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At one point, the theory of “flattening the curve” was ubiquitous. The basic concept was that lockdowns could slow the spread of coronavirus, and this was of great importance since, as we were told at the time, “We can’t stop this virus.” The narrative went that if the virus were to spread unchecked, hospitals would be overwhelmed and both people with coronavirus and those needing medical attention for other ailments would die from the lack of access to care.

It all made sense. To a certain extent, it still does. Most graphics depicting flattening the curve, such as in The New York Times, showed two curves. Typically, the first was associated with no lockdowns that peaked well above the capacity of the health-care system, while the second, “flattened” curve was associated with lockdowns with its peak hovering near capacity. The areas under each curve, representing the total number of Covid-19 infections, were roughly equal.

Flattening the curve made two assumptions. First, it assumed that a certain amount of deaths and infections were inevitable and the best we could do was delay the process. No one promoting flattening the curve talked of stopping the disease; there were no graphs showing that if we locked down, infections would go straight to zero.

Second, flattening the curve was always shown with the same level of flattening: just enough to not overwhelm the health-care system. This was a tacit admission that flattening the curve would be painful and that it would not be beneficial to flatten the curve beyond the level needed to prevent overwhelming the healthcare system.

Flattening the curve was the bait. Next came the switch.

It didn’t take long for the “flattening the curve” storyline to be abandoned. For example, California had more than 26,000 hospital beds available for coronavirus patients, but they locked down when they had about 200 coronavirus hospitalizations on March 20. That was less than 1 percent of their coronavirus hospital capacity. It quickly became clear that the California hospital system was not under threat, yet the lockdowns remained and “flatten the curve” was abandoned in favor of “suppress at all costs.”

read more:

https://thefederalist.com/2020/06/29/flattening-the-curve-has-become-a-massive-bait-and-switch/

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  • Bait and switch u bet and it is still on.  Lk yesterday in NYC LGBTQ whatever were out and about marching while we are in phase whatever and only allowed 4 people in an elevator. MAD YET boy I pray many of us are cause Trump has to win.  period.  

    This virus needs us to get out open our businesses and tell THE PEOPLE WE ELECT U R GOING TO BE FIRED.   WE ARE THE GOVERNMENT ACCORDING TO THE CONSTITUTION AND U DO NOT CONTROL MY LIFE.  They have this virus was their tkt to socialism.  This is the country they want so move to one.  

    Flatten the curve kiss my u know what.  curve that

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