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Wot no coronavirus thread? Part 2

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  • Kidlicious
    replied
    Originally posted by BeBro View Post
    Didn't he call this whole thing a hoax early on? I mean, long before he went into hospital for it.
    He called the attempt to spread hysteria a hoax.

    Leave a comment:


  • BeBMan
    replied
    Didn't he call this whole thing a hoax early on? I mean, long before he went into hospital for it.

    Leave a comment:


  • Kidlicious
    replied
    When you try to spread hysteria but people love Trump too much.

    Leave a comment:


  • BeBMan
    replied

    Leave a comment:


  • Ming
    replied
    Trump super spreader event in Georgia yesterday...


    Leave a comment:


  • Ming
    replied
    218,000 and climbing, and all Trump can do is hold more spreader events.

    Leave a comment:


  • Kidlicious
    commented on 's reply
    85% of the people that catch it wear masks. Whatever. Mask isn't a sure thing go save you. CDC says that.

  • -Jrabbit
    commented on 's reply
    Bullshlt. Here's what he said 3 times yesterday: in an interview, at a campaign rally and in his televised town hall on NBC Thursday night.
    All three times, Trump suggested that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had found that 85% of people who wear masks catch the virus. This is factually, provable false.

    On Fox Business, morning show: "CDC comes out with a statement that 85% of the people wearing masks catch it."
    At North Carolina rally in the afternoon: "Then they come out with things today, did you see CDC -- that 85% of the people wearing the mask catch it?"
    During NBC Town Hall: during Thursday night’s town hall: “Just the other day, they came out with a statement that 85% of the people that wear masks catch it.”

    Does this sound like a man recommending people wear a mask?

  • pchang
    replied
    And of course, herd immunity will not really work for COVID-19.
    The Trump administration this week promoted a theory that calls for people at low risk of contracting COVID-19 to return to schools, sports, and the...

    Leave a comment:


  • -Jrabbit
    commented on 's reply
    LOL, Kid pretends to care about evidence.

  • Ming
    replied
    And while the only thing that Trump is doing about covid is hosting super spreader events...

    US Coronavirus:The US has reached 8 million Covid-19 cases, and the pace of new infections signals a tough winter

    The United States on Friday surpassed 8 million recorded Covid-19 cases -- a milestone that comes as daily infection rates are rising, which experts say is setting the country up for a very difficult winter.
    The country has recorded more than 8,008,000 cases, Johns Hopkins University says. That total is likely a vast undercount, largely because of a low testing capacity early in the pandemic, researchers have said in several reports.
    Perhaps more immediately concerning than Friday's milestone is a recent rise in cases per day. The country's one-week average of new daily cases has moved above 53,000 -- an increase of more than 55% in just over a month, Johns Hopkins data show.
    Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert, has warned that is far too high heading into the end of the year.
    "You can't enter into the cool months of the fall and the cold months of the winter with a high community infection baseline," Fauci said in a John Hopkins virtual event posted Friday.
    Fauci and other public health officials have
    warned the country should try to lower its daily cases to prepare for new challenges. Those include the flu season, which could create what doctors call a "twin-demic" with Covid-19; as well as temptations to hold more gatherings indoors as temperatures drop, including during the holidays.
    But the
    national case trend isn't the only thing concerning experts.
    • Seven states saw a record for Covid-19 hospitalizations Thursday -- Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, Oklahoma and Wisconsin, according to the Covid Tracking Project.
    • Fourteen states set records for their seven-day average of new daily cases Thursday, according to Johns Hopkins.
    • The country's average test-positivity rate over a week has moved above 5%, the Covid Tracking Project says. The CDC's director previously suggested that communities' rates
    should be below 5% to comfortably have schools open
    And test positivity is much worse in certain states -- sitting above 20% Friday in Idaho, Iowa, South Dakota and Wisconsin. Experts including Fauci have said rising positivity rates predict surges in cases, hospitalizations and deaths.
    An
    updated forecast from the University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation projects the US could reach more than 389,000 total Covid-19 deaths by February 1. More than 217,000 people have already lost their lives to the virus in the US.

    The virus is now winning
    More than 30 states accumulated more new Covid-19 cases this past week compared to the previous week, according to data from Johns Hopkins.
    The 14 states that reached their highest-ever seven day average of new daily cases were: Alaska, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
    New Mexico's governor called her state's coronavirus situation "the most serious emergency that New Mexico has ever faced" Thursday.
    The state's test-positivity rate was 8.1%, she said. It's average of new daily cases over a week -- 457 as of Thursday -- is more than 400% higher than it was at one point in early September.
    That comes just days after she issued new restrictions to help curb the spread of the virus -- including a limit on mass gatherings and a 10 p.m. closing time for establishments serving alcohol.
    "The virus is now winning," Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said. "We're in uncharted waters."
    In parts of the state, ICU beds are "full," according to New Mexico Health and Human Services Secretary David Scrase.
    "This is a serious time for the state of New Mexico," Scrase said, adding the state's curve for seven-day average daily cases was "dwarfing previous curves."

    Masks could save 70,000 lives
    It doesn't have to be this way. Experts have repeatedly said that doubling down on simple safety measures including masks, social distancing and hand washing can help slow transmission of the virus.
    Universal mask wearing could save the lives of more than 70,000 Americans in the next three and a half months, according to
    IHME projections.
    And as cooler weather approaches, experts say, there are ways you can see some friends and family while still staying safe.

    Leave a comment:


  • pchang
    commented on 's reply
    You don't understand. Trump is accelerating herd immunity!

  • -Jrabbit
    commented on 's reply
    You are setting the bar incredibly low: 9 WHOLE COUNTRIES ARE WORSE THAN US!
    USA! USA! USA!

  • Ming
    replied
    Originally posted by Kidicious View Post
    You're just jealous because no one goes to Biden rallies.
    I see you are ignoring the actual point... that Trump doesn't care about his supporters and won't enforce basic safety at his rallies... You can't defend that.

    Leave a comment:


  • Kidlicious
    replied
    You're just jealous because no one goes to Biden rallies.

    Leave a comment:

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