Who's Afraid Of Covid?
Spoiler: It's young people.
It's a Covid day, and this story from the Epoch Times (which I picked up through Zerohedge) is rather fascinating. The article is based off a YouGov poll that you can read about here . What the Epoch Times author did was to inquire into what lies behind the seemingly contra indicated results of the YouGov poll:
Why Young Adults Are The Most Scared Of COVID, Even Though They Are The Least At Risk
Back when I was in the waning years of my working life, we old timers (I was in my 50s then) were constantly being told that the Bureau would be hiring large numbers of "computer savvy young people" to lead the FBI into the brave new digital world of law enforcement. I was pretty unimpressed with these supposedly "computer savvy" youngsters--their savviness usually extended to using electronic gadgets like cell phones, but did not extend to critical analysis of the vast amounts of data made available on the internet. Nor was I able to see much interest in learning. It was old timers who seemed more interested in the implications of understanding how data is collected and used.
Sorry if I bored you with that, but it seems to play into the YouGov results. Here's what YouGov found:
Do you or do you not feel nervous about the prospect of interacting with people socially again? (%):
Feel
very nervous or fairly nervous
Don't
know
Don't
feel very nervous or don't feel nervous at all
US adults
39
8
54
18-to 24-year-olds
50
12
38
25-to 34-year-olds
47
12
41
35-to 44-year-olds
42
10
48
45-to 54-year-olds
36
7
57
55 and older
31
4
65
Overall, most (54%) Americans are not feeling anxious about the prospect of returning to social interactions. Those who are 55 or older are especially likely (65%) to say they’re not nervous.
Women (43%) are slightly more likely than men (34%) to say they’re feeling nervous about the prospect of social interaction.
What's up with this? As Dr. John Ioannidis pointed out long ago (July, 2020), Coronavirus fatality rate for people under 45 'almost 0%' :
“There are already more than 50 studies that have presented results on how many people in different countries and locations have developed antibodies to the virus,” Dr. John Ioannidis said during a recent interview with Greek Reporter . “Of course, none of these studies are perfect, but cumulatively, they provide useful composite evidence. A very crude estimate might suggest that about 150-300 million or more people have already been infected around the world, far more than the 10 million documented cases.”
Ioannidis pointed out the mortality rate is low among young people who have contracted the virus.
“The death rate in a given country depends a lot on the age structure, who are the people infected, and how they are managed,” Ioannidis said. “For people younger than 45, the infection fatality rate is almost 0%. For 45 to 70, it is probably about 0.05%-0.3%.For those above 70, it escalates substantially.”
Comorbidities, of course, play a major role--if you're already at death's door, Covid may well push you over into the Great Beyond, as will other respiratory diseases. Andrew Cuomo somehow didn't get that memo, or his dog ate it. Or something.
The clever Epoch Times author, Jonathan Miltimore, went looking for an explanation for this discrepancy, this inverse relationship between actual risk and subjective fear . He places the blame on the media:
All the official data point in the same direction: Young people have the least to fear from COVID-19. Yet the YouGov poll also shows they are the most afraid.
This is odd. As influencers noted on Twitter, the level of comfort people feel in returning to normal life is inversely correlated to their level of actual risk.
This invites an important question: Why are young people more afraid? One obvious answer is young adults might simply be unaware their risk of serious illness is low.
As I recently noted, Americans in general are wildly misinformed about the risk of hospitalization from COVID-19, with roughly a third of Americans believing the chances of being hospitalized with the virus are 50 percent. In actuality, it’s closer to 1 percent.
The reasons for this aren’t hard to find.
Studies have shown that U.S. media essentially created a climate of fear by publishing a flood of negative news in 2020 . Indeed, an Ivy League-led study concluded that 91 percent of U.S. articles in major media were negative in tone, nearly double when compared to non-U.S. media. The negative news, the researchers noted, continued even when the pandemic was ebbing and when positive medical breakthroughs were being achieved.
Interestingly, the author confirms this overwhelming negativity by citing his own Google searches for articles using the search string: ‘Young People Less Likely to Die From Covid’. Try it yourself--you come up with stories that suggest the exact opposite, which probably means that, well, "91% percent of US articles in major media" say exactly that. I tried that search with both Startpage and DuckDuckGo, and the results were the same, so it doesn't appear to be Google manipulating the results.
What this means, of course, is that if you want to find out the truth of these matters, you need to do a fair amount of determined digging. My experience from work was that young people tend to absorb digital media in a rather credulous way. In fairness, many people do--the constant bombardment by the MSM leads many to assume that, where there's smoke there's fire. All those news readers can't be wrong, can they? Try to suggest that to people, and the reactions is likely to be: C'mon, Man! My government would never lie to me or mislead me! CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky wouldn't be warning us of “impending doom” if doom weren't actually impending, would she? But all this credulousness comes with a significant price:
The YouGov poll results show there is a disconnect between perception and reality when it comes to COVID-19. Unfortunately, this disconnect has real-world consequences.
“Those who overestimate risks to young people or hold an exaggerated sense of risk upon infection are more likely to favor closing schools, restaurants, and other businesses,” the authors of a recent Franklin Templeton/Gallup study concluded .
This is important because these restrictions are quite serious. Closing parts of the economy is no small matter. These actions are associated with numerous unintended consequences—job losses, mental health deterioration , increased global poverty , surging loneliness , health procedures deferred, and more. Meanwhile, the documented benefits of these restrictions remain elusive.
In 2020, we witnessed unprecedented infringements on fundamental civil liberties. And it all stemmed from fear.
And the drumbeat of alarmism continues. It's high time that more people asked, Who's benefiting from the alarmism?