Anyone that advises (or mandates) that we socially isolate and clothe our healthy immune population is LOGICALLY IGNORANT -- doing so greatly INCREASES THE DEATHS to our vulnerable population, and PERPETUATES the further mutations of these killer mosquitos. — Roger Gregoire
It is very rare for a healthy immune person to replicate and spread the virus. — Roger Gregoire
Firstly, mosquitoes (and viruses) don't necessarily stand still in a room.The analogy between the woman in the room with a mosquito and her in a room with a virus is, to put it kindly, flawed. By which I mean stupid. If there were viruses in the room, they would be spread evenly throughout the room. Bringing someone else into the room, clothed or naked, would have no effect on the likelihood of the woman being exposed. — T Clark
Bringing someone in from outside probably increases the chances that there will be more viruses, which will raise the probability of exposure. The more people we let in, the greater the probability. — T Clark
T Clark, check the science. It is extremely rare for the young (immune) man to replicate and cough up (or "bring in") mosquitoes into the room. — Roger Gregoire
The risk to the vulnerable woman is significantly LESS with the unclothed young man in the room, than without him. — Roger Gregoire
In evolutionary biology, a spandrel is a phenotypic trait that is a byproduct of the evolution of some other characteristic, rather than a direct product of adaptive selection. — Wikipedia
"Follow the LOGIC" ...not the Bad Science (the science that disregards logic). — Roger Gregoire
Science tells us that the healthier/stronger one's immune system, the less likely the replication (and subsequent spreading). — Roger Gregoire
if we want to stop these deadly mosquitos once-and-for-all, then, more importantly than vaccinations, we must allow healthy people to freely socialize un-clothed, or else the mosquitos will ultimately win the battle of "survival-of-the-fittest". — Roger Gregoire
Which 'science' would this be? The one you just instructed us to ignore? — Isaac
The simple math is -- the more people sharing a viral load, the less individual risk per person. The more healthy unmasked immune people surrounding a vulnerable person, the proportionally safer she becomes. — Roger Gregoire
The more healthy unmasked immune people surrounding a vulnerable person, the proportionally safer she becomes. — Roger Gregoire
The replies are asking about the behavior of the mosquito compared with the behavior of the virus. You should try to explain this, as this is what they're asking.CONCLUSION: If we wish to save ourselves, then we need to "Follow the LOGIC" ...not the Bad Science (the science that disregards logic). — Roger Gregoire
There's bad logic too, or is the moon really made of green cheese.If we wish to save ourselves, then we need to "Follow the LOGIC" ...not the Bad Science — Roger Gregoire
The number of mosquitoes (or viral particles) is irrelevant. Doubling the number of people within a given environment cuts the risk in half to any individual within that environment. Math is math regardless of the size of the number.If we were talking about mosquitos, and if a mosquitos behaved the way viruses do, and if mosquitos could only bite one person, perhaps you would be right. But viruses do not behave like mosquitos and you will never find one virus in a room.
So, show us some evidence. I've asked before. Several other people have too. Put up or shut up. Your so-called "simple math" is wrong. — T Clark
The number of mosquitoes (or viral particles) is irrelevant. Doubling the number of people within a given environment cuts the risk in half to any individual within that environment. — Roger Gregoire
In that case, @Roger Gregoire's analogy is misplaced as he mistakes the mosquito's search for a host before it lands on the host as similar to how a virus seeks its host before it enters the lungs, etc of the host. I stand corrected.This is not correct. Viruses are not self-propelled. They move passively with the substance they are attached to, e.g. droplets of moisture from the lungs. — T Clark
It works if we're only talking about the mosquito seeking a host. But virus behaves differently.The odds/risk of her getting bit have now instantly reduced 10 fold! — Roger Gregoire
I don't think the spread of the virus is a zero-sum game -- such as, some could take the risk so others could be safer. If the virus's search for a host begins externally, like the mosquito flying around searching for another animal to bite, your findings could work.ANSWER: The logical (mathematical/statistical) answer is that she would be TEN TIMES MORE SAFE because he is now taking on a disproportionate share of the risk. The odds/risk of her getting bit have now instantly reduced 10 fold! — Roger Gregoire
The number of mosquitoes (or viral particles) is irrelevant. Doubling the number of people within a given environment cuts the risk in half to any individual within that environment. Math is math regardless of the size of the number. — Roger Gregoire
Instead of a mosquito, imagine there is a mad killer with a gun loaded with one bullet, in this room with the woman. If the killer is intent on killing (shooting) someone, then the woman is in grave danger. ...agreed?
Now, if another person enters into the room, is the woman now safer (with a killer with one bullet), or less safe? How about if 100 people enter this room, is the woman more safe or less safe?
The math and logic (in determining risk) is very simple and straightforward. Take the number of bullets and divide it by the number of people in the room to ascertain the risk assessment to any individual in the room.
For example, if you double the number of people, you cut the individual risk in half. ...agreed? — Roger Gregoire
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