Author Topic: Covid 19 - We are all screwed - discuss  (Read 584233 times)

tommywishbone

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Re: Corona Virus......am I missing something?
« Reply #1575 on: March 16, 2020, 04:11:11 PM »
Laughable rubbish.   

One coward scaring another coward.

Folly.
a

friedchickendinner

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1576 on: March 16, 2020, 04:32:18 PM »
Arnold even got to mentioned he had some vegan food  ::)



SOMEPARTS

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1577 on: March 16, 2020, 04:33:26 PM »
I held a monthly Board meeting just now....conference call. Another meeting I have which was scheduled for next Wednesday morning has been cancelled. People paying attention and doing the best we can.










 ;D

friedchickendinner

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1578 on: March 16, 2020, 04:36:54 PM »
 :D

Gregzs

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1579 on: March 16, 2020, 04:37:23 PM »
Idris Elba becomes one of the small handful of famous to come down with it -

https://variety.com/2020/film/news/idris-elba-coronavirus-1203535677/ .

Seems mildly sick, and in good spirits from the video posted below -

https://twitter.com/idriselba/status/1239617034901524481 .


Kristofer Hivju, best known for his roles on Game of Thrones and The Witcher, has tested positive for the COVID-19 novel coronavirus, making him the latest notable name to come down with the virus which has paralyzed much of the industrialized world. Hivju, who played Tormund Giantsbane in the long-running HBO series, had just joined The Witcher recently -- weeks before the production was shut down due to concerns over the spread of the virus. Nearly all TV and film productions have ground to a halt over the last couple of weeks, leaving the entertainment world in chaos as theaters close down and box office numbers plummet.

Hivju announced his diagnosis on social media. The revelation follows similar announcements by Tom Hanks and Idris Elba.

https://comicbook.com/irl/2020/03/16/game-thrones-witcher-kristofer-hivju-coronavirus/?fbclid=IwAR3TfFc1Y0RWzdQ_zi-ozjKRrHsQCjoRmyH7cS0_BI34DFti84h8s6WK7dg

XFACTOR

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1580 on: March 16, 2020, 04:38:49 PM »









 ;D

Looks a little too innocent for him.

Gregzs

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1581 on: March 16, 2020, 04:44:29 PM »
New Jersey announces 80 new coronavirus cases. Statewide total jumps to at least 178 positive tests.

The coronavirus outbreak in New Jersey increased to at least 178 cases on Monday with 80 new positive tests for COVID-19 announced by state officials with two deaths, as residents brace for sweeping new restrictions including a call for a statewide curfew, closure of all public and private schools and the shut down of casinos, dine-in restaurant service, theaters gyms and bars.

The latest numbers were made public on the state Department of Health’s website and by Gov. Phil Murphy during an afternoon briefing. Murphy also announced plans to mobilize the National Guard for the coronavirus response.

The two N.J. coronavirus deaths are linked, state officials have said. A religious education teacher from Freehold, Rita Fusco-Jackson, who was in her 50s, died on Thursday. Her death is connected to the death of John Brennan, a horse trainer who lived in Little Ferry.

Like Brennan, Fusco-Jackson’s family was involved in harness horse racing and the two deaths were connected through a family gathering in Monmouth County.

The age range for the new cases is 5-year-old to 93-years-old, marking the first known pediatric case in the state, according to Department of Health Commissioner Judy Persichelli.

“It’s the youngest child affected,” Persichelli said. "And that child is home.”

“The majority are hospitalized or have been hospitalized,” Persichelli said of the state’s 178 cases.

The county-by-county list of cases released by the state Monday includes:

Bergen County: 61
Essex County: 20
Hudson County: 19
Middlesex County: 17
Monmouth County: 14
Passaic County: 8
Union County: 8
Mercer County: 6
Morris County: 6
Burlington County: 5
Somerset County: 5
Camden County: 3
Ocean County: 3
Hunterdon County: 1
The counties were not identified for two of the new cases.

The latest update from New Jersey health officials comes hours after Murphy, along with governors in New York and Connecticut, made an unprecedented move in all three states to close all restaurants, bars, movie theaters, gyms and casinos beginning 8 p.m. Monday. All will be closed until further notice, though restaurants and bars will be allowed to offer takeout and delivery.

The coronavirus outbreak has continued to spread in New Jersey and there are now cases in 14 of 21 counties. Bergen County has the most coronavirus cases with 61, according to the state.

More than 175,000 people across the globe have been infected during the coronavirus pandemic and 6,700 people have died, according to Johns Hopkins University. In the United States, there are more than 4,000 confirmed cases and 69 deaths.

https://www.nj.com/coronavirus/2020/03/new-jersey-announces-78-new-coronavirus-cases-statewide-total-jumps-to-at-least-176-positive-tests.html?utm_content=nj_facebook_njcom&utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=njcom_sf&fbclid=IwAR0gtihjEAx5VnyvaXNXDkOZn1_ngkqxRFJ8oYDuDJ6cqiWfWREc_-_zhjE

joswift

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1582 on: March 16, 2020, 04:49:44 PM »
Looks a little too innocent for him.

illuminati

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Re: Corona Virus......am I missing something?
« Reply #1583 on: March 16, 2020, 04:50:47 PM »
Laughable rubbish.   

One coward scaring another coward.

Folly.

Agreed - Some Serious Scaremongering Going On & An Easy excersise in control of mass population
So many so easily fooled & frightened & ready to do exactly as their Masters Tell Them. 🙄

friedchickendinner

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Re: Corona Virus......am I missing something?
« Reply #1584 on: March 16, 2020, 04:51:53 PM »
Well not everybody can be so cool and bad ass as illuminati and tommywishbone  ::)

illuminati

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Re: Corona Virus......am I missing something?
« Reply #1585 on: March 16, 2020, 04:55:21 PM »
Well not everybody can be so cool and bad ass as illuminati and tommywishbone  ::)

No not bad ass at all.
Just not buying into mass hysteria & mass control
Even if your so Gullible & wish to be fooled & controled
Some of us are able to Think & act for ourselves

You carry on as you wish.

Gregzs

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1586 on: March 16, 2020, 04:59:01 PM »
Former James Bond star, Olga Kurylenko, has taken to social media to reveal to her fans that she has been diagnosed with coronavirus. The actress, who starred alongside Daniel Craig in 2008's Quantum of Solace, told fans in a post on Instagram that she has been feeling ill for about a week, which led to her testing positive for coronavirus over the weekend. She seems to be in good spirits, however, and is urging others reading the post to take the current pandemic seriously.

"Locked up at home after having tested positive for coronavirus," Kurylenko wrote on Instagram. "I've actually been ill for almost a week now. Fever and fatigue are my main symptoms. Take care of yourself and do take this seriously!"

Kurylenko portrayed Camile in Quantum of Solace, Craig's second outing as James Bond. Camile had her own agenda in the film, just as Bond did, and the duo needed to work together to stop Mathieu Amalric's Dominic Greene. Quantum of Solace was the only Bond film that Kurylenko appeared in. She has since had roles in films such as Oblivion, The Water Diviner, and The Room, as well as the TV series Magic City.

The James Bond franchise itself has also been affected by the spreading of the coronavirus. No Time to Die, the 25th installment in the series and Craig's last outing as the titular character, was originally set to arrive in theaters next month. However, due to the ongoing crisis surrounding the virus, No Time to Die was pushed back to November.

Craig's final movie as James Bond is currently scheduled to hit theaters on November 25th.

https://comicbook.com/movies/2020/03/16/james-bond-olga-kurylenko-coronavirus-diagnosed/?fbclid=IwAR0wKbv5d2droMt5uzhSo4qZ9sFmO3tMpU18zXkkOSvdOg7OdLnqieCVsYA

Gregzs

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1587 on: March 16, 2020, 05:03:23 PM »
Italy May Soon Be Forced to Stop Treating Coronavirus Patients Over 80


Italian hospitals, buckling under a surge of coronavirus patients, may soon have to deny intensive care treatment to people over 80, according to draft plans for the next phase of the crisis.

A written proposal by the civil protection department of the badly-hit northern region of Piedmont, seen by The Telegraph newspaper, warns that the constant rise in patients means that demand for intensive care resources will outstrip supply. That will force health authorities to choose who gets treated and who doesn’t — with those considered more likely to survive to get priority.

The document, which lays out guidelines for assessing who should get treatment once that tipping point is reached, proposes that people over 80, and those already in poor health, will be denied.

“The criteria for access to intensive therapy in cases of emergency must include age of less than 80 or a score on the Charlson comorbidity Index [measuring what other medical conditions the patient has] of less than 5,” says the document.

Luigi Icardi, a health councillor in Piedmont, said the protocols would establish binding priorities for who receives treatment, based on their chance of survival. “I never wanted to see such a moment,” he said.

The document reportedly only needs approval from a technical-scientific committee before being sent to hospitals. Government sources said the same criteria were expected to be rolled out throughout Italy, the Telegraph reported.

Doctors in Italy, where the epidemic is worse than in any place outside China, have been warning that it will cause their healthcare system to collapse as the unending flow of new patients pushes ICU bed capacity to breaking point. A national lockdown that was imposed last week has done nothing to slow the rise of infections and deaths; officials reported 368 new fatalities on Sunday, the greatest day-on-day increase in the country so far.

Nearly 25,000 people have been tested positive for the virus in Italy, and a total of 1,809 people have died there, out of about 6,000 deaths worldwide. Experts have speculated that the high death toll in Italy is linked to the age of its population, which is the oldest in Europe.

The Italian document adds to the alarming picture of the threat facing the elderly as the pandemic rages in more than 100 countries. In the UK, Health Minister Matt Hancock said Sunday that people over 70 will soon be asked to stay at home for up to four months to protect themselves.

Speaking to the BBC, Hancock said the measure, expected to be announced in coming weeks, was “a very big ask,” but that it was a necessary restriction to try to protect them, as the virus was anticipated to spread widely through the community.

The warning came as details of a secret government briefing to top officials in Britain’s health system laid out the expected impact of the outbreak in the UK. The document, reported by The Guardian Sunday, predicted that the outbreak will last until spring 2021, infect up to 80 percent of the population, and require about 8 million people (about 15 percent) to be hospitalized.

Cover: Hospital personnel seen at the window of the Gemelli hospital where Columbus Covid 2 hospital opened to treat COVID virus patients, in Rome, Monday, March 16, 2020. The vast majority of people recover from the new coronavirus. According to the World Health Organization, most people recover in about two to six weeks, depending on the severity of the illness.

https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/5dmqxb/italy-may-soon-be-forced-to-stop-treating-coronavirus-patients-over-80?utm_source=vicenewsfacebook&utm_content=1584369005&utm_medium=social&fbclid=IwAR2s9pC1xl7VwnL4D-jZcY-zjVhrAgmMM4gKmQvFuJhSK-lwYXGfSaBt_CI

Moontrane

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Re: Coronavirus, we are all screwed
« Reply #1588 on: March 16, 2020, 05:05:30 PM »
Some remarkable coincidences.  I wouldn't be surprised if the book breaks into the top twenty best-seller list.  Good for Koontz.

Not in the top ten but listed for as much as $295 on Amazon.  Wow!

friedchickendinner

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1589 on: March 16, 2020, 05:07:37 PM »
"selling"

friedchickendinner

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Re: Corona Virus......am I missing something?
« Reply #1590 on: March 16, 2020, 05:10:39 PM »
No not bad ass at all.
Just not buying into mass hysteria & mass control
Even if your so Gullible & wish to be fooled & controled
Some of us are able to Think & act for ourselves

You carry on as you wish.

And how do you do that exactly, think and act for yourselves? Will you go to the gym even though it's locked? Will you meet up with other people even though there's a risk of getting the virus and infecting somebody elder or with an illness that might die because of it?
Will you stop washing your hands?

Let me know all the AWESOME stuff you guys do that others dont, you who can think and act for yourself!

Moontrane

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Thin Lizzy

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Re: Corona Virus......am I missing something?
« Reply #1592 on: March 16, 2020, 05:22:42 PM »
China forced people to lock themselves in their homes to stop the spread starting in January, they were very strict about it. Do you think Americans would voluntarily lock themselves in their homes for over a month? From traffic data coming out of Wuhan (11 million population), there is still very low activity, so people are still quarantined since January 25th. That's nearly 2 months of quarantine.  Americans won't do this which means infections will skyrocket.

The graph I posted is deaths not infected. You graph you just posted is already out of date as there are 27,980 infected in italy, not 12,462. And all other countries is 101,529 cases not 16,966. See how fast it's increasing?

Right click, open image in new tab...

This is traffic congestion nearly two months after lockdown of a 11 million person city, the city is still dead, barely any traffic!!! That's why China is controlling it, they shut down everything, nobody leave their homes for months!!!



So, how and when did it spread to so many other countries?

tommywishbone

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1593 on: March 16, 2020, 05:22:44 PM »
The whacked out, spun out, brain dead mayor of San Francisco just order a "Shelter in Place" order for 6.5 million people.  HAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHA!

Unenforceable, attention whoring shit. 


😂😂😂😂😂😂
a

Gregzs

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Kwon

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tommywishbone

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Re: Corona Virus......am I missing something?
« Reply #1596 on: March 16, 2020, 05:37:02 PM »
Well not everybody can be so cool and bad ass as illuminati and tommywishbone  ::)

"...Cool and bad ass..."?

 No sir. Just not scared of the boogie man, or monsters, or nightmares.

Get a hold of yourself. Stand tall. Pretend people are watching.

You do not have to be strong and brave to act strong and brave.
a

friedchickendinner

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Re: Corona Virus......am I missing something?
« Reply #1597 on: March 16, 2020, 05:52:23 PM »
"...Cool and bad ass..."?

 No sir. Just not scared of the boogie man, or monsters, or nightmares.

Get a hold of yourself. Stand tall. Pretend people are watching.

You do not have to be strong and brave to act strong and brave.

Too much Game of Thrones for you, give it a rest.

What a nerd.

Army of One

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1598 on: March 16, 2020, 05:59:57 PM »
Just flu, bro

dearth

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Re: Coronavirus - We are all screwed - discuss
« Reply #1599 on: March 16, 2020, 06:00:20 PM »
“This is a very contagious — this is a very contagious virus. It’s incredible,” he said. “But it’s something that we have tremendous control over.” - A man baby with limited vocabulary trying to sound presidential  aka leadership according to bigots like Kung

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/trumps-repeated-insistences-that-coronavirus-is-under-control-have-reached-a-critical-moment/ar-BB11gesM




Trump’s repeated insistences that coronavirus is under control have reached a critical moment
 Philip Bump 6 hrs ago
Dow dives 3,000 points in worst day since 1987
Elba says he tested positive for coronavirus
Energized by the stock markets’ late surge two days earlier, President Trump on Sunday offered assurances about the progress of the country’s fight against the novel coronavirus.

Mike Pence, Anthony S. Fauci, Brett Giroir, Jerome Adams, Deborah Birx standing in front of a crowd: President Trump leaves the news briefing room at the White House on Sunday. (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)© Tasos Katopodis/AFP/Getty Images President Trump leaves the news briefing room at the White House on Sunday. (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)
“This is a very contagious — this is a very contagious virus. It’s incredible,” he said. “But it’s something that we have tremendous control over.”

It was a bit of optimism that seemed to run contrary to the moment. It was also a return to form for Trump, who has continually claimed that the virus is under control in the United States.

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He did so two weeks ago, during his speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference. At the time, there were still under 100 cases in the United States.

“We’ve done a great job. And I’ve gotten to know these professionals,” Trump said then. “They’re incredible. And everything is under control. I mean, they’re very, very cool. They’ve done it, and they’ve done it well. Everything is really under control.”

Since then, the number of confirmed cases in the country has risen an average of 30 percent a day. That’s confirmed cases; the actual number of cases is undoubtedly an order of magnitude higher. It’s hard to ascertain the actual number, in part because only about 30,000 tests have been conducted.

During his first briefing on the coronavirus, on Feb. 26, Trump insisted that the government had things well in hand.


“It’s going to be very well under control. Now, it may get bigger, it may get a little bigger. It may not get bigger at all. We’ll see what happens,” he said, later adding that the virus “is a little bit different [from the flu], but in some ways it’s easier and in some ways it’s a little bit tougher. But we have it so well under control. I mean, we really have done a very good job.”

He also said publicly that the virus was under control on Feb. 25, Feb. 24, Feb. 23, Jan. 30 and Jan. 22. That last example came during an interview with CNBC.

“We have it totally under control,” he said then. “It’s one person coming in from China, and we have it under control. It’s — going to be just fine.”

Needless to say, the government did not have it under control. The question now is whether the damage from the virus can be controlled, both directly — infections and deaths — and indirectly, in the strain it puts on the country’s health-care system. That strain could lead to additional deaths as lifesaving resources needed for other issues are consumed by coronavirus patients.

That grim reality has been experienced in Italy, where the number of coronavirus infections has continued to grow. As we noted last week, the increase in cases in the United States has tracked with the increase in Italy, trailing Italy by a bit over a week in the number of cases. On Sunday, there were nearly 3,700 cases in the United States, about where Italy was on March 6.

This is not a portrait of a country where coronavirus is under control.

a close up of a map
The good news is that the increase in confirmed cases in the United States is not climbing at the same rate as in Spain or China, growth rates that stand out when considering the shift since the 500th case was reported in each country. (Again, we reiterate the necessary caveat that the real, undetected number of cases in the United States is much larger.) The bad news is that it’s continuing to grow.

a close up of a map
Notice, though, how Italy and South Korea diverged at about the point that the United States has reached. South Korea, which conducted broad testing for the virus and implemented stringent social distancing measures, saw the number of new cases slow. Italy, which was slower to respond, has seen a continued increase.

a close up of a map
It offers a glimmer of hope for the United States: Are the measures being rolled out across the country enough to shift our trajectory to mirror that of South Korea? Might Trump’s repeated confidence about the virus being under control reflect such a shift?

Unfortunately, zooming back to the 100-case level suggests that it doesn’t. South Korea’s effort to limit the number of cases it was seeing was already evident at the point the United States has reached. The slope of the curve had already begun to shift downward.

a close up of a map
These are absolute numbers, so part of the reason that the rate of increase in the United States better mirrors that in Italy than in South Korea may be a function of the fact that the United States’ efforts to shift the behavior of its population is slower.

But that may just be optimism. As noted above, the United States has continued to average about 30 percent more confirmed cases each day since hitting the 500th case. That’s slower than Spain, but faster than both Italy and South Korea.

a screenshot of a cell phone
There is certainly value in the president calming Americans’ concerns about the coronavirus. The challenge for Trump, though, is that his assurances have been uncoupled from reality for months. It’s hard to see evidence for his claim that the virus is under control now just as it was hard to see how he could make a similar assurance in late January.

News to stay informed. Advice to stay safe.
Click here for complete coronavirus coverage from Microsoft News
If some portion of Trump’s confidence Sunday stemmed from his enthusiasm about the market surge Friday — he sent an autographed picture of the surge to his favorite host on Fox Business — that confidence has probably waned. Markets opened down significantly Monday morning.

The threat to the economy isn’t demonstrably under control, either.