Emily Lake
Might be a replicant
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2014
- Messages
- 8,544
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- It's a desert out there
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- Agenderist
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- Atheist
And why would you think that statistics for the state that is 97% would yield optimistic estimates for the BIPOC (3%) population?
Except your 2) is an assumption not a fact.My point was that 1) prioritizing vaccines on the basis of vulnerability, even if using a proxy variable like race, is an eminently reasonable thing to do and 2) pretty much useless in Vermont where NONE of the populations were particularly vulnerable with respect the the variances seen across the US as a whole.
But that doesn't hold true in Vermont.
pretty much useless in Vermont where NONE of the populations were particularly vulnerable
Pardon me, but what makes you an expert on the circumstances of BIPOC, in Vermont, at the depths of the C19 recession? Such an expert that you can mind read the health department authorities, and decide that they're virtue signalling?
The problem is that you're arguing against success. Whatever failures you think they have, they're way out in the lead in vaccination rates. Given that demonstrable data, somebody is gonna have to come up with some serious data demonstrating that their policy was a mistake before I will take that claim seriously.
Tom
Egads. Whatever. If it makes you feel all fuzzy inside to assume that Vermont's lead in vaccination rates is all a result of them prioritizing all 20,000 of the BIPOC residents of that state, then jump to it. I'm sure it has nothing at all to do with it being a geographically small area with the second lowest population in the US. Nope. It's totally because they prioritized BIPOC people.
