slyjoe
Illuminator
If only someone could convince Trump to take it.
I thought I read that the Lindell guy IS taking it.
If only someone could convince Trump to take it.
I've been thinking about Gavin's discussions, and why some countries did better than others. What is the main factor? Lockdowns? Masks? School policy? Travel restrictions? What is it? is there a common factor.
After doing some reading, I think there is.
The success of a nation's response is most highly dependent on how seriously the threat was taken by the population. I'm not sure how to quantify that, but that seems to me to be the common thread.
Here in the United States, most states had some fairly strict lockdown rules, but even in the middle of the lockdowns, there were huge chunks of population that weren't compliant, and a whole bunch of people saying that the pandemic wasn't something to be worried about. Of course, this starts at the top. "It's a hoax." "It's just the flu." "Kids are a tiny fraction of deaths."
Compare public statements by Donald Trump to public statements by Angela Merkel. Then compare death numbers.
Ben Carson was in the meeting as well. So it was Trump, Carson, Lindell and that Whitney dude, or in other words, a cluster ****.
Communities ban the burning of oleander waste because it is toxic, and these idiots propose humans ingest it. Without clinical human trials apparently. Yep, sounds about right for this collection of stooges.
Jesus, Trump can't be gone soon enough.
You said I didn’t have proper links’s are facts so I assumed you would provide some sort of proof showing they where wrong
Unfortunately, it could very well be another four and a half years of Trump Presidency most or all of which will be with the spectre of Covid-19 looming.![]()
I didFirst posted on August 8:
Again yesterday:
1 - Obviously, more kids and adults have sadly died between August 8 and August 17.
2 - You still haven't posted a source for those statistics. If I am wrong, please correct me.
Thanks.
I really doubt that. Nothing to do with the election, but see how much more unwell he is now compared even to the start of the year, let alone 2016.
I just hope his physical decline overtakes his mental decline.
I did
.....
I want to see people start challenging him to ride a bike test. He wants Biden to take his dementia test. I'd like Trump to take the bike ride challenge. There's no electoral purpose other than he gets ridicule and hopefully, falls and hurts himself.
Tom Joseph
@TomJChicago
·
Aug 16
Noted here 8/1, Donald Trump’s dementia, falling & blood thinners would be a danger. Questions:
-How did Robert Trump fall?
-Was he really recently released from neuro care to file a lawsuit against his niece Mary?
-Did media see him during this release & directly take his quote?
Quote Tweet
Tom Joseph
@TomJChicago
· Aug 2
Trump’s hand bruise resembles when a patient is on Coumadin or another blood thinner & gets a blood draw or IV. If so it’s more medical malpractice bc he has frontotemporal dementia & is surely falling. Blood thinners & falls are a bad combo as a cerebral hemorrhage could result
For places the virus got its foothold after the beginning of April I’d agree with you. Before that I think you are relying on 20-20 hindsight to know when countries “should” take this virus very seriously. In Jan neither IFR nor R0 were know and human-to-human transmission wasn’t even confirmed until late Jan. If Feb these started to be known to some degree, but it was not unreasonable to think that the small number of cases outside China could be handled by contact tracing and there would not be any other major outbreaks.
....
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/06/us/politics/navarro-warning-trump-coronavirus.htmlA top White House adviser starkly warned Trump administration officials in late January that the coronavirus crisis could cost the United States trillions of dollars and put millions of Americans at risk of illness or death.
https://www.axios.com/trump-coronavirus-warnings-46ea8006-2e19-4810-82c1-0f10f4f9aa97.htmlAmericans working at the World Health Organization warned the federal government about the novel coronavirus outbreak late last year as the outbreak spread in real-time.
So you're okay with at least 1.4% of everyone over age 15 dying if they contract covid, with odds getting much worse with age? A death rate of at least 3% for everyone over 25? A death rate of at least 5% for everyone over 35? You don't consider that a crisis? You're good with that? And note that those death rates are despite masks, social distancing, improved medical care, etc.
And you stubbornly refuse to accept that death is not the only bad outcome from a covid infection. Severe damage to lungs, heart, brain and circulatory system have been identified, require extensive, expensive treatment, and may ultimately be life-shortening. You seem to be okay with that, too.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...3de170-de6a-11ea-8051-d5f887d73381_story.html
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20200622-the-long-term-effects-of-covid-19-infection
https://www.vox.com/2020/7/14/21324201/covid-19-long-term-effects-symptoms-treatment
What is the point that you think you are trying to make?
"I aced the bike test! Everyone were amazed! The first five metres are easy, cause then they're holding your bike and pushing you, but the last five are relly hard! And if you pedal yourself and don't fall off the bike you get bonus points! No one's ever done that!I want to see people start challenging him to ride a bike test. He wants Biden to take his dementia test. I'd like Trump to take the bike ride challenge. There's no electoral purpose other than he gets ridicule and hopefully, falls and hurts himself.
I don't think that's entirely true. Peter Navarro, one of Trump's right-wing economic advisers, warned Trump directly in January that covid was coming and it would be catastrophic.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/06/us/politics/navarro-warning-trump-coronavirus.html
Other officials also weighed in early:
https://www.axios.com/trump-coronavirus-warnings-46ea8006-2e19-4810-82c1-0f10f4f9aa97.html
We could all see what was happening in China, and any President other than Trump from either party would have started sounding the alarms and circling the wagons. "We didn't know" doesn't work.
There has been enough time to determine long term symptoms the ones that do have ongoing issues is often due and underlying illness with covid and are very rare your links don’t give a number are percentage of cases you have to have a subscription to view
The Washington post.
from your second link.
Happy hypoxia” is another mystery. Our blood normally features “oxygen saturation” levels of around 98%. Anything below 85% should lead to a loss of consciousness, coma or even death. But a large number of Covid-19 patients have been found to have oxygen saturation levels below 70%, even below 60%, yet remained fully conscious and cognitively functional.
Then there’s the fact that an enormous percentage of people who carry the virus have no symptoms. Estimates vary, but one mass-testing report from Iceland found that fully 50% of the population who carried the virus expressed no symptoms whatsoever.
Perhaps most unnerving: while about 80% of people who develop Covid-19 shake off the virus easily, a small percentage quickly worsen and within days die from respiratory weakness and multi-system organ failure.
I have searched for this many times most of the major news sites all say there hasn’t been enough time to determine long term illness even those who have been very critical of the virus.
From your second link: Yet it’s currently impossible to predict who will have long-lasting symptoms from Covid-19. “People who are older and frailer with more comorbidities are more likely to have longer physical recovery. However, I’ve seen a lot of young people be really, really sick,” Santhosh says. “They will have a long tail of recovery too.”
Keep in mind understanding works. Lots of people say lots of things early on. Any of these things could turn out to be correct but as the facts come in most fall by the wayside. This means you will always be able to find someone that was “right” in very early days, but this should not be mistaken for the truth being clear at the time. There would have been people championing every somewhat reasonable position, so whatever the outcome you can always look back and find people who guessed right. This is distinctly different that having the weight of the evidence being clear and convincing.
You should also consider that maybe they interpreted “serious” as something like SARS or the 2009 H1N1 epidemic. Outcomes like these would have been considered serious even though they fall far short of what COVID-19 on the danger scale.
I did
https://ourworldindata.org/search?q=covid+death+ages+in+the+US
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/201...s-discovery/hospitalization-death-by-age.html
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid_weekly/index.htm
[qimg]https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50237477821_05d2e69787_c_d.jpg[/qimg]
The current stats only to the 8th it’s supposed to be updated weekly
Keep in mind understanding works. Lots of people say lots of things early on. Any of these things could turn out to be correct but as the facts come in most fall by the wayside. This means you will always be able to find someone that was “right” in very early days, but this should not be mistaken for the truth being clear at the time. There would have been people championing every somewhat reasonable position, so whatever the outcome you can always look back and find people who guessed right. This is distinctly different that having the weight of the evidence being clear and convincing.
You should also consider that maybe they interpreted “serious” as something like SARS or the 2009 H1N1 epidemic. Outcomes like these would have been considered serious even though they fall far short of what COVID-19 on the danger scale.
Two new studies from Germany paint a sobering picture of the toll that Covid-19 takes on the heart, raising the specter of long-term damage after people recover, even if their illness was not severe enough to require hospitalization. One study examined the cardiac MRIs of 100 people who had recovered from Covid-19 and compared them to heart images from 100 people who were similar but not infected with the virus. Their average age was 49 and two-thirds of the patients had recovered at home. More than two months later, infected patients were more likely to have troubling cardiac signs than people in the control group: 78 patients showed structural changes to their hearts, 76 had evidence of a biomarker signaling cardiac injury typically found after a heart attack, and 60 had signs of inflammation.
These were relatively young, healthy patients who fell ill in the spring, Valentina Puntmann, who led the MRI study, pointed out in an interview. Many of them had just returned from ski vacations. None of them thought they had anything wrong with their hearts. Link to Stat News
Once inside a few initial host cells, the virus sets them to work churning out copies of itself. Within hours, thousands of new virus particles begin bursting forth, ready to infect more cells. Although SARS-CoV-2 is less deadly than the original SARS virus, which emerged in 2002, it replicates more rapidly. Also unlike SARS, which primarily infects the lungs, SARS-CoV-2 replicates throughout the airway, including in the nose and throat, making it highly contagious – like the common cold. UCSF magazine