Talk about a savage response calling out government in California for their stupid laws.
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Talk about a savage response calling out government in California for their stupid laws.
That is hilarious! So, Guisslapp made a video? LOL!! Sounds JUST LIKE Guissy, trying to spread fear everywhere! HAHA!
IMO, the best line is late in the video where he's speaking of Bill Gates and he says, "Dude...Bill Gates isn't smart. He's a billionaire, not a trillionaire". LOL!
Man the meme's are on fire today..
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Well Nancy's 1800 page 3 TRILLION dollar stimulus package just barely passed the democrat controlled House. It should be DOA at the Senate. It will definitely get a Trump Veto as it should. There's so much crap in this bill again, including mail in voting, bailouts for city and state governments, bailouts for US postal service, etc.
“America is first in the world in deaths, first in the world in infections and we stand out as an emblem of global incompetence. The damage to America’s influence and reputation will be very hard to undo.”
Quite the takedown of this administrations response to Coronavirus. It is as if they have been reading my posts.
https://amp.ft.com/content/97dc7de6-...mpression=true
More from the article...
Redfield is about the worst person you could think of to be heading the CDC at this time,” says Laurie Garrett, a Pulitzer Prize-winning science journalist who has reported on epidemics. “He lets his prejudices interfere with the science, which you cannot afford during a pandemic.”
One of the CDC’s constraints was to insist on developing its own test rather than import a foreign one. Dr Anthony Fauci – the infectious disease expert and now household name – is widely known to loathe Redfield, and vice versa. That meant the CDC and Fauci’s National Institutes of Health were not on the same page. “The last thing you need is scientists fighting with each other in the middle of an epidemic,” says Dr Kenneth Bernard, who set up a previous White House pandemic unit in 2004, which was scrapped under Barack Obama.
Advising Trump was like ‘bringing fruits to the volcano . . . You’re trying to appease a great force that’s impervious to reason’
An administration official
The scarcity of kits meant that the scientists lacked a picture of America’s rapidly spreading infections. The CDC was forced to ration tests to “persons under investigation” – people who had come within 6ft of someone who had either visited China or been infected with Covid-19 in the previous 14 days. Most were denied. Few could prove that they had met either criterion. This was at a time when several countries, notably Germany, Taiwan and South Korea, gave access to on-the-spot tests, including at drive-through centres – an option most Americans still lack.
Somewhere on this board, I wrote a post back in early April about the fact that this COVID-19 pandemic is essentially nothing more than a New York/New Jersey pandemic. In that post, I supplied a link to statistics noting that over 50% of all deaths and coronavirus cases were taking place in just 3 states: New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts. Well, nothing has changed. New York (27,878 deaths), New Jersey (10,148) and Massachusetts (5,592) still make up approximately 50% of all Coronavirus deaths in the country.
This is why many people say you can't paint the entire country with the same broad brush. What works well in New York isn't necessarily the best medicine (metaphorically speaking) for the rest of the country. Every community has it's own distinct, and different challenges. Thirty-Four states have less than 1,000 deaths attributed to Coronavirus. Twelve states have less than 100.
With this in mind, most of these states with fewer deaths should be allowed to open up their businesses, go back to school and start working and producing again.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-...rus-in-the-u-s
These stats also show that Louisiana, with a state population of only 4.6 million people, has supposedly had 2,448 Coronavirus deaths to date. To give you some perspective, the 5 states of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee have a combined population of almost 47 million people (10X Louisiana's), and boasts an almost identical combined number of totals deaths from Coronavirus, at 2,450.
I wonder how many of those deaths could be attributed to Mardi Gras and visitors to the state and spread to population after visiting?