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'We're All in This Together': Dr Fauci Says World Has Failed India as Covid Cases Surge (theguardian.com) 339

Dr Anthony Fauci, the White House's chief medical adviser, has said countries have failed to unite to provide an adequate global response to prevent the "tragic" coronavirus outbreak from overwhelming India, and singled out wealthier nations for failing to provide equitable access to healthcare around the world. From a report: Speaking to Guardian Australia from the US, Fauci said the situation in India had highlighted global inequality. "The only way that you're going to adequately respond to a global pandemic is by having a global response, and a global response means equity throughout the world," Fauci said. "And that's something that, unfortunately, has not been accomplished. Often when you have diseases in which there is a limited amount of intervention, be it therapeutic or prevention, this is something that all the countries that are relatively rich countries or countries that have a higher income have to pay more attention to."

India recorded 360,960 new cases in the 24 hours to Wednesday morning according to health ministry data, another new daily global record. The ministry also said that India's total number of fatalities had passed 200,000 to stand at 201,187. The latest epidemiological update from the World Health Organization (WHO) issued on Tuesday said Covid-19 cases increased globally for the ninth consecutive week, with nearly 5.7m new cases reported. India accounts for the majority of cases, with 2,172,063 new cases reported in the past week -- a 52% increase.

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'We're All in This Together': Dr Fauci Says World Has Failed India as Covid Cases Surge

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @11:49AM (#61324326)

    If he had ever been to India, he'd know why they're struggling, and it has nothing to do with the rest of the world "failing" them.

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @01:44PM (#61324868) Homepage Journal

      I'm sure you know much more about it than he does.

    • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @03:22PM (#61325288) Homepage Journal
      I've kinda given this guy a pass for the most part....

      But WTF, does he NOT expect nations to take care of their own first before they give out help out outside nations?

      I have no problem with helping other countries. Hell, if you look at past track records of the US with catastrophic events, we are often the first people there helping (Hati and those fairly recent tsunamis that struck somewhere come to mind).

      But geez, like a family in troubled times, you take care of your own first and THEN help others.

      Our government is there to serve US first, not the world first.

      That is the job of every goverment, to serve the interests of their people first.

      It does look like vaccine demand is starting to come down a bit in the US, and so, why not start giving some of the astra Zeneca and J&J vaccines we're likely not to be using any time soon...I think Biden has already shipped a bunch of it there.

      But still, WTF Fauci....the US government (and any country's government) is there to serve its OWN people first, every time in every thing.

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        India is quite capable of manufacturing its own vaccine, they have some of the worlds largest vaccine manufacturers but has respected the patents that the American public paid for and gave to private industry. Likewise for a few other countries, who if given a license, could manufacturer their own.
        It seems that paying dividends is more important to some of these companies then saving lives. Considering how much the seed money for those patents came from public funds, the argument that they need to make a re

      • by getuid() ( 1305889 ) on Thursday April 29, 2021 @08:03AM (#61327296)

        I'll just leave this [nytimes.com] here. 37 fully vaccinated doctors sick, in intensive care. Youth, intrnsive care. 2 months old babies, intensive care.

        I think you're not fully aware what "we're in this together" means.

        I means that "taking care of my own first" is a losing move, because then the "others" lose. And when we either all win, or all lose, if the others lose, you also lose.

        Wait until India's variant hits a fully vaccinated US and doesn't stop.

      • by J-1000 ( 869558 )

        You're misrepresenting what was said.

        First, the headline:
        "Dr Fauci says WORLD has failed India as Covid cases surge"

        Then, Fauci's own quotes:
        "The only way that you’re going to adequately respond to a global pandemic is by having a global response, and a global response means equity throughout the world,"
        "The United States has really revved up their activity in helping out India we’re sending oxygen, remdesivir, personal protective equipment, a variety of other medications and soon we’ll b

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @11:52AM (#61324354)
    if you look at the graphs they were going along OK and then *blam*.

    Did they get hit by a new variant or something? Was the gov't just lying all along? Did they just get lax? I know they're allowing their various religious activities (e.g. the big pilgrimages) again.

    Something drastic changed. If you look at the graphs it looks like somebody changed the exponent. It's nuts.
    • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @11:58AM (#61324404)

      They held mass public events and festivals is what happened. Variants...no variants...cell towers...whatever.

      Bottom line is you personally cannot infect 500 people if you don't get in the faces of 500 people.

      Masks...no masks...whatever. The only mathematically guaranteed way of limiting the exponent is by limiting the number of people you snuggle up to in any two week period. The exponent is roughly equal to that number of people...but that's math. And math is hard enough already and damn near impossible for people too scared to think straight.

      • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @12:05PM (#61324440)

        Correction: the exponent is a monotonic function of that number.

        Roughly 0 for 2 or fewer contacts
        Roughly 1 for 8 or fewer
        Roughly 2 for 27 or fewer etc

        Think of it as a wave propaging in an N dimensional space. The daily count is the circumference/surface area/volume/whatever of the wave front which is the dimensionality of the social network minus 1.

    • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @11:59AM (#61324410)
      New COVID variant, B1617, appeared just right around massive holidays where tons of people congregated thinking it passed. It is more virulent.
      • by ffkom ( 3519199 )
        Only ~40% of the recently sequenced samples in India were B.1.167 (which you probably meant), so even if that (not so new, first found in Oct 2020) variant was absent from India, the 60% remaining infections would constitute a very large recent growth.
    • I don't know that anyone knows for sure what happened yet, but a lot of people suspect it was related to Kumbh Mela:

      https://www.cnn.com/2021/04/12/india/india-covid-kumbh-mela-crowd-intl-hnk-scli/index.html [cnn.com]

      • by msauve ( 701917 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @12:55PM (#61324672)
        That certainly didn't help, but the surge started well before that. According the the same article, "The second wave, which began in March and has rapidly accelerated in the past week...". And, the incubation period pushes the start to even earlier. Perhaps Maha Shivaratri?
        • by chr1973 ( 711475 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @01:17PM (#61324786)

          Looking at a logarithmic graph of confirmed Covid-19 deaths [1], it the death count increases roughly as a straight line. This implies exponential growth as the scale is logarithmic.

          Extrapolating to the start of the line I get around March 8th. However, the curve is a 7-day-rolling value, so deaths actually started a few days earlier. And infections are likely 2-3 weeks before death. This gives us sometime around say 15th of February, or a few days later.

          [1] https://ourworldindata.org/exp... [ourworldindata.org]

          • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @01:42PM (#61324858)

            Exponential growth means people were mixing all over (essentially infinite-dimensional topology).

            Linear growth in total cases means people weren't mixing at all maybe with a few of the same people with some overlap, just a pulse traveling down a wire.

            Quadratic growth means people were mixing with their immediate neighbors.

            Cubic growth means lots and lots of friends across town.

            Rough approximations of course, but a good way to check if it's behavior or something else. If it's suddenly a more contagious version, but the same behavior, then you'd see a bend in the curve as the exponent changes. If it's people mixing more, you'd see it going from subexponential to exponential.

            Again: if you think this is woo woo hand waving you're right. Which is also why "zomg more contagious" claims also need to be taken with a grain if salt. "More contagious" means they fit a curve and pulled out a bigger slope and attributed it to viral mutation rather than human behavior.

    • by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @12:00PM (#61324414)

      Did they get hit by a new variant or something? Was the gov't just lying all along? Did they just get lax?

      According to the news I read it was the first and third. People thought they had licked it, so masking and distancing stopped - especially outside cities. Their prime minister had giant political rallies that have been criticized as superspreader events. Then a new variant with two mutations arose. The first is a "more contagious/spreading" mutation. The second is also helping the spread, but I'm not sure what it is. The reporting was a little vague as to the second mutation's effect, but maybe it helps pierce natural immunity from earlier strains.

      The positivity rate among tests has jumped from 3% to 35%, which is a good indicator it was not just a lack of testing a earlier.

    • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @12:00PM (#61324416)

      From my understanding, they grossly underestimated the first wave, celebrated too early (involving politics no less to make it even worse), which ultimately brought on a voracious second wave, in one of the most densely populated countries on the entire planet.

      On top of that, India appears to have done what I predicted many countries would do in the name of National Security/Pride; lie about their COVID numbers.

      The world failed India? Perhaps not as much as India failed India. We're here to help, not take the damn blame. Perhaps Dr. Fauci should be prescribed a couple of Shut-The-Fuck-Ups with a glass of water and call someone with a more measured approach in the morning.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        Do you really think Fauci was saying that India wasn't to blame?

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by geekmux ( 1040042 )

          Do you really think Fauci was saying that India wasn't to blame?

          "The World has Failed India", certainly has the implication that we are more to blame for that, than India.

          "We", are not in charge of India. India is. They took steps to be quite dismissive of the virus, when variants were known and breeding, in favor of religious events that created massive gatherings and little concern of safety. All in one of the most populated countries on the planet.

          Again, we're here to help, not left feeling berated and guilty for not providing "equity throughout the world". Easy

          • by AxeTheMax ( 1163705 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @01:03PM (#61324720)
            Nowhere in that clip does Fauci say that. The headline says it, but that is the journalist, i.e. the Guardian. It's a provocative headline and you are provoked.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Yeah, I wholeheartedly agree, it's an absolute farce to say the world failed India:

        - This happened over a year since the COVID-19 outbreak went widespread, this has given them plenty of example cases of how horrible wrong it can go quickly - the US, Brazil, the UK if you play politics, so that's on them for being arrogant enough to think they were special.

        - India is a Covax recipient nation, which is absurd when it's the 6th largest economy in the world, when it has the largest vaccine manufacturing capacit

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      You're asking what happened? In a country where it takes 5 years to resolve a parking ticket? It's simple, they weren't testing people. In a country where 70% of their population resides in rural farming communities and roads that are so dangerous they have sprouted their own documentaries, distribution is also a problem.

      • by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @01:19PM (#61324792)

        The positivity rate jumped from 3% to 35%. That's indicitive of it not being a testing failure.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          No, that proves the opposite. Spontaneous Generation isn't a thing; not even for COVID; despite what the TV tells you to think. Jumping from 3% to 35% tells me that in the beginning you were testing communities that were not impacted, then all of a sudden you got test results back from the communities that were. Again, mostly rural communities. Not large cities with centralized testing facilities and dedicated lab equipment. Also a superstitious people, many would never bother getting tested if they truly b

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @02:19PM (#61325022) Homepage Journal

      Yes, they've got the B1617 variant, but it's not significantly worse than B1117 or B11248. The problem is that the Indian government declared victory too early, and people believed the government, even though scientists were urging caution. The media largely went along with the politicians, publishing speculative stories about *how* India had beaten the virus (herd immunity, natural resistance), when they should have been asking *whether* India had beaten the virus. People wanted good news, and the government and media happily pandered to that.

      SARS-COV-2 is a virus that is uniquely adapted to spreading in immunologically susceptible populations that don't take precautions. It's a black swan event; there's never been anything like it. SARS-COV-2 is like how my doctor characterizes diabetes: like a vicious dog on short chain. As long as you keep the dog on the chain you can live with it, but the instant you let it off the chain it will maul you.

    • 1. Bad communication lines, especially with rural area - difficult to get a clear picture of a fast moving target.
      1.a. Once realized the information may have been withheld for a bit out of pride, but once it was realized that a nightmare was occurring going public was the only choice.
      2. Woefully lacking medical capacity and capabilities (rural areas most specifically, but the effect is/was probably everywhere).

      I guarantee India had a much higher rates than reported during 2020. They either didn't know f

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      if you look at the graphs they were going along OK and then *blam*.

      Did they get hit by a new variant or something? Was the gov't just lying all along? Did they just get lax? I know they're allowing their various religious activities (e.g. the big pilgrimages) again.

      Something drastic changed. If you look at the graphs it looks like somebody changed the exponent. It's nuts.

      They reopened too quick, that's what. They saw the numbers go down, decided it was over and celebrated. Not too surprising since it's fest

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      it looks like somebody changed the exponent.

      That's exponential growth for you. A variant, underreporting from rural areas, people getting fed up with restrictions, any number of other factors, mix them up, and it starts growing. Slowly at first. Looks under control, but it's not. Then whoosh.

  • Talk is cheap (Score:2, Insightful)

    by alvinrod ( 889928 )
    Talk is cheap. Unless he has some proposal that would have sped up the creation and then production of vaccines he's just flapping his arms and his lips after the fact. Meanwhile he's free to donate as much of his personal wealth as he wishes to create a more equitable world. I'm sure he's doing that as we speak.
    • Re:Talk is cheap (Score:5, Insightful)

      by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @12:55PM (#61324678)

      Talk is cheap. Unless he has some proposal that would have sped up the creation and then production of vaccines he's just flapping his arms and his lips after the fact.

      Actually there are definite concrete actions the US can take.

      First they can ease off the DPA so India has the materials to manufacture vaccines [thehindu.com] and they can send over some of the 60m AstraZeneca doses that they have and won't use [bbc.com].

      I do get the urge to prioritize your own population first, but hording life-saving materials that you won't even use is way over the line.

      Meanwhile he's free to donate as much of his personal wealth as he wishes to create a more equitable world. I'm sure he's doing that as we speak.

      As I'm sure you've already donated a huge portion of your personal wealth to all the causes you care about, because otherwise such as a statement would make you a hypocrite.

      • I think the US is sending millions of doses to Mexico, so those 60m may already be largely spoken for.
      • by sfcat ( 872532 )

        As I'm sure you've already donated a huge portion of your personal wealth to all the causes you care about, because otherwise such as a statement would make you a hypocrite.

        Yea, but the OP didn't make his/her money off the backs of a series of p-hacking scandals and a lockdown that benefits him at huge costs to the rest of us.

    • Re:Talk is cheap (Score:5, Informative)

      by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @12:59PM (#61324696) Journal

      It's as if you didn't even read the article. Fauci specifically mentions the COVAX initiative [who.int], and then gives a fairly long list of proposals, as listed in the article.

      I know it's not popular to read the article on Slashdot, but if you are going to libel someone, you really should read it.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @11:54AM (#61324374)
    Every time somebody gets the virus there's a chance of a new mutation that gets past our vaccine defenses.

    This is why it drives me nuts to see this, and to see things like this [theverge.com].

    We really are all in this together, whether we like it or not. And if you think you can just close the boarders think again. The people who make money off open boarders aren't going to let you.
    • And if you think you can just close the boarders think again. The people who make money off open boarders aren't going to let you.

      I can fix that. Right now.

      I'll just take their boards away.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by hdyoung ( 5182939 )
      About a third of the population simply isn't going to play ball. In the US, it's because of a combination of mis-information and abject stupidity. But, in India there's still a lot of serious-level poverty. The sort that's incomprehensible to most people in the modern world. Why care much about anything when you're trying to survive on 90 cents per day? That's not an exaggeration, either.

      In the modern world, if we wait for herd immunity, we'll be waiting decades. It's time to mostly-carefully-re-open a
      • We had no trouble getting people to play ball with polio. The issue we and other countries have is that I've side is using anti vax and anti mask as a wedge issue to district from their inability to solve problems. As a result we've got major media personalities pushing anti science lies that their on staff fact checkers know are lies and getting away with it.
        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          Well, the polio vaccine was a pretty easy sell at first because polio victims very visibly walked (with a cane) or wheeled down the street, and literally stacked up in long-term care wards. When the eradication program started gaining ground it was a tougher sell.

          We're very good at making bodies disappear, particularly in the west. If things get out of hand enough for that system to get overwhelmed, people will be clamouring for vaccinations. Maslow's pyramid. Politicking is a luxury available to those who

      • Students of racial history in the US will remember the Tuskegee incident, in which the US deliberately infected people of African descent with syphilis just to study how it would spread.

        The United States has a long history of earning mistrust with the public in general, and minorities in particular. From driving Native Americans off their lands, to giving them smallpox blankets, to interning the Japanese during World War II, to exposing civilians to deadly radiation, to deliberately exposing them to LSD

    • The people who make money off open boarders aren't going to let you.

      Vietnam is closing theirs. [dhakatribune.com]

    • If you are vaccinated can you still transmit COVID though? Being the 95% effectiveness rate is vs sickness/symptoms, not infection, this should be a relevant question. I haven't checked lately but an Israeli study a few weeks ago suggested a boosted protection against infection around 60% for Pfizer.
  • by guruevi ( 827432 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @12:01PM (#61324422)

    7 out of 100,000 people in India died from COVID in the last 18 months.

    180+ infants per 100,000 births die in the first 5 years of life due to the lack of medical resources
    16+ people per 100,000 annually simply die due to a lack of water in India with an order of magnitude more dying from lack of all water-related issues (sanitation, cholera etc)
    150+ people per 100,000 die from tuberculosis and 50+ die from malaria annually

    When a disease that hits primarily people which are obese or over 65, a country with food shortages and an average life expectancy of 67 isn't really a prime target. Sure every death is a tragedy, but how will they roll out vaccines if they can't even get an MMR or polio vaccine to most of their children.

    • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @01:07PM (#61324752)

      7 out of 100,000 people in India died from COVID in the last 18 months.

      Actually ~14 [worldometers.info] (though India would be an obvious candidate for a massive undercount). Though one need only look at the graph to realize that number is going to start growing very quickly.

      180+ infants per 100,000 births die in the first 5 years of life due to the lack of medical resources
      16+ people per 100,000 annually simply die due to a lack of water in India with an order of magnitude more dying from lack of all water-related issues (sanitation, cholera etc)
      150+ people per 100,000 die from tuberculosis and 50+ die from malaria annually

      Those are terrible statistics, but those lives are relatively expensive and complicated to save, at least relative to what we're willing to spend in foreign aid.

      But saving lives with a vaccine? That's dirt cheap and damn easy by comparison.

      When a disease that hits primarily people which are obese or over 65, a country with food shortages and an average life expectancy of 67 isn't really a prime target. Sure every death is a tragedy, but how will they roll out vaccines if they can't even get an MMR or polio vaccine to most of their children.

      Hopefully those other vaccination campaigns get going after. But remember the case fatality rate (CFR) in a nation with a western health care system (that's gotten a lot better at treating COVID) vs a lot lower than the CFR in India. We're talking 100s of thousands of preventable deaths in the next year depending on how the situation in India progresses. I think that's worth taking action over.

    • by battingly ( 5065477 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @01:50PM (#61324900)
      You're missing the point. Right now, India is a huge petri dish, manufacturing covid variants, some of which will dodge immunizations and will spread to other parts of the world. As bad as things are in India right now, the real danger is what will emerge from this mess.
    • India's per-capita is still under the Western countries, no?

      All the corporate news is reporting is raw numbers on a billion-person problem.

  • by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @12:05PM (#61324446) Journal
    The "official" death count is about 300 per day in Delhi. However, crematoriums are saying they are burning at least 600 bodies every day. And that is just in one city. In the city of Ahmedabad [nytimes.com], one crematorium worker, when asked, said all he writes on the paper he hands to families is "sickness":

    "Sickness, sickness, sickness," Mr. Suresh said. "Thatâ(TM)s what we write." When asked why, he said it was what he had been instructed to do by his bosses, who did not respond to requests for comment.

    The body count is so high and the deaths so unrelenting, crematoriums are burning bodies 24 hours a day. Crematoriums are so overloaded, they are having to expand wherever they can [theguardian.com].

    In Delhi, photographs taken on Tuesday showed smoke billowing from dozens of pyres lit in a car park that had been turned into a makeshift crematorium. Elsewhere, workers built makeshift pyres on land outside crematoriums. "People are just dying, dying and dying," said Jitender Singh Shanty, who is coordinating more than 100 cremations per a day at the site in the east of the city. "If we get more bodies then we will cremate on the road. There is no more space here," he said, adding: "We had never thought that we would see such horrible scenes."

    In one of the Southern states, the "official" count on April 23rd was 33 people dead from covid. However, between 80-100 people died at two hospitals [apnews.com] in the capital of Hyderabad.

    Take whatever number the Indian government says with a block of salt. It's clear the numbers they are providing aren't close to reality.

  • umm no (Score:3, Insightful)

    by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @12:15PM (#61324492) Journal

    The only way that you're going to adequately respond to a global pandemic is by having a global response

    The solution is hard borders - Australia and New Zealand petty much proved that.

    While people with an agenda think its cute to say virus don't respect lines on a map, and while that is true they also do not teleport themselves from place to place, they need a carriers. Hard-Borders and sufficient quarantine procedures pretty much stop them and the break though events can be contained.

    I am not against sending India PPE, vaccines, or whatever else at this point in the name of humanitarian aide - its the right thing to do. However it would not have been the right thing to do back when we were at the height of the crisis here. The governments of the world have a first responsibility to their own populations.

    • While people with an agenda think its cute to say virus don't respect lines on a map, and while that is true they also do not teleport themselves from place to place, they need a carriers.

      True, which is why we need to keep an eye on animals as a vector. They don't respect borders either.

    • However it would not have been the right thing to do back when we were at the height of the crisis here. The governments of the world have a first responsibility to their own populations.

      Unfortunately, highly religious societies, create highly religious governments, which in turn have a responsibility to a higher power.

      Religion, is what often fails to recognize the reality of a horrible virus.

    • Re:umm no (Score:4, Insightful)

      by scamper_22 ( 1073470 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @01:50PM (#61324902)

      I'm in Canada and this is the strangest thing.
      We've been in lockdown for over a year now with very brief periods of opening. Schools are currently closed. Stores are limited to curb side pickup..

      Yet, it all this time the airport has been open. It literally boggles my mind.
      I'm 'not allowed' to go across the city to see my nephew. But someone from Brazil, UK, South Africa, India... can fly into Canada.

      The first thing you do is close down borders and isolate the virus.

      Here's an oddity. They're being called the UK, Brazil, South African... variant for a reason. If the borders were closed, these variants wouldn't make their way over here.

      This is nothing against immigration or anything like that. It's just basic science of disease transmission. It's like not recognizing that carbon dioxide emissions contribute to global warming. It just does and it works both ways. Closing the border between the UK and Canada protects both the UK and Canada from each other's variants.

      I really find the half measures we do in countries like Canada to be just pathetic. Places like Sweden or Florida take a more lax stance and maybe have increased transmission, but they stayed open. Life went on.

      Some places locked down hard with pretty authoritarian measures, like several Asian countries, like Taiwan. They've really managed to isolate and contain the virus... yes... by closing the border, contact tracing...

      In Canada, we want to appear to be tough, but aren't actually willing to violate rights of people. So we end up with this weird ineffective mess where we have all these semi-authoritarian measures, but they're not really effective because the government doesn't want to enforce anything. They don't want to enforce the border. They don't want to enforce mandatory covid tracking on smartphones to make covid tracking easier.

  • by StikyPad ( 445176 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @12:47PM (#61324644) Homepage

    Let's be clear: India failed India. Not long ago it was America failing America, so we know what that's like. It's really hard to get people to take threats seriously when they can't see them, hear them, or touch them, *especially* when numbers are going down.

    Two months ago we were trying to figure out why India's numbers were so *low* [npr.org], so I suspect complacency had a lot to do with it. Hopefully this is an object lesson for everyone, not just India.

  • India failed India.

  • by juancn ( 596002 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @01:52PM (#61324912) Homepage

    Many countries are in similar duress. Is this an economic thing? An immigration thing (many Indians live in the US)?

    To make a point, all these countries are in a worse position in terms of vaccines than India: Belize, Montenegro, Mauritius, Colombia, Australia, Jordan, Indonesia, Nepal, Lebanon, Suriname, Fiji, Kazakhstan, Bolivia, Bahamas, South Korea, Oman, Moldova, Bangladesh, New Zealand, Jamaica, Peru, São Tomé and Príncipe, Malaysia, Ecuador, Sri Lanka, Equatorial Guinea, Belarus, Eswatini, Tunisia, Ghana, Rwanda, North Macedonia, Laos, Japan, Senegal, Trinidad and Tobago, Togo, Myanmar, Botswana, Thailand, Philippines, Uzbekistan, Malawi, Angola, Kenya, Paraguay, Ukraine, Georgia, Djibouti, Guinea, Guatemala, Pakistan, Nicaragua, Gambia, Venezuela, Iran, Somalia, Iraq, Sierra Leone, Egypt, Afghanistan, Uganda, Honduras, Nigeria, Brunei, Namibia, South Africa, Ivory Coast, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Gabon, Cape Verde, Ethiopia, Vietnam, Sudan, Republic of the Congo, Mali, Timor-Leste, Mozambique, Algeria, Mauritania, Zambia, Kyrgyzstan, Armenia, Syria, Papua New Guinea, Libya, South Sudan, Niger, Cameroon

    I mean, we should definitely help them, but we should help all of them.

    See here for the data [nytimes.com]

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • US deaths per 1mil: 1767

    India deaths per 1mil: 147

    Even if you think India is not fully counting COVID deaths by an entire order of magnitude, they STILL aren't dying as much as we are. The more Fauci talks, the less I think of him. But Biden or someone is probably still going to pin a medal on him for all of his 'work'.

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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