That term āhuman capitalā is very common in Human Resources and other upper management courses in college. Itās used both positively and negatively. Human Resources is a term built on Human Capital. Some companies value their human capital more than others and this is seen in policy.
Using the term āhuman capitalā in the above video context is so out of touch though.
Using the term āhuman capitalā in the above video context is so out of touch though.
There was a time when humans were treated the same as any other kind of "capital stock." Just another category on the list
Academia goes back that far
Academia goes back that far
By diehard Go To PostHow long have we been trying to make this "red states are fucked" a thing now?i mean, its their fault for being fucked
By Xpike Go To Posti mean, its their fault for being fucked9 of the top 10 death rates are blue states. Is that their fault or is the biggest reason for that simply population density?
By Laboured Go To PostCan I shock you?mild shock
By diehard Go To Post9 of the top 10 death rates are blue states. Is that their fault or is the biggest reason for that simply population density?ima say both
us states just fucked
By DY_nasty Go To Postyal sound like fender lol
Just last page I was like 50/50 agreeing with diehard .... smdh
By DY_nasty Go To Postyal sound like fender lolThey see the open spot Fender has vacated.
I just want to know what the difference between all these beach and party pictures is than what's been going on. Because these goons have been ass to ass for 45 minutes to 2 hours in the grocery stores with no government regulation since day 1
Grocery stores don't have a disease barrier so why we getting on Twitter and giving a fuck now
Grocery stores don't have a disease barrier so why we getting on Twitter and giving a fuck now
By data Go To PostI just want to know what the difference between all these beach and party pictures is than what's been going on. Because these goons have been ass to ass for 45 minutes to 2 hours in the grocery stores with no government regulation since day 1Some of that is just from necessity. Going to the grocery store is something that you just have to do, going to the beach isn't.
Grocery stores don't have a disease barrier so why we getting on Twitter and giving a fuck now
With that said, if you are out in the sun and not spending a lot of time right next to people the beach is probably pretty safe-ish.
The beach most definitely is on the safe side, especially if thereās spacing. That pool party in the ozarks was not. You would be eating spit if someone was coughing at that pool party. People need to eat. This isnāt hard
By diehard Go To PostSome of that is just from necessity. Going to the grocery store is something that you just have to do, going to the beach isn't.
With that said, if you are out in the sun and not spending a lot of time right next to people the beach is probably pretty safe-ish.
By Fenderputty Go To PostThe beach most definitely is on the safe side, especially if thereās spacing. That pool party in the ozarks was not. You would be eating spit if someone was coughing at that pool party. People need to eat. This isnāt hard<3
christ guys that wasn't the answer data was looking for
data the grocery store is the safest place there is bb you good. People are more likely to respect social distancing and wear masks in there than anywhere else I imagine
data the grocery store is the safest place there is bb you good. People are more likely to respect social distancing and wear masks in there than anywhere else I imagine
By Yurtlicious Go To Postchrist guys that wasn't the answer data was looking for
data the grocery store is the safest place there is bb you good. People are more likely to respect social distancing and wear masks in there than anywhere else I imagine
Ohhh š®
Ok sorry I was a dick lol
By Dipro Go To Post40 doesn't sound like all that much though.just wait 2 more weeks
On Sunday my manager is gonna decide who has to show up to work and who doesn't.
I swear if he picks me I'm just gonna use up all my leaves lmao.
I'll forge an asthma paper idc I KNOW A GUY
I swear if he picks me I'm just gonna use up all my leaves lmao.
I'll forge an asthma paper idc I KNOW A GUY
By blackace Go To Postjust wait 2 more weeksschool are open for almost a month now here and cases didn't go up.
It's nice to see my country being talked as a good example for a chance.
In the Azores we have gone even a step further in terms of restrictions and people have been doing their part.
In my island, we haven't had a new case in 51 days and have been infection free for about two weeks yet still everyone wears masks when going to shops and keeps safe distance on the streets.
I normally do my shopping at a little store near my house but I had to go to a bigger supermarket last week and everyone was patiently waiting to get inside as there is a restriction to the number of clients inside the store, didn't see anyone complaining or upset to have to wait.
By Laboured Go To PostBad pneumonia epidemic you got there.
What the hell is this bullshit?
A simple CDC check tells me it averages close to 3000 and has been increasing with years. And Florida's COVID deaths are 2319, with a 72 hour lag.
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/pressroom/sosmap/flu_pneumonia_mortality/flu_pneumonia.htm
Edit: It is also known that every state has counting issues due to testing shortages initially.
https://www.starfl.com/zz/news/20200430/spike-in-us-deaths-and-cases-flagged-as-pneumonia-suggest-even-greater-covid-19-impact
This was everywhere, because at the beginning of it all, states didn't have a means of testing a victim for COVID19. So they had to put down pneumonia. I thought this was well known?
This was everywhere, because at the beginning of it all, states didn't have a means of testing a victim for COVID19. So they had to put down pneumonia. I thought this was well known?
In New York, deaths attributed to pneumonia are up 651% for March 22 through April 11. Those counts are up 670% in New Jersey and 172% in Michigan. The three states reported 7,430 pneumonia deaths above the typical 1,419.
By AlphaSnacks Go To Posthttps://www.starfl.com/zz/news/20200430/spike-in-us-deaths-and-cases-flagged-as-pneumonia-suggest-even-greater-covid-19-impact
This was everywhere, because at the beginning of it all, states didn't have a means of testing a victim for COVID19. So they had to put down pneumonia. I thought this was well known?
Assume this is what the tweet is going off.
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid19/index.htm
Agree re the past pneumonia averages though, no idea where that dude got those numbers unless he just sucks real bad at math.
By AlphaSnacks Go To Posthttps://www.starfl.com/zz/news/20200430/spike-in-us-deaths-and-cases-flagged-as-pneumonia-suggest-even-greater-covid-19-impact
This was everywhere, because at the beginning of it all, states didn't have a means of testing a victim for COVID19. So they had to put down pneumonia. I thought this was well known?
Florida walking around bragging about very low deaths and wagging their finger at the liberals who wanted Florida to act faster. The critique of Florida aināt in an vacuum
By Laboured Go To PostAssume this is what the tweet is going off.
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid19/index.htm
Agree re the past pneumonia averages though, no idea where that dude got those numbers unless he just sucks real bad at math.
Just reading through the asterisks and factors to determine how the deaths are counted makes it clear that we will not know the extent of mortality for quite a while. Way too many caveats due to the novelty of this.
Ah, so it seems those past pneumonia averages he's stating are for the same period within those years whereas in your link those are pneumonia deaths in Florida for the entire year.... I think.
By Fenderputty Go To PostFlorida walking around bragging about very low deaths and wagging their finger at the liberals who wanted Florida to act faster. The critique of Florida aināt in an vacuum
Who said it wasn't? The point is that those numbers are wrong and misleading, and lacking a TON of context, because it applies to every state in shape or form. Florida has thus far proved the critics and models wrong, and it looks like some can't cope with that. I saw every single COVID model for FL change 5x. We were expected to have had over 250K by now and we're at 20% of that prediction.
By Laboured Go To PostAh, so it seems those past pneumonia averages he's stating are for the same period within those years whereas in your link those are pneumonia deaths in Florida for the entire yearā¦. I think.I was looking into it and I've come to the same conclusion.
Or at least, that definitely is true regarding the tweet (and the reddit post which is the actual source). The CDC table is showing death rate/100,000 and total deaths/year for every state, right Alpha?
By Laboured Go To PostAh, so it seems those past pneumonia averages he's stating are for the same period within those years whereas in your link those are pneumonia deaths in Florida for the entire yearā¦. I think.
Seems like it.
This was unfortunately not just Florida, but all 50 states. There was no way to accurately test during the start of the pandemic here. Isolating one state to make it look like the numbers are cooked is selective bias. Not sure why FL is constantly under attack when it comes to COVID. The media (is this Twitter user even media?) is borderline obsessed with almost wanting to see us fail.
By AlphaSnacks Go To PostWho said it wasn't? The point is that those numbers are wrong and misleading, and lacking a TON of context, because it applies to every state in shape or form. Florida has thus far proved the critics and models wrong, and it looks like some can't cope with that. I saw every single COVID model for FL change 5x. We were expected to have had over 250K by now and we're at 20% of that prediction.
When itās reported those other states may be intentionally suppressing numbers theyāll get the same sized eyes I assume.
By Fenderputty Go To PostWhen itās reported those other states may be intentionally suppressing numbers theyāll get the same sized eyes I assume.
It has been for NY and NJ from the start of it all. It's been glossed over.
My mom is a director at a 200 bed nursing facility in NYC and when their patients started to drop, they weren't allowed to officially label them as COVID deaths, because it required testing. So they had to label them as TENTATIVE flu/pneumonia deaths. The NYC death toll right now is missing 70% of nursing home residents for this reason.
I've seen my mom's facility on the PDF NY Dept of Health published...and what NY State has counted of their deaths and what the ACTUAL deaths are are two massively different numbers. By the dozens. A 1000 bed facility in NYC is reported to be at something like 85 deaths. Meanwhile, the actual number is 300+.
It's not a cover-up. It's a technicality in not being able to count the deaths from the onset correctly due to a lack of resources. In due time it will likely be corrected.