No I don't, the article you posted references studies without even describing them at all. The only non-correlational covid mask data I've seen is the Danish study.
They were cited. Maybe you should read them.
Get off your fucking high horse. You've continually given me shit studies to look at from HCQ to ivermectin. You continually reference a bullshit HCQ all-cause mortality number that is full of bias. You told me a ~200 person study is "iffy",
Because you don't read or understand.
I said a 200 person study
on mortality [to covid-19] is "iffy": becausethere will be so few deaths it is hard to get meaningful statistical power for analysis. But mortality was not the primary metric of that paper, only a secondary one; it is in fact a well-powered study for its primary metric. It's not just that you didn't read that paper or didn't understand it, it's that even when I explained this to you about what it was actually doing, you just ignored that because you were too happy with yourself that you thought you had a "gotcha" to throw back at me. As you are stil doing.
Contextually here, at the same time, you were arguing for HCQ using studies on mortality that actually had even smaller cohorts: which you were evidently unaware of, because you didn't read or understand. You'd argue a study with 5000 was better, despite the fact some of these didn't really look at 5000 people in the way you thought they did and/or were vastly inferior methodologies, because you don't read or understand. And all you keep coming back at me with is that some study I mentioned with 200 people is shit, which is an opinion based upon the sum total of you not reading or understanding.
You could try learning something. But you're not interested in learning and developing understanding, you want to defend the conclusion you've already decided and don't like it when people present reasons it might be wrong. As far as I am concerned, this is tantamount to gratuitous ignorance, and doesn't deserve respect.
You keep citing that covid immunity being long lasting was a 50/50 chance when there is not a single bit of legit data that even pointed to it being short-lived.
There was "no legitimate" data
period. The only way you can truly know whether immunity lasts 6 months, or 1 year, or 5 years, or 10 years, is to wait that long and see whether it does.
The closest we can get before then is to consider what happens to other viruses, and what the immunity is like for them. And we know immunity to some diseases is a matter of months, others years, others lifelong. It may be variable by strength of initial infection, and according to the individual, and so on. So, you were guessing. The fact you can cherry pick the guesses of people who also thought it would be long-lasting doesn't make it any less a guess or you any cleverer.
There was never any legit bit of science that pointed to variants escaping immunity either.
There was no "legit" data
period. The only way you can know whether immunity would also catch variants is to wait until it happens (or not). As it is, we know that people's immunity to variants tends to be lower, whether their immunity comes from infection by earlier variants or with the vaccines: which totally makes sense to anyone who understands how it all works. So you were guessing. And your ability to cherry pick the guesses of people who also thought it would work on variants doesn't make it any less a guess.
Never mind it's a stupid claim for anyone who knows what's going on. The level of immunity is always likely to relate to the similarity of the variant, so the question is really how different is the variant? With ongoing viral evolution, there is a very decent chance we will end up with variants or whole new strains where people's immunity is sufficiently low that we get a new mini-pandemic. (This is a reason we have sporadic flu surges.) Also why people urge a global vaccine rollout ASAP, because the faster we squash it now, the lower the chance of breeding such new variants/strains in the future.
I can look at data better than you it seems
It's a bit like how people say that a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. You have very little information, from which you construct a delusion of competence on the odd occasion one of your guesses turns out right.
Yeah, you can totally look at data properly yet I don't even recall a single major issue that you were even right about, you're even wrong in hindsight like a 50/50 chance covid immunity could be short-lived, it's not a coin flip.
You see, you're so incompetent at reading and understanding, you don't even have my position right. I disagreed with many of your presumptious assertions on the grounds they were unknowns or generally lacked sufficient evidence. That is not the same as asserting the opposite view to you.