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Thu, 04 Nov 2021
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Did the lockdown save lives?

empty highways city lockdown
For two to three months, Americans have suffered the loss of liberty, security, and prosperity in the name of virus control. The psychological impact has been beyond description. We thought we could count on basic rights and freedoms. Then over a few days in March, it all ended in ways hardly anyone could believe possible.

The manner in which governments dealt with foundational principles of modernity has been shocking. They put half the country under house arrest and managed every movement in disregard for the Bill of Rights and all legal precedent, to say nothing of the Constitution. It felt like a coercive unraveling of civilization itself. It's like we are all waking up from a bad dream only to look around and see the wreckage that proves it was all real.

So how can we deal with this terror that befell us? One way is to figure out some aspect in which our sacrifice has been worth it, maybe not on net given the consequences, but surely some good has come out of this. If my email and feeds are correct, this is how many people have been justifying this. The psychology here is rooted in the sunk-cost fallacy: when you commit resources to something, even when it is a proven error, you tend to find justifications by doubling down rather than just admitting the mistake.

Comment: See also:


Arrow Up

Deadlier than Covid? Medics sound alarm as lockdown suicides SOAR in US - and health officials knew it would happen

depressed
© Getty Images / Knk Phl Prasan Kha Phibuly / EyeEm
After two months of devastating lockdown, doctors at one California clinic say they've seen more suicides than Covid-19 deaths - and they're not alone. But warning signs were there since day one. Why have they been ignored?

"We've seen a year's worth of suicide attempts in the last four weeks," Dr Mike deBoisblanc, lead trauma surgeon at the John Muir Medical Center in Walnut Creek, California, told local media on Thursday, confirming the center had seen more deaths from suicide over the two-month lockdown period than deaths from coronavirus.

Not only are the numbers of attempts "unprecedented" but so is their seriousness, according to a trauma nurse at the clinic. "I have never seen so much intentional injury," nurse Kacey Hansen attested, adding the deaths are mostly young adults who are clearly not making "cry for help" suicidal gestures. "They intend to die."

Red Flag

Upcoming 'Apple Watch for kids' is a bad sign of creeping tech addiction

apple
© Getty Images / Yifan Ding
The next Apple Watch update may be a lot more child-centric, bringing better parental controls and a school mode. But regardless of the benefits, this early induction into the tech world is a win for the tech, not for the kids.

Enthusiasts digging into Apple software for hints of what future updates might bring have discovered that the Apple Watch, a gadget sold in the tens of millions every year, is likely moving to be more 'child-friendly' in the future. The new functions apparently in the works would make it more appealing for a parent to buy a set for their kids.

Big Tech is aiming to be with us from day one - but is it a world we should be looking forward to?

Over the past decade or so, the world's honeymoon period with a number of social media and tech giants has hit a few rocky patches. Many have begun to question whether the luxury of communicating with one another and purchasing online is worth handing away information detailing our every move.

Heart - Black

Doctor says 'time to end shelter-in-place order' as Bay Area sees more suicides than COVID-19 deaths

suicide covid
Doctors at John Muir Medical Center in Walnut Creek say they have seen more deaths by suicide during this quarantine period than deaths from the COVID-19 virus.

The head of the trauma in the department believes mental health is suffering so much, it is time to end the shelter-in-place order.

"Personally I think it's time," said Dr. Mike deBoisblanc. "I think, originally, this (the shelter-in-place order) was put in place to flatten the curve and to make sure hospitals have the resources to take care of COVID patients.We have the current resources to do that and our other community health is suffering."

The numbers are unprecedented, he said.


Airplane

Pakistani airliner carrying 99 crashes in Karachi, many feared dead - Updates

Pakistan plane crash
© EPA
The crash site was in a residential area just short of the airport perimeter
A Pakistan International Airlines Airbus jet with 99 people on board crashed into residential buildings in the Pakistani city of Karachi on Friday afternoon while approaching the airport.

At least two passengers survived but many others were feared dead.

Smoke billowed from the scene where flight PK 8303 came down at about 2:45 p.m. (0945 GMT). Twisted sections of fuselage lay in the rubble of multi-storey buildings as ambulances rushed through chaotic crowds.

Comment: Update 5/22: More on the two survivors of the crash, one of whom appears to be relatively "high profile":
Bank of Punjab (BOP) CEO Zafar Masud was one of the two confirmed miracle survivors.

BOP said Masud was being treated in hospital, writing on Twitter that he has "sustained injuries but he is out of danger."

The other passenger has been named as Mohd Zubair by a Sindh government official on Twitter.

There has been no official confirmation as to the total number of survivors, but local media outlet Geo News said Masud is one of "multiple" people who escaped death.


Another view of the disastrous flight:


And a footage of the damage and chaos that ensued:




Red Pill

Biased mainstream media again misuses science to paint sensible Sweden as reckless gamblers - here is why they are wrong

sweden
© Global Look Press / CHROMORANGE / Bilderbox
Sweden has found that just 7.3 percent of Stockholmers have antibodies for coronavirus, despite the country's laissez-faire handling of the outbreak. The mainstream media think this proves them right. It doesn't.

Just last week, I criticized a piece of reportage in the Guardian, that grand old publication, for its remedial understanding of coronavirus. They are at it again, this time holding up an antibody study as evidence that Sweden, a land of dangerous wrong-think, is killing people with its coronavirus policy.

First, let us deal with the study itself. It reported that, based on antibody tests - which are supposed to detect people who have had and cleared the coronavirus - far fewer Stockholmers had had the virus than thought, which would mean that Sweden has a long way to go to reach herd immunity. But the thing about antibody tests is that they are utterly unreliable.

Eye 1

Children in care must be immunized, even against parents' wishes, UK court rules

Royal courts justice
© Getty Images/iStockphoto
Judges claim vaccination is in a child's best interests
Children in care can be immunised against their parents' wishes without court intervention, senior judges have ruled.

In a Court of Appeal decision published on Friday, three judges concluded that scientific evidence "clearly establishes" vaccination is in a child's best interests.

Lady Justice King, sitting with Lords Justice McCombe and Peter Jackson, said that children in local authority care must be vaccinated unless there is a specific reason against doing so.

While parents' views must be taken into account, councils should not make decisions regarding vaccinations based on the strength of those views - unless they have a "real bearing" on the child's welfare, said Lady Justice King.

Comment: Were the judges as well informed as they claim to be then they would be not be able to confidently claim that vaccine science is "clearly established", because vaccine related scandals are in the news often, and in real scientific discourse with an increasing frequency, and their possible impact on health have been debated since their inception: And check out SOTT radio's:


Corona

Top 10 reasons to abandon 'Team Corona-Phobia'


Comment: ...also known as 'disembarking from the Coronavirus Cruise'.


bigtree corona phobia
Do you know someone with Corona-Phobia? Someone who has an irrational fear of Coronavirus? Here are our top 10 reasons Del & The HighWire Team does not suffer from Corona-Phobia. Use these in Covid convos with your friends!


Black Cat

Aviron Pictures founder William Sadleir arrested in $1.7M COVID-19 PPP scam

William Sadleir coronavirus scam PPP embezzlement
© Shutterstock
William Sadleir
The ousted chairman of Aviron Pictures was arrested Friday on federal fraud charges for using $1.7 million in the federal government's coronavirus-relief Paycheck Protection Program funds for his personal use.

William Sadleir was taken into custody without incident by FBI agents and other federal officials, the Department of Justice revealed. He allegedly filed applications for loans under the names of various Aviron entities through JPMorgan Chase - but not for the reasons he stated.

The complaint, which was filed Thursday and unsealed after his arrest, charges Sadleir with wire fraud, bank fraud, making false statements to a financial institution, and making false statements to the Small Business Administration.

Arrow Down

Florida's nursing home strategy spared it widespread deaths suffered in New York, New Jersey

DeSantis
© Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
As controversy grows over some states having forced nursing homes to accept COVID-19-positive patients — a policy that may have contributed to astronomical death rates in numerous long-term care facilities — officials in Florida say they did everything they could to keep infectious patients out of vulnerable environments and in isolated hospital settings.

The state governments of New York and Pennsylvania have come under scrutiny in recent weeks as the death tolls at their respective care facilities have grown significantly. New York has seen thousands of deaths in nursing homes over the past several months; as many as a quarter of all deaths in the state are estimated to have occurred in those facilities. In Pennsylvania, meanwhile, the death toll in care facilities is running around 70% of all fatalities in the state.

Both Pennsylvania and New York declared early in the outbreak that nursing homes could not turn away residents simply because they had had a positive coronavirus test. In effect, the states forced nursing homes to accept likely infectious patients, bringing them into the closed environments of nursing homes where the overwhelming majority of residents were among the most vulnerable to infection and death.