If you want a "control" against which to evaluate the forced government interventions, I would suggest Arizona. We are right next door to SoCal, we have about the same demographics and (this time of year) similar climate.
My observation is that, since about June, Arizona and California have been on opposite ends of the government COVID mandate scale. While CA continues to lock up tighter and tighter, AZ is mostly open for business.
Schools are open in-person. Our large colleges have in-person classes. Our restaurants and bars are all open for indoor dining -- some at reduced capacity, but some at full capacity. We all wear masks in the Walmart but pretty much no one wears a mask walking outdoors.
A wave of snowbirds (though fewer than usual) arrived from all over the country in October and November. As states like NY block their borders to fellow Americans, AZ has never done so (a LOT of new yorkers showed up here in April and May)
New arrivals and visitors marvel at how little COVID seems to affect business as usual in AZ (as compared to their states). I go to my gym and work out, walk the neighborhood and breathe the air freely, and sit at bars for drinks and dinner from time to time.
This does not mean I don't have friends in hiding. I know a number of people who have self-isolated in fear of the virus, sometimes IMO rationally (my 86-year-old mother in law) and sometimes less so. But that his the cool thing about a free society --
if individuals wish to stay home and not go out or see anyone in person for 9 months, they may do so (and BTW, thank capitalism for all the great services that allow one to live this way!) But in AZ those of us who do not want to live that way don't have to.
The percent of Americans aged 45-64 (my bracket) who have perished with (not just from) COVID is 0.06% (49K/81.5MM). At my age, I have probably 20 good years left. Am I willing to give up a whole year, or 5% of my enjoyable remaining live, to avoid a 0.06% chance of death?
Others think about the risk differently. Fine. Again, that is the wonderful feature of individual rights and liberty in a free society -- each person can make their own individual choices based on their own perceptions of risk and value
But in many places, like CA, such traditional American views of liberty have been abandoned. In 2020, the choices one can make are limited to only those that the most frightened and risk-adverse are willing to let one make.
Up until recently, those of us who live in places like AZ have been shamed for such attitudes, and our COVID rates have been treated as a scarlet A marking us for our wonton behavior. We were getting what we deserved, and worse we were bringing retribution down on the righteous
It is amazing how history repeats itself -- jews were persecuted and killed during the Black Death for the same reason, that their apostasy was bringing the disease down on the believers.
But to some extent, this situation is finally turning. It is becoming increasingly clear that much of the "science" behind lockdowns and other NPI is actually just a cargo cult.

politico.com/news/2020/12/2…
Most of the "studies" in the media justifying lockdowns are crap. They take a hugely multivariable problem - demographics, density, climate & season, etc. and try to boil differences down to the result of politician's actions
This works only if you choose your data points carefully, and take North Dakota as it is experiencing its seasonal peak and compare it to NY after its peak or CA before its peak. But the bankruptcy of this is finally starting to show
It is going to turn out that costly political interventions were at best a rounding error on the numbers, and at worst are going to show up in other sorts of mortality in the coming months and years (eg unscreened cancer).
Absolutely unsurprisingly, if you read the article above, the response of CA officials boils down to "real lockdowns haven't been tried before." If only they had tougher enforcement and better compliance they would have worked. Right.
None of this is surprising because nearly the entire body of scientific research pre-2020 held that lockdowns once the infection takes hold are useless and/or counter-productive and that public mask wearing does little and can in some cases actually lead to disease spread.
And during 2020, almost the entire body of contact tracing studies has shown that the disease spreads in ways that public mask-wearing and business closures are virtually irrelevant. So we should be unsurprised when they don't work.
And the crappy science we get on TV! We see small bits of a complex process, like masks stopping projections of large droplets, but never studies of how the whole system performs, eg does mask-wearing actually lower transmission rates in real world situations?
I am not wishing death and disease on anyone. I have friends who have gotten COVID and it can be a nasty experience.
But our response to this thing has been simply insane, a result of moronic politicians following their crappy incentives to be seen as "doing something", and then defending and doubling down on that "something" rather than ever, ever admitting error
I am still behind the Great Barrington Declaration. In fact, I was ahead of that Oct 4 statement with a number of blog posts saying roughly the same thing in my own less sophisticated way
coyoteblog.com/coyote_blog/20…
We uselessly shut down a lot of people's businesses and now are trying to make up for that with several trillion dollars in spending spread across past and future stimulus bills. Why couldn't we remain open and spend a trillion or so instead on protecting the vulnerable?
I largely stand behind what I wrote way back in August.

coyoteblog.com/coyote_blog/20…

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More from @Coyoteblog

13 Dec
When I argue with folks on the failures of socialism, I tend to group these failures into three buckets. @boriquagato is getting at the third and probably least discussed of the three
Readers are probably tired of me repeating these, and I know there are others who are better at this who use different frameworks, but here is mine.

Socialism fails in practice, and will always fail (until we get to a Banks' Culture-like end to scarcity) for at least 3 reasons
1. Information: It is impossible for any group of humans (or even humans with powerful computers) to come close to the power of distributed, organic, bottom-up markets in coordinating human behavior to improve the sum of individuals' welfare [insert "I pencil" reference]
Read 25 tweets
11 Dec
As a reminder, prior to 2020, the Left critiqued the US hospital system for having TOO MANY beds, arguing that profit motive of hospitals was causing them to spend too much on capacity. See the study, for example, in the attached article which was typical
coyoteblog.com/coyote_blog/ca…
As I describe in the attached article, this belief drove the Left to support certificate of need processes (in many states like NY) that require government and often competitor(!) permission to expand capacity or add things like ICU beds or MRI machines

PLEASE don't tell me this makes no economic sense. I know that. A large number of the market "fixes" from the Left make no sense. In this case, the certificate of need (CON) and similar processes were totally and completely counter-productive
Read 7 tweets
10 Dec
We are getting our 15th day of rain in 2020 today. That is barely one day a month

But like the conundrum of Seattle having very high sales of sunglasses (the theory is sun is so intermittent that people lose them since last use), we have more than our fair share of floods here
Two reasons I know of

1. Even our open ground absorbs water about as well as does concrete. The runoff from even a small rain can be substantial

2. We don't bother building infrastructure that is used for 1 day a year. We have very few storm sewers, for example
We have weird systems where neighborhoods are built with one patch of ground that is a big depression. They put a park there, and then slope all the streets toward it so the rain is just captured in this big catch basin. My house even has one of my own in the backyard
Read 4 tweets
2 Dec
372 days since the idea was first broached, I closed my acquisition of my competitor, who wanted to ease towards his retirement.

As a result, we are now the largest company in an industry you've never heard of, privately operating over 400 public campgrounds and parks
It was quite a ride -- if you are thinking this is the sort of thing that banks fund, HAH! Banks laugh at companies like mine looking for cash flow loans. But we tapped into the growing number of minority private equity companies, funding us with debt plus a 20% equity stake
Over the coming weeks I will tell the whole story for folks who might be interested in the same journey, but at one point in time we were holding the deal together when we were entirely shut down in every location due to COVID lockdowns...
Read 14 tweets
30 Nov
One likely cause of differences in cost between US and European health care systems is seldom highlighted -- massive differences in licensing and required education requirements. @NiskanenCenter

niskanencenter.org/does-bargainin…
One rejoinder I always get to this is, "well, I can understand the over-licensing issue for some folks, but I sure don't want an unlicensed brain surgeon!"
But the always inevitable "brain surgery" retort just reinforces why government licensing is a failure. Let me put it to you this way -- if you needed brain surgery, would you be willing to accept any random government-licensed brain surgeon? My guess is the answer is no.
Read 6 tweets
30 Nov
It is amazing how hard this country works to forget this, even people my age who lived through it will now claim it never happened. If you are unfamiliar, you won't believe the insane accusations that were taken seriously.

I remember because I was on a jury in one such case
The whole mess was started with a young female baby sitter who saw another baby-sitter lauded on Oprah for identifying a (supposed) abuse situation, and very clearly dreamed of being on Oprah too.
We had all the usual elements, including a very young child who was put through all the crazy Janet-Reno-Patented recovered memory BS.

Fortunately, our case was near the end of the cycle and defense attorneys were ready to challenge this crap
Read 8 tweets

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