And your colleagues in China are all free to tell each other, and you, everything, and to challenge the governments figures on deaths? What exactly are they doing to check the total number of deaths?
China's openness about the virus:
December 30: Dr. Li Wenliang sent a message to a group of other doctors warning them about a possible outbreak of an illness that resembled severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), urging them to take protective measures against infection.
January 1: The Wuhan Public Security Bureau issued summons to Dr. Li Wenliang, accusing him of “spreading rumors.” Two days later, at a police station, Dr. Li signed a statement acknowledging his “misdemeanor” and promising not to commit further “unlawful acts.”
If China are being open and honest, why did Dr Li have to pretend he was spreading rumours, when he clearly wasn't?
The virus passed from human to human in the first week of December, but at the end of December, China were still saying that hadn't happened. They were still maintaining this lie well into January.
I'm not suggesting China hasn't lied. What I'm saying is their data don't actually look that weird, and their numbers are more akin to what people out there are telling me, and what one might expect after a pretty draconian and swift (compared with us) lockdown. One is a mate's daughter. I won't give the details but she is in a position to know what's what and if we are being fed a crock (and their are bodies piling up) I would know about it by now.
Our own dear leader was playing this all down as late as early March, you realise? I accept that he hasn't had anyone shot, yet, but it isn't just China that had engaged with information 'management' and, yes, denial.
For me, the log data shown earlier tell a story. Almost every nation's lines overlay one another. I have looked at enough graphs to recognise when there is and isn't a pattern. Where there are sufficient numbers, the numbers align. It looks like Australia have the weirdest numbers, but Australia is a weird nation in terms of population location, and their numbers are too small yet for a pattern to be discernible. South Korea is the most weird of all for a sizable nation with early exposure and decent numbers.
Anyway if you were to ask me if it's to early to say what the global and local projections are, I'd say it's too early to say. If the Italy and Spain deaths trends continue to bounce around in the next 3 days I'd be able to state with some certainty that it is too early to say.