Then divided the weekly deaths by each state's population and generated a "percent chance of death" chart. The "excess deaths due to covid" is effectively the same between FL and CA. States like NY had spikes earlier in the year. When added all together to make a US composite data set that the CDC shows (BTW with different sums for some reason, same web site), there are two bumps - NOT a second wave, but a wave in secondary states, like FL and CA.
Also, integrating the increased area of the 2020 curve over 2019 shows a higher spike during the cold/flu season, but nowhere near 200+ K that every media outlet keeps parroting, more like 100 K, which is not worse than a bad flu season and not as bad as SARS was.
In response to this thread:
https://thedonald.win/p/11R4XA0C4D/california-locked-down-since-mar/c/
I downloaded the CDC data: https://data.cdc.gov/NCHS/Weekly-Counts-of-Deaths-by-State-and-Select-Causes/muzy-jte6
Then divided the weekly deaths by each state's population and generated a "percent chance of death" chart. The "excess deaths due to covid" is effectively the same between FL and CA. States like NY had spikes earlier in the year. When added all together to make a US composite data set that the CDC shows (BTW with different sums for some reason, same web site), there are two bumps - NOT a second wave, but a wave in secondary states, like FL and CA.
Also, integrating the increased area of the 2020 curve over 2019 shows a higher spike during the cold/flu season, but nowhere near 200+ K that every media outlet keeps parroting, more like 100 K, which is not worse than a bad flu season and not as bad as SARS was.
So basically, Covid counts are tabulated by Dominion? lol