Speaker Jose Oliva, R-Miami Lakes, sent a memo Tuesday to all House members announcing the findings of an-in house analysis he ordered of the state’s COVID-19 death numbers and cautioned lawmakers against using the data for policy purposes.
www.tampabay.com
i'm glad you posted this.
this quote right here, from anna eskamani, is the problem with this issue:
“What this comes down to is this is COVID-19 deniers. And I hate to say it, but this is a complete attempt to downplay this pandemic that has destroyed lives across the country and world,” Eskamani said. “There are so many steps we can take to not cause controversy over this pandemic and just get our job done. It’s very frustrating to see these used-up attacks to downplay the pandemic.”
doesn't really seem like she "hates to say it." data integrity is not a conspiracy theory. how and why you count something is important.
so yeah, when you're dealing with a virus that very clearly preys on very weak, very frail patients, and in the case of mortality, is likely to be accompanied by at least one co-morbidity, then how those deaths get classified is a big deal.
so when she says, "this pandemic that has destroyed lives across the country and world," it's probably prudent to find out just how accurately we are classifying these deaths, and what's actually wreaking havoc on the world: the fallout from the virus, or the fallout from public policy response.
i know this doesn't make me popular with the cool kids in this thread, but i'm confident enough not to let that get in the way of my ability to think critically.