Foldren always in basement, folding.
Not today.
Foldren always in basement, folding.
Elf man trying to BFF Chumpdump
How many days have you volunteered in a COVID ward without a mask?
Almost 10k slips trips and falls counted as covid deaths in USA. You hate to see it.
Less than 10k covid only deaths
...m..........k
..
........
Foldren too low iq and can only fold like derp.
all he can do is cry and lie
And meltdown post.![]()
This is the spanish flu
Thread
you don't even know that's a poster
Weekend reporting is typically lighter than M-F
UNITED STATES
Yesterday's data (12/14/2020)
NEW CASES: 190,920
DEATHS: 1,389
Ten US counties with most per capita growth in cases , last seven days:
County Total reported cases per 100k New cases in last 7 days per 100k Crockett County, Tex. 13,267 5,065 Coke County, Tex. 10,992 4,916 Crane County, Tex. 9,651 4,691 Floyd County, Tex. 7,936 4,530 Bent County, Colo. 11,431 4,476 Collingsworth County, Tex. 6,442 4,406 Upton County, Tex. 6,714 4,403 Sterling County, Tex. 7,975 4,294 Taylor County, Tex. 6,901 4,071 Tom Green County, Tex.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graph...-cases-deaths/7,091 4,032
That seems pretty dramatic until you realize that several of those counties have populations under 5K. It would only take a case or two to give those "new cases in last 7 days per 100k"
Dr. Darrin said they're out of fuel.
Is Texas the only US state with small counties?
In relative terms the growth is dramatic.
Bad math on my part. It would be between 150-200 cases for these counties.
So, nbd?
Here's a bigger picture
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news...tates-n1231332
You seem eager to deflect. Does data reflecting the situation closer to home make you uncomfortable?
If I look closest to home, there's not much happening over the last couple weeks.
It's not just FL Desantis LYING about pandemic numbers
OSHA Is Helping Employers Get Away With Underreporting Health Care Worker Deaths
State and federal laws say facilities like Ludeman are required to alert Occupational Safety and Health Administration officials about work-related employee deaths
within eight hours.
But facility officials did not deem the first staff death on April 13 work-related, so they did not report it. They made the same decision about the second and third deaths. And Walter’s.
It’s a pattern that’s emerged across the nation, according to a KHN review of hundreds of worker deaths detailed by family members, colleagues and local, state and federal records.
Workplace safety regulators have taken a lenient stance toward employers during the pandemic,
giving them
broad discretion to decide internally whether to report worker deaths.
As a result, scores of deaths were not reported to occupational safety officials from the earliest days of the pandemic through late October.
https://truthout.org/articles/osha-i...worker-deaths/
by the time the pandemic subsides in 2022, 10Ks of pandemic deaths will by lied about, hidden from official statistics.
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