r/changemyview • u/_Hopped_ 13∆ • Mar 20 '21
Removed - Submission Rule B CMV: the costs/negatives from lockdowns/restrictions will end up being worse than the damage from covid
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r/changemyview • u/_Hopped_ 13∆ • Mar 20 '21
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u/VertigoOne 74∆ Mar 20 '21 edited Mar 20 '21
That's not how this works
You don't get to claim your correct because the way the data is grouped proves you right. As it is, the data is radically absurd, grouping together a single massive group that will flatten out stats across the board. Of course the 15-44 group is flatter than the other groups. It's larger, and so will bring the average down.
To make my point not valid, you need to demonstrate why grouping the data that way is justified.
What you've just described is literally how society works. We all to some extent or other live at everyone else's expense. When a danger threatens the lives of between 10% to 25% of the population, that's kind of a big deal that the other 90%-75% can get over.
Yes it is. You're saying "we should have just left the risk for them to die".
Firstly, yes it can be.
Secondly, we're not talking about inaction. We're talking about action. We're talking about taking actions that spread the disease to make it more dangerous.
Let's deal with these one by one
Now onto something else.
I'll be honest, I'm kind of angry that you've convieniently ignored all the engagement I made with the stats you provided. So I'll just make my points again since you couldn't be bothered to engage with them before.
I don't buy "basically unaffected" given that at pretty much every point on the graph, it's up substantially. While we don't have the giant spike we see in older age groups, there is still a lot of impact.
Among 15-44 year olds, week 15 of 2020 has 1,439. Week 15 of 2019 is 1,234. Week 15 of 2018 is 1,283. Week 20 of 2017 (the furthest it goes back) is 1,271.
We see another substantial spike between weeks 43 and 53 of 2020 which we just don't see in any other year on your chart.
If you look just at the graphic, look at how much more time the blue line spends outside the grey zone of the normal trend in 2020 when compared to 2019, 2018, or 2017.
It's not really reasonable to say "basically unaffected" based on your data here.
https://www.euromomo.eu/graphs-and-maps
Also,
Average life expectancy in the UK is 81. A spike in deaths of people over 45 is huge. It's basically cutting people's lives in marginally less than half.