Not really, I listed why mortality rate alone can be very flawed way to compare two places. Also, before vaccines were widely available when covid measures were the most important,
California's deaths per capita was higher than Florida. That obviously can't be true if "the science" was the actually the science as Florida gave "the science" a big ass middle finger and performed better.
Again, you're oversimplifying a lot things: the impact of covid is affected by a lot more things than government policy, and you are inconsistent in how you want to treat evidence. Remember you posted that Vinay Prasad video where he attacks a paper for not covering all the bases in a comparison of two places? One thing you could learn from that is the principle that simple comparisons often do tend to be very flawed. But you haven't learnt anything, you're just grabbing what suits you.
I gave a better method for comparison and you'd prefer not to use it because you don't like the results and they don't fit your preferred narrative.
No, that's not quite true. I'm questioning selecting out two states under a specific (and limited) analysis, which you appear to be doing for no coherent logic other than that they happen to flatter your prejudices. Again, I point out that other states which had similarly lax regulations like Florida had very, very poor outcomes. Why not talk about them?
He's a very good scientist and knows when there's holes in the methods that you can drive semi truck through.
...and yet he co-authored at least one covid paper with very significant flaws.
medice, cura te ipsum.
The one discussion video in Florida with Bhattacharya and other prominent scientists was taken off Youtube due to "misinformation". You've yet to make an argument on way X is wrong or worse than Y.
That's because I believe a lot of it is unknown. And good scientist that I am, if I don't think there's sufficient evidence to make a strong claim, I don't. Although I'd be absolutely clear about one thing though: lockdowns saved a lot of lives.
DeSantis implemented major restrictions on visitation to assisted living facilities (that lasted basically a full year) and after there were just a handful of cases, he forbid covid positive patients from going to assisted living facilities.
He did that long before the Great Barrington Declaration, though, didn't he? And let's face it, that doesn't make him particular special either, as a great deal other jurisdictions around the world took that measure. And even where governments hadn't, individual facilities took that step on their own.
Not that I have any great inclination to stick up for Cuomo as he made a serious misjudgement, but I would point out in at least some mitigation that NY's hospitals were flooded and they urgently needed to free up space.
California has the 45th biggest elderly population while Florida has the 2 biggest elderly population, yet Florida had a better straight-up mortality rate than California in the 1st year of the pandemic.
Again, you're just rigging the argument here. Covid struck in waves, and the waves hit different places at different times with different intensity. So you can cheat by selecting out a particularly helpful time point... and you are.
If you were to use end 2020, California was doing vastly better than Florida. California then takes heavy losses in early 2021 where Florida gets off quite lightly, but then in late 2021, Florida does very badly where California does not. I really don't think those things are all about policy.