Hawktawk wrote:America's greatness has been greatly overestimated obviously.We are a nation in steep decline, total dysfunction, greed, avarice, moral decay.
The medical heros of March have become "sucks to be you, should have done something else for work" as people flout guidelines and the administration ignores the issue.
The perfect storm with this rollout is that according to the surgeon general states lack the resources , personnel and money to handle this rollout.
And guess what's not in the relief package? Money for states .
Mitt Romney has called the lack of a national strategy "unconscionable" and has called for military medics and veterinarians to assist in sticking as many arms as fast as possible. Only a blind man cant see whats coming out of the holiday season with this new strain and people travelling by the millions. This nation could face utter collapse of our medical system in the coming weeks. It's a national security threat at this point.
NorthHawk wrote:I've just been looking up the effectiveness of just one dose. The information is mixed with some saying it's in the 80% to 90% range but one of the companies producing it says they have no studies after 21 days so they don't know if it will last after that. Apparently the Biden admin will not hold back the 50% required for 2nd doses but rather administer all of it in the hope that it is effective and slowing the spread initially. Maybe that shock to the spread will give us enough time to get ahead of it and start to get back to normal sooner.
RiverDog wrote:This vaccine rollout is FUBAR. The more I think about it, the more I'm tempted to throw away all these priorities and groupings and do it by tossing 365 numbers corresponding to each day in the year into a bin and pulling out 10 a week. If your birthday falls on that date, you can make an appointment to go to a clinic or pharmacy and get the vaccine.
They're over complicating it, and we're making it too long and drawn out. The object should be to get as many needles into arms as possible as quickly as possible.
Aseahawkfan wrote:10 more days until the idiot is gone. Then instead of a president that sits in his office like a teenage girl brooding he was kicked off twitter we'll have a president that understands he has a job to do.
RiverDog wrote:The problems with the vaccine rollout goes WAY beyond Trump and the federal government. The fact that some states, like the Dakotas, Nebraska, and Connecticut, three rural states and an urbanized one, are doing very well with getting shots in the arm, while others have 70% of the vaccines sitting in their freezers should tell us something.
The federal government doesn't have the authority to tell states how to distribute the vaccines. All they can do is offer recommendations. The individual states are just as, if not more, responsible for this f-up rollout as the feds are.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I expect better State and Federal coordination once Angry Teenage Girl is gone.
RiverDog wrote:This vaccine rollout is so frigging screwed up, both at the federal as well as the state level. Here in WA, the 2nd tier of recipients after health care and nursing homes is 70+ and anyone 50+ living in a multi generational household. The age group that my wife and I are in, 65-69, isn't even listed. They plan to vaccinate the homeless before they get around to my age group even though both the Trump and Biden Administrations are recommending that 65+ receive priority. And Washington isn't the only state with a nonsensical prioritization. New Jersey is giving smokers priority over teachers.
What they are doing is forcing people to lie. They have said that they are depending on the honesty of citizens to tell the truth about their priority status, but I'll be damned if I'm going to wait until the general public is vaccinated when every other entity is saying 65+ should receive top priority.
The solution is so simple that a blind man could see it. Forget about underlying conditions, employment status, and living conditions. They are confusing and difficult or impossible to prove or disprove. Many of them are refusing anyway and adding to the chaos. Just start with 80+ and give them appointment windows based on their birthday month. Age and birthdates are easy to prove. Once vaccinations slow down, then take it down to 75+. They can designate a pharmacy for special needs. The doctor can call it in as they would a prescription. Mobile clinics can be used to go to employment locations. My former employer used to give flu shots at the plant.
This really has me upset. My wife and I have taken this pandemic very seriously, complied with all the mandates, supported the restrictions, and we have been looking forward to getting a vaccine in another month or so. But now we find out that it might not be until summer. And to think that up to 50% of those that are eligible are refusing them. It's no wonder the country is so on edge.
NorthHawk wrote:It's also part of the far right Republican ideal of limiting government. Things like this happen when you try to shrink Gov't down so much like Grover Nordquist said so it's so small you can throw it in the bathtub and drown it.
If you don't believe there should be any gov't programs and try to make it irrelevant, it will become so. In this case with nobody at the top that believes in National programs and are totally inexperienced, confusion and problems
are bound to occur.
NorthHawk wrote:That's where a Federal Government presence helps. They can provide money for those States that don't have the infrastructure or are cash poor and help coordinate a common approach across the country if required.
NorthHawk wrote:People working together from the Feds to community levels makes a world of difference. As far as retired health providers being re-activated (for a lack of a better term), are there national requirements in play or are those standards solely the responsibility of the State?
NorthHawk wrote:If re-certification is required, it should be coordinated with all levels of gov't should it be required or maybe temporary suspension of certifications for those who haven't been out of practice for a certain time frame. There are often a lot of different things that can impede successful implementations of programs if not considered. I don't know if that's the case at all here, but the different levels of gov't seemingly not working together creates a lot of frustration and possibly abuse of the system by those with access or influence.
It is looking more and more like the powers that be are setting us up for an endless lockdown because the science
Aseahawkfan wrote:https://www.yahoo.com/news/californias-coronavirus-strain-looks-increasingly-130055544.html
It is looking more and more like the powers that be are setting us up for an endless lockdown because the science, yet the government can't afford to do this. Now they are listing strains the vaccines don't work against and pushing the narrative that will lead to an endless lockdown like some kind of dystopian society where we hide from a virus destroying our world and relying on government stimulus and online remote work forever as though that can employ everyone.
c_hawkbob wrote:Nonsense. It isn't looking like that at all. If you listen to the full interview with these guys instead of the sensationalized bad news headlines they are all still very firm on reaching herd immunity this year.
Aseahawkfan wrote:If these variants spread and are vaccine resistance, we will see if they push lockdowns. I don't think they can afford to continue them myself, but we shall see.
Aseahawkfan wrote:At some point they could just stop counting and accept the high number of deaths. If they don't count, the public will go back to normal. The only reason people are as frightened and messed up as they are now is because keeping a counter going and broadcasting drives up the stress and fear. If they reach a point where they go, "This isn't controllable." They can stop counting and let things run with the vaccines doing what they can. People will learn to live with it as they have done every time in the past.
RiverDog wrote:All the evidence so far indicates that the vaccines, although not as effective as they are against the original strain, are still well above the standard the CDC laid out. You have to remember that flu vaccines are only 40-60% effective. Plus they are already in the process of tweaking the vaccines to account for the variants, and we won't have to wait nearly as long for the modified vaccines as we did for the original. We are also over the hump weather-wise. As temperatures warm, people will be moving outside and the virus is less transmissible in hot and more humid conditions. By the time we get to next fall, we should have 70-75% of the country vaccinated.
Covid isn't disappearing anytime soon, but there's more optimism now than there has been since the beginning of the pandemic that the worst is behind us.
I'm not following your logic. Stop counting and just accept the deaths? That almost sounds like Donald Trump saying not to test so much because it makes us look bad.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The logic is easy to follow: we will have to re-open and accept the deaths at some point even if it doesn't drop substantially.
We never stop counting. So this has nothing to do with Trump. We count deaths of everything every year. That is why we know that cardiovascular disease and cancer killed more people this year than COVID. What I do mean is stop broadcasting the count and running a daily counter people can look at. It will happen whether or not COVID is under complete control, you can guarantee that. The world can no longer afford these lockdowns. They are wiping out cities, wiping out national economies, wiping out companies, and turning us into a technocracy with tech companies having more power than ever before.
NorthHawk wrote:I heard an epidemiologist say we are in a race between getting people vaccinated and the variant mutations that can survive the vaccines. The concern is it will mutate and make the vaccine ineffective.
NorthHawk wrote:The quicker people are vaccinated the better the chance we get ahead of this virus. The current vaccines are said to mitigate the symptoms of the virus if not prevent it. As well, there are more therapeutics coming on board that will hopefully lessen the time to recovery for those that contract it, but some won't be so lucky and will die before we get to that point.
RiverDog wrote:The economy has not been wiped out, not even close. At 6.7%, the unemployment rate is less than half of what it was at the height of the lockdowns. It is less now than it was than when I was looking for a job in the late 70's. The stock market is experiencing record highs. The lockdowns have been loosened considerably, schools are returning to in-person learning, the infection rate has been on a steady decline for weeks, hospitalizations are way down, vaccinations are over 13% and we should be to 50% by June. The holiday season is over, we should be getting a 3rd vaccine approved this Friday, perhaps a 4th within another month or so. By the time summer is over and we have to go back indoors, we're going to be swimming in vaccine. There is considerable evidence that we're already approaching herd immunity.
Life's going to be different for awhile. We won't be able to throw away our masks, we'll have to deal with the variants and we'll undoubtedly have outbreaks and surges but nothing on the scale of 42,000 deaths per month. Vaccines are going to have to be tweaked to keep up with the variants just as they have with the flu. Outside of those challenges, I honestly don't know what you're wringing your hands about.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The unemployment rate is not real unemployment. Not even sure why you go by that any longer. It does not include workers that have given up.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The restaurant industry and entertainment are still in a precarious position. Primarily big tech is doing well and companies that were able to operate at near full capacity while shutdown including the workers who could.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The stock market is not the economy. The stock market is in a huge bubble with valuation at levels not seen since the Tech Crash back in 2001, you remember that tech crash. So you using the stock market as a sign of economic health is a bad idea because the stock market is not healthy at all.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I'm wondering again what you think is an acceptable level of deaths per year from COVID before we get this open again? What do you think it is?
c_hawkbob wrote:Well it's finally my turn. I get mine March 9th (Moderna) as an essential worker.
They are opening up vaccinations to all 60 and over next week here so I hope to get my wife vaccinated soon as well. None too soon either as we're planning to drive to West Virginia to see my new granddaughter when she's born (due at the end of March).
RiverDog wrote:Ok, smarty pants, here's the "real" unemployment:
More than 10 million Americans are still out of work, and millions more have stopped searching for a job. The January employment report showed that 5 million people left the work force that month.
"The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that many unemployed individuals have been misclassified as employed," Powell said. "Correcting this misclassification and counting those who have left the labor force since last February as unemployed would boost the unemployment rate to close to 10 percent in January."
https://www.nbcnews.com/business/econom ... e-n1257331
Versus the reported unemployment rate was in the 70's:
After 1974, unemployment averaged 7.9 percent and some years saw the rate reach more than 9 percent, according to the BLS.
https://bizfluent.com/info-7751089-unem ... 1970s.html
By the time you add the long term unemployment rate to the reported rate in the late 70's it far exceeds what the "real" unemployment rate is today.
The hospitality industry is going to be the last to recover and likely won't until the 3rd quarter.
The stock market is a huge component in the health of the economy. Companies use the sale of their stock to finance capital improvements and do the other things that keeps their business competitive. The fact that the stock market is strong is a good sign of impending economic recovery.
It's already getting open again. Indoor dining at restaurants, albeit it at reduced capacity, was allowed in my community last week. Schools are returning to in-person learning. But to answer your question, I can't answer it. It's like asking how many deaths are acceptable in a war.
But I do think that there should be a thorough review of the actions taken during this pandemic and see what worked and what didn't. I am not convinced that the shutdowns were all that effective. California had some of the strictest restrictions in the country yet they performed horribly, worse than Florida, which was one of the least restrictive. Some of the worst hit states, like the Dakotas, were some of the least populated.
c_hawkbob wrote:Well it's finally my turn. I get mine March 9th (Moderna) as an essential worker.
They are opening up vaccinations to all 60 and over next week here so I hope to get my wife vaccinated soon as well. None too soon either as we're planning to drive to West Virginia to see my new granddaughter when she's born (due at the end of March).
Aseahawkfan wrote:Yes. And like I said, the death rate hasn't dropped substantially, but they are re-opening. I believe even if we get a surge again, they will still re-open.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Hopefully vaccine works, but even if it doesn't we're rolling. Economic lockdowns are unsustainable.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I knew it would reach this point and am only hoping these vaccines cut the death rate to a lower level. If we can get under a 100 k a year, it will be good. Lower than that even better.
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