Covid 19 - Data Snapshot – 7/10: Southern States Misery

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If it seems I’m picking on Florida, and not on other states like New York or California, it really isn’t because it’s a red state. Cuomo in NY, and Newsome in CA, both have performed miserably during the pandemic, and Newsome especially, flip-flops on his Coronavirus response faster than the eye can see. Thing is, NY’s Covid 19 early catastrophic situation seems, today, like old news, with minimal daily infections and deaths , and Newsome, at least, doesn’t withhold data that people in CA need to make rational decisions about their behavior in this pandemic. Texas’ current numbers are the nation’s worst, but I think Abbot, at least, tells Texans the truth. In Florida, on the other hand, you have a perfect storm – a barefaced-lying governor and an out of control spread of the Coronavirus – which combine to make the “Sunshine State” the place where, of all states, Covid 19 wants to be. Florida is, simply, where the pandemic’s action is, and will continue to have my attention until it’s not.

https://www.miamiherald.com/article244115927.html

Similarly, I’m not trying to shame southern states. It is simply a matter of where the current Covid 19 numbers are spiking. If Arizona and California continue to trend upward in terms of Covid 19 infections and deaths I may start a chart to watch western states as well.


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Herd immunity...it's where it's at.

No turning back at this point. We take risks with our lives every day....and I am sorry for those who lose this battle, but as they say the cure is worse than the disease.

Keep safe if you are at risk, be smart, wash your hands, don't pick your nose, keep your distance and for gods sake don't sit packed in bars with people you don't know.
 

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Herd immunity...it's where it's at.

No turning back at this point. We take risks with our lives every day....and I am sorry for those who lose this battle, but as they say the cure is worse than the disease.

Keep safe if you are at risk, be smart, wash your hands, don't pick your nose, keep your distance and for gods sake don't sit packed in bars with people you don't know.
Agree with what you’ve said, except about “herd immunity” being either an inevitability or a goal we want to achieve. Given the huge percentage of population needed to be infected for “herd immunity” to be a possibility, we’re talking millions dying as well, and it’s not like there aren’t other ways to get through this. Other nations have all but halted Covid 19 spread, have “reopened” cautiously, and it is only a matter of months before a vaccine is developed. All it takes is patience.
 

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In Florida, on the other hand, you have a perfect storm – a barefaced-lying governor and an out of control spread of the Coronavirus – which combine to make the “Sunshine State” the place where, of all states, Covid 19 wants to be. Florida is, simply, where the pandemic’s action is, and will continue to have my attention until it’s not.

https://www.miamiherald.com/article244115927.html



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Agree with what you’ve said, except about “herd immunity” being either an inevitability or a goal we want to achieve. Given the huge percentage of population needed to be infected for “herd immunity” to be a possibility, we’re talking millions dying as well, and it’s not like there aren’t other ways to get through this. Other nations have all but halted Covid 19 spread, have “reopened” cautiously, and it is only a matter of months before a vaccine is developed. All it takes is patience.

It is estimated we may already be around 30%
 

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Anybody remember "You have 15 people, and the 15 within a couple of days is going to be down to close to zero,” and, "Anybody who wants a test can get one?" Let us not forget that he forces anybody who is stupid enough to come listen to him in a giant petri dish to sign a waiver. Breath DEEP Cult 45ers...


[h=1]Trump Says Areas With Surging Coronavirus Cases Are 'Going To Be Fine'[/h]Sarah Ruiz-Grossman
July 10, 2020, 4:05 PM


https://www.yahoo.com/huffpost/trump-coronavirus-going-to-be-fine-230556836.html#


https://www.tumblr.com/widgets/shar...ging Coronavirus Cases Are 'Going To Be Fine'https://www.facebook.com/dialog/fee...virus-going-to-be-fine-230556836.html&tsrc=fbhttps://twitter.com/intent/tweet?te...rus-going-to-be-fine-230556836.html&tsrc=twtrIn another unfounded bout of wishful thinking about the coronavirus, President Donald Trump said Friday that areas where coronavirus cases have surged are “going to be fine.”
In an interview with Noticias Telemundo, reporter José Díaz-Balart noted the recent increases in COVID-19 infections in the U.S. and asked Trump if the country was “losing the war” against the virus.
“We are winning the war. We have areas that flamed up and they’re going to be fine over a period of time,” the president responded, according to a transcript from Telemundo.
“It flared up in areas where they thought it was ending, and that would be Florida, Texas, a couple of other places,” Trump later added of the virus. “They’re going to have it under control very quickly.”
Meanwhile, the U.S. continues to lead the world in coronavirus cases and deaths, with more than 3.1 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 and over 133,000 dead from the virus in the country so far. Recently, the U.S. has repeatedly set new global records for the highest number of reported coronavirus cases per day, hitting over 59,800 daily cases on Thursday.
Confirmed coronavirus cases are growing faster in Arizona, Florida and South Carolina than in any country in the world not including the U.S. This week, California recorded its largest single-day death toll since the pandemic began. In Mississippi, major hospitals are running out of ICU beds as cases balloon.
Trump’s statements on Friday are part of a pattern of the president making baseless claims about the virus simply going away. In May, Trump said in an interview that the virus “will pass, with or without a vaccine.” In February, he said the virus might “miraculously” be gone by April, and in March and April, he asserted without evidence that COVID-19 is “going to go away.”
 

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Anybody remember "You have 15 people, and the 15 within a couple of days is going to be down to close to zero,” and, "Anybody who wants a test can get one?" Let us not forget that he forces anybody who is stupid enough to come listen to him in a giant petri dish to sign a waiver. Breath DEEP Cult 45ers...


Trump Says Areas With Surging Coronavirus Cases Are 'Going To Be Fine'

Sarah Ruiz-Grossman


In another unfounded bout of wishful thinking about the coronavirus, President Donald Trump said Friday
“We are winning the war. "



Donald Trump, Feb 26:

"When you have 15 people, and the 15
within a couple of days
is going to be down to close to zero,
That’s a pretty good job we’ve done."
 

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Anybody seen Rush_Moron lately?:hahahahahShush()*:pointer:popcorn-eatinggifazzkick(&^:think2:
 

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Given the huge percentage of population needed to be infected
for “herd immunity” to be a possibility, we’re talking millions dying
as well, and it’s not like there aren’t other ways to get through this.

Other nations have all but halted Covid 19 spread,
have “reopened” cautiously, and it is only a matter
of months before a vaccine is developed.
All it takes is patience
.

Good points!! w-thumbs!^


Also, "herd immunity" isn't actually immunity at all --
it only means reduced risk of catching the contagion.
Like wearing a mask and social-distancing are likewise NOT foolproof either.
They just reduce the risk...which of course is very important,

but in themselves don't necessitate KILLING MILLIONS of American citizens
to have a significant effect at reduciing risk, as WillyBoyXXX has pointed out.
 

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This scumbag is almost as bad as Twittler, in fact, maybe worse, since he has parroted Twittler almost from the moment he appeared.

[FONT=&quot]DeSantis defends reopening, says new surge is because of Florida’s ‘flatter curve’[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Mary Ellen Klas[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot] [/FONT][FONT=&quot]July 10, 2020, 3:06 PM[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot] [/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday defended his decision to reopen the state despite the months-long surge in new cases, suggesting that Florida’s “flatter curve” meant that although the virus had abated, it hung around longer.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]At a news conference in Orlando, DeSantis was asked about comments by Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, who said Thursday that Florida had “jumped over a couple of checkpoints” and opened too early, leading to the surge in cases in every county in the state.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]“We had very, very low prevalence, particularly in the 64 counties outside of southern Florida, and we did put southern Florida on a different pathway,’’ the governor told reporters, referring to the lower numbers of people testing positive in May and early June. “So I think there was really no justification to not move forward.”[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]A Miami Herald analysis, however, showed that new cases and positivity started rising in early May, even prior to reopening. By the time the state entered Phase 2 of its reopening on June 5, the numbers were showing what experts called “leading indicators of a resurgence” of COVID-19 in Florida. That resurgence began within two weeks of initial reopening, the analysis shows — the amount of time experts say it takes to see the impact of policy decisions on rates of transmission.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Hospital admissions rising[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Since July 1, the number of people who were infected by the disease in the previous month have now started to crowd Florida hospitals. COVID-19 admissions have jumped by 13%, according to Florida Department of Health records, and nearly half of Florida’s intensive care units are 90% full.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]On Friday, the governor made no mention of the 11,433 new positive COVID-19 cases reported by the Florida Department of Health, or the 93 deaths. Instead, he attributed the rise in new positive cases to the fact that the virus has been in Florida longer because of a “flatter curve.”[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]“When you have a flatter curve, which Florida has — I mean if you look at the Northeast, they went boom ... Florida,Texas, we’re just much flatter,’’ DeSantis said. “It means it goes on longer, and so you know we said you wanted a flatter curve but this is drawn out over a longer period of time.”[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]The Republican governor has rejected calls to issue a statewide mask mandate, even as public health data shows that an increasingly number of regions of the state are reaching the tipping point for contagion.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]A new map by the Harvard Global Health Institute using state COVID-19 data shows that 42 of Florida’s 67 counties are seeing more than 25 new cases per 100,000 population per day on a seven-day rolling average, a point at which public health experts consider a tipping point and recommend stay-home orders be issued.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]The remaining 25 counties have seen new cases per 100,000 population rise by an average of 10 to 25 per day, a signal there is “significant spread” and public health experts recommend rigorous testing and tracing programs be implemented or stay-home orders.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]DeSantis said Friday that the surge in July is not unique to Florida.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]“We’ve now seen more cases in transmission at the exact same time that the rest of the Sunbelt is,’’ he said, noting that from Los Angeles to Texas, in Georgia, Arizona and South Carolina cases have risen.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Birx: Don’t link surge with reopening[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]At a briefing at the White House on Wednesday, Dr. Deborah Birx of the White House coronavirus task force also suggested the increase in new cases in Florida could not be tied to reopening.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]“The governor talks about how they were ‘steady and low’ for a long period of time after reopening,” she said. “That is reflected for almost five weeks after reopening.”[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]However, at the same time the governor was referring to steady and low numbers, data shows that testing had only increased by about 8 percent while new cases were rising by 42 percent, the Miami Herald analysis of the Florida health department’s case data found.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Since Monday, the governor has shifted his messaging from arguing that reopening the state was justified because the positivity rate was declining to now stating that the virus may be more prevalent in Florida than the state acknowledged but it is not a problem as long as people are not dying from it.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]On Friday, the governor estimated that about 130,000 of the new cases involved people under the age of 45 whose mortality rate is “incredibly, incredibly low and probably close to zero for people that don’t have underlying conditions.”[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]A more important indicator than being infected, he said, is “who is getting infected.”[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]DeSantis also said there is an advantage to having the pandemic continue over a sustained period in Florida.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]“There’s no question that has given our healthcare system, a better chance at dealing with the clinical consequences of this,’‘ he said. “We have PPE [personal protective equipment]. We have a lot of stuff that was tough at the beginning. But it does mean it goes on, you know, longer than if you had a boom or bust.”[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]The governor said that hospitals could handle the increase in patients, and he urged people with life-threatening illnesses not to refrain from visiting emergency rooms because of the virus.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]However, as a sign that hospitals were facing the strain, administrators at Baptist Health South Florida and Jackson Health System said they need more nurses and other staff to care for patients.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]This week, the governor announced that the federal government was assisting the state to hire more than 1,000 contract healthcare workers to assist hospitals, nursing home and testing centers in Miami-Dade County and the Tampa Bay area. In Miami-Dade, hospitals neared capacity as administrators at Baptist Health South Florida and Jackson Health System said they need more nurses and other staff to care for patients.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]El Nuevo Herald staff writers Ana Claudia Chacin and Miami Herald staff writer Sarah Blaskey contributed to this report. [/FONT][FONT=&quot][/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]WPTV News West Palm Beach[/FONT]
 

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Aaaannnndddddd......42% of all Covid deaths have come from 3 Democratic states.

New York, New Jersey and Mass.

You losers are just complete ass clowns....
 
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Aaaannnndddddd......42% of all Covid deaths have come from 3 Democratic states.

New York, New Jersey and Mass.

You losers are just complete ass clowns....


And don't forget the 40,000+ innocent people who were murdered in nursing homes in these same Democratic states.

And the thousands of others who were murdered too as a result of these same Democratic states who blocked hydroxychloriquine from being administered.
 

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