Americans gonna American and lots of people are going to get sick and die and that is their right.
Best of luck to them.
Yes
No
Americans gonna American and lots of people are going to get sick and die and that is their right.
Best of luck to them.
We visited friends for dinner on Thursday. They, like us, have been keeping a low profile. Masks when shopping, not eating out at restaurants, no group meals with more than two other people. Not perfect but not party hardy. Then unexpectedly, two of their friends show up - hey we're just back from our daughter's wedding in California! And look who we ran into at the bakery this morning - X Y and Z! You remember X & Y from high school, right? They are living in the Adirondacks now and they just came back from visiting their family in Columbia. And Z is their sister. She lives in Miami! Isn't that great? Oh we're all vaccinated. Hope that's okay.
So in about 2 minutes we went from a dinner perceived as relatively low risk to a possible epidemiological smorgasbord. Our guests graciously shooed their visitors off "for another time when we don't have plans already." But we had chosen to be there, to define the risk associated with being there in a way that made us comfortable enough to have dinner with two other people, and yet here were all these people adding themselves into the situation who were not part of that calculation. So refigure the risks and then go on with dinner? Run for the hills? Bathe in alcohol? We gritted our teeth a bit. And stayed for dinner.
Not sure what point I was making. Maybe that I wouldn't go to a DCCC function and sit so close to another person I could put my napkin on their lap accidentally?
Asymptomatic spread & "breakthrough" infection makes everything sketchy.
There is not much we can do to help ourselves.. except take the vaccine.
slow.
Trod Harland, Pickle Expediter
Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced. — James Baldwin
Please get vaccinated and encourage others to do likewise.
Are these guys following our thread?
https://www.wsj.com/articles/in-los-...ks-11629558004
LOS ANGELES—The center of the Covid-19 pandemic in America’s second-largest city has shifted from poor, crowded neighborhoods to affluent ones with younger populations.
Across Los Angeles County, cities and neighborhoods including West Hollywood, Venice and Santa Monica now report some of the most infections, even though their vaccination rates are higher than in poorer areas such as East Los Angeles, where Covid-19 raced through families and neighborhoods during earlier surges, county health data shows.
The shift is a consequence of the Delta variant, which spreads more easily among people who gather indoors in such places as bars, clubs and restaurants and can affect people who are vaccinated, according to doctors.
Los Angeles shows how the Delta variant is prompting a surge that is different from what occurred earlier. Some other cities across the country, facing signs of increases, are taking steps such as mandating masks or requiring proof of vaccination for indoor dining instead of measures including the lockdowns carried out early in the pandemic.
Posted two or three weeks ago....
For those who aren't from SoCal, Boyle Heights and East LA were the neighborhoods that were historically known as the Eastside of Los Angeles.
The problem now is that the unvaccinated are filling the hospitals and causing serious problems for the most vulnerable vaccinated individuals experiencing severe symptoms from breakthrough infections and for those who just need surgery and medical care completely unrelated to Covid. The anger over all of this in Oregon is reaching a boiling point as it is largely the rural/red/tRumper?GQP counties that refuse to get vaccinated or wear masks, and it is those counties who are sending their Covid patients to the hospitals in the counties with higher rates of vaccination and overwhelming the systems of counties that have "done the right thing". And yet the rules of emergency care dictate that the triage is done by immediate need, so we can't just put the unvaccinated in a tent out back and tell them to use their thoughts/prayers/FB-cures to take the sickness away. It's a clusterfuggle of epic proportions, and if it isn't in your area yet, just wait... it's coming. The only way out of it I can see is if medicare/medicaid coverage and/or private insurance coverage is denied for the unvaccinated. A percentage will still show up at the ER anyway and just deal with the bankruptcy that awaits them - but maybe it will push middle-class science deniers to get over themselves and choose their family's future over their insane ideology. Maybe the FDA approval will allow anyone providing a paycheck or benefits to require vaccination too, unless a bona-fide doctor has cleared someone as medically exempt.. We can hope anyway.
Dan in Oregon
---------------
The wheel is round. The hill lasts as long as it lasts. That's a fact. Everything else is pure theory.
This is similar to the folks who have the ability to evacuate before a hurricane but refuse, then call 911 when they need to be rescued resulting in EMS folks risking their lives to save them. Our local hospital is at capacity with covid cases (97% unvaccinated with breakthrough cases in folks >65 with comorbidity) with 3-5 deaths daily. Just across the street, folks are yelling at Walmart employees who ask them to wear a mask. The last data I reviewed showed a vaccinated person has a .0001% chance of dying due to a breakthrough infection, but people will argue that as well. We had too many people anyway.
Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com
Opinion: Unvaccinated covid patients are straining hospitals like mine, where I had to turn a cancer patient away
Video: Dying in the Name of Vaccine Freedom
Opinion: The Quiet Rage of the Responsible
In that last one, Paul Krugman explores if the anger is justified and whether it will have any effect. "It's possible to have sympathy for some of the unvaccinated, especially workers who find it hard to take time off to get a shot and are worried about losing a day to aftereffects. But there's much less excuse for those who refuse to get their shots or wear masks for cultural or ideological reasons — and no excuse at all for MAGA governors like Ron DeSantis in Florida, Greg Abbott in Texas and Doug Ducey in Arizona who have been actively impeding efforts to contain the latest outbreak."
He sums it up by saying "So it's time to stop being diffident and call out destructive behavior for what it is. Doing so may make some people feel that they're being looked down on. But you know what? Your feelings don't give you the right to ruin other people's lives."
Covid-19 live updates: Third Pfizer dose significantly lowers risk of infection in seniors, Israeli data shows
And a bonus track:
Last edited by thollandpe; 08-23-2021 at 01:15 PM. Reason: Hail Fauci?
Trod Harland, Pickle Expediter
Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced. — James Baldwin
Dan in Oregon
---------------
The wheel is round. The hill lasts as long as it lasts. That's a fact. Everything else is pure theory.
Since data and numbers can get one clowned, how about we look at trends. Again, I'll stick to LA County. Hospitalization and death rates higher than any part of Oregon, at least as reported. Vast numbers of unvaccinated; over 4M (essentially the entire population of Oregon) by the official definition. Vast wealth inequality. And, yet, the hospital system is not facing crisis. Scan the front page of the LA Times, scroll down the Covid-19 section. How are hospitals doing here? Are individuals in Oregon or Florida or wherever linked inherently less unvaccinated or less healthy or less lucky (sic)? Or is it possible that CA is the only state where a Democratic governor is being recalled. Speaking of, did anyone see that Pelosi fundraiser photo?
https://www.latimes.com/topic/covid-19-pandemic
https://www.economist.com/finance-an...hs-than-others
Dan in Oregon
---------------
The wheel is round. The hill lasts as long as it lasts. That's a fact. Everything else is pure theory.
Dan in Oregon
---------------
The wheel is round. The hill lasts as long as it lasts. That's a fact. Everything else is pure theory.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/...-vaccines.html
Data and stuff. Show me one where vaccinated folks have equal chances of hospitalization or death.
Pretty sure a reduction of risk is evidenced here. My local hospital mirrors this data…full of unvaccinated idiots.
Jason Babcock
Bookmarks