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  1. The commie freaks can dish it out easily enough, but they can't take it.
  2. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Trump’s Surgeon General says anti-vax 'freedom argument is bunk'


    On Cuomo Prime Time Thursday, former President Trump’s Surgeon General, Dr. Jerome Adams took aim at anti-vaxxers who claim personal freedom as the reason they refuse to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

    As Adams pointed out, the people claiming freedom as the reason they’re not getting vaccinated are actually taking away the freedom of their fellow Americans. “We need to help people understand that this freedom argument is bunk. I mean, at the end of the day, we are losing freedoms because people are unvaccinated,” Adams said, soon adding, “The consequences are, as I said last week, more mitigation. And as I’m telling you this week, I’m predicting closures in the future because we are not gonna be able to reign this variant back in before we get enough spread that it’s gonna start causing closures again.”


    As the Delta variant rapidly spreads and COVID cases skyrocket in many areas of the country, overwhelming hospitals and threatening the new school year, Adams put the blame squarely on the unvaccinated if we have another year like 2020.


    “I don’t want my kids to have to go through another year of virtual school. I don't want our hospitals to be overwhelmed, and for them to be shut down for elective surgeries, like we saw last year,” Adams said. “Our freedoms are being impinged upon because we have far too many people unvaccinated.”

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  3. Donald Trump Black Hole
    Originally posted by stl1 Trump’s Surgeon General says anti-vax 'freedom argument is bunk'


    On Cuomo Prime Time Thursday, former President Trump’s Surgeon General, Dr. Jerome Adams took aim at anti-vaxxers who claim personal freedom as the reason they refuse to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

    As Adams pointed out, the people claiming freedom as the reason they’re not getting vaccinated are actually taking away the freedom of their fellow Americans. “We need to help people understand that this freedom argument is bunk. I mean, at the end of the day, we are losing freedoms because people are unvaccinated,” Adams said, soon adding, “The consequences are, as I said last week, more mitigation. And as I’m telling you this week, I’m predicting closures in the future because we are not gonna be able to reign this variant back in before we get enough spread that it’s gonna start causing closures again.”


    As the Delta variant rapidly spreads and COVID cases skyrocket in many areas of the country, overwhelming hospitals and threatening the new school year, Adams put the blame squarely on the unvaccinated if we have another year like 2020.


    “I don’t want my kids to have to go through another year of virtual school. I don't want our hospitals to be overwhelmed, and for them to be shut down for elective surgeries, like we saw last year,” Adams said. “Our freedoms are being impinged upon because we have far too many people unvaccinated.”

    More From Yahoo Entertainment US
    He just hates the blacks. You should hear him after a few beers.
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  4. Donald Trump Black Hole
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  5. Donald Trump Black Hole

    https://summit.news/2021/07/30/psychic-gym-bro-recognized-for-predicting-lockdown-agenda/

    The guy was right about everything.
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  6. Xlite African Astronaut
    He should be our new jebus, lord and saviour.
  7. Donald Trump Black Hole
    https://odysee.com/@ComputingForever:9/A-Message-to-My-Harassers-Broadband-High:2

    Dave Cullen has covid People harassing his family now.

    What does it feel like covid true-believers? To be part of a literal terrorist gang?
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  8. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    NBC News
    U.S. hits 70 percent Covid vaccination goal — a month later than Biden had hoped to
    Phil Helsel


    Seventy percent of American adults have received at least one dose of the Covid-19 vaccine, officials said Monday, reaching a goal that President Joe Biden had hoped to reach a month ago.

    Biden had said he wanted to hit that mark by July 4.

    The goal was ambitious, but Monday's development is a good step, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday.

    "But we’ve said from the beginning: Even when we set this goal, our work would not be done even when we reached it, and so we're forging ahead," she said.

    As of Monday, more than 180.7 million Americans 18 years or older, or 70 percent, have received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    For those 12 years or older, that percentage is 67.6 percent. Children younger than that are not eligible for the vaccination. A Food and Drug Administration official has said that emergency use authorization for younger children could come by early to mid-winter.

    The 70 percent mark was reached with Covid-19 cases rising across the country, fueled by the more transmissible delta variant.

    The CDC recently recommended that everyone wear masks in indoor settings in areas where the coronavirus is spreading widely. The revised recommendation came in part because of evidence that fully vaccinated individuals who get infected with the variant can spread the virus just as easily as unvaccinated people.

    White House Covid-19 Data Director Dr. Cyrus Shahpar announced the 70 percent figure on Twitter, calling it "Milestone Monday" and encouraging people to get vaccinated.

    Rising cases in Louisiana prompted Gov. John Bel Edwards on Monday to reinstate a statewide mask mandate. The policy takes effect Wednesday, but the governor urged people to begin wearing masks indoors immediately.

    Edwards said the state is "in an unchecked COVID surge" and blamed Louisiana's low vaccination rate. Around 37 percent of state residents are fully vaccinated, according to numbers compiled by NBC News.

    Louisiana is the first state to bring back a statewide mask mandate. Some counties, including Los Angeles County in California, have also done so. On Monday, most counties in the San Francisco Bay Area also reinstated mask requirements.

    Health officials have stressed that the vaccines are the best way to protect against the coronavirus, including the delta variant, and that they keep someone from getting seriously ill or dying.

    Also on Monday, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina, announced that he has tested positive for Covid-19. He is vaccinated, and credited that for the mildness of his symptoms.

    More than 617,000 people in the U.S. have died from Covid-19 since the pandemic began, according to an NBC News count of reports.
  9. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    The Hill
    Graham's COVID-19 'breakthrough' case jolts Senate
    Jordain Carney


    The coronavirus officially returned to the United States Senate on Monday.

    News that Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) tested positive quickly jolted through the Capitol and sparked an hours-long scramble to figure out who else might have been exposed, which only escalated after sources confirmed that the South Carolina Republican attended an outdoor event on Sen. Joe Manchin's (D-W.Va.) houseboat over the weekend with other senators.

    Graham's "breakthrough" case, the first known instance among senators, comes as the chamber has largely loosened social distancing restrictions in recent months, with at least 96 of the 100 senators vaccinated. Though the Capitol physician has recommended mask wearing regardless of vaccination status, most Republicans have not been wearing them, and even some Democrats would remove them while hobnobbing on the floor with their colleagues.

    It also comes as the Senate is embarking on a tense slog of legislating: It is currently debating a bipartisan bill, which Graham has been helping advance, before Democrats turn to a budget resolution and then leave for a weeks-long break.

    "Y'all OK? Nobody's sick?" a masked GOP Sen. Richard Shelby (Ala.) asked reporters as senators came to the Capitol for the first vote after news of Graham's positive test result.

    Asked why he decided to wear a mask, Shelby said, "Why do you think? I'd like to stay healthy. ... I was in the room the other day with Lindsey when we were meeting with [Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.)]. So you don't know."

    Though the Senate didn't vote this weekend, Graham was in the Capitol on Monday and briefly spoke with reporters. In a move that didn't go unnoticed, the normally chatty GOP senator appeared to be in a hurry and was wearing a mask - an unusual move for the largely maskless Senate GOP caucus.

    "I'll talk to y'all later," he told reporters as they tried to push for details on potential changes to the bipartisan infrastructure bill.

    Nearly an hour later, his office released a statement announcing that Graham had tested positive for the coronavirus.

    "I started having flu-like symptoms Saturday night and went to the doctor this morning. I feel like I have a sinus infection and at present time I have mild symptoms. I will be quarantining for ten days," he said.

    Experts say infections in people who are vaccinated, known as breakthrough cases, are rare and usually result in only mild symptoms.

    An analysis from the Kaiser Family Foundation found that less than 1 percent of fully vaccinated people got a breakthrough case in every state reporting data. The highest rate of hospitalization among vaccinated people was just 0.06 percent, in Arkansas. The rate of death among vaccinated people was at a high of just 0.01 percent.



    REPEAT




    The rate of death among vaccinated people was at a high of just 0.01 percent.





    "These infections, because they are so mild, illustrate just how efficacious the vaccine is in taming the virus," Amesh Adalja, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, wrote in an email. "The virus is not going anywhere and overtime [there are] going to be breakthrough infections. The fact that they are mild due to the vaccines doing exactly what they were designed to do should be the story."
  10. https://cdn.lbryplayer.xyz/api/v4/streams/free/Sterilisation---Computing-Forever/bc08bda8b406ce8497a7c77364195d47d439410c/125fd9
  11. Kev Space Nigga
    Originally posted by stl1 More than 617,000 people in the U.S. have died from Covid-19 since the pandemic began, according to an NBC News count of reports.

    if a motorcycle death counts as a covid death, i wonder what else counts as a covid death.

    617000 my ass
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  12. Donald Trump Black Hole
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  13. RIPtotse victim of incest [my adversative decurved garbo]
    Originally posted by Donald Trump He just hates the blacks. You should hear him after a few beers.


    Dudes a boomer living in fucking St. Louis one of the most dangerous cities in America what do you expect lol

    I’m right here too I’m just not a complete fucking moron like op and can think for myself and don’t listen to mass news sources
  14. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    I live in St. Louis County within one of the safest cities in the state. St. Louis City itself is only 300,000 people while the metropolitan area is almost 3 million.


    WEBSTER GROVES RANKS AS STATE'S SAFEST CITY
    February 12, 2020


    The National Council for Home Safety and Security (NCHSS) released its annual report on the safest cities in each U.S. state. The Safest Cities Report examines each city’s per-capita crime data to provide state rankings and simultaneously features cities that have made strides to improve or sustain a safe environment for their residents.

    According to the report, Missouri, saw a 5.2% decrease in violent crime and a 6.5% decrease in property crime since last year.
    Webster Groves is Missouri’s safest city. The wealthy, medium-sized St. Louis suburb logged a crime rate just above 1 per 1,000 in 2018, while its property crime rate is just one-third of the national rate.


    https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=webster+groves%2c+mo+video+tour&docid=607989089458153960&mid=9EAD2FD7D17989F4A5469EAD2FD7D17989F4A546&view=detail&FORM=VIRE
  15. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Crickets.
  16. STER0S Space Nigga [the disappointingly unanticipated slab]
    american politics is fucking retarded now.

    i dont even really keep up with it anymore... repubs and dems are suppose to work together in a civil matter and solve issues together and to find common grounds that can be worked out to be met in the middle so that everybody is satisfied but instead its turned into some stupid junior high drama shit
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  17. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Florida has recorded 50,997 cases in 3 days, and hospitalizations break a record
    Michelle Marchante, Miami Herald


    MIAMI — Florida reported 50,997 COVID-19 cases and 100 deaths over the last three days to the federal government as the state continues to see a surge in cases not seen since January, the month with the highest number of cases since the coronavirus pandemic began 18 months ago.

    Florida on Tuesday also broke its record for COVID-19 hospitalizations.

    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.

    Florida’s seven-day average of new cases was 17,628 as of Monday, a nearly 800% increase since the seven-day average of new cases on July 1.

    On Saturday, Florida reported a record-breaking 21,683 new COVID-19 cases for Friday, July 30, the highest single-day number of cases since the pandemic began.

    January was the worst month of the Florida pandemic, with daily case counts routinely topping 10,000. That followed a surge last July, when daily case counts also topped 10,000. The latter half of July 2021 has been Florida’s third COVID-19 surge.

    Cumulatively, Florida has recorded at least 2,641,696 confirmed COVID cases statewide and 39,179 deaths as of Tuesday, according to the CDC.

    COVID hospitalizations in Florida break record
    There’s now 11,863 people hospitalized for COVID-19 in Florida, breaking the state’s hospitalization record for the second day in a row, according to data from the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services as of 1:45 p.m. Tuesday. About 2,406 people are in intensive care, or nearly 40% of the state’s ICU hospital beds.

    “Last year, in 2020 it took us 60 days to go from 2,000 cases to 10,000. It has taken us 27 days to break our 2020 peak so it has been a dramatic increase,” Florida Hospital Association President Mary Mayhew told MSNBC Monday morning.

    Many of the people hospitalized are younger and unvaccinated, according to South Florida hospitals and public health experts. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis reiterated during a Tuesday news conference at the Shark Valley Visitor Center in Miami-Dade County that there would be no shutdowns.

    More than 10.4 million eligible Floridians have completed the two-dose series of Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna, or have completed Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine. About 49.1% of Florida’s total population is fully vaccinated, according to the CDC.

    COVID-19 vaccines
    Florida switched from daily to weekly COVID reports in early June. The Miami Herald can no longer include new deaths because the state stopped classifying deaths by county in its report. The CDC does not display daily case totals for counties, only weekly averages.

    Here is Monday’s vaccination data. Tuesday’s data is not available yet.

    — In Miami-Dade County, 2,042,988 people, or 75.2% of the county’s total population, have received at least one dose of the vaccine, according to the CDC. About 1,668,972 people, or 61.4% of the county’s total population, are fully vaccinated.

    86.9% of the population 12 years old and over, 89.3% of people 18 and older, and 99.9% of people 65 and older have received at least one dose of the vaccine.

    — In Broward County, 1,234,678, or 63.2% of the county’s total population, have received at least one dose of the vaccine, according to the CDC. About 1,011,321 people are fully vaccinated, or 51.8% of the county’s total population.

    73.4% of the population 12 years old and over, 75.6% of people 18 and older, and 95.2% of people 65 and older have received at least one dose of the vaccine.

    — In Palm Beach County, 878,442, or 58.7% of the county’s total population, have received at least one dose of the vaccine, according to the CDC. About 757,245 people are fully vaccinated, or 50.6% of the county’s total population.

    66.9% of the population 12 years old and over, X69.2% of people 18 and older, and 88.9% of people 65 and older have received at least one dose of the vaccine.

    — In Monroe County, 52,468, or 70.7% of the county’s total population, have received at least one dose of the vaccine, according to the CDC. About 44,065 people are fully vaccinated, or 59.4% of the county’s total population.

    78.8% of the population 12 years old and over, 81.4% of people 18 and older, and 99.9% of people 65 and older have received at least one dose of the vaccine.

    — In Manatee County, 219,222, or 54.4% of the county’s total population, have received at least one dose of the vaccine, according to the CDC. About 187,625 people are fully vaccinated, or 46.5% of the county’s total population.

    61.5% of the population 12 years old and over, 64.1% of people 18 and older, and 86.9% of people 65 and older have received at least one dose of the vaccine.
  18. AngryOnion Big Wig [the nightly self-effacing broadsheet]
    Why don't you post a link like normal people?
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  19. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Do you EVER click on them?
  20. AngryOnion Big Wig [the nightly self-effacing broadsheet]
    Ya it beats looking a wall of text.
    Its not like your getting per word.
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