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by jjoonathan
1873 days ago
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I spot-checked the first link: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/eci.13484 The argument is the same well-hashed "Sweden is a counterexample" with mathematical window dressing. Bonus points for chopping the Sweden dataset before the big spike in Swedish cases even though the paper was published after the spike and is still being held up as a flagship example half a year after that. Like the other anti-lockdown papers I've spot checked, I'm not impressed. |
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However, that doesn't really matter. Sweden is a counter-example because lockdown theory doesn't posit any sort of Swedish exception, so the existence of this place alone disproves the models. Going further or using longer term data is good, but strictly speaking unnecessary.
Also, you're claiming that there was some sort of "big spike" in Swedish cases and that this would change the conclusions. It might do but if Sweden did anything since January it would have been tightening restrictions - around Christmas the international pressure got to their leaders and they started to get tougher, not laxer. So it would be hard to say that this would invalidate the conclusions. At any rate, lockdowns weren't justified on the basis of PCR positive results, they were justified on the grounds of deaths. Swedish death curves are the same as other countries that did hard lockdowns and there has been no big Swedish spike:
https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/coronavirus-data-explor...
This is important because for Sweden the models predicted predicted ~90,000 deaths from COVID alone, there were 98,000 deaths in total from all causes in 2020. That's clearly a huge miss.
Like the other anti-lockdown papers I've spot checked, I'm not impressed.
And of the papers arguing lockdowns work, they're all free of methodology errors in your view? Because that's definitely not what I've seen. The thing with lockdowns is, it's ultimately very simple. You don't actually need any complex analysis to see the truth. You can just look at the predictions and then go to ourworldindata for the reported curves. You should see huge sudden drops or surges when lockdowns and mask mandates are imposed or released, and it should be visible in all the countries that made changes. Additionally countries that did nothing should be have dramatically bigger curves than those that did lots. You can't see anything like that in the data.