So China’s mismanagement didn’t matter because we handled things so badly? Maybe if we had better info from China we wouldn’t have sent infected people to Nursing homes Or told people to go out and enjoy the Chinese New Year and not be xenophobic. You’re a clown.Ridiculous post. First off, he said Asia, not China, and yes, China behaved very badly, as I've said, but even if China had been fully transparent it would've only delayed the pandemic, not stopped it, since there would've still been hundreds of thousands of people traveling from China to other countries before they could've figured out what was going on with a novel virus and some of them would've been infected and seeded outbreaks everywhere else. Given how badly we responded to the initial outbreak, I have a hard time seeing a different outcome, other than it being delayed by weeks or a month or so.
Hmmm...do the state travel restrictions apply to business/commerce activities? My guess is a nonbusiness out-of-state visitor would be subject to the state restrictions (i.e. vacationer, visiting relatives, personal). I would probably have to defer to a pro like @camdenlawprof for clarifications.
What are the best washable cloth masks that are comfortable but give the best protection too?
Preferably made in the USA.
I have prospects for a new job and would need to get better masks than I currently have.
I bought from here: https://standardissuetees.com/collections/shop-all/products/cotton-mask
Nice and washable — can also insert paper towel between layers if desired
That is the dumbest analogy I've ever read on this board! Congrats. You are off the rail again!Here we go smh--Jackie Smith dropped a wide open TD pass in the endzone that cost Dallas SB XIII-it hit him right in the breadbasket. Was the OC or head coach to blame for calling that play to Smith?
C'mon you're beating a dead horse. Go ahead and blast the career government scientists and health officials that botched the testing kit development in the CDC lab. And why was there never any apparent consensus among career health officials and scientists about the threat urgency in Jan-Feb? I'm fine with getting real answers there--suspect Chicom's cover-up was a huge part of the problem.
Or success in stopping the virus.Mask wearing had nothing to do with the virus lol. If China figured out that peanut butter and celery prevented and cured Covid, you wouldn’t eat it because they were responsible for the virus in the first place?
Anyways, cultural adoption of masks stretches beyond China. Not saying it will or won’t happen here, but China’s role in the virus’ origin will have nothing to do with people’s mask preferences.
I bought from here: https://standardissuetees.com/collections/shop-all/products/cotton-mask
Nice and washable — can also insert paper towel between layers if desired
Ridiculous post. First off, he said Asia, not China, and yes, China behaved very badly, as I've said, but even if China had been fully transparent it would've only delayed the pandemic, not stopped it, since there would've still been hundreds of thousands of people traveling from China to other countries before they could've figured out what was going on with a novel virus and some of them would've been infected and seeded outbreaks everywhere else. Given how badly we responded to the initial outbreak, I have a hard time seeing a different outcome, other than it being delayed by weeks or a month or so.
So China’s mismanagement didn’t matter because we handled things so badly? Maybe if we had better info from China we wouldn’t have sent infected people to Nursing homes Or told people to go out and enjoy the Chinese New Year and not be xenophobic. You’re a clown.
bs....you make predictions about testing declaring we would have 75% less deaths and then basically excuse China...oh and buy the way dumping covid patients in nursing homes killed what 40-45% in this area, you have excused that behavior too
there is nothing scientific in your arguments and opinions..yes opinions, stop declaring yourself the end all be all on what happened and what was going to happen
They're not made in the US, but in Europe somewhere, but the ones available on vistaprint are super comfortable and have a pocket for extra filtration of you so choose.What are the best washable cloth masks that are comfortable but give the best protection too?
Preferably made in the USA.
I have prospects for a new job and would need to get better masks than I currently have.
See my posts on this above. Retrospective trials like this one are way, way less meaningful than randomized controlled trials, like the Recovery trial, which showed no clinical benefit from HCQ in hospital settings. Also, most of the other observational trials do not show the benefit the Ford trial showed (also the Ford trial had a control group that was 5 years older than the HCQ group, which was likely significant). Would you like me to cite those?
It's crap. Just off the top of my head, not sure anyone has used HCQ more than the US and Brazil and SK barely used it at all, since the vast majority of cases were resolved before the HCQ frenzy started in late March (and nobody was using it as a prophylactic in Feb/March). I'm sure there are more errors in it, but I don't have the patience to review it, especially since there's no clinical data to support its use.
No perhaps if the initial directives by Fauci-Debbie and the CDC had not been so wrong then instead of what we saw may have been somewhat different. But it was a perfect storm in a overly dense populated corridor known as the northeast of the USA . No matter who was in charge would have faced exactly the same issues. The previous acts were vastly unconcerned and prepared. Forget those states ... they really sucked the B1G one.
Yes, nothing like quoting the omnipotent moral busybody to inspire scientific confidence in the misleading content you posted. Let's see you demonstrate that "lockdowns" caused all those lost lives in the big box, as opposed to people simply being afraid of catching the virus because so many people caught the virus and either died or had hellacious illnesses or the fact that the coronavirus, in many places, totally occupied most/all medical personnel for weeks. I'll wait.
I don't have time for a full analysis of multiple states every night, like last night, but checking in on the national numbers is pretty easy. Below is the Worldometers detailed graphic of deaths, with today's total of 1205 being the highest number since 5/29 and close to 50% of the highest daily peaks in April.
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us
Below that are the COVID Tracking charts of tests, cases, hospitalizations, and deaths, all on 7-day moving averages, showing cases about 2x what they were during the first wave and hospitalizations being about equal to those in the first wave (but haven't peaked yet, while cases have and the accuracy of the hospitalization data is questionable), which is very likely due to a much younger population being infected than in the first wave and is why it's likely that deaths will likely remain significantly less than what we saw in the first wave (coupled with improved treatments/procedures).
https://covidtracking.com/data#chart-annotations
Yes, nothing like quoting the omnipotent moral busybody to inspire scientific confidence in the misleading content you posted. Let's see you demonstrate that "lockdowns" caused all those lost lives in the big box, as opposed to people simply being afraid of catching the virus because so many people caught the virus and either died or had hellacious illnesses or the fact that the coronavirus, in many places, totally occupied most/all medical personnel for weeks. I'll wait.
Nope, doesn't work that way. You have to do more than that or else simply admit you have no idea how to verify what some yahoo on Twitter claims.The links are all there for you to read..thanks.
Fools if you wear a mask after this is over. We have something called an immune system. People have gotten colds since forever. If you are that bent out of shape stay home if you are worried about giving someone a cold. Wearing masks forever? Im fing rolling on the floor.
This is coming from someone who works outside and doesn’t come in contact with many people.I think employers are going to have to address how they deal with people coming to work when sick. The dynamics have changed in that regard. I can see significant issues with the workforce really getting up in arms with people coming to the office when sick
Here is RWE tracker on medication use here in the US:It's crap. Just off the top of my head, not sure anyone has used HCQ more than the US and Brazil and SK barely used it at all, since the vast majority of cases were resolved before the HCQ frenzy started in late March (and nobody was using it as a prophylactic in Feb/March). I'm sure there are more errors in it, but I don't have the patience to review it, especially since there's no clinical data to support its use.
Edit: almost forgot - using the case fatality rate, CFR, for anything meaningful is a waste of time, as it's so dependent on testing. A much better country comparison for COVID severity is deaths per capita and on that the US and Brazil will be leading the world in 2-3 months on that count, barring some miracle. Some hospitals in NY/NJ were giving HCQ to 75+% of all patients in April, at the height of the outbreak, while deaths were climbing significantly.
My favorite comment on the twit thread was, "do you have similar charts for witch spells fixing the virus?"
Fools if you wear a mask after this is over. We have something called an immune system. People have gotten colds since forever. If you are that bent out of shape stay home if you are worried about giving someone a cold. Wearing masks forever? Im fing rolling on the floor.
Not even sure what you're asking. Do you not think one of the richest countries in the world, that supposedly was the best prepared country for a pandemic (as per the JHU study from last year) was capable of doing what South Korea did (the link below details our failures vs. SK's successes on testing)? SK was running 1000 tests per day by mid-Feb and 10,000 tests per day by 2/25 and NY had no tests run until about 3/2 and didn't reach 1000 tests per day until mid-March (similar in NJ), a full month after SK - in a country 6.5X more populated, so we actually were doing even worse on a per capita testing basis. If the CDC, FDA, and HHS (i.e., the Federal Government) had done their jobs, there's no doubt in my mind that the states would've been able to run the tests - the states weren't the bottleneck.How have you assured yourself that NY/NJ/CT would have all those tests completed and results fully available for the tri-state governors to implement the appropriate shelter-in-place strategies in your hypothetical scenario to avoid 75-90% of cases/deaths?
Here is RWE tracker on medication use here in the US:
Your claims are NOT supported by the RWE. I am in no way suggesting that twitter thread has any value. Just pointing out statements that you made about HCQ use are false. Does not mean HCQ works, just your statements (past ones as well) are woefully inaccurate.
I’m curious to know how masks became pervasive in some Asian cultures — I don’t know if they were already popular prior to Sars, or if after Sars folks said “you don’t know it’s something other than a common cold until you’re already on a vent, so I’ll just wear the mask.”
Not sure where I’ll shake out on this; I had a full Saturday of errands, day drinking at bars, boat ride with a crowd of people, and dinner on a restaurant patio — I didn’t feel the mask was much of a burden or took away from a fun day with a friend.
Absent Covid, i would rather not have one extra item on my person, but if it makes others comfortable in five or ten years, I don’t feel like it takes away from my enjoyment of life.
Very strong guidance at work to absolutely stay home if one has any symptoms. I doubt the formal requirements will remain in place after COVID, but culturally, I think it will be far less acceptable to come to work with a cold or certainly the flu, which I think is a good thing, as people aren't as productive anyway, plus they're likely infecting others.I think employers are going to have to address how they deal with people coming to work when sick. The dynamics have changed in that regard. I can see significant issues with the workforce really getting up in arms with people coming to the office when sick
Air pollution.I’m curious to know how masks became pervasive in some Asian cultures — I don’t know if they were already popular prior to Sars, or if after Sars folks said “you don’t know it’s something other than a common cold until you’re already on a vent, so I’ll just wear the mask.”
Not sure where I’ll shake out on this; I had a full Saturday of errands, day drinking at bars, boat ride with a crowd of people, and dinner on a restaurant patio — I didn’t feel the mask was much of a burden or took away from a fun day with a friend.
Absent Covid, i would rather not have one extra item on my person, but if it makes others comfortable in five or ten years, I don’t feel like it takes away from my enjoyment of life.
Complete post of lies...That's US usage and it disagrees completely with the NYC hospital usage I've shared from multiple studies (JAMA and NEJM) showing 60-85% HCQ usage in late March/April, so I have doubts of its veracity for the US. And given that you've been spectaculary wrong on HCQ, publishing that screed from that LibertyMaven guy, believing the Indian prophylactic study, which might've been the worst run study ever, being wrong about the Recovery trial being overdosed (and HCQ toxicity), and defending the Ford study instead of picking it apart like you did on the Lancet study (which I gave you props on), you might want to think about the glass house you're throwing stones from.
While most would agree in principle re: staying home when sick, think of all the inconsiderate jagoffs who show up at work with a full blown flu or bronchitis or strep because they think the world will end if they don't show up to the workplace. Then tell everyone that they're not sick, they just have a sniffle or the heat is just bothering them.
It's very much a residual of the 20th century work construct. Now that many office workers are capable of working from home, this shouldn't even be an issue that comes up. Unless I'm completely bedridden, I work from home when sick...and my group knows that. So they never have an issue if I don't come in. Still productive, still hitting deadlines, just not there physically.In highly competitive work environments when there are major deadlines, there has often been no excuse for not working. The workers were not viewed as "inconsiderate" if they showed up sick but rather inconsiderate if they didn't show up because they were being depended on. I do think that will change, at least for a while.
Past U.S. experience shows us that often such changes are not permanent and that when this is far enough behind us to be forgotten by many, that behavior change may not last.
I was certainly oversimplifying things, since the info you mentioned is unlikely to be readily available. I also am not sure it would help much, since our states, cities and counties aren't monoliths with regard to political party. Plenty of Trump supporters in the cities and plenty of lefties in the country. And it only takes a modest subset of the population in any area not wearing masks and congregating in groups (especially indoors) to lead to outbreaks.
Plus a variable I didn't mention, but probably should have, is age: far more younger people, independent of party are not following masking guidance, since the young often don't want to listen to "authority" anyway, plus they know they're not at much risk. My larger point remains, though, that I think far more people would be wearing masks if the POTUS had been a strong champion for them from day one (or at least since early April, when the CDC came out for them).
Also, I have no great disagreement on your 7 points (minor quibbles maybe, but not worth arguing here), but, as I've said hundreds of times now, the biggest factor enabling our horrific start to the pandemic was the lack of testing. No tests at all in NY/NJ through 3/3 and less than 1000 per day through mid-March, by which time we had tens of thousands, if not over 100,000 infected people participating in the most densely populated/most dense commuting culture in the US, at least (with, by far, the biggest influx of infected people from Europe in the US), prior to things starting to shut down on 3/16. If we had the testing we needed in place, we'd have seen similar numbers 2 weeks earlier and likely could've shut down 2 weeks earlier and avoided 75-90% of cases/deaths.