of THEIR rights.
* And pointing out all this hypocrisy somehow makes us "racists." ????
If you are tired of living in the Left’s dystopian nightmare, then forward this.
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skegley.blogspot.com at 12:40 PM No comments:
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Sunday, May 17, 2020

Mortality Analysis - Our Workd Data

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How does mortality differ across countries?

One of the most important ways to measure the burden of COVID-19 is mortality. Countries throughout the world have reported very different case fatality ratios – the number of deaths divided by the number of confirmed cases. Differences in mortality numbers can be caused by:
  • Differences in the number of people tested: With more testing, more people with milder cases are identified. This lowers the case-fatality ratio.
  • Demographics: For example, mortality tends to be higher in older populations.
  • Characteristics of the healthcare system: For example, mortality may rise as hospitals become overwhelmed and have fewer resources.
  • Other factors, many of which remain unknown.
This page was last updated on Saturday, May 16, 2020 at 11:46 PM EDT.

Mortality in the most affected countries

For the 10 countries most affected by COVID-19 worldwide, the bars in the chart below show the number of deaths either per 100 confirmed cases (observed case-fatality ratio) or per 100,000 population (this represents a country’s general population, with both confirmed cases and healthy people). Countries at the top of this figure have the most deaths proportionally to their COVID-19 cases or population, not necessarily the most deaths overall.
4.5%5.9%6.0%6.7%7.5%11.9%14.1%14.3%15.3%Mortality: 16.4%0%2%4%6%8%10%12%14%16%GermanyIranUSBrazilCanadaSpainItalyUnited KingdomFranceBelgium
Mortality: Observed case-fatality ratioObserved case-fatality ratioDeaths per 100,000 population

Worldwide mortality

The diagonal lines on the chart below correspond to different case fatality ratios (the number of deaths divided by the number of confirmed cases). Countries falling on the uppermost lines have the highest observed case fatality ratios. Points with a black border correspond to the 10 most affected countries by COVID-19 worldwide, based on the number of deaths. Hover over the circles to see the country name and a ratio value. Use the boxes on the top to toggle between: 1) mortality per absolute number of cases (total confirmed cases within a country); and mortality per 100,000 people (this represents a country’s general population, with both confirmed cases and healthy people).
100100010k100k1M10100100010k100k
Confirmed casesDeaths10%5%2%1%0.5%Observed case-fatality ratioDeaths per 100,000 population


Cases and mortality by country

CountryConfirmedDeathsCase-FatalityDeaths/100k pop.
US1,467,82088,7546.0%27.13
United Kingdom241,46134,54614.3%51.96
Italy224,76031,76314.1%52.56
Spain230,69827,56311.9%58.99
France179,63027,53215.3%41.10
Brazil233,51115,6626.7%7.48
Belgium54,9899,00516.4%78.84
Germany175,7527,9384.5%9.57
Iran118,3926,9375.9%8.48
Canada77,2065,8007.5%15.65
Netherlands44,0705,68912.9%33.02
Mexico47,1445,04510.7%4.00
China84,0444,6385.5%0.33
Turkey148,0674,0962.8%4.98
Sweden29,6773,67412.4%36.08
India90,6482,8713.2%0.21
Ecuador32,7632,6888.2%15.73
Russia272,0432,5370.9%1.76
Peru88,5412,5232.8%7.89
Switzerland30,5721,8796.1%22.06
Ireland24,0481,5336.4%31.59
Portugal28,8101,2034.2%11.70
Romania16,7041,0946.5%5.62
Indonesia17,0251,0896.4%0.41
Poland18,2579155.0%2.41
Pakistan38,7998342.1%0.39
Philippines12,3058176.6%0.77
Japan16,2377254.5%0.57
Austria16,2016293.9%7.11
Egypt11,7196125.2%0.62
Colombia14,9395623.8%1.13
Denmark11,0565434.9%9.37
Algeria6,8215427.9%1.28
Ukraine17,8584972.8%1.11
Hungary3,47344812.9%4.59
Dominican Republic12,1104283.5%4.03
Chile41,4284211.0%2.25
Argentina7,8053634.7%0.82
Bangladesh20,9953141.5%0.19
Saudi Arabia52,0163020.6%0.90
Finland6,2862974.7%5.38
Czechia8,4552963.5%2.79
Panama9,4492692.8%6.44
Israel16,6082681.6%3.02
Korea, South11,0502622.4%0.51
South Africa14,3552611.8%0.45
Norway8,2372322.8%4.37
Serbia10,4962282.2%3.27
United Arab Emirates22,6272140.9%2.22
Moldova5,9342073.5%5.84
Morocco6,7411922.8%0.53
Nigeria5,6211763.1%0.09
Afghanistan6,4021682.6%0.45
Bolivia3,8261654.3%1.45
Greece2,8191625.7%1.51
Belarus28,6811600.6%1.69
Cameroon3,1051404.5%0.56
Honduras2,5651385.4%1.44
Bosnia and Herzegovina2,2671295.7%3.88
Iraq3,2601213.7%0.31
Malaysia6,8721131.6%0.36
Kuwait13,8021070.8%2.59
Bulgaria2,1751054.8%1.49
Luxembourg3,9301042.6%17.11
Slovenia1,4651037.0%4.98
North Macedonia1,762985.6%4.70
Australia7,044981.4%0.39
Sudan2,289974.2%0.23
Croatia2,224954.3%2.32
Cuba1,862794.2%0.70
Estonia1,770633.6%4.77
Congo (Kinshasa)1,455614.2%0.07
Thailand3,025561.9%0.08
Lithuania1,534553.6%1.97
Somalia1,357554.1%0.37
Armenia4,283551.3%1.86
Andorra761516.7%66.23
Burkina Faso782516.5%0.26
Niger889515.7%0.23
Kenya830506.0%0.10
Chad4745010.5%0.32
Mali835485.7%0.25
Tunisia1,037454.3%0.39
San Marino653416.3%121.36
Azerbaijan3,138361.1%0.36
Tajikistan1,322362.7%0.40
Kazakhstan5,850340.6%0.19
Guatemala1,763331.9%0.19
Albania933313.3%1.08
Sierra Leone462296.3%0.38
Kosovo944293.1%1.57
Ghana5,735290.5%0.10
Slovakia1,493281.9%0.51
Lebanon902262.9%0.38
El Salvador1,265262.1%0.40
Senegal2,429251.0%0.16
Cote d'Ivoire2,061251.2%0.10
Singapore27,356220.1%0.39
New Zealand1,499211.4%0.43
Oman5,029210.4%0.43
Tanzania509214.1%0.04
Liberia223209.0%0.42
Haiti358205.6%0.18
Uruguay733192.6%0.55
Latvia997191.9%0.99
Yemen1221814.8%nan
Cyprus914171.9%1.43
Guinea2,658160.6%0.13
Congo (Brazzaville)391153.8%0.29
Qatar30,972150.0%0.54
Kyrgyzstan1,117141.3%0.22
Diamond Princess712131.8%nan
Bahrain6,747120.2%0.76
Georgia683121.8%0.32
Gabon1,320110.8%0.52
Paraguay778111.4%0.16
Uzbekistan2,738110.4%0.03
Togo298113.7%0.14
Bahamas961111.5%nan
Mauritius332103.0%0.79
Guyana117108.5%1.28
Iceland1,802100.6%2.83
Costa Rica853101.2%0.20
Venezuela504102.0%0.03
Montenegro32492.8%1.45
Sri Lanka96090.9%0.04
Jamaica51791.7%0.31
Jordan60791.5%0.09
Trinidad and Tobago11686.9%0.58
Nicaragua25832.0%0.12
Equatorial Guinea59471.2%0.53
Taiwan*44071.6%0.03
Barbados8678.1%2.44
Sao Tome and Principe23573.0%3.32
Zambia67971.0%0.04
Burma18263.3%nan
Malta54661.1%1.24
Ethiopia30651.6%0.00
Mauritania40410.0%0.09
South Sudan23641.7%0.04
Djibouti1,33140.3%0.42
Guinea-Bissau96940.4%0.21
Zimbabwe4249.5%0.03
Maldives1,07840.4%0.78
Monaco9644.2%10.34
Malawi6534.6%0.02
Cabo Verde32830.9%0.55
Antigua and Barbuda25312.0%3.12
Syria5135.9%nan
Libya6534.6%0.04
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skegley.blogspot.com at 4:44 PM 1 comment:
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skegley.blogspot.com
Westerville, Born in Portsmouth OH now Westerville OH, United States
Author of eleven published books. Started this blog in 2008. As interviews proceed with different topic lines, they could become other books by the author. Born Nov. 13, 1932 in Portsmouth, Ohio. Retired Metallurgical Engineer in January, 1998- BS degree University of Kentucky, 1961.
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