The graph on the left is a proportion that says that at the peak - "per 1 million inhabitants per day" - there were more cases in unvaccinated people.
The graph on the right is the number of cases. There are way more vaccinated people than unvaccinated, and Omicron doesn't care if you're vaccinated or not, so there are more cases among vaccinated people than unvaccinated. Simple.
If you don't understand the difference that's OK. Not everyone gets math.
If you do understand the difference and you're just spreading misinformation I'm sorry for you.
And in the end, since Omicron is spreading faster than the cases can be counted, neither of those graphs are very accurate any way.
You can go directly to Ontario's official site and toggle between daily cases and cases per 100,000: https://covid-19.ontario.ca/data
Nevertheless, if the daily cases per 100,000 (or 1million, either tells the same thing) is higher every day since mid-December, there is no way to plot this on a graph that shows unvaccinated cases to be higher. Math is not subjective.
If you don't understand the difference that's OK. Not everyone gets math.
I don't care much if you understand math or not. I do care that Ontario Science Table is lying to the public.
No, it's just you that doesn't see it. You don't understand math.
tell me about your math, though.
I understand that Ontario's chart is a 7-day average per 100,000 and Ontario Science Table's chart is daily per 1 million. Nevertheless, it doesn't matter since the ratio of vaccinated people getting covid has been higher than unvaccinated people getting covid every day since mid-December in Ontario (likely everywhere else too, but the charts I showed are specifically for Ontario). How do you plot this on a graph that shows unvaccinated people getting covid at a higher rate than vaccinated?
First, you don't have enough links to back up the points you are trying to make.
Second, out of all the high school and university math teachers and students in Ontario, why are there no letters to the editor, no calls to phone-in shows? Why are there no articles by science journalists about this?
Because so far you are the only person who sees it this way - although I bet Ezra Levant would agree with you if you could catch his attention.
And it's a pointless argument anyway because it's based on case counts that aren't even remotely accurate any more now that Omicron has arrived.
There's no conflict.
The graph on the left is a proportion that says that at the peak - "per 1 million inhabitants per day" - there were more cases in unvaccinated people.
The graph on the right is the number of cases. There are way more vaccinated people than unvaccinated, and Omicron doesn't care if you're vaccinated or not, so there are more cases among vaccinated people than unvaccinated. Simple.
If you don't understand the difference that's OK. Not everyone gets math.
If you do understand the difference and you're just spreading misinformation I'm sorry for you.
And in the end, since Omicron is spreading faster than the cases can be counted, neither of those graphs are very accurate any way.
You can go directly to Ontario's official site and toggle between daily cases and cases per 100,000: https://covid-19.ontario.ca/data
Nevertheless, if the daily cases per 100,000 (or 1million, either tells the same thing) is higher every day since mid-December, there is no way to plot this on a graph that shows unvaccinated cases to be higher. Math is not subjective.
I don't care much if you understand math or not. I do care that Ontario Science Table is lying to the public.
I'd be careful about that. You're the only one that sees it.
No, it's just you that doesn't see it. You don't understand math.
tell me about your math, though.
I understand that Ontario's chart is a 7-day average per 100,000 and Ontario Science Table's chart is daily per 1 million. Nevertheless, it doesn't matter since the ratio of vaccinated people getting covid has been higher than unvaccinated people getting covid every day since mid-December in Ontario (likely everywhere else too, but the charts I showed are specifically for Ontario). How do you plot this on a graph that shows unvaccinated people getting covid at a higher rate than vaccinated?
First, you don't have enough links to back up the points you are trying to make.
Second, out of all the high school and university math teachers and students in Ontario, why are there no letters to the editor, no calls to phone-in shows? Why are there no articles by science journalists about this?
Because so far you are the only person who sees it this way - although I bet Ezra Levant would agree with you if you could catch his attention.
And it's a pointless argument anyway because it's based on case counts that aren't even remotely accurate any more now that Omicron has arrived.