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  1. Originally posted by stl1 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 16,998 new cases and 32 deaths in Florida on Saturday; 16,998 new cases and 32 deaths on Sunday; and 17,001 new cases and 36 deaths on Monday. The CDC did not make the data public until Tuesday afternoon.

    sounds like made up numbers.
  2. CNN and the rest of the fake news networks are posting "Delta Variant" cases numbers, but it was proved, with direct calls to the testing centers, that no testing center in the world, in any country, currently tests for ANY variants, much less the Delta Variant. So the fakes have been trounced out once again for full public viewing. Just a gang of liars and fraudsters, with a mindless sheep following who will believe anything and everything they are told to believe.
  3. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Speculum is too dumb to realize that the Delta variant is, by far, (OVER 70%) the predominant strain now and is much more easily transmissible.



    The Washington Post
    Delta variant takes hold in U.S. as coronavirus cases rise nearly 70 percent
    Yasmeen Abutaleb, Frances Stead Sellers 7/16/2021


    Federal health officials sounded an alarm Friday about a surge in U.S. coronavirus infections fueled by the twin threats posed by the highly transmissible delta variant and a stagnation in efforts to vaccinate as many Americans as possible.

    During a White House briefing, Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said the seven-day average of coronavirus infections soared nearly 70 percent in just one week, to about 26,300 cases a day. The seven-day average for hospitalizations has increased, too, climbing about 36 percent from the previous seven-day period, she said.

    “There is a clear message that is coming through: This is becoming a pandemic of the unvaccinated,” Walensky said. “We are seeing outbreaks of cases in parts of the country that have low vaccination coverage because unvaccinated people are at risk, and communities that are fully vaccinated are generally faring well.”

    Data and maps illustrated the hastening pace of cases — and the disproportionate burden borne by some states. Florida emerged as a national hot spot, accounting for 1 in 5 cases in the past week. Four states were responsible for more than 40 percent of cases in the past week, health officials said. And 10 percent of counties have moved into “high transmission risk.”

    The response in some corners of the nation was swift. In Los Angeles County, an indoor mask mandate — applying to everyone, vaccinated or not — was reimposed. In Abilene, Kan., the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum was shuttered because of an increase in covid-19 cases.

    Health officials repeatedly stressed the outsize toll covid-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus, is taking on unvaccinated people and communities.

    More than 97 percent of hospitalizations are among those who are unvaccinated, Walensky said, and almost all covid-19 deaths — which climbed 26 percent in the past week — are among people who have not received a shot.

    “Unvaccinated Americans account for virtually all recent covid-19 hospitalizations and deaths,” said Jeff Zients, the White House coronavirus coordinator. “Each covid-19 death is tragic, and those happening now are even more tragic because they are preventable.”

    On Friday, the Association of American Medical Colleges recommended all of its member institutions require vaccinations for employees.

    “We are aware of the sensitive nature of this recommendation and understand that it must be made on an institution-by-institution basis, subject to legally required exceptions and consistent with state law,” David J. Skorton, the association’s president and CEO, said in a statement. “However, for the safety of our patients, communities, health care personnel, faculty, and students, we encourage our members to require vaccinations for employees while working with local public health officials as appropriate.”

    The delta variant has become the dominant strain worldwide and is responsible for the majority of U.S. cases, said Anthony S. Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. In some parts of the United States, Fauci said, the delta variant is responsible for more than 70 percent of cases.

    Fauci said young people — who have been particularly hesitant about getting vaccinated — are being hospitalized to a greater extent than they were earlier in the pandemic, in large part because most older Americans are inoculated.

    Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy discussed Friday how misinformation about vaccines and the coronavirus more broadly has hampered the nation’s efforts to get vaccine-hesitant Americans inoculated. He called on social media platforms, news organizations and individual Americans to “call this activity out” and help properly inform the public.

    “During this pandemic, health misinformation has led people to resist wearing masks and high-risk settings to turn down proven treatments, in some cases to turn to unproven treatments and to choose not to get vaccinated,” Murthy said. “All of this has led to avoidable illnesses and deaths. Simply put, health misinformation has cost us lives.”

    In another indication of the ever-evolving pandemic, Zients said the administration would be prepared to administer booster shots to some Americans if the science demonstrates they are beneficial, but health officials stressed that Americans at this time do not need a booster. A CDC advisory panel is scheduled next week to discuss whether patients with fragile immunity should receive an additional vaccine dose. People who are immunocompromised do not mount the same immune response as healthy individuals in response to the vaccine.

    Florida, where only about 47 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, ranks 26th among the states in vaccinations, according to the CDC’s vaccine tracker. The slow vaccine rollout, combined with a reduction in people wearing masks, made the large and populous state “a ripe ground for the emergence of the delta variant,” said John Brownstein, chief innovation officer at Boston Children’s Hospital.

    “The concern for the South is the summer months bring people indoors because of the heat,” Brownstein said.

    Mary Jo Trepka, an infectious-disease expert at the Robert Stempel College of Public Health and Social Work at Florida International University, has been tracking the rise in case numbers from week to week and also seeing an increase in the percentage of people testing positive. The current surge, she said, feels uncomfortably familiar.

    “It’s almost the same timeline as last year,” Trepka said. She’s hoping it won’t prove as steep.

    Figures from Florida’s health department show that in the past month, the number of cases is four times higher, reaching more than 45,000 in the most recent week.

    A week ago, the rate of cases in Miami-Dade County was 150 per 100,000 people, or five times the rate of the United States. What’s most worrisome, Trepka said, is the stalling vaccination rate.

    The surge in infections is being reflected in an increase in hospitalizations, according to Hany Atallah, chief medical officer at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. The immediate challenge at the sprawling hospital is to figure out bed space and the availability of negative pressure rooms.

    In the last 24 hours, there have been about 20 to 25 new covid admissions, Atallah said, with the greatest increase in patients between the ages of 30 and 50. Atallah said most of the patients being admitted have not been vaccinated. But in a few instances, people who were vaccinated but are immunocompromised became sick enough to warrant hospital care.

    Atallah urged people to maintain mask-wearing and social distancing, and to surmount lingering hesitancy about getting a shot.

    “It’s not too late to get the vaccine,” Atallah said.

    Vaccination rates are particularly low in some rural counties in northern and southern parts of Florida and in the Panhandle, according to Cindy Prins, an epidemiologist at the College of Public Health and Health Professions at the University of Florida. Prins also noted that people are acting as if they are done with the pandemic. “There is a feeling of being open,” Prins said, particularly following the Fourth of July.

    “It doesn’t have to be,” Prins said of the new surge. “If people would get vaccinated, we wouldn’t be seeing these numbers.”
  4. Donald Trump Black Hole




    My body is ready. Coronachan stop the foreplay and come fuck me.
  5. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Still posting cartoons as proof?

    Really?
  6. Originally posted by stl1 Speculum is too dumb to realize that the Delta variant is, by far, (OVER 70%) the predominant strain now and is much more easily transmissible.


    the phrase "easily transmißable" is onky scarry to the scientifically illiterated persons.

    easily transmissable means it doesnt make its host sick enough to the point they re bed ridden and cant go out and spread the disease/viruses.
  7. Kev Space Nigga
    Originally posted by vindicktive vinny sounds like made up numbers.

    17000 cases and ONLY 32 deaths? such a deadly plague, i couldve sworn peanuts kill more than that.
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  8. Originally posted by stl1 Speculum is too dumb to realize that the Delta variant is, by far, (OVER 70%) the predominant strain now and is much more easily transmissible.



    The Washington Post
    Delta variant takes hold in U.S. as coronavirus cases rise nearly 70 percent
    Yasmeen Abutaleb, Frances Stead Sellers 7/16/2021


    Federal health officials sounded an alarm Friday about a surge in U.S. coronavirus infections fueled by the twin threats posed by the highly transmissible delta variant and a stagnation in efforts to vaccinate as many Americans as possible.

    During a White House briefing, Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said the seven-day average of coronavirus infections soared nearly 70 percent in just one week, to about 26,300 cases a day. The seven-day average for hospitalizations has increased, too, climbing about 36 percent from the previous seven-day period, she said.

    “There is a clear message that is coming through: This is becoming a pandemic of the unvaccinated,” Walensky said. “We are seeing outbreaks of cases in parts of the country that have low vaccination coverage because unvaccinated people are at risk, and communities that are fully vaccinated are generally faring well.”

    Data and maps illustrated the hastening pace of cases — and the disproportionate burden borne by some states. Florida emerged as a national hot spot, accounting for 1 in 5 cases in the past week. Four states were responsible for more than 40 percent of cases in the past week, health officials said. And 10 percent of counties have moved into “high transmission risk.”

    The response in some corners of the nation was swift. In Los Angeles County, an indoor mask mandate — applying to everyone, vaccinated or not — was reimposed. In Abilene, Kan., the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum was shuttered because of an increase in covid-19 cases.

    Health officials repeatedly stressed the outsize toll covid-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus, is taking on unvaccinated people and communities.

    More than 97 percent of hospitalizations are among those who are unvaccinated, Walensky said, and almost all covid-19 deaths — which climbed 26 percent in the past week — are among people who have not received a shot.

    “Unvaccinated Americans account for virtually all recent covid-19 hospitalizations and deaths,” said Jeff Zients, the White House coronavirus coordinator. “Each covid-19 death is tragic, and those happening now are even more tragic because they are preventable.”

    On Friday, the Association of American Medical Colleges recommended all of its member institutions require vaccinations for employees.

    “We are aware of the sensitive nature of this recommendation and understand that it must be made on an institution-by-institution basis, subject to legally required exceptions and consistent with state law,” David J. Skorton, the association’s president and CEO, said in a statement. “However, for the safety of our patients, communities, health care personnel, faculty, and students, we encourage our members to require vaccinations for employees while working with local public health officials as appropriate.”

    The delta variant has become the dominant strain worldwide and is responsible for the majority of U.S. cases, said Anthony S. Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. In some parts of the United States, Fauci said, the delta variant is responsible for more than 70 percent of cases.

    Fauci said young people — who have been particularly hesitant about getting vaccinated — are being hospitalized to a greater extent than they were earlier in the pandemic, in large part because most older Americans are inoculated.

    Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy discussed Friday how misinformation about vaccines and the coronavirus more broadly has hampered the nation’s efforts to get vaccine-hesitant Americans inoculated. He called on social media platforms, news organizations and individual Americans to “call this activity out” and help properly inform the public.

    “During this pandemic, health misinformation has led people to resist wearing masks and high-risk settings to turn down proven treatments, in some cases to turn to unproven treatments and to choose not to get vaccinated,” Murthy said. “All of this has led to avoidable illnesses and deaths. Simply put, health misinformation has cost us lives.”

    In another indication of the ever-evolving pandemic, Zients said the administration would be prepared to administer booster shots to some Americans if the science demonstrates they are beneficial, but health officials stressed that Americans at this time do not need a booster. A CDC advisory panel is scheduled next week to discuss whether patients with fragile immunity should receive an additional vaccine dose. People who are immunocompromised do not mount the same immune response as healthy individuals in response to the vaccine.

    Florida, where only about 47 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, ranks 26th among the states in vaccinations, according to the CDC’s vaccine tracker. The slow vaccine rollout, combined with a reduction in people wearing masks, made the large and populous state “a ripe ground for the emergence of the delta variant,” said John Brownstein, chief innovation officer at Boston Children’s Hospital.

    “The concern for the South is the summer months bring people indoors because of the heat,” Brownstein said.

    Mary Jo Trepka, an infectious-disease expert at the Robert Stempel College of Public Health and Social Work at Florida International University, has been tracking the rise in case numbers from week to week and also seeing an increase in the percentage of people testing positive. The current surge, she said, feels uncomfortably familiar.

    “It’s almost the same timeline as last year,” Trepka said. She’s hoping it won’t prove as steep.

    Figures from Florida’s health department show that in the past month, the number of cases is four times higher, reaching more than 45,000 in the most recent week.

    A week ago, the rate of cases in Miami-Dade County was 150 per 100,000 people, or five times the rate of the United States. What’s most worrisome, Trepka said, is the stalling vaccination rate.

    The surge in infections is being reflected in an increase in hospitalizations, according to Hany Atallah, chief medical officer at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. The immediate challenge at the sprawling hospital is to figure out bed space and the availability of negative pressure rooms.

    In the last 24 hours, there have been about 20 to 25 new covid admissions, Atallah said, with the greatest increase in patients between the ages of 30 and 50. Atallah said most of the patients being admitted have not been vaccinated. But in a few instances, people who were vaccinated but are immunocompromised became sick enough to warrant hospital care.

    Atallah urged people to maintain mask-wearing and social distancing, and to surmount lingering hesitancy about getting a shot.

    “It’s not too late to get the vaccine,” Atallah said.

    Vaccination rates are particularly low in some rural counties in northern and southern parts of Florida and in the Panhandle, according to Cindy Prins, an epidemiologist at the College of Public Health and Health Professions at the University of Florida. Prins also noted that people are acting as if they are done with the pandemic. “There is a feeling of being open,” Prins said, particularly following the Fourth of July.

    “It doesn’t have to be,” Prins said of the new surge. “If people would get vaccinated, we wouldn’t be seeing these numbers.”

    Hey, idiot. Maybe you missed the fact that no testing centers are testing for the so-called Delta Variant, so there's no possible way to know it's the "predominant strain". You can't identify what's predominant, if you are not even testing for it. Wake up, fool. Time is running out for you deliberately ignorant clowns.
  9. Donald Trump Black Hole
    Originally posted by stl1 Still posting cartoons as proof?

    Really?


    Anime girls are the highest form of political discourse.
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  10. Originally posted by Donald Trump
    Anime girls are the highest form of political discourse.

    libertarians wear too much.
  11. Kev Space Nigga
    Originally posted by vindicktive vinny libertarians wear too much.

    such are larpers
  12. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    I just came from my "reading room" after sitting down to enjoy my current (Aug. 2-Aug. 9) issue of Time magazine and, after finishing all of the required paperwork, have returned to report this short article from page 8:



    U.S. LIFE EXPECTANCY DROPS IN 2020

    Driven mostly by the COVID-19 pandemic, the average American life expectancy fell by 1.5 years from 2019 to 2020, the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention announced on July 21. The decrease was especially pronounced among Black and Hispanic populations.



    But...this is all a big joke, isn't it?
  13. Kev Space Nigga
    life expectancy has been dropping since 2014, mostly thanks to obesity. putting everyone on house arrest was such a great idea, what couldve went wrong?
  14. Originally posted by stl1 I just came from my "reading room" after sitting down to enjoy my current (Aug. 2-Aug. 9) issue of Time magazine and, after finishing all of the required paperwork, have returned to report this short article from page 8:



    U.S. LIFE EXPECTANCY DROPS IN 2020

    Driven mostly by the COVID-19 pandemic, the average American life expectancy fell by 1.5 years from 2019 to 2020, the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention announced on July 21. The decrease was especially pronounced among Black and Hispanic populations.



    But…this is all a big joke, isn't it?

    what ? you read july's latest info in aug ?



    way to be behing the curve.
  15. Donald Trump Black Hole
    Originally posted by stl1 I just came from my "reading room" after sitting down to enjoy my current (Aug. 2-Aug. 9) issue of Time magazine and, after finishing all of the required paperwork, have returned to report this short article from page 8:



    U.S. LIFE EXPECTANCY DROPS IN 2020

    Driven mostly by the COVID-19 pandemic, the average American life expectancy fell by 1.5 years from 2019 to 2020, the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention announced on July 21. The decrease was especially pronounced among Black and Hispanic populations.



    But…this is all a big joke, isn't it?

    Of course obesity, cancer, opioids, gun crime, and unaffordable healthcare wouldn't be the cause.

    And it's not like you can do anything about any of those things anyway.

    I'd be interested to see the maths they used to deduce that covid, which mostly kills people coming to the end of their lives, drove a decrease in life expectancy greater than a few days.
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  16. Originally posted by Kev life expectancy has been dropping since 2014, mostly thanks to obesity. putting everyone on house arrest was such a great idea, what couldve went wrong?

    That's how totally dishonest these clowns really are.
  17. Donald Trump Black Hole


    Of course sti1 is in favor of banning the unvaccinated from his favorite restaurants.
  18. Originally posted by Donald Trump

    Of course sti1 is in favor of banning the unvaccinated from his favorite restaurants.

    he secretly enjoys being ariund asssians
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  19. St|1 and Tech are fascist, Marxist tyrants. Of course, they don't mind at all robbing their own kids and grandkids from their futures.
  20. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Deseret News
    The delta variant could lead to ‘doomsday’ variants, experts say
    Herb Scribner

    A number of scientists recently spoke with Newsweek about the potential of a “doomsday COVID variant” that would be worse than the delta and lambda variants.

    A number of scientists recently spoke with Newsweek about the potential of a “doomsday COVID variant” that would be worse than the delta and lambda variants.© Marcio Jose Sanchez, Associated Press A sign advises shoppers to wear masks outside of a store on Monday, July 19, 2021, in the Fairfax district of Los Angeles. A number of scientists recently spoke with Newsweek about the potential of a “doomsday COVID variant” that would be worse than the delta and lambda variants.

    Experts told Newsweek that the delta variant won’t be the only coronavirus variant that makes its way through the United States. In fact, more mutations will come soon.

    “I wouldn’t be incredibly surprised if something else came along that’s even more transmissible,” Eric Vail, director of molecular pathology at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, told Newsweek.

    The next big variant may come from one single person, per Newsweek. If one person suffers from a mutation that is more highly transmissible, they will pass it onto someone else, and then it will spread like wildfire as these mutations have done already.

    “If a mutation comes up anywhere that’s more transmissible, it will be selected out to propagate,” Sharone Green, infectious disease researcher at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, told Newsweek.
    The key, experts told Newsweek, is to make sure that the coronavirus doesn’t mutate into something that makes vaccines ineffective. The delta variant, for example, spreads super fast, but it does not evade vaccines.

    “I don’t think eradication is on the table,” Green told Newsweek. She said the health community could create a better solution for COVID-19 than what we have now for the flu, where the virus remains really tame.
    We’re already starting to see variants make their way into our population. For example, a variant originally discovered in Colombia made its way to South Florida in recent days, according to The Washington Post.

    The variant — the B.1.621 variant — already makes up 10% of cases in the South Florida area, Carlos Migoya, CEO of Jackson Health System, told WPLG.

    So far experts with Public Health England said that the variant is not more severe, nor does it evade vaccines.
    However, a new study — published online through bioRxiv but has not been peer-reviewed — suggested that the lambda variant has three mutations that could help it evade vaccines, as I wrote about for the Deseret News.

    The researchers, who worked in a lab in Japan, said the variant can spread fast, too.

    Senior researcher Kei Sato, of the University of Tokyo, told Reuters that the lambda variant should concern everyone.

    “Lambda can be a potential threat to the human society,” he said.
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