EDIT: This isn't a pro-conspiracy post. It's something I noticed that I'm trying to understand and evaluate.
I'm looking at
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#nav-todayLooking at the global statistics for COVID-19, they just don't make sense. Presumably, about as many people in the world are getting infected per day as they ever have been. We have 1,019,018 total cases, globally, and only 3,953 new cases on the last reported day.
1019018/3953 = ~257.78
Let that sink in. With the infection rate today, it would have taken about 258 days at the same rate to get where we are today, globally (if you just look at the USA, it's even more days). How did we get so many total infections, with so few new cases per day?
The first COVID-19 case was said to have been discovered in November.
The first reported case in the USA was 20 Jan 2020.
245373/496 = ~494.7
It would have taken about 495 days of new reported infections at the current rate to have gotten to where we are today, in the USA. As far as I've seen, new infections haven't been a terrible lot higher per day at any point, even if they have been higher.
We've got the same issue with total deaths compared to daily new deaths reported.
To get the number of deaths in the USA we have now, we would have had to have had an average of 83.5 deaths per day (since January 20th), but we only had 25 on the last reported day, which is presumably the most deaths we've had so far in a day.
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