coronavirus

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morekaos said:
eyephone said:
morekaos said:
eyephone said:
morekaos said:
Fauci is "Science"  haven't you heard? Besides..you cannot prove a mask saved one life, just as I can't prove a mask didn't...too many factors go into the equation...can't prove a negative no matter what you read.

He later then said wear a mask. It was so the health workers can get masks.
Sorry Fauci was not the president of US.

How old are you 5 years old?

So he lied?  interesting.  And No, he was not the President, Worse, he was the Presidents chief medical advisor...who lied then flip flopped.  Not one to take any advice from, huh?

Trump and Fauci did not get along. But if I remember correctly he always said to wear a mask. I think the begging he did not because there was no supply.

You want to get into lying. There is a lot that Trump lied about. Fuck you

tsk...tsk..your language is Cakeist and triggering...stop macro aggressing... ;D ;D >:D

Jeesh Is this guy crying? If you can%u2019t stand the heat get out of the kitchen. Your dealing with a professional, go on a different forum and play with the amateurs.

As I have always said, you have wasted my time. But it%u2019s okay. It doesn%u2019t stop me from working and trading stocks.
 
Nbc News:
A federal court in Texas on Saturday dismissed a lawsuit by 117 hospital employees who challenged their employer's vaccination requirement.

In the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas' written decision, Judge Lynn N. Hughes said lead plaintiff Jennifer Bridges, a nurse, and 116 other Houston Methodist Hospital employees who challenged the requirement, had no case.

Hughes also knocks down a comparison to forced medical experiments in Nazi Germany.

"Equating the injection requirement to medical experimentation in concentration camps is reprehensible," she wrote.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-new...employees-over-covid-19-vaccinations-n1270597

Haha How can a person compare the covid vaccinations to Nazi Germany? 





 
morekaos said:
Irvinehomeseeker said:
Just heard from someone in neighborhood  tried the antibody test and found they had the antibodies for this virus. The family had flu in Nov. and then again Jan, so they all went for this test and found they had the antibodies. So it looks like virus was here much earlier.

Have a buddy (firefighter) just got his antibody test and tested positive for having had it. He says he was sick in November, before thanksgiving. Is sure that was when he had it.  This thing has been around for quite awhile, think a lot of us has already had it. I am pretty sure I did and my son in December. We are further along with this thing then they say.

Told ya?

Coronavirus was in US by December 2019, NIH study finds


A new government study shows that people in at least five states were infected with the coronavirus in December 2019 and early January 2020, providing more evidence that the virus was in the country earlier than previously believed.

Given that the incubation period for the coronavirus can be up to two weeks, the results strongly suggest that the coronavirus was in the United States by early 2019. That?s earlier than the first confirmed case of COVID-19, which occurred on Jan. 19, 2020, according to the New England Journal of Medicine.

https://news.yahoo.com/news/coronavirus-us-december-2019-nih-154900154.html



 
eyephone said:
Philippines' Duterte warns he'll jail people who refuse the COVID-19 vaccine
https://news.yahoo.com/philippines-duterte-warns-hell-jail-023532148.html

Go to Jail if you do not get the vaccine. (in the Philippines)
I guess there are a lot of people that are refusing to take the vaccine in the Philippines.

We will see if Darwin does it better because the Dixie South looks like they are planning a live fire exercise this fall with their vaccination rate across the region stalling at about 33%.

Maybe they'll get a 4th of July bump that rattles them, maybe nothing happens.

Maybe the Delta Variant puts Delta out of business.

At some point you have to stop trying to save an addict and let them hit bottom.

Now please don't smash too windows out of my California Glass house.


 
I?ve got my shot, but my kid is under 12.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. ? As the U.S. emerges from the COVID-19 crisis, Missouri is becoming a cautionary tale for the rest of the country: It is seeing an alarming rise in cases because of a combination of the fast-spreading delta variant and stubborn resistance among many people to getting vaccinated.

Intensive care beds are filling up with surprisingly young, unvaccinated patients, and staff members are getting burned out fighting a battle that was supposed to be in its final throes.

The hope among some health leaders is that the rest of the U.S. might at least learn something from Missouri?s plight.

?If people elsewhere in the country are looking to us and saying, ?No thanks? and they are getting vaccinated, that is good,? said Erik Frederick, chief administrative officer at Mercy Hospital Springfield, which has been inundated with COVID-19 patients as the variant first identified in India rips through the largely non-immunized community. ?We will be the canary.?

The state now leads the nation with the highest rate of new COVID-19 infections, and the surge is happening largely in a politically conservative farming region in the northern part of the state and in the southwestern corner, which includes Springfield and Branson, the country music mecca in the Ozark Mountains where big crowds are gathering again at the city?s theaters and other attractions.

While over 53 percent of all Americans have received at least one shot, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, most southern and northern Missouri counties are well short of 40 percent. One county is at just 13 percent.

Cases remain below their winter highs in southwestern Missouri, but the trajectory is steeper than in previous surges, Frederick said. As of Tuesday, 153 COVID-19 patients were hospitalized at Mercy and another Springfield hospital, Cox Health, up from 31 just over a month ago, county figures show.

These patients are also younger than earlier in the pandemic ? 60 percent to 65 percent of those in the ICU over the weekend at Mercy were under 40, according to Frederick, who noted that younger adults are much less likely to be vaccinated ? and some are pregnant.
https://www.tampabay.com/news/healt...rians-fuel-coronavirus-we-will-be-the-canary/
 
We are going to see so much of this over the next six months.

More than 80 teens and adults have tested positive for the coronavirus after attending a central Illinois summer camp that didn?t check their vaccination status or require masks indoors, state health officials said.?

All the campers and staffers at Crossing Camp in Rushville, Ill., were eligible for the shots, the Illinois Department of Public Health said in a statement this week, but officials knew of ?only a handful of campers and staff receiving the vaccine.

??In total, 85 people who attended the summer camp in mid-June were infected, most of them teens, according to the health department. One unvaccinated young adult was hospitalized, officials said.?

The spate of infections also appears to have spawned a secondary outbreak. Officials said some people from the camp attended a nearby conference, where 11 people subsequently tested positive.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2021/06/30/illinois-summer-camp-coronavirus-outbreak/

 
I haven't been active here on TI in a while but as we see numbers are going up, please encourage people you know (especially the younger crowd) to get vaccinated.

It reduces spread and decreases the chances of variants being created.

#science
 
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