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  • deadbergeron [he/him,they/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    my question is though, why didn't we see the same amount of crisis in the US in those months leading up to 2020? Because early on in our whole Covid thing, hospitals were overrun to the point they didn't have any beds left, they were running low on equipment. We went months with literally no precautions, but it seemed never to hit the same disaster point we hit in like spring 2020. And also if it had gotten out, it 100% would've spread to other countries, since Americans, especially in the Beltway, are so keen on travelling. But no other countries seemed to hit that crisis point. Was I just not paying attention? Was there crisis that just wasn't covered?

    • sooper_dooper_roofer [none/use name]
      ·
      edit-2
      3 years ago

      my question is though, why didn’t we see the same amount of crisis in the US

      low population density and natural spread

      vs. high population density and targeted deliberate spread

      also the virus even after release has been mutating into more and more contagious forms. The one that hit the West in 2020 (D614G) was already way more contagious than the Wuhan strain. It's probable that any hypothetical strain from July 2019 was even less contagious.

      • deadbergeron [he/him,they/them]
        ·
        3 years ago

        idk what you are defining as high vs low density, but the washington DC area is one of the denser areas of the US, and is also the southern end of the northeast megalopolis, which includes some of the densest areas of the US. Idk and i don't think any of those places can compare to China, especially not DC, but its not like you're out living in farmland or something. Its dense cities surrounded by dense suburbs up and down that part of the Atlantic Coast.

        Also the locations of those pneumonia outbreaks are Marshall County, WV, outside Phoenix, AZ and Terre Haute, IN. That's low density - the closest city to Marshall County is like Wheeling. If this thing could've spread to those sorts of places, then there can't be too much of a problem with density, and the virus already has access to the densest areas of the US, being situated on the northeast Atlantic Coast. Which is also a very global population with a lot of money, which should mean it can spread globally since those places travel a lot. At least if it can spread to the middle of West Virginia.

        Just trying to be critical before I buy this theory