BearGoggles said:
Quote:
I can't access the article because its behind a paywall. How are "reported cases" defined? Because if its just a gross number, then the metric is largely irrelevant - much if not most of the increase will be attributable to increased testing.
The better metric is deaths/hospitalizations - which trails by several weeks - and in any event appears to be on the decline.
Since you (and Newsom) blame conservatives for being hypocrites for resisting questionable proclamations (not "laws" as you said) they find unconstitutional or illegal, maybe someone could ask Newsom on what basis he issued gay marriage licenses in 2004? And on what basis sanctuary cities ignore and actively thwart federal laws? And maybe you could answer how that's different than what "conservatives" and many other people are doing now? If conservatives are ignoring the regulations (not because they believe their "inconvenient" but because they feel their illegal/unconstitutional), I'm pretty sure I know where they got the idea that was ok - Newsom's chickens are coming home. The lesson in this is that hypocrisy is found on all political fronts.
And for the record, I think people who violate the SIP regulations should pay the legal consequences, whatever those are. Charge/cite them and let the courts sort it out.
Have any of the bay area counties articulated a factual basis (rational or not) for refusing to move to stage 2? I'm open to the possibility there is a legitimate reason, but I haven't heard it. For example, I heard Sonoma has extended and has virtually no covid.
Why are you talking about gay marriage licenses from 2004 during a pandemic in 2020? Republicans have been proclaiming themselves the part of the rule of law for decades so I'm not sure why your whataboutism is relative. How long have you been criticizing democrats and their activist judges, etc.? Turns out, to no one's surprise, it was just posturing. I'm glad that you think the people who violate regulations should pay the legal consequences because that's not universally held by conservatives politicians. See the Lt. Gov of Texas actively working against the state's avowed interests.
Fortunately most conservatives civilians, like most Americans of all persuasions (outside right wing extremists), are paying attention to the public health crisis and are acting in their own best interests, even if their elected officials are acting against them. Here's another graphic from a
NYT article I linked previously on point:

To your question regarding the data I cited previously, I didn't think SF Gate had paywalled their COVID map but here is some more detail behind the case counts.
Sources: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, California Department of Public Health and county public health departments, Chronicle reporting
The seven-day trailing average represents the average number of cases or deaths reported each day over the weeklong span ending on the given day. It is used to account for daily variances in reporting and large one-off changes in daily counts, such as April 20 when nearly 1,500 cases were reported in L.A. County as the result of a lab clearing a large backlog. Some counties do not provide daily updates which, combined with daily variances in the number of tests given, could result in randomly higher or lower counts for daily reported cases.