so you agree with his maths but disgaree with the outcome of the calculations??
A calculation is merely a list of process/instruction.
For example the brief outline I posted earlier is merely an answer to a numerical question. It doesn’t necessarily tell you how or why or what you should do. We as individuals derive that ourselves.
So for example I showed the mortality rate declining. To keep it simple, people could then conclude different reasons for why that is:
A) masks work
B) jabbing people as many times as possible works
C) viruses over time become less lethal but more transmissible
Depending on what people conclude they then create a plan of what we need to do;
A) wear more masks more often and forever
B) jab the shit out of adults, kids, animals, vehicles
C) put those most likely to be severely impacted under special restrictions to wait out the storm
So while the data is exactly the same, we can begin to understand why people reach vastly different conclusions. It isn’t always the maths it’s how our brains translate the answer into perspective.