Dr Ding Dong at it again
quid pro quo.![]()
At what again?
Trump era idea do ent.
Will Biden follow same path?
Tell Winehole23. I was parodying him.
386,000 reported new cases today
![]()
Yup he did![]()
Aussie cucks
Making it illegal for their own citizens to return to their country
59k fine and/or 5 years in jail
Seems this india double mutant is something
It's one of several hundred thousand variants
Colorado sees rapid spread of cases among middle and high school students.
Coronavirus cases in Colorado are rapidly increasing among middle and high school students, state public health officials said this week, four months after schools began to reopen.
“Their rate is much higher on average for what we’re seeing for adults in the state, and
that increase we’re seeing is pretty steep at this point,”
There is also an increase in younger children, between 3 and 10 years old, though it is “not as dramatic,”
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2021/04...onavirus-cases
Yeah that makes it better
It does if you're the govt. It's not our fault it's the variant!
Aussie's know China style lock down is the only kind of lock down that works. Give them credit.
Cant fully disagreew this
But there should be no bull abou Aussie and the West being more free and better at human rights than China. That ship sailed. As lomgas the hipocrisy is gone im ok
approach avoidance is real
India Is What Happens When Rich People Do Nothing
https://www.theatlantic.com/internat...ailure/618702/India may be classified as a developing or middle-income country, and by international standards, it does not spend enough on the health of its people. Yet this masks many of India’s strengths in the health-care sector: Our doctors are among the best trained on the planet, and as is well known by now, our country is a pharmacy for the world, thanks to an industry built around making cost-effective medicines and vaccines.
What is evident, however, is that we suffer from moral malnutrition—none of us more so than the rich, the upper class, the upper caste of India. And nowhere is this more evident than in the health-care sector.
India’s economic liberalization in the ’90s brought with it a rapid expansion of the private health-care industry, a shift that ultimately created a system of medical apartheid: World-class private hospitals catered to wealthy Indians and medical tourists from abroad; state-run facilities were for the poor. Those with money were able to purchase the best available care (or, in the case of the absolute richest, flee to safety in private jets), while elsewhere the country’s health-care infrastructure was held together with duct tape. The Indians who bought their way to a healthier life did not, or chose not to, see the widening gulf. Today, they are clutching their pearls as their loved ones fail to get ambulances, doctors, medicine, and oxygen.
I have covered health and science for nearly 20 years, including as the health editor for The Hindu, a major Indian newspaper. That time has taught me that there is no shortcut to public health, no opting out from it. Now the rich sit alongside the poor, facing a reckoning that had only ever plagued the vulnerable in India.
Makes sense -- look how anxious you are about vaccines.
$800B / year and military people aren't paid a living wage, just like Capitalism
The Pandemic Has Added To Food Insecurity Among Military Families
On a recent spring day at Fort Sam Houston, a line of cars idled with their trunks popped open, waiting as volunteers unloaded 11,000 pounds’ worth of food from a semi parked nearby. Some of the drivers were soldiers who had just gotten off work, while others were military spouses or relatives.
As they rolled forward to collect their rations, most barely cracked their windows — volunteers say that’s common because people don’t want to be seen.
In the last year, COVID-19 has exacerbated the unique challenges of military families, like high rates of spousal unemployment.
According to a survey from the military support organization Blue Star Families,
more than 40% of working military spouses reported losing their jobs during the height of the pandemic.
Others had to reduce their work hours, usually to take care of kids who were home and in virtual school.
Many are still not back to work full-time.
“We saw a lot more job losses among spouses of military service members, because childcare became an issue,”
https://www.tpr.org/military-veteran...itary-families
US government telling americans to leave India ASAP
India is our problem as well.
“But, but.... you are a globalist...”
Someone forgot to tell the virus it was a globalist problem. It should know better.
COVID cases and hospitalization surging in Oregon
https://www.latimes.com/world-nation...-surge-vaccineOn Friday, Gov. Kate Brown placed 15 counties in an “extreme risk” category, banning indoor dining at restaurants and limiting the number of patrons at gyms. She said the return to restrictions could save hundreds of lives and prevent as many as 450 hospitalizations over the next three weeks.
“What I can’t do is bring back someone’s life lost to this virus,” Brown said at a news conference Friday. “That’s why, as hard as this is, we must act immediately. This is truly a race between the variants and the vaccines.”
She imposed the restrictions after cases rose by 51% in two weeks, the fastest increase in the nation, and hospitalizations jumped by more than a third. As cases declined in much of the rest of the country, Oregon lurched in the opposite direction.
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