The intent once again is to compare the timeline from May 11th to May 25th once the 14 day period has passed. As clearly seen on the two charts; the first one you posted showed the trend going down from May 11th to May 25th due to the delayed data in Florida. The revised chart later show the data trend from May 11th to May 25th basically flat with a slight downtrend at best. For example -- the earlier chart show 2 deaths on May 24th while the second chart shows 35. As stated earlier... there is not any type of drastic decline of COVID cases or deaths in Florida or Georgia that the governors are trying to project.
Now that they have been open where is the decline that the governor has been promoting. You don't even want to bring up CASES which are INCREASING https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/96dd742462124fa0b38ddedb9b25e429
Yeah, because testing is increasing. Why is this a surprising fact? Test more, more positive tests. Through 5/31.
So please present the chart of the number of tests per day to demonstrate your point. The number of tests in Florida per day has not been rising much over the past two weeks.
So as your chart notes --- it is only data for May. No data for June. https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/96dd742462124fa0b38ddedb9b25e429 See the Florida testing tab.
Where do you think I got the chart from? I'm using the same source. Its a week delayed. But you think the testing suddenly dropped off a cliff in the last week or something? We said two weeks ago that we'd come back to see all the deaths now that we opened up. Where are they? Or do we need to come back again in two weeks? If you want, I can put another note in my calendar. I don't mind. We will either see all the deaths you said were coming or we won't, and you'll continue to make excuses.
Let's take a look at Florida testing from their most recent daily report.. at best the average testing is flat over the past two weeks and not rising. http://ww11.doh.state.fl.us/comm/_partners/action/report_archive/state/state_reports_20200608.pdf
So you're saying the source you originally provided (that I also provided) is wrong? Or you just like this source better? And the week of 6/1 (on your second source) looks considerably higher than the norm in the number of tests. Actually, back of the napkin math shows the second week at about 9200 more people tested per day. Still doesn't explain where all the dead people are. And that's the point.