35 what to one what?
Deaths in the US without quarantine to deaths in Cuba with quarantine. The two countries aren't directly comparable- Cochran is only confident estimating the number of AIDS deaths prevented as 'at least half'- but that's still 300k people. (If we had tested everyone in the US in 1987, that would be 300 deaths prevented for every person falsely quarantined.)
You're not exactly laying my fears to rest about the excessively coercive nature of your project.
The project is obviously coercive: otherwise it won't work. We're asking whether or not it's excessive, but I think in order to draw a line we need to have cases that clearly fall on each side of the line. Do you think it was excessive to, say, imprison Typoid Mary for three decades?
You are quite wrong that this has been seen as the right move for centuries. In the past, quarantines were normally carried out informally, sometimes by the church.
The US has federal laws on the books regarding quarantine since 1799. That's not because government quarantine is only 200 years old; that's because the US is only 200 years old. When churches have carried out quarantines, I would suspect it's because they are the effective government.
I brought them up as a reductio, not as a serious suggestion.
I'm serious; one of the reasons I don't engage in casual sex with men is because I would have to trust his self-report of whether or not he has HIV (and almost half of the men with HIV don't know that they have it).
One thing I find strange about this discussion is that it's all in the past tense. To those so gung-ho about quarantine - why not quarantine now? HIV is just as infectious as ever.
Several reasons:
I'm serious; one of the reasons I don't engage in casual sex with men is because I would have to trust his self-report of whether or not he has HIV (and almost half of the men with HIV don't know that they have it).
Did my quantified risks post make you more or less concerned?
A post from Gregory Cochran's and Henry Harpending's excellent blog West Hunter.
The commenter Ron Pavellas adds:
The Wasserman Test.