Oh really, now? You never said anything of that kind? Your
exact words: "This is probably the least deadly pandemic ever. Also, the cure is literally just Vitamin D!!!", immediately followed by you claiming that the mortality rate was massively inflated, and that our attempts to slow the spread of the disease were a massive overreaction. This was
followed shortly by you once again trying to claim that not only was Vitamin D the obvious cure, but that you'd
always known it and therefore you were ahead of the curve. "I always thought Vitamin D was the key ever since those stats of like 90% of deaths were people with deficiency... I don't know why the media has never been on top of these kind of things during the entire pandemic, they could've helped save thousands of lives too." Gee, those sure sound like those arguments you just claimed to have never made, don't they?
Note that even then people were calling you out on pushing a bullshit argument predicated on your utter failure to understand the sources you mistakenly believed supported your uninformed opinion, resulting in you egregiously misrepresenting them. Three years later,
you are still doing that. And by all appearances you don't give the slightest fuck, because you never actually read the damn things and only see them as worth mentioning when somebody feeds you a soundbite that you think validates your opinion. You've never even cared enough to check the actual papers to be sure they'd been represented to you correctly, and then you have the gall to lie about it and accuse the people pointing out your error of
clearly not reading the papers because they dared to tell you that you were wrong!
Glad you asked. That's actually a great example
against your point. The answer is because, per usual, your premise is built on a false premise derived from your ignorance. The two are not the same.
Testicular Cancer affects 1 in 250 biological males, representing about 0.5% of new cancer cases. The five year prognosis is 95% survival, and testicular cancer accounts for 0.1% of cancer fatalities.
Breast Cancer affects 1 in 8 biological females, representing a whopping 15% of new cancer cases. The five year prognosis is 90% survival, and breast cancer accounts for 7.1% of cancer fatalities.
Once again, you appear to be doing little more than looking at the 5-year outlook and thinking "90% and 95% is practically the same, so why are we more concerned about one than the other?" And once again that's an argument that you have to squint
really hard to make, to the point of functionally quote mining. So let's make this a bit less abstract. As a point of direct comparison, last year in the United States, there were 9,910 new cases of Testicular Cancer, and it killed 460 people. Meanwhile, there were 287,850 new cases of Breast Cancer, and it killed 43,250 people.
1 in 8 women vs. 1 in 250 men. 287,850 vs 9,910 new cases. 43,250 vs 460 deaths. While on an individual level, the prognosis of both are roughly equivalent
if you catch them soon enough, the fact of the matter is that Breast Cancer occurs at
30 times the frequency of Testicular Cancer, and kills
94 times as many people.
That's why we make so much more of a big deal about Breast Cancer than Testicular Cancer. To do so does not make light of Testicular Cancer (for goodness sake, your doctor probably checks for it every time you have a physical, and you're supposed to perform a self-exam monthly), it's just an acknowledgement that
even with all of our efforts to raise awareness about it and ensure early testing, Breast Cancer
still affects and kills
many more people than Testicular Cancer does. This is rather like how I've been explaining to you how concerns about Covid don't focus purely on its raw lethality, and instead is based on a synthesis of multiple factors - including both prognosis
and how many people can be expected to be affected by it - and what that synthesis of factors translates to for the population at large. Point of fact, the exact same criticism applies: You're trying to make a ceteris paribus argument when ceteris paribus does not apply.
--
I'm going to be blunt here Phoenix. For
three years now, you've done precious little in these threads other than trying to downplay covid - and as recently as the last few pages trying to argue that it's less dangerous
than the average flu season - all because, like any other conspiracy theorist, you want to think you're clever. And don't lie to my face again and pretend that isn't exactly what this is. For
three years now, people with more relevant experience than you have been telling you that your takes are ridiculous, misrepresent what you're claiming to reference, and are in no uncertain terms
painfully stupid, and you simply refuse to hear it.
Medical professionals have been telling you that you have not understood the data you're citing and that your medical takes have been so uninformed as to be borderline bizarre. Data analysts have been calling you out on bastardizing the papers you've been touting, flat out misrepresenting their results, and generally failing to understand the scope, limitations, and
actual conclusions of the data you've posted. The general pattern we've been seeing is that, when you make a claim, someone else who actually has an education and background in the subject tells you that you are
very clearly talking out of your ass and are coming to downright
absurd conclusions that are in no way reflected in the data you're trying to claim supports your ignorant opinions.
And yet rather than doing the smart thing and acknowledging that - as this is outside your wheelhouse - there might very well be some gaps in your knowledge and you might have run your mouth off, you've instead (almost nonstop for three years running) consistently done the
pretentious thing and doubled down, insisting that you know better than the professionals telling you that your claims are so removed from reality as to make your insistence upon them
actively insulting. You just turn around and say that because you
skimmed something (usually a youtube video or an editorial) that [you
think] agrees with you, that means that you're more informed than they are. You aren't being clever, you're just acting like all those 9/11 "Truthers" who condescended to everyone else that the World Trade Center's collapse could only be explained by a controlled demolition because - like yourself - they thought that watching a youtube video made them experts on the topic.
Your stubborn pride is blinding you to the self-evident fact that the people with backgrounds in medicine and biology might just have a better understanding of both virology
and the sources you're bastardizing than an IT professional like yourself would, or that people with a background in research, data collection, and analytics might know more about conducting, reading, and interpreting studies than you do, to say nothing of having a better grasp of the strengths, weaknesses, and utility of different forms of data. You're still trying to insist that their disagreement with you (which you attempt to mask as disagreement with the sources
that you've been repeatedly told do not say what you claim) is necessarily absurd and that therefore their disagreement with you means that they must be wrong.
Your performance has been little but childish pretentiousness, trying to pass yourself off as more informed on the topic than the relevant professionals who you are condescending to. You're not a debater, you're a bullshitter, and a sub-par one at that.
You say that X paper says <outlandish claim>. We read it, and point out that it says nothing remotely resembling what you claim. You respond "nuh-uh" and pull up the out-of-context quote that you were fed and then - in the height of hypocrisy - declare that we must not have read the paper. We explain the paper in depth, directly cite and explain how the results differ from what you claim, explain the methodology they employed, note how your claim goes beyond the scope and limitations of the study, and how
none of it aligns with the conclusions you're attributing to the paper. You say that's obviously wrong and doesn't count because you found a youtuber or editorial that told you otherwise and therefore declare that if we had
actually read the paper we'd agree with you. We
again point out that it very clearly doesn't say what you're claiming, and you keep stonewalling, say"nuh-uh" again and repeat the prior steps, before finally claiming that none of that matters and that the paper (or more accurately, the conclusion you're
falsely attributing to it) is still better than any study that disagrees with the conclusion you're pushing, and that we should just take your conclusion as a given anyways.
That's not arguing based on the data, that's just being a stonewalling contrarian. By all indications, you never so much as glanced at the actual studies that you demand we accept as evidence of your claims, and you
certainly have not understood them. You only name drop them and falsely credit your uninformed opinions to them in an effort to give your ignorant positions an illusion of credibility. It amounts to little more than you claiming "see, this researcher/study agrees with me", and then refusing to accept it when everyone else explains - often at length
and repeatedly - how and why that the studies
do not say anything remotely resembling what you claim.
And frankly, at this point I see no purpose in further wasting my time with you when you can't even be bothered to so much as read your own sources, much less argue in good faith. You don't outargue people, you just outlast them through the sheer obstinacy of your willful ignorance and the frustration that inspires. Good day. I would appreciate it if you grew up before we speak again.