lpetrich
Contributor
About That Terrible Johns Hopkins Lockdown “Study” – Skepchick by Rebecca Watson
noting video version
About That Terrible Johns Hopkins Lockdown "Study" (Now Higher Res!) - YouTube
The earlier link is to a page with a transcript of that video. What RW discovered is very damning.
They started out with 18,590 studies, which seems impressive. But they trimmed down this number very drastically using various criteria:
18,590 -> 1,048 -> 117 -> 34 -> 24
She then explains what a lockdown is.
noting video version
About That Terrible Johns Hopkins Lockdown "Study" (Now Higher Res!) - YouTube
The earlier link is to a page with a transcript of that video. What RW discovered is very damning.
They started out with 18,590 studies, which seems impressive. But they trimmed down this number very drastically using various criteria:
18,590 -> 1,048 -> 117 -> 34 -> 24
She then explains what a lockdown is.
New Zealand and Vietnam did similar drastic measures.Let’s pause there to talk about “lockdowns.” Lockdown has a very specific meaning apart from its colloquial meaning, and one would hope that a scientific evaluation would understand that, but this paper does not appear to. It’s important that in cases like this we avoid colloquial terms because there’s a huge difference between a lockdown, a quarantine, a vaccine mandate, a government-issued recommendation – lumping all these things under “lockdown” would be like a scientific paper on evolution discussing how it’s “just a theory” because the colloquial use of “theory” means “something we’re not totally sure of.” There’s a reason why scientists uphold a different standard of word choice and definitions.
An actual “lockdown” looks like what China did in early 2020 in the Hubei province: on January 23rd, they shut down ALL public transportation in Wuhan, including buses, ferries, and subways. The Wuhan airport was closed. Major highways leading out of Wuhan were closed. Residents could not leave the city without explicit government permission. Some cities only allowed one member of each household to leave the house every few days to get provisions.
But not a single state in the United States ever came anywhere close to doing anything like that. That’s why it’s helpful to have words other than “lockdown” to precisely talk about what did happen: some states closed some businesses; some did not. Some states mandated masks indoors, and some states enacted bills stating private businesses could NOT insist their customers wear masks indoors. Some counties discouraged travel, but no state, county, or city strongly enforced the restriction of people’s movement around the country. Americans were encouraged to stay home if they could, but no one was forced to.
If the entire world were a public pool, New Zealand and Vietnam would be hanging out in separate submarines while Californians tried to swim to the deep end to avoid the Texans, who are pissing in the shallow end and chugging beers to refill their bladders as quickly as possible.