Millions of U.S. deaths (by the end of the year) are still on the table, so yes.https://twitter.com/BlowhardEsq/status/1253788237744627712 …
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Replying to @JayMan471
Another meaningless statement. Yeah, we know a risk exists, so what. The issue is how likely that risk is such that it dictates public policy.
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I was graphing y=x^2 before you were even born. Science dorks like to think that math concepts are hard to grasp, but they're not. The issue isn't the alleged complexity of the theory, it's the fact that reality isn't comporting with the theory.
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Replying to @BlowhardEsq @MeltedJonSnow and
Well then maybe you should have learned that y=x^2 is a quadratic equation; y=k^x is an exponential function. They look very different.pic.twitter.com/C0rdFBmcrl
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Replying to @CovfefeAnon @MeltedJonSnow and
It's been a long time since calculus, so forgive me. Regardless, the numbers in CA don't approach anything like that. 1,500 deaths in a place where the virus ran totally unchecked from Jan to mid-March.
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Start with a small base and the growth looks insignificant but keep doubling the number of cases (and deaths) and the numbers get very large all of a sudden
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