Chip Chipperson
Well-Known Member
I guess all we can do to limit cases in the meantime is mitigate with masks and vaccines.It’s not a start when they don’t come out until we are likely on the back end of the Covid surge. Too late quite simply.
I guess all we can do to limit cases in the meantime is mitigate with masks and vaccines.It’s not a start when they don’t come out until we are likely on the back end of the Covid surge. Too late quite simply.
They're just like us, making decisions on the information they see and read and their experience and have the same concerns as everyone else. Doesn't mean they are making the right decision, doesn't mean they are experts in immunology, genetics, and the type of science needed to really understand how vaccines work. Doctors are by far making the decision to be vaccinated.
Yep. It would be nice to have additional tools available. But, here we are.I guess all we can do to limit cases in the meantime is mitigate with masks and vaccines.
As I've pointed out multiple times now, some of the most vaccine-hesitant individuals out there are people of colour and members of ethnic minorities. This is a reality in both the US and the UK (I can't speak to the situation in Canada). Some of you take comfort in imagining the unvaccinated as boorish reactionaries who vote a particular way, but you are painting a grossly simplistic picture. I'm tired of it.
Different topic. But I hear BC is canceling surgeries starting in January? Not good.Vaccine-hesitant, especially among minorities, is very different then who I was thinking of.
Nowhere did I deny that there is also a political correlation. My point was only that many of you gleefully disparaging the unvaccinated are, whether you realise it or not, also talking about individuals that belong to certain historically marginalised communities that vote totally the other way.How many times does something like this have to be posted? Yes, people of color are more hesitant than caucasians but there is a huge divide between voting populations.
You say you are in London? There is a strong bias against immigrants there, are you one? That was a huge factor in why you got Brexit no?
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As I've pointed out multiple times now, some of the most vaccine-hesitant individuals out there are people of colour and members of ethnic minorities. This is a reality in both the US and the UK (I can't speak to the situation in Canada). Some of you take comfort in imagining the unvaccinated as boorish reactionaries who vote a particular way, but you are painting a grossly simplistic picture. I'm tired of it.
Some of these rates just boggle my mind.That's quite a sweeping generalization there. Consider this:
Vaccination rates among Blacks trail Whites by 7 percentage points.Among Latines, rates trail Whites by 2 percentage points.Among Asians, it is Whites who trail Asians by 18%!!
However, over time the gap between Whites and Blacks/Latines has been closing.
Now, is that 7 percentage points between Blacks and Whites that significant? Consider this:
The average fully vaccinated rate of the U.S. is 64%The average of the top ten most vaccinated U.S. states is about 74%. That's 10 points over the average.The average of the top ten least vaccinated U.S. states is about 50%. That's 14 points below the average.
So, the difference between the top ten and the bottom ten is 24%.
That kinda puts the 7% difference between Black and White in perspective.
Consider also this: in Mississippi and Louisiana, Black vaccination rates surpasses White by 4 points.
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Thank you for doing the workThat's quite a sweeping generalization there. Consider this:
Vaccination rates among Blacks trail Whites by 7 percentage points.Among Latines, rates trail Whites by 2 percentage points.Among Asians, it is Whites who trail Asians by 18%!!
However, over time the gap between Whites and Blacks/Latines has been closing.
Now, is that 7 percentage points between Blacks and Whites that significant? Consider this:
The average fully vaccinated rate of the U.S. is 64%The average of the top ten most vaccinated U.S. states is about 74%. That's 10 points over the average.The average of the top ten least vaccinated U.S. states is about 50%. That's 14 points below the average.
So, the difference between the top ten and the bottom ten is 24%.
That kinda puts the 7% difference between Black and White in perspective.
Consider also this: in Mississippi and Louisiana, Black vaccination rates surpasses White by 4 points.
View attachment 609022
Yes, I consider the 7% difference significant. Whenever anyone in this forum dares to suggest that the percentage of young people dying from COVID is small, they are roundly (and rightly) criticised. But now you want me to concede that 7% is too small to matter.That's quite a sweeping generalization there. Consider this:
Vaccination rates among Blacks trail Whites by 7 percentage points.Among Latines, rates trail Whites by 2 percentage points.Among Asians, it is Whites who trail Asians by 18%!!
However, over time the gap between Whites and Blacks/Latines has been closing.
Now, is that 7 percentage points between Blacks and Whites that significant? Consider this:
The average fully vaccinated rate of the U.S. is 64%The average of the top ten most vaccinated U.S. states is about 74%. That's 10 points over the average.The average of the top ten least vaccinated U.S. states is about 50%. That's 14 points below the average.
So, the difference between the top ten and the bottom ten is 24%.
That kinda puts the 7% difference between Black and White in perspective.
Consider also this: in Mississippi and Louisiana, Black vaccination rates surpasses White by 4 points.
View attachment 609022
That's precisely my point. It's all too easy to perpetuate crude stereotypes of unvaccinated people when you only allow yourself to imagine them as your enemies.Vaccine-hesitant, especially among minorities, is very different then who I was thinking of.
Feel free to use Latinos or Latin people. Latine has some following but not as much as Latin.That's quite a sweeping generalization there. Consider this:
Vaccination rates among Blacks trail Whites by 7 percentage points.Among Latines, rates trail Whites by 2 percentage points.Among Asians, it is Whites who trail Asians by 18%!!
However, over time the gap between Whites and Blacks/Latines has been closing.
Now, is that 7 percentage points between Blacks and Whites that significant? Consider this:
The average fully vaccinated rate of the U.S. is 64%The average of the top ten most vaccinated U.S. states is about 74%. That's 10 points over the average.The average of the top ten least vaccinated U.S. states is about 50%. That's 14 points below the average.
So, the difference between the top ten and the bottom ten is 24%.
That kinda puts the 7% difference between Black and White in perspective.
Consider also this: in Mississippi and Louisiana, Black vaccination rates surpasses White by 4 points.
View attachment 609022
No need. They weed themselves out. Unvaccinated = not qualified. No common sense.You dont have to. Just dont complain about how tight the labor market is.
Yeah, but when you say "people of colour and members of ethnic minorities" did you just mean 'Blacks'?Yes, I consider the 7% difference significant. Whenever anyone in this forum dares to suggest that the percentage of young people dying from COVID is small, they are roundly (and rightly) criticised. But now you want me to concede that 7% is too small to matter.
As someone who has studied actual Latin, the -es ending to create plurals comes much more natural to me, and it is, IMO, a fitting alternative to the -os, and -as, and... very understandable to English speakers, who use -es for plurals, especially considering how English is the new Lingua Franca (a triply ironic phrase).Feel free to use Latinos or Latin people. Latine has some following but not as much as Latin.
No, I didn't. As I made clear, I was referring to the situation in my home country also, where the issue extends to communities like mine that are ethnic minorities but not Black.Yeah, but when you say "people of colour and members of ethnic minorities" did you just mean 'Blacks'?
That's precisely my point. It's all too easy to perpetuate crude stereotypes of unvaccinated people when you only allow yourself to imagine them as your enemies.
I know he can’t see my posts, but I’m responding for the group.September of this year may have worked. Even October possibly.
Different topic. But I hear BC is canceling surgeries starting in January? Not good.![]()
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