Holding our belief to the end... is it right ?

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Peter8519, Nov 16, 2020.

  1. Peter8519

    Peter8519

    First and foremost, we must accept that our knowledge is limited and our belief in certain facts could be wrong. Whatever wrong could be right and whatever right could be wrong, until it could be proven beyond reasonable doubt. (But in equity trading, it's just a hunch and it couldn't be proven beyond reasonable doubt as it is not science. Because buy and sell sides are often wrong.)

    Not sure if this is true, if it's is... it's sad.

     
    777 likes this.
  2. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    [​IMG]
     
  3. Ricter

    Ricter

    I believe it. It's fear that brought them into the Trump cult in the first place, so adding more fear is not going to help.
     
    Cuddles likes this.
  4. Obama did create a lot of fear. Especially for cops. Seems they were hunted a lot when he was Prez.
     
    elderado likes this.
  5. Amun Ra

    Amun Ra

    Hate to break up your gaslighting party, but the majority of people that get covid live in big cities. The majority of people that live in big cities are democrats which means the majority of people that get covid are democrats which means these people that are saying covid isn't real by all odds are probably democrats.
     
  6. Ricter

    Ricter

    The majority of people live in big cities, dumfuk.
     
    Cuddles likes this.
  7. A pretty close relative of mine who is 96 years old recently got COVID and survived. She just got really weak that was all. Pretty amazing.
     
  8. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Rural Americans dying at nearly 3.5 times the rate of urban Americans, CDC data shows
    https://edition.cnn.com/world/live-...16-20-intl/h_111e467dc89f2d2783fe466f684b5739

    As coronavirus cases and hospitalizations continue to rise, rural areas are being hit the hardest. According to data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, rural Americans are dying at rates 3.45 times higher than the death rates of Americans living in metropolitan areas.

    As of Nov. 13, according to the CDC’s data, the seven-day death rate per 100,000 people for Americans living in large metro areas is 0.2, while in rural areas it is 0.69. The national average seven-day death rate is 0.33.

    In addition, the rate of new cases in rural areas is also higher than in urban areas. The rates of new cases in rural areas is 57 for every 100,000 people, a rate that is 1.7 times that of those who live in large, metropolitan areas.
     
    Last edited: Nov 16, 2020
  9. Amun Ra

    Amun Ra

    Oh really? I said big city which means anything over a population of 1 million, but lets just pretend you can't read or comprehend English for a minute and we use the standard definition of a city which is anything over 300k people. There are 66 cities in the US with a population of over 300k. That equals just UNDER 56 million people. So only 17% of the population live in cities. Even less in "Big" cities. Don't you feel stupid now? U got rekt, boi.

    [​IMG]
     
  10. Amun Ra

    Amun Ra


    Source is from CNN. No link to CDC data. and no info on how the data was calculated.
     
    #10     Nov 16, 2020