Tag Archives: Hype
Taoiseach Leo Varadkar (left) and Minister for Health Simon Harris at a press briefing on Easter Sunday in Government Buildings
Via Michael Smith, editor of Village magazine [full article at link below]:
Those who predicted swamped ICUs, scandalous shortages of equipment and overflowing morgues in Ireland were utterly wrong. If you haven’t realised that, you’re not following.
The Irish Times, Irish Independent, RTÉ and other media in Ireland have failed their democratic duty to keep the public aware of the significance of the evolving pattern of Coronavirus cases in Ireland over the last three weeks.
There may indeed be “the darkest days ahead” as the Taoiseach intoned, to media head-nodding, on Easter Sunday, but there is no evidence for it.
I am not saying this to be provocative but because it is the truth.
There is a pattern of reported cases, it is just that the media have not followed it, or conveyed what the pattern indicates as the probable outcome of at least the first wave of Coronavirus cases and deaths in Ireland.
Their job was not to convey this as a certainty but as the probability, based on the curves – the data.
Instead they have plied, and continue hour after hour to ply, pictures of improvised morgues, invitations to submit stories about deceased love ones, pieces about our non-existent devastating shortages of PPE and ventilators, and of rockstars still organising emergency imports of it, and po-faced pieces about how funerals, so central of course to Irish life, will never be the same again….
…The Department of Health oversaw a system underprepared for a pandemic and then specifically underestimated the dangers from China – on 20 February the Chief Medical Officer Tony Holohan ineptly faced a camera and said: “We don’t expect to see anything more than individual cases occurring that we believe we’ll be well-positioned to manage within the next couple of months”.
Within a few weeks, however, the official view had flipped the other way and by 8 March Paul Reid, CEO of the Health Service Executive (HSE), was endorsing a report in the Business Post which quoted the health authorities massively overestimating cases.
The lead story in that newspaper on that day five weeks ago predicted 1.9 million infected cases for Ireland which would have implied 68,000 deaths, since the death rate given by the WHO at the time was 3.4%.
The report did not say there “might” or “would probably” be 1.9 million cases.
Its best-selling headline on March 8, a date on which there had been no deaths in Ireland, was “Irish health authorities predict 1.9m people will fall ill with coronavirus”; the subheadline was “Up to 50 per cent of cases projected in a three-week period, while the new figures raise fears of intense pressure on health service”. The premise was that we would see 30% daily increases in cases. The smaller print of the report clarified that the prognosis depended on there being no lockdown measures….[more at link below]
Media fails to report truth – success in Ireland’s handling of Coronavirus (Michael Smith, Village)
This morning.
Glasnevin, Dublin 9.
Via RTÉ
The shelter indoors warning has been lifted as blizzard conditions caused by Storm Emma have passed, although a red weather warning remains in place for Munster, Leinster and Co Galway.
An orange alert is in place for the rest of the country.
…People are being urged not to drive anywhere unless it is absolutely necessary.
Storm in a teacup?
YOU decide.
‘No unnecessary journeys’ as red warning remains (RTÉ)
Last night: Snowverkill
Meanwhile…
This morning.
Dublin City Centre.
Oh, the humanity.
Rollingnews
Snowverkill?
at“…a throwback to the crazy days of the property boom, house hunters have begun queuing overnight for a new homes scheme in Swords, Co Dublin, that will not open to the public until Saturday. Three or four parties queued overnight at the Millers Glen development [from Gannon Homes] near Applewood in Swords in order to secure their places at the top of the queue for 60 newly-built homes launching on Saturday at 2pm. This morning a number of others have joined the queue…
You tried to tell them.
Hell, we all tried.
They’re going to have to learn the HARD way.
*squeezes reused tea bag*
House hunters queuing five days ahead of Swords estate launch (Madeleine Lyons, Irish Times)
No smiley face?
Paul Flynn writes:
Through the letterbox yesterday in Phibsboro [Dublin]. ‘hand written’ invitation to sell the gaff…
Meanwhile…
Property crash ‘over’ as @MoodysRatings insists market at bottom: http://t.co/59c4bsjoUp
— Independent.ie (@Independent_ie) November 14, 2013
Obsessed
atThe “booming East Coast”, eh?
Booming.
House prices ‘to rise 5-7pc this year’ (Charlie Weston, Independent.ie)
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