Watch this 10 times. Focus on one color at a time. Watch the blue (60+) case load plummet as they get vaccinated. Watch the red (20-39) case load rise, and then plummet, as the vaccination rate crosses some thresholdhttps://twitter.com/H_Rossman/status/1373932554261303296 …
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Replying to @davidboxenhorn @ScottAdamsSays
The Y axis is % from peak. If older people caught it first you would expect the same hospitalization dynamic. Notice other age groups reapproach “peak” after. Additionally needs a longer timeline, to show pre-vaccine. Disingenuous statistics. Australia similar w/o vaccine.
2 replies 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @LasassoJustin @ScottAdamsSays
David Boxenhorn Retweeted Hagai Rossman
Here are the absolution numbers, as you can see, not misleadinghttps://twitter.com/H_Rossman/status/1369549820302606338 …
David Boxenhorn added,
Hagai Rossman @H_Rossman

Preprint updated this week
Patterns of COVID-19 pandemic dynamics following deployment of a broad national immunization program
Now with new data and analysis:
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.02.08.21251325v2 …
with @GorfineMalka@ShalitUri@smadarshilo@tomer1812@segal_eran pic.twitter.com/LG48FS7zPxShow this thread1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @davidboxenhorn @ScottAdamsSays
Would a standard flu season look any different? Why is the X axis set at this point? For maximum effect? Here is a typical flu curve. Notice the similarity based on time? It is disingenuous x and y axis to reinforce a narrative. Sorry. https://twitter.com/lasassojustin/status/1373968208315703299?s=21 …pic.twitter.com/quGUwO4CkU
2 replies 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @LasassoJustin @ScottAdamsSays
Your theory is that it's just a coincidence that - Case loads dropped as vaccination increased - They dropped faster for older age groups that were more vaccinated, *even* though those age groups were more susceptible Maybe, but I doubt it. If case loads stay down, I'm right
2 replies 2 retweets 3 likes -
Replying to @davidboxenhorn @ScottAdamsSays
I literally showed you a 10 year average flu illness curved that followed the exact same peak and drop in the given time. Stop mind reading. -vaccines coincided with natural end of flu season. Flu chart follows your chart. Not a theory. You are inferring, not me.
2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
Average flu data doesn't exist. No one tracks it. It is estimated. Ever hear of anyone dying of normal flu?
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