That's the one that got to you.
Are you talking about that blank piece of paper he was scribbling on?
Lol trump s
That's the one that got to you.
If I were the president, I wouldn't be signing blank pieces of paper with my name, but maybe that's just me.
Meanwhile, nobody cares about Biden's blatant virtue signaling.
A national strategy to mitigate COVID-19 sure beats the over pretending it will go away and hinting a vaccine is just around the corner.
Short of effective medical prophylaxis and treatment, wearing masks during a respiratory pandemic is a good idea, especially when combined with social distancing, rapid testing, contact tracing, and a robust public healthcare system.
I'll take prosperity over sniffle policing. That's just me (and most of America).
What's the alternative?
Meanwhile, Zombie Rapist has turned in at 11 AM. He's all tuckered out from the drive and his two-minute speech.
Dumb
you think Truimp is a pussy.
SnakeBoy's going to vote for this failure twice.
False dichotomy.
Delayed public policy response to pandemics can be more destructive than non-medical interventions. Mass death, disability and morbidity are a de facto drag on prosperity.
“We find no evidence that cities that acted more aggressively in public health terms performed worse in economic terms,” says Emil Verner, an assistant professor in the MIT Sloan School of Management and co-author of a new paper detailing the findings. “If anything, the cities that acted more aggressively performed better.”
With that in mind, he observes, the idea of a “trade-off” between public health and economic activity does not hold up to scrutiny; places that are harder hit by a pandemic are unlikely to rebuild their economic capacities as quickly, compared to areas that are more intact.
“It casts doubt on the idea there is a trade-off between addressing the impact of the virus, on the one hand, and economic activity, on the other hand, because the pandemic itself is so destructive for the economy,” Verner says.https://news.mit.edu/2020/pandemic-h...-recovery-0401Looking at the effect across 43 cities, however, the researchers found significantly different economic outcomes, linked to different social distancing policies. The best-performing cities included Oakland, California; Omaha, Nebraska; Portland, Oregon; and Seattle, which all enforced above average duration and intensity of social distancing in 1918. Cities that ins uted significantly fewer than days of social distancing in 1918, and saw manufacturing struggle afterward, include Philadelphia; St. Paul, Minnesota; and Lowell, Massachusetts.
“What we find is that areas that were more severely affected in the 1918 flu pandemic see a sharp and persistent decline in a number of measures of economic activity, including manufacturing employment, manufacturing output, bank loans, and the stock of consumer durables,” Verner says.
Says the basement dweller who never worked a day in his life.
Yeah because it's hilarious. You really suck at whatever message board game you're trying to play in this daily now yearly basis. It's why everyone calls you derp.
So strange when someone like you that claims the medical knowledge you do still props this super spreader in chief up like you do.
You're a really weird dude.
video thumbnail in the OP shows trump wearing a diaper on his face
Puff piece.
Thereby mitigating Zombie Rapist's only card.
you think Trump is a pussy for wearing a mask too
If the article doesn't suit you, feel free to read the study it's based on:
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....act_id=3561560
this is the guy TGY was pimping
My bad, I credited Nathan89 for the introduction.
Sorry, Nathan89!
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