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> please don't generalize

I don't, I specifically point exactly against the generalization:

> I am aware that many decisions are up to the regional institutions there, and that's why generalizing and equalizing any statement to whole Germany is by definition wrong.

and additionally give an example of one older affair where exactly the same prejudices that I mentioned resulted in measurable consequences.

> "Spain consequently expressed anger about having its produce linked with the deadly E. coli outbreak, which cost Spanish exporters US$200 million per week"

Is there anything that you dispute in what I've written?

If you want me to additionally support my claim that there was downplaying of the seriousness of the coronavirus epidemics, I have also:

"Of course, people will still die, but I lean out of the window and say: It could well be that in 2020 we won't have more deaths than in any other year."

https://www.faz.net/aktuell/gesellschaft/gesundheit/coronavi...

"Virologe Hendrik Streeck : „Wir haben neue Symptome entdeckt“ 16.03.2020"

A virologist, less than 2 weeks ago. Two doctors openly downplaying is already a symptom to me. I can imagine that slipping to the educated politicians, but the doctors...

Regarding which deaths are reported Covid-19 in Germany, my initial observation, please see other comments in this whole topics, e.g:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22720011

or

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22719448

linking to the Guardian explaining:

"Unlike in Italy, there is currently no widespread postmortem testing for the novel coronavirus in Germany. The RKI says those who were not tested for Covid-19 in their lifetime but are suspected to have been infected with the virus “can” be tested after death, but in Germany’s decentralised health system this is not yet a routine practice."

As I also already mentioned, Germany is big with a lot of local policies which aren't unified across the federation, so let me stress it again, all that should be taken with grain of salt.

EDIT: it also appears to me that even the "debunking" of that first doctor guy didn't even try to address that he's misusing prejudices against "the southern people" etc. I haven't tied to analyze the "debunking" too carefully (not enough time) but my general impression is "oh, it's too early to tell if he is right."



What I'm saying is that this particular explanation for the apparent difference in fatality ratios of Coronavirus infections is a fringe one, and it's not right to point to that as an example of sentiment in Germany in general.

I'm not disputing any of the other things that you wrote. Distancing started in Germany on March 12, at that point it was just a legally non-binding recommendation, it became legally binding on March 16. The timing is similar to what happened in many other European countries with the exception of Italy.

Based on that, it's fair to say that the seriousness was downplayed initially, but that is pretty much universal. We knew this was going to be a global problem by mid February at the very latest.




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