Here's a map of Coronavirus vulnerability from Bert Sperling, based on density, age, obesity, diabetes, hospitals, ICU beds, and population ...pic.twitter.com/yEbQypXMZy
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Imagine if Texas or Georgia swing blue in November because older Trump voters didn't take covid seriously because of Trump/Fox downplaying .. sewing the seed of their own demise.
The first map is extremely concerning, considering that NY, Seattle etc have among the highest capacities. It looks very bad for the South.
Living in MV, I could walk a block to a food store. Living in Alabama, it's 2.5 miles to get out of my neighborhood to go to a similar food store. Stats like that are skewed by geographic structure.
Fun: the way I read it is exactly the opposite -- big validation of the thesis that not all of the US will be impacted in the same way. BTW this view doesn't include latitudine information (which is also very likely to be an important factor). All-in-all: good news, not alarming.
It is strikingly similar and suggests potential for a long second wave in the South.
And to the one where the food comes from. It's getting on towards planting season in some of these places. Movement is going to happen.pic.twitter.com/YoRoifhv5d
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