Hawktawk wrote:Just wow. Adoring fans left to freeze after being stranded outside a superspreader 2 nights ago , half a dozen hospitalizations. Yesterday in florida thousands packed into a stadium without masks in 87% heat, numerous people passed out due to heat stroke.
Never mind the virus that people are testing positive for after every one of these superspreaders including hospitalizations and ICU for several at his NC rally.5 other stops have had definite traceable spread from the rallies.
Whether fuctopoluos wins or loses he's literally responsible for a thousand deaths a day now. Its 100% his fault at this point the sheer amount of this virus load in this country and he's going to do this every day till the election. Donnie Jr got up yesterday and said the death toll is "nothing" compared to other countries as 1 K plus died like every day and headed back up, pushing 100K new cases a day. Jared Kushner is on tape in april telling Bob Woodward that "Trump took the country back from the doctors" explaining how he had marginalized their control of the govt response. Over 180K people have died since that interview.
Even if he loses we still have to deal with this inept amatuer hour adminstration for another quarter of a year. We wont make it...
Hawktawk wrote:By we I mean America as we know it . Models currently show without major course corrections deaths will triple to 3 k a day by January. There may be medical systems collapsing all around the country
Hawktawk wrote:It’s clear the Trump campaign strategy down the stretch is Covid fatigue , pick off late deciders worried about lock downs . Should he win is he going to change anything? How about if he loses ? My guess is he will be pardoning buddies , golfing and figuring out how to get asylum so he doesn’t rot in jail . That’s a bit facetious but with this guy who knows . I heard a chilling report Russian hackers are hitting our overwhelmed hospitals with ransom ware . Thet have struck in 5 states . I’m sure Trump will be all over that. We are in over our heads in every way .
Hawktawk wrote:By we I mean America as we know it . Models currently show without major course corrections deaths will triple to 3 k a day by January. There may be medical systems collapsing all around the country . It’s clear the Trump campaign strategy down the stretch is Covid fatigue , pick off late deciders worried about lock downs . Should he win is he going to change anything? How about if he loses ? My guess is he will be pardoning buddies , golfing and figuring out how to get asylum so he doesn’t rot in jail . That’s a bit facetious but with this guy who knows . I heard a chilling report Russian hackers are hitting our overwhelmed hospitals with ransom ware . Thet have struck in 5 states . I’m sure Trump will be all over that. We are in over our heads in every way .
We were supposed to lose over 2 million based on initial projections and we won’t come anywhere near that.
We were supposed to lose over 2 million based on initial projections and we won’t come anywhere near that.
I-5 wrote:Whenever I see the 2 million deaths referenced, it's rarely mentioned that the number references if the country did NOTHING. As it is, most of the people who vehemently disagree with Trump are the ones wearing most (not all) of the masks, which is empirically proven in more successful countries to help stop the spread of the disease, along with social distancing. What if no one at all wore masks nor social distanced like at a Trump rally, for example?
I-5 wrote:
Whenever I see the 2 million deaths referenced, it's rarely mentioned that the number references if the country did NOTHING. As it is, most of the people who vehemently disagree with Trump are the ones wearing most (not all) of the masks, which is empirically proven in more successful countries to help stop the spread of the disease, along with social distancing. What if no one at all wore masks nor social distanced like at a Trump rally, for example?
mykc14 wrote:I want to be clear that I think the virus is a serious issue. I think the mask-less rallies, without social distancing, are idiotic and I always wear a mask in public. In no way do I think we should be completely opened up. I think we should be wearing masks in public and be smart about our choices in regards to social gatherings. I do, however, think businesses should be open, kids should be in schools, and Kids should be playing sports. All of those, of course with restrictions including masks and social distancing.
RiverDog wrote:
The point is that we're doing a much better job of managing the virus. It's difficult to use a mortality rate as an indicator of improvement as positive tests determines the denominator and we weren't doing nearly as much testing in March as we are now. But if you look at the death rate of those sick enough to be hospitalized with the virus, the mortality rate has gone way down:
The study, which was of a single health system, finds that mortality has dropped among hospitalized patients by 18 percentage points since the pandemic began. Patients in the study had a 25.6% chance of dying at the start of the pandemic; they now have a 7.6% chance.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-sho ... eath-rates
The article goes on to say that COVID is still very serious and more deadly than other infectious diseases like the flu, but with the improvements we've made in treating the virus, it's not near the threat to our health care system like it was earlier this spring.
RiverDog wrote:
I don't agree with all of that. I think that most, but not all, businesses should be opened up. Nightclubs, for example, are huge super spreader venues and should not be back in business until the pandemic is virtually over. Many of the others, like restaurants and bars, should be allowed to open if they show that they're serious about following the guidelines, like adhering to capacity requirements, no more than 5 per table, insisting that employees and customers wear their masks, limited hours, and so on.
As far as extra curricular sports goes, they can wait until spring when they can be held outdoors and at a time when a vaccine becomes available. Push them back into summer if they have to, but I don't like the idea of 30 or so heavily breathing, sweaty bodies bouncing around in a gym then going home to their grandparents. That's just asking for it IMO.
I-5 wrote:And my point is that if we all behaved the way people do at Trump rallies, we’d be surpassing 2 million deaths soon. That’s the irony of this ‘leadership’.
mykc14 wrote:I agree mortality rate isn’t perfect, but if anything it tends overestimate the risk of the virus as you obviously cant test everybody who has the virus, especially those who are asymptomatic. It also can’t account for false positive tests, but overall it does give an idea to how deadly the virus is. It isn’t the best indicator that we are doing better treating the virus, but when combined with hospitalization numbers being down it does suggest that we are.
mykc14 wrote:Your data is in line with what I’ve been reading as well and suggests that we are in fact doing better at treating the virus. Along with articles discussing that school/sports haven’t been linked to mass spreading of the virus like many predicted. There is evidence to suggest that the virus rarely spreads in elementary schools/day cares that have opened up across the country.
RiverDog wrote:
I've seen the articles, too, but the data was collected in July through September before the weather got colder and drier, before people started moving indoors, and before the flu season had arrived.
I can understand the need for in person learning in a classroom environment, and IMO that's what the focus should be on. But interscholastic activities not only introduce players to high and medium risk activities, they're traveling from one community to another, increasing the chances of coming in contact with an infected person. IMO the benefit is not worth the risk.
mykc14 wrote:I agree that that the winter will probably see an increase in the numbers but the research above takes into account activities played indoors. Furthermore we could be playing outdoor sports right now through December. Many people want to wait to play until the Spring, but the reality is that the risk or lack of risk is going to be the same now as it is in January-March.
mykc14 wrote:If the study, which was pretty exhaustive, shows there was no greater risk for athletes than non-athletes it seems like that trend would continue in the winter. As far as travel goes the above study took that into account and it just doesn't seem to increase the risk. Right now it is almost worse as far as traveling goes. Teams from all over Washington are traveling to other states (mainly Idaho) and playing sports, specifically basketball but also 7-on-7 football tournaments. These teams are usually not set up through the school but are more like traveling teams. The way it is set up right now there are multiple teams from our county, each team consisting of kids from different cities within our county, who practice multiple times a week and then travel to Idaho on the weekends and play in tournaments against teams from who knows where in a completely uncontrolled environment and even that system isn't producing high numbers of COVID cases (or any in our area as of yet that can be linked to one of these teams/tournaments). These same kids then come to school football, baseball, track workouts which are extremely more controlled. To me a better system would be one in which the students are in a much more controlled environment, playing one sport and playing teams from the same general area (or at least the same state).
Aseahawkfan wrote:In roughly 2 months if the polls hold true, it will be the Democrats who get to take responsibility for COVID19 from the Republicans. I can only hope they do a better job than this group of idiots did.
That's why I don't worry about all this crying about the Republican Party being done. The fact is people get unhappy when things don't go well. COVID19 is a beast to deal with. Americans hate the lockdowns, so if the Democratic answer for COVID19 is to continue hard lockdowns I expect a worse response than Europe is experiencing right now.
So we'll see what the Democrats bring to the table. I can't imagine they can screw it up worse than an idiot who wanted to dismiss it as no big deal, not wear his mask, get sick himself weeks before an election after making fun of his opponent for wearing a mask, then flouting COVID19 quarantine procedures to take a ride in front of his followers with his Secret Service personnel in the vehicle with him. If the Democrats avoid that level of stupid, they'll be starting off better than The Idiot in Chief.
RiverDog wrote:
Not quite. What you aren't considering is the rate at which the virus is spreading now. Moving football and wrestling, the sports with the highest risk of transmission, to the spring buys us time. It spreads out the risk, or 'flattens the curve', as the saying goes. Currently the virus is out of control, with so many states showing dramatic increases in infections and hospitalizations.
The other thing that you're not considering is that we should have a vaccine by late this year or early next year. If we delay sports until March, we should have first responders and high risk individuals a vaccine. And as we discussed earlier, we're improving on our treatment of the disease. We should be better prepared. We should have more PPE's, more ICU units available. Plus it gets us closer to the end of the flu season and the weather will improve, reducing the risk of transmission.
I'm not a research scientist, but my gut tells me that if you change the environment under which the study was done, ie summer vs. winter, predominantly outdoor activities vs. indoors, pandemic relatively under control like it was in July-Sept vs. out of control like it is now...that it would affect the subjects in the study. After all, each of those subjects goes home every night, goes to restaurants with their parents, etc. The conditions under which the study was done changes. I would be a lot more comfortable if the duration of the study was a year long vs. just a couple of months in the summer.
mykc14 wrote:I am considering the rate at which the virus is spreading now. As a country we are currently trending to open more things up not close them down so the spread of the virus could be worse by the Spring, not better. You clearly have more faith in a vaccine then I do. If a vaccine is widely available by the Spring that would certainly help the numbers and obviously greatly reduce the spread of the virus. I am not seeing where we are having more hospitalizations now than we had in the summer.
mykc14 wrote:You live in Benton county, right? You guys are currently using 6% of your beds for COVID cases. The fact is that most counties in our state have never been near using even 10% of their beds. As a State our COVID cases are up but the total beds occupied due to COVID are down from a high of 4.6% in April/May to 3.1% now.
mykc14 wrote:I understand that the study was during Summer months but indoor sports still practice/play games indoors, so that shouldn't have a dramatic effect on the data.
mykc14 wrote:I agree I would feel more comfortable if the study were completed over the course of a year, but all we have to go on is this data. It's not great but it is pretty good. I am not arguing that we should put sports in front of people's lives or push this through just to play, but if the data shows that it doesn't increase the spread of COVID any more than normal teenage life then it could really be beneficial for kids.
RiverDog wrote:It's going to be pretty difficult to pin the virus response on Biden. The genie is already out of the bottle. By the time he takes office, we should have a vaccine and distribution should already be in progress. If for some reason things go awry, if multiple vaccines don't work or have unexpected side effects and have to be pulled from the market, then he'd be called upon to make some decisions. But otherwise, he's essentially going to be a relief pitcher coming in to pitch in the 7th inning and trailing 15-4. Nothing he does is going to have a huge effect on the outcome.
What he can do is usher in some reforms and help us be better prepared for a future pandemic, things like re-establishing the pandemic task force that Trump disbanded, create a better network for manufacturing and maintaining an inventory of PPE's, reforming the CDC, re-examine our relationship with the WHO, etc. And, of course, we're going to be facing an economic recovery and resolution of some of the social problems it exposed, such as policing and race relations.
RiverDog wrote:
You're missing my point.
mykc14 wrote:The survey wasn't about the COVID rate in the general population, it's the idea that the same number of kids are going to get COVID whether we have sports or not. The research showed that teenagers between the ages of 14-17 who were involved in sports got sick at the same rate as teenagers who were not involved in sports.
mykc14 wrote:I don't want this to sound like I don't take COVID seriously, because I do. Being a teacher, coach, involved in other youth outreach stuff, and married to a healthcare worker I am at a higher risk of infection than many. I just want us to make educated responses to the epidemic based on the scientific research that is available, not based on fear mongering, political leverage, or making a point about our individual rights.
Aseahawkfan wrote:COVID19 does not appear to be close to over. It's spreading again. Europe is pushing lockdowns again and people are losing their mind. Even Sweden is apparently reversing course. We're not even deep into the winter and flu/cold season. It's just starting. So no, Biden isn't coming in as a relief pitcher.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I don't even know why you post some of this being in the country as long as you have been. It doesn't matter what's true or not. All that matters is if Biden is in office and this doesn't get cleaned up, then he and the Democrats will take the blame. That's how it works. How it has always worked. How it always will work. No one goes, "Gee, this must be the other party's fault because they screwed up." Only the diehards play that blame game. The swing voters are all about, "What is happening right now and who is in power right now." That's what they care about. That's why Congress flip flops. The Democrats no matter how many ways you try to spin this are being sent to The White House for one main thing: clean this mfing COVID19 mess up.
RiverDog wrote:I just came across this article. We can't get hung up simply on hospitalization rates to gauge our health care system's capacity to handle the current surge of coronavirus cases:
In many cases, it’s not a lack of hospital beds, therapies or equipment that worry managers amid the surge, with someone dying from COVID-19 in the U.S. nearly every two minutes. It’s the depleted and exhausted hospitals staffs needed to care for those who need life-sustaining therapies.
The head of the Utah Hospital Association this week warned the situation is getting so dire hospitals there might soon need to ration care. Hospitals in North and South Dakota are seeking staff reinforcements to care for patients in crowded intensive care units. And in Wisconsin, hospitals are opening makeshift ICU wings even as they desperately look for nurses and other clinicians to staff the facilities.
“We can keep converting ICU space,” said Jeffrey Pothof, an emergency room doctor in Madison, Wisconsin. “But the constraint will be the staffing … that’s the thing that worries us the most right now.
Banner Health, Arizona’s largest health system, recruited more than 1,000 contract nurses and respiratory therapists from June through mid-July. Without those extra trained workers, the hospital might have used similar measures that Utah hospitals are now considering – rationing care.
Banner Health CEO Peter Fine worries hospitals can’t depend on stopgap staffing again.
“The real issue is staff burnout,” Fine said. “It’s a very real phenomenon and with a countrywide breakout we no longer can count on contracted staff to save us.”
Staffing agencies that place travel nurses in hospitals and clinics say they’ve never been busier. In the past four weeks, RN Network, part of Salt Lake City-based CHG Healthcare, has fielded a 130% increase in staffing requests, said spokesman Chad Saley.
https://news.yahoo.com/hospitals-overwh ... 27524.html
mykc14 wrote:I can agree this (staffing shortages) is a problem and have seen it first hand. My wife is a nurse and although she has moved to part time recently she and her colleagues are totally burned out and it’s not directly a result of COVID, it’s a result of her hospital system trying to recoup the money they lost during COVID. When COVID first hit they used it as an opportunity to make widespread changes to their depart and even laid some nurses off. When they were able to return to business as usual they made even more widespread changes, increasing patient load. Since June 12 of 28 nurses have either transferred departments, found another job, or retired. They are burnt out and then you put them in an environment with a flu/COVID outbreak. It’s not going to be a good situation. I can see that as a bigger problem than the beds space.
RiverDog wrote:That's true, but most of the decisions, both good and bad, have already been made. If, like one of his ads states, he emphasizes manufacturing PPE's domestically instead of relying on foreign companies, that's not going to happen soon enough to have any noticeable effect. If he re-establishes a pandemic response team, it's going to take them time to reverse the course of decisions that have already been made. About the only thing he'll be able to do is facilitate the distribution of vaccines, get more medical grade freezers to the distribution points, respond to governor's requests for federal resources, and so on. Those are important decisions and can help us avoid more deaths and help bring the pandemic to a quicker end, but they cannot undo the damage that Trump...and to be fair, other governors and government agencies....did during the critical first few months early in the pandemic.
Of course, there's going to be an attempt to assign blame. I am only speaking for myself.
To use another analogy, just as it would not be fair to credit or blame Biden for the coronavirus response, it would not be fair to credit or blame Harry Truman for his role in World War 2. He became POTUS very late in the war after Germany and Japan were virtually defeated, most of the momentous decisions, both good and bad, like the Lend Lease Act, the Manhattan Project, the relocation of Japanese-Americans, and so on, had already been made. The only momentous decision he made during the fighting was to drop the bomb on Japan. His contributions, like Biden's will be with the pandemic, was post war decisions like Potsdam, ending lend/lease, participation in the UN, the Marshall plan, and so on.
RiverDog wrote:That's true, but most of the decisions, both good and bad, have already been made. If, like one of his ads states, he emphasizes manufacturing PPE's domestically instead of relying on foreign companies, that's not going to happen soon enough to have any noticeable effect. If he re-establishes a pandemic response team, it's going to take them time to reverse the course of decisions that have already been made. About the only thing he'll be able to do is facilitate the distribution of vaccines, get more medical grade freezers to the distribution points, respond to governor's requests for federal resources, and so on. Those are important decisions and can help us avoid more deaths and help bring the pandemic to a quicker end, but they cannot undo the damage that Trump...and to be fair, other governors and government agencies....did during the critical first few months early in the pandemic.
Aseahawkfan wrote:This will be entirely dependent on how bad things get.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Trump dropped the ball. And because he did so we have almost nothing in place to deal with this virus during the possible worst season for it. We have lost World Leadership because Trump pulled us from the WHO and likes to argue with foreign leaders. So much that Trump has done has left it so the Democrats will come into office with a huge mess, not a short run to the finish line. More like an Earthquake with massive clean up on a national and global scale. America should have been at the forefront of the coronavirus with our massive resources, huge number of advanced medical companies, advanced universities, and business base, but instead we're one of the worst nations in the world at handling the coronavirus. If we had stepped up as we should have, we not only could have but should have taken leadership on this virus. But you know we have an Idiot in in office whose ego makes him think he can just find scientists to agree with his viewpoint and somehow the virus will bow to his immense ego.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I hope it continues and no party garners so much power they get to push their will far too much for far too long because the progressive left is one scary group. You watch any of these Ocasio-Cortez videos and how hard the left is pushing her? My goodness her ideas are terrible. She talks about taxing a wealthy person 70 cents on every dollar they earn over a certain amount like it's perfectly moral and the wealthy person is just being an immoral and bad person for not wanting to give 70 cents of every dollar they earn to the government. I don't even know many moderate American Democrats who believe that trash. I know some who think the wealthy should higher taxes and have some loopholes closed, but not pay 70 percent of their wealth to the government like they did in the 50s and 60s which pretty much gave rise to conservatism because the radical socialist left was taking away freedoms and abusing their powers of taxation. I can't imagine many would tolerate a 60 or 70% tax rate on income. That would be ridiculous.
Not so much as how bad things get, but how quickly things get back under control. If none of the vaccines work, if the virus mutates into a more dangerous strain, or something else unexpected that throws off the timing, then the decisions Biden makes would come into play.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The decisions Biden makes will come into play right now. Biden is talking about a national lockdown, which he has clearly stated he will do if he takes office. He is talking about a nationwide mask mandate enforced by fines. He is talking about contact tracing programs in place. Biden's decisions will carry a lot of weight. Aren't you at listening to what the guy is saying before you vote for him? You didn't cast your vote and go, "I hate Trump. Here you go."
Aseahawkfan wrote:Once he takes office, the coronavirus becomes the responsibility of the Democrats which they have specifically been sent to Washington to deal with. It is the number one topic on people's agenda by a mile. Trump not having a plan. Just talking out his behind. Ignoring the science. Not wearing a mask. Politicizing the virus. This is what people want stopped. They want a plan in place. They want some idea of when this will end. They want to know the government is getting this thing taken care of on a national scale. That hasn't been done at all right now. That means how Biden handles it and his decisions have a huge amount of weight because the Idiot in Chief did next to nothing but be a total idiot.
"If we test a lot, we'll find a lot of cases. Which makes it look worse than it is." You remember that trash? That's how Trump saw testing. He wanted to hide the coronavirus like it was some minor scandal at the Miss America Pageant that would make him look bad. Fricking moron.
Aseahawkfan wrote:So I don't agree. Biden's decisions are absolutely essential to calming America, letting them know we now have national plan, and providing a timetable and guidelines for a return to work and coordination on a global scale.
RiverDog wrote:
And we are just beginning to get into the flu season.
All of this supports my contention that now is not the time to be expanding school activities, or for that matter any other type of activity, beyothose that are absolutely necessary. Indeed, a number of states are talking about shutting down again.
mykc14 wrote:As far as this being the only study, it is the only exhaustive study I’ve read but there is a ton of antidotal evidence from 40 many other states that aren’t seeing huge increases directly related to sports.
RiverDog wrote:Biden is going to be faced with the same limitations that so frustrated Trump when he wanted to force states to open up for business. Biden is going to need the cooperation of all 50 governors if he wants to shut the entire nation down.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Biden will get the cooperation.
Trump could have gotten all his governors on board. He didn't even try. His answer was to let them do what they want, blame the Democrats when Democrats complained no help was coming, and act like an ass. I still can't believe I have friends who think Trump did fine and he represents hope for the nation. How bad do you have to be at processing information to think Trump's handling of the coronavirus was acceptable for a president?
Aseahawkfan wrote:I gave this guy the benefit of the doubt at the start of all this because it blind-sided everyone except a handful of Asian nations like South Korea and Taiwan. But once he showed no regard for contact tracing, questioned testing, and started to politicize the virus, it became apparent this idiot thought he could just grumble, blame, and shout his way out of this. He showed terrible leadership. He emboldened his followers to make ludicrous claims that were not at all in line with the mounting evidence.
The tipping point for me was Italy. I watched Italy closely to see how big they blew up. Once they passed he 2 in 10,000 mark, I knew we were in for a bad time. China's lying numbers seriously threw the world off. I still don't buy those numbers. 85,000 cases and 3000 deaths my behind. China should be punished by the world community for how they handled the coronavirus, but not in the middle of it. After this is done though, the world community should come down on China like the Hammer of Thor in regards to their lies, which were worse than Trump's.
Trump got more terrible and stupid as the virus went on. But the initial egregious failure on the coronavirus was on China's leadership. The WHO and global health organizations went off China's obviously doctored numbers when devising policy for containing the virus on a global scale. They obviously lied.
Even once Trump could see that China lied, he just tried to lie and BS his way through it too. Fricking moron.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Biden needs to get leadership on this again for America. Then needs to draw the global community together to absolutely hammer China on this. They gotta absolutely agree to more open information on any kind of medical crisis like this or suffer severe, severe consequences.
I-5 wrote:Choking in late. I don’t know if Biden, if he wins, will institute a lockdown to help slow down the spread. But if he does, it will likely be because americans simply refuse to confirm to known best practices: 1) universal mask wearing and 2) social distancing. Taiwan is a smaller country, but even per capita they have the best numbers, and never instituted a lockdown. But they ALL wear masks. Americans would rather die, literally.
I-5 wrote:My point is we can do better without having to lock down, but as Riv and others have mentioned before, Americans are too skeptical to ever follow a national mandate when it comes to individual behaviour on behalf of public safety (ie wearing masks), which would necessitate more enforceable measures like closing businesses. That’s the sad reality of human nature, at least in the US. Asian countries by contrast have no problem with people following orders, no matter which asian country you’re talking about. They just simply do it.
I-5 wrote:My point is we can do better without having to lock down, but as Riv and others have mentioned before, Americans are too skeptical to ever follow a national mandate when it comes to individual behaviour on behalf of public safety (ie wearing masks), which would necessitate more enforceable measures like closing businesses. That’s the sad reality of human nature, at least in the US. Asian countries by contrast have no problem with people following orders, no matter which asian country you’re talking about. They just simply do it.
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