margarita25
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In a normal year, we would be in Florida: for various reasons, including the pandemic, we are probably not going to make it this year. We are presently in Michigan---- where at least we have a Governor with common sense, who puts appropriate restrictions in place. De Santis apparently takes his orders from, shall we say, higher up. Take care of yourself.
Michigan has had extensive lockdowns and extremely high COVID stats. Florida has been open and free with low COVID stats.
I feel much safer in Florida with Governor DeSantis.
Cruise lines and Florida Gov. DeSantis square off over vaccine passports (nbcnews.com)
Cruise lines are eager to set sail, but a new law championed by Gov. Ron DeSantis banning so-called vaccine passports may keep them anchored.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is on a collision course with one of the state's biggest industries over a law he signed banning businesses from asking customers whether they've been vaccinated against Covid-19.
Cruise ship operators, who sail out of Florida's large southern ports, say the order will make it make it harder for them to safely return to the seas, possibly imperiling a major economic driver in the state...
She wasn’t fired for speaking to the media. She was fired for altering data. She was making changes based on her opinion rather than the facts. She has been dismissed for insubordination. She was intentionally making changes that were not correct.Not surprised.
Fired Florida employee, Rebekah Jones, gets whistleblower status - NBC2 News
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — A former Florida Department of Health employee has received whistleblower status a year after being fired for repeatedly violating the agency’s policy about communicating with the media.
The employee, Rebekah Jones, had raised questions about Florida’s COVID-19 data after being ousted as the data’s curator. State officials said she was fired for insubordination after being reprimanded several times, according to state records.
The Miami Herald reported that the Office of the Inspector General told her attorneys on Friday that “the information disclosed does meet the criteria for whistleblower status as described by … Florida statutes.”
Not surprised.
Fired Florida employee, Rebekah Jones, gets whistleblower status - NBC2 News
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — A former Florida Department of Health employee has received whistleblower status a year after being fired for repeatedly violating the agency’s policy about communicating with the media.
The employee, Rebekah Jones, had raised questions about Florida’s COVID-19 data after being ousted as the data’s curator. State officials said she was fired for insubordination after being reprimanded several times, according to state records.
The Miami Herald reported that the Office of the Inspector General told her attorneys on Friday that “the information disclosed does meet the criteria for whistleblower status as described by … Florida statutes.”
Michigan has had extensive lockdowns and extremely high COVID stats. Florida has been open and free with low COVID stats.
I feel much safer in Florida with Governor DeSantis.
This indicates a difference of 14 deaths per 100K people between CA and FL. Once this is over, and all of the numbers can be tallied, I suspect we will find that draconian mitigations had a marginal effect and people will debate whether that difference was worth the State dictating human behavior, versus people making their own decisions regarding the risk.
I know people in AZ who were disgusted that their fellow citizens access to bars and restaurants was not curtailed, even though they were free to stay home. I also know people in CA who were disgusted at being subjected to closures. Which level of disgust was deeper may be revealed in migration. It feels like there's an exodus from CA to AZ, but we will have to wait for the data to be certain.
If anything there were more deaths attributed to COVID in Florida than was true. A few cases were revealed by family and corrections were made on their death certificates. One was a man that died in a motorcycle accident. He tested positive for COVID so his death was listed as a COVID death. When family received the certificate they brought it to the attention of others to get it fixed. Another was an illness that listed COVID as the death but family said it wasn’t.My opinion, is that many more deaths happened in Florida than have been documented, due to the byzantine data collection methods.
Person dies in FL of Covid.
1. Was the death actually documented as Covid? Many died, no autopsy, shrug, over age 80, flu, pneumonia, whatever is on their chart. Covid tests were not done post mortem. So, the data is not comprehensive.
2. Was the death attributed to Florida? Many people who live in FL, have other residences, so, was the "Covid Death", attributed to FL? Or the other residence?
The data set is skewed from the beginning. Completely useless. And excess death rates, which would be the only real analysis, has become "Top Secret" information. Normally, widely available, now, not just routinely uploaded on county sites, as it was before.
If anything there were more deaths attributed to COVID in Florida than was true. A few cases were revealed by family and corrections were made on their death certificates. One was a man that died in a motorcycle accident. He tested positive for COVID so his death was listed as a COVID death. When family received the certificate they brought it to the attention of others to get it fixed. Another was an illness that listed COVID as the death but family said it wasn’t.
Crash victim reported as COVID-19 death
Honestly, I trust the data in my state much more than the cdcreports simply because of the cdc admitting that they were being “generous” in naming COVID as cause of death, admitting that even a suspicion of exposure to COVID was being attributed to COVID.Which illustrates the fact, again, that the entire data set is suspect.
Higher or lower? We don't know. Useless data.
Honestly, I trust the data in my state much more than the cdcreports simply because of the cdc admitting that they were being “generous” in naming COVID as cause of death, admitting that even a suspicion of exposure to COVID was being attributed to COVID.
Honestly, I trust the data in my state much more than the cdcreports simply because of the cdc admitting that they were being “generous” in naming COVID as cause of death, admitting that even a suspicion of exposure to COVID was being attributed to COVID.
The CDC openly stated that only 6% of deaths were strictly COVID. The rest were underlying causes with COVID as well. So far as considering even suspected cases, that too comes from the CDC. It instructs them to list COVID as a cause of death even without a positive test. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvss/vsrg/vsrg03-508.pdfCan you link where the CDC reported that a "suspicion of exposure to COVID was being attributed to COVID". Does that mean attributed to COVID death? to COVID diagnosis? or to the fact that if someone has exposure and symptoms after being exposed, folks should be suspicious of COVID and go get a test? Not sure what is meant by post without a link.
Umm, just for clarification. The states report TO the CDC the numbers and statistics they have do they not? e.g. on deaths form is https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/dvs/blue_form.pdf
And using your motorcycle example, perhaps that one that Fox News highlighted is indeed incorrect mistake by coroner following guidelines and they put in Part I (immediate and underlying cause) or Part II (other significant conditions contributing to death). http://www.floridahealth.gov/diseas...lance/_documents/covid-19-case-definition.pdf .
Of the 600,000 reported deaths in the US, I do believe that there are some mistakes. But in totality, I don't think massive fraud to "overturn" the reality of the pandemic and call it a hoax etc. At this point, I'm looking more at trends in the numbers and things settle in as standard reporting over the long term.
As to other world countries, that's another conversation.
The CDC openly stated that only 6% of deaths were strictly COVID. The rest were underlying causes with COVID as well. So far as considering even suspected cases, that too comes from the CDC. It instructs them to list COVID as a cause of death even without a positive test. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvss/vsrg/vsrg03-508.pdf