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Trump admits he knew coronavirus was ‘deadly’ and worse than the flu while intentionally misleading Americans

  1. -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Originally posted by MexicanMasterRace Source?

    You obviously don't know what a PCR test is or how it works. Try an encyclopedia or Google, instead of flapping your uneducated gums.
  2. ORACLE Naturally Camouflaged
    Originally posted by MORALLY SUPERIOR BEING 2020 IV: Intravenous Soyposting You people don't listen when people try to explain stuff anyway.

    Try saying something worth listening to.
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  3. POLECAT POLECAT is a motherfucking ferret [my presentably immunised ammonification]
    On Monday morning, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention edited its Web page describing how the novel coronavirus spreads, removing recently added language saying it was “possible” that it spreads via airborne transmission. It was the third major revision to CDC information or guidelines published since May.

    The agency had posted information Friday stating the virus can transmit over a distance beyond six feet, suggesting that indoor ventilation is key to protecting against a virus that has now killed nearly 200,000 Americans.

    The CDC shifted its guidelines Friday, but the change was not widely noticed until a CNN report Sunday. Where the agency previously warned that the virus mostly spreads through large drops encountered at close range, on Friday, it had said “small particles, such as those in aerosols,” were a common vector.

    AD

    But Jay Butler, the CDC’s deputy director for infectious disease, said the Friday update was posted in error. “Unfortunately an early draft of a revision went up without any technical review,” he said.

    The edited Web page has removed all references to airborne spread, except for a disclaimer that recommendations based on this mode of transmission are under review. “We are returning to the earlier version and revisiting that process,” Butler said. “It was a failure of process at CDC.”

    Track major developments in the pandemic with our Coronavirus Updates newsletter. All stories linked in it are free to access.

    For months, scientists and public health experts have warned of mounting evidence that the coronavirus is airborne, transmitted through tiny droplets called aerosols that linger in the air much longer than the larger globs that come from coughing or sneezing.

    The novel coronavirus is a master of disguise: Here's how it works
    The novel coronavirus uses a number of tools to infect our cells and replicate. What we've learned from SARS and MERS can help fight covid-19. (Video: Brian Monroe/Photo: Brian Monroe/The Washington Post)
    Experts who reviewed the CDC’s Friday post had said the language change had the power to shift policy and public behavior. Some suggested it should drive a major rethinking of public policy — particularly at a time when students in many areas are returning to indoor classrooms.

    AD

    It was a “major change,” Jose-Luis Jimenez, a chemistry professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder who studies how aerosols spread the virus, told The Washington Post before the CDC reversed itself. “This is a good thing, if we can reduce transmission because more people understand how it is spreading and know what to do to stop it.”

    Since the pandemic began, experts have debated the ways the virus travels — and the methods to best halt it. At first, widespread fear of contaminated surfaces led some to bleach their groceries and mail. But the CDC soon concluded that person-to-person transmission was a much more pressing threat. Instead, the agency focused its guidance on avoiding the larger droplets hacked up by sneezes and coughs, which are thought to be mostly limited to a six-foot radius.

    “We have been saying ‘wear a mask’ and ‘6 feet apart’ for months,” tweeted Abraar Karan, a physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and Harvard Medical School. Karan said six feet of separation may be insufficient, particularly in poorly ventilated indoor areas.

    AD
    ADVERTISING

    Some researchers suspected that the virus could travel much farther, especially indoors and in places where people talk loudly or sing. Infamously, one infected person in March unknowingly passed the coronavirus to 52 others at a choir practice in Washington state. Similar indoor “superspreader” events added weight to the idea of an airborne threat.

    The World Health Organization recognized the threat of aerosols in July, after hundreds of scientists urged the international body to address airborne spread. It is not clear why the CDC finally followed; Jimenez said high-ranking CDC officials were still arguing publicly against airborne transmission as a major vector as recently as late August.

    “Evidence has been accumulating for some time,” Jimenez said. “Those of us who have been studying this were frustrated that the change was slow, but it finally came.”

    AD
    When asked who wrote the draft that was posted in error, Butler said: “I don’t have all of that information. Obviously I’m asking some of the same questions.”

    The CDC is “very intensively” discussing guardrails in the publication process to prevent a repeat error. “This cannot happen again,” Butler said. In May, the CDC updated an information page that suggested the coronavirus did not spread easily from contaminated surfaces. It also edited that revision after the update received widespread media attention to clarify that the tweak was “not a result of any new science.”

    And last week, the CDC reversed testing guidelines to again recommend that anyone, regardless of symptoms, who has been in close contact with an infected person be tested. The White House coronavirus task force had directed the agency to change those guidelines in August, allowing that asymptomatic people did not need to be tested.

    Read more:

    The fitness industry is trying to lure gym members back — but experts say it’s using flawed data

    At least 199,000 people have died from coronavirus in the U.S.

    Coronavirus: What you need to read
    The Washington Post is providing some coronavirus coverage free, including:
    Updated September 22, 2020
    The latest: Live updates on coronavirus

    Coronavirus maps: Cases and deaths in the U.S. | Cases and deaths worldwide

    What you need to know: Vaccine tracker | Coronavirus etiquette | Summertime activities & coronavirus | Hand sanitizer recall | Your life at home | Personal finance guide | Make your own fabric mask | Follow all of our coronavirus coverage and sign up for our free newsletter.

    How to help: Your community | Seniors | Restaurants | Keep at-risk people in mind

    Asked and answered: What readers want to know about coronavirus

    Have you been hospitalized for covid-19? Tell us whether you’ve gotten a bill.

    4.9k Comments
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  4. -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Originally posted by POLECAT On Monday morning, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention edited its Web page describing how the novel coronavirus spreads, removing recently added language saying it was “possible” that it spreads via airborne transmission. It was the third major revision to CDC information or guidelines published since May.

    The agency had posted information Friday stating the virus can transmit over a distance beyond six feet, suggesting that indoor ventilation is key to protecting against a virus that has now killed nearly 200,000 Americans.

    The CDC shifted its guidelines Friday, but the change was not widely noticed until a CNN report Sunday. Where the agency previously warned that the virus mostly spreads through large drops encountered at close range, on Friday, it had said “small particles, such as those in aerosols,” were a common vector.

    AD

    But Jay Butler, the CDC’s deputy director for infectious disease, said the Friday update was posted in error. “Unfortunately an early draft of a revision went up without any technical review,” he said.

    The edited Web page has removed all references to airborne spread, except for a disclaimer that recommendations based on this mode of transmission are under review. “We are returning to the earlier version and revisiting that process,” Butler said. “It was a failure of process at CDC.”

    Track major developments in the pandemic with our Coronavirus Updates newsletter. All stories linked in it are free to access.

    For months, scientists and public health experts have warned of mounting evidence that the coronavirus is airborne, transmitted through tiny droplets called aerosols that linger in the air much longer than the larger globs that come from coughing or sneezing.

    The novel coronavirus is a master of disguise: Here's how it works
    The novel coronavirus uses a number of tools to infect our cells and replicate. What we've learned from SARS and MERS can help fight covid-19. (Video: Brian Monroe/Photo: Brian Monroe/The Washington Post)
    Experts who reviewed the CDC’s Friday post had said the language change had the power to shift policy and public behavior. Some suggested it should drive a major rethinking of public policy — particularly at a time when students in many areas are returning to indoor classrooms.

    AD

    It was a “major change,” Jose-Luis Jimenez, a chemistry professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder who studies how aerosols spread the virus, told The Washington Post before the CDC reversed itself. “This is a good thing, if we can reduce transmission because more people understand how it is spreading and know what to do to stop it.”

    Since the pandemic began, experts have debated the ways the virus travels — and the methods to best halt it. At first, widespread fear of contaminated surfaces led some to bleach their groceries and mail. But the CDC soon concluded that person-to-person transmission was a much more pressing threat. Instead, the agency focused its guidance on avoiding the larger droplets hacked up by sneezes and coughs, which are thought to be mostly limited to a six-foot radius.

    “We have been saying ‘wear a mask’ and ‘6 feet apart’ for months,” tweeted Abraar Karan, a physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and Harvard Medical School. Karan said six feet of separation may be insufficient, particularly in poorly ventilated indoor areas.

    AD
    ADVERTISING

    Some researchers suspected that the virus could travel much farther, especially indoors and in places where people talk loudly or sing. Infamously, one infected person in March unknowingly passed the coronavirus to 52 others at a choir practice in Washington state. Similar indoor “superspreader” events added weight to the idea of an airborne threat.

    The World Health Organization recognized the threat of aerosols in July, after hundreds of scientists urged the international body to address airborne spread. It is not clear why the CDC finally followed; Jimenez said high-ranking CDC officials were still arguing publicly against airborne transmission as a major vector as recently as late August.

    “Evidence has been accumulating for some time,” Jimenez said. “Those of us who have been studying this were frustrated that the change was slow, but it finally came.”

    AD
    When asked who wrote the draft that was posted in error, Butler said: “I don’t have all of that information. Obviously I’m asking some of the same questions.”

    The CDC is “very intensively” discussing guardrails in the publication process to prevent a repeat error. “This cannot happen again,” Butler said. In May, the CDC updated an information page that suggested the coronavirus did not spread easily from contaminated surfaces. It also edited that revision after the update received widespread media attention to clarify that the tweak was “not a result of any new science.”

    And last week, the CDC reversed testing guidelines to again recommend that anyone, regardless of symptoms, who has been in close contact with an infected person be tested. The White House coronavirus task force had directed the agency to change those guidelines in August, allowing that asymptomatic people did not need to be tested.

    Read more:

    The fitness industry is trying to lure gym members back — but experts say it’s using flawed data

    At least 199,000 people have died from coronavirus in the U.S.

    Coronavirus: What you need to read
    The Washington Post is providing some coronavirus coverage free, including:
    Updated September 22, 2020
    The latest: Live updates on coronavirus

    Coronavirus maps: Cases and deaths in the U.S. | Cases and deaths worldwide

    What you need to know: Vaccine tracker | Coronavirus etiquette | Summertime activities & coronavirus | Hand sanitizer recall | Your life at home | Personal finance guide | Make your own fabric mask | Follow all of our coronavirus coverage and sign up for our free newsletter.

    How to help: Your community | Seniors | Restaurants | Keep at-risk people in mind

    Asked and answered: What readers want to know about coronavirus

    Have you been hospitalized for covid-19? Tell us whether you’ve gotten a bill.

    4.9k Comments
    Today’s Headlines
    The most important news stories of the day, curated by Post editors and delivered every morning.

    Enter your email address
    By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy


    Most ReadNational

    1
    Omaha reels as man accused of killing Black Lives Matter protester found dead
    2

    A police shooting ignited unrest in Kenosha. Current and former officers say the department’s problems with race go much deeper.
    3
    Ruth Bader Ginsburg was shaped by her minority faith
    4

    Former officers charged in George Floyd killing turn blame on one another
    5
    Secrecy envelopes will cause electoral chaos, official warns

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    They have to sync up their propaganda with the New World Order's coming tyrannical orders and bogus fear mongering. For real. When they come through my door unwelcomed, I plan on killing as many of them as possible, before they take me down. I hope they bring enough body bags.
  5. Originally posted by MexicanMasterRace I don't know who you're trying to troll or why, but you're failing miserably.

    suffice to say not you.

    and dont talk to me until youve mastered your own native language.

  6. Originally posted by ORACLE Illiterate mongoloid^

    unehjucated rohingya ^
  7. ORACLE Naturally Camouflaged
    Originally posted by vindicktive vinny unehjucated rohingya ^

    Illiterate actual mongoloid^
  8. ORACLE Naturally Camouflaged
    Originally posted by POLECAT On Monday morning, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention edited its Web page describing how the novel coronavirus spreads, removing recently added language saying it was “possible” that it spreads via airborne transmission. It was the third major revision to CDC information or guidelines published since May.

    The agency had posted information Friday stating the virus can transmit over a distance beyond six feet, suggesting that indoor ventilation is key to protecting against a virus that has now killed nearly 200,000 Americans.

    The CDC shifted its guidelines Friday, but the change was not widely noticed until a CNN report Sunday. Where the agency previously warned that the virus mostly spreads through large drops encountered at close range, on Friday, it had said “small particles, such as those in aerosols,” were a common vector.

    AD

    But Jay Butler, the CDC’s deputy director for infectious disease, said the Friday update was posted in error. “Unfortunately an early draft of a revision went up without any technical review,” he said.

    The edited Web page has removed all references to airborne spread, except for a disclaimer that recommendations based on this mode of transmission are under review. “We are returning to the earlier version and revisiting that process,” Butler said. “It was a failure of process at CDC.”

    Track major developments in the pandemic with our Coronavirus Updates newsletter. All stories linked in it are free to access.

    For months, scientists and public health experts have warned of mounting evidence that the coronavirus is airborne, transmitted through tiny droplets called aerosols that linger in the air much longer than the larger globs that come from coughing or sneezing.

    The novel coronavirus is a master of disguise: Here's how it works
    The novel coronavirus uses a number of tools to infect our cells and replicate. What we've learned from SARS and MERS can help fight covid-19. (Video: Brian Monroe/Photo: Brian Monroe/The Washington Post)
    Experts who reviewed the CDC’s Friday post had said the language change had the power to shift policy and public behavior. Some suggested it should drive a major rethinking of public policy — particularly at a time when students in many areas are returning to indoor classrooms.

    AD

    It was a “major change,” Jose-Luis Jimenez, a chemistry professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder who studies how aerosols spread the virus, told The Washington Post before the CDC reversed itself. “This is a good thing, if we can reduce transmission because more people understand how it is spreading and know what to do to stop it.”

    Since the pandemic began, experts have debated the ways the virus travels — and the methods to best halt it. At first, widespread fear of contaminated surfaces led some to bleach their groceries and mail. But the CDC soon concluded that person-to-person transmission was a much more pressing threat. Instead, the agency focused its guidance on avoiding the larger droplets hacked up by sneezes and coughs, which are thought to be mostly limited to a six-foot radius.

    “We have been saying ‘wear a mask’ and ‘6 feet apart’ for months,” tweeted Abraar Karan, a physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and Harvard Medical School. Karan said six feet of separation may be insufficient, particularly in poorly ventilated indoor areas.

    AD
    ADVERTISING

    Some researchers suspected that the virus could travel much farther, especially indoors and in places where people talk loudly or sing. Infamously, one infected person in March unknowingly passed the coronavirus to 52 others at a choir practice in Washington state. Similar indoor “superspreader” events added weight to the idea of an airborne threat.

    The World Health Organization recognized the threat of aerosols in July, after hundreds of scientists urged the international body to address airborne spread. It is not clear why the CDC finally followed; Jimenez said high-ranking CDC officials were still arguing publicly against airborne transmission as a major vector as recently as late August.

    “Evidence has been accumulating for some time,” Jimenez said. “Those of us who have been studying this were frustrated that the change was slow, but it finally came.”

    AD
    When asked who wrote the draft that was posted in error, Butler said: “I don’t have all of that information. Obviously I’m asking some of the same questions.”

    The CDC is “very intensively” discussing guardrails in the publication process to prevent a repeat error. “This cannot happen again,” Butler said. In May, the CDC updated an information page that suggested the coronavirus did not spread easily from contaminated surfaces. It also edited that revision after the update received widespread media attention to clarify that the tweak was “not a result of any new science.”

    And last week, the CDC reversed testing guidelines to again recommend that anyone, regardless of symptoms, who has been in close contact with an infected person be tested. The White House coronavirus task force had directed the agency to change those guidelines in August, allowing that asymptomatic people did not need to be tested.

    Read more:

    The fitness industry is trying to lure gym members back — but experts say it’s using flawed data

    At least 199,000 people have died from coronavirus in the U.S.

    Coronavirus: What you need to read
    The Washington Post is providing some coronavirus coverage free, including:
    Updated September 22, 2020
    The latest: Live updates on coronavirus

    Coronavirus maps: Cases and deaths in the U.S. | Cases and deaths worldwide

    What you need to know: Vaccine tracker | Coronavirus etiquette | Summertime activities & coronavirus | Hand sanitizer recall | Your life at home | Personal finance guide | Make your own fabric mask | Follow all of our coronavirus coverage and sign up for our free newsletter.

    How to help: Your community | Seniors | Restaurants | Keep at-risk people in mind

    Asked and answered: What readers want to know about coronavirus

    Have you been hospitalized for covid-19? Tell us whether you’ve gotten a bill.

    4.9k Comments
    Today’s Headlines
    The most important news stories of the day, curated by Post editors and delivered every morning.

    Enter your email address
    By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy


    Most ReadNational

    1
    Omaha reels as man accused of killing Black Lives Matter protester found dead
    2

    A police shooting ignited unrest in Kenosha. Current and former officers say the department’s problems with race go much deeper.
    3
    Ruth Bader Ginsburg was shaped by her minority faith
    4

    Former officers charged in George Floyd killing turn blame on one another
    5
    Secrecy envelopes will cause electoral chaos, official warns

    Today’s Headlines
    The most important news stories of the day, curated by Post editors and delivered every morning.

    Enter your email address
    By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy


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    washingtonpost.com © 1996-2020 The Washington Post

    Didn't read
  9. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  10. Second TV star Republicans have put in the white house

    They do love their tv
  11. Originally posted by ORACLE Illiterate actual mongoloid^

    ^ fake copy of iranian with even fakier made in paki label.
  12. ORACLE Naturally Camouflaged
    Originally posted by vindicktive vinny ^ fake copy of iranian with even fakier made in paki label.

    Actually, literally a mongoloid in every scientific sense of the term^
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  13. Originally posted by ORACLE Actually, literally a mongoloid in every scientific sense of the term^

    rohyngia ^
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  14. ORACLE Naturally Camouflaged
    Originally posted by vindicktive vinny rohyngia ^

    Mongoloid^
  15. Vinny's 3rd world education is so apparent sometimes. This nigga went to Malaysian public school.
  16. Soyboy 2020 IV: Intravenous Soyposting African Astronaut [scrub the quick-drying deinonychus]
    Originally posted by MexicanMasterRace Vinny's 3rd world education is so apparent sometimes. This nigga went to Malaysian public school.

    ^Product of home schooling.
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  17. ORACLE Naturally Camouflaged
    Originally posted by MORALLY SUPERIOR BEING 2020 IV: Intravenous Soyposting ^Product of home schooling.

    Never went to college^
  18. Originally posted by ORACLE Never went to college^

    Never heard of college^
  19. ORACLE Naturally Camouflaged
    Originally posted by MexicanMasterRace Never heard of college^

    Believes college exists like a shill^
  20. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    "This is not just an election between Donald Trump and Joe Biden,” the Vermont senator and Democratic runner-up said in remarks on Thursday. “This is an election between Donald Trump and democracy – and democracy must win."

    Bernie Sanders details Trump's efforts to steal election in urgent call to action:

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-election/bernie-sanders-donald-trump-2020-election-joe-biden-b578294.html
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
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