COVID-19 - On the Ground

Coffee talk.
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MICHHAWK
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

Post by MICHHAWK »

Sparko wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 1:31 pm Should lose his license. In jail.
does this also apply for dr fauci.

who played fast and loose with the facts more than him.
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KUTradition
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

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what, exactly, did Fauci say that’s got your panties in a wad?

please show your work
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
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pdub
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

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MICHHAWK wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 2:19 pm
Sparko wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 1:31 pm Should lose his license. In jail.
Does this also apply for Dr. Fauci?

Who played fast and lose with the facts more than he did?
I'll do the spell check, you do the fact check.
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PhDhawk
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

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MICHHAWK wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 2:19 pm
Sparko wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 1:31 pm Should lose his license. In jail.
does this also apply for dr fauci.

who played fast and loose with the facts more than him.
The guy who called it a fungus for three years is suddenly worried about facts?

There were like 3 days where Fauci, among many, said people shouldn't wear masks because they should be prioritized for health care professionals. And that was extremely early on, before it was known that there were asymptomatic carriers.

Other than that, what did he do wrong? Too many TV interviews? Made a funny face when Trump said stupid shit? is that worth losing a license over?
I only came to kick some ass...

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randylahey
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

Post by randylahey »

Fauccis research caused a culling of the old and the weak. If anyone should face consequences from anything covid related, its him
jfish26
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

Post by jfish26 »

randylahey wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 4:01 pm Fauccis research caused a culling of the old and the weak. If anyone should face consequences from anything covid related, its him
lol

Through the goddamn looking glass.
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

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PhDhawk wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 3:11 pm
MICHHAWK wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 2:19 pm
Sparko wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 1:31 pm Should lose his license. In jail.
does this also apply for dr fauci.

who played fast and loose with the facts more than him.
The guy who called it a fungus for three years is suddenly worried about facts?

There were like 3 days where Fauci, among many, said people shouldn't wear masks because they should be prioritized for health care professionals. And that was extremely early on, before it was known that there were asymptomatic carriers.

Other than that, what did he do wrong? Too many TV interviews? Made a funny face when Trump said stupid shit? is that worth losing a license over?
If it weren't for the constant death threats, it has to be HIGHLY amusing to see one's reputation become some combination of Mengele, Freeman, Moreau and Voldemort.
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

Post by Sparko »

Places in red states where they ignored Fauci and public health warnings had higher rates of death than places who did not. Empirical.
Overlander
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

Post by Overlander »

randylahey wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 4:01 pm Fauccis research caused a culling of the old and the weak. If anyone should face consequences from anything covid related, its him
Wait, Faucci was doing research in China?
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jfish26
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

Post by jfish26 »

Overlander wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 8:46 pm
randylahey wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 4:01 pm Fauccis research caused a culling of the old and the weak. If anyone should face consequences from anything covid related, its him
Wait, Faucci was doing research in China?
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jfish26
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

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Opinion - A closer look at the U.S. pandemic response reached an unsettling conclusion

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions ... se-report/
Looking back at the U.S. response to the pandemic, many setbacks and mistakes are well-known. But a closer examination by a team of seasoned experts has brought to the surface a profoundly unsettling conclusion. The United States, once the paragon of can-do pragmatism, of successful moon shots and biomedical breakthroughs, fell down on the job in confronting the crisis. The pandemic, the experts say, revealed “a collective national incompetence in government.”

This warning comes through over and over again in “Lessons from the Covid War: An Investigative Report,” a book published Tuesday by a group of 34 specialists led by Philip Zelikow, the executive director of the 9/11 Commission and a history professor at the University of Virginia. Their verdict: “The leaders of the United States could not apply their country’s vast assets effectively enough in practice.”

Mr. Zelikow mobilized the experts to help get ready for a possible national commission on the pandemic. When Congress and the White House failed to launch a national inquiry, the experts wrote their own report. It is a compelling, disturbing account. They conclude the pandemic was not an inescapable tragedy. The United States could and should have done better.

The United States started out “with more capabilities than any other country in the world,” they note. But it ended up with 1 million dead. “The Covid war is a story of how our wondrous scientific knowledge has run far, far ahead of the organized human ability to apply that knowledge in practice.”

[...]

The authors of the report show, in detail, how federal crisis management “splintered by the third week of March.” HHS Secretary Alex Azar had placed the assistant secretary for preparedness and response, Robert Kadlec, in charge of the HHS effort — but at the same time, Vice President Mike Pence’s staff kicked him off the White House task force. The head of the Food and Drug Administration was not even on the task force for the first month. The CDC was “fractured into too many missions.” While some officials recognized the urgency of a crash program of testing and masks, “Kadlec had no money, no real emergency fund.”

“By late April, as a frightened and bewildered country became more and more confused about continuing business and school closures, and after some brow-raising comments at a White House briefing in which he discussed treating the virus with light, heat, or disinfectant, Trump essentially detached himself from his own government,” the report says. “He moved toward questioning and challenging what other government officials were doing.”

“The administration abdicated its wartime responsibility to lead,” they add. “It left the battlefield, and the war strategy” to the states and localities. By April, the White House chief of staff concluded the task force was “useless and broken.”

There were many other examples of dysfunction — confusion over face masks, shortages of personal protective equipment, conflict over reopening, mixed messages over boosters.

[...]

The pandemic also found the United States navigating without critical information about the virus and how it was moving. “No federal agency, including the CDC, had designed or tried to build a rapid-action, interdisciplinary, systematic biomedical surveillance network,” the report says. “Such a network would show how many people were getting sick, reveal what kind of people were most vulnerable and the key risk factors, illustrate the usual course of the disease, and employ robust capabilities for genomic sequencing.” Other nations, including Britain, Israel and South Africa, used such networks.

U.S. policies were “being designed largely in the dark, reacting as people showed up in hospitals, sick and dying.”

[...]

“Because authorities were flying blind about how the virus was spreading, many communities probably imposed social controls long before they needed to,” the report says. “Timing was hard when authorities could not track the virus spread.”

[...]

The United States did some things well, the experts conclude, such as the crash vaccine development and manufacturing effort, Operation Warp Speed, which was a bargain at $30 billion. But “one of the worst consequences” of the bungled response “was that Americans sensed their governance had let them down. It had let them down in performing the most fundamental task governments are expected to perform, to protect them in an emergency.”

This is a sobering, realistic assessment, one of the most important to come out of the pandemic. The nation should pay heed to it.
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KUTradition
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

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the nation should pay heed, but it won’t

randy is just one example as to why

faux news is another (not entirely unrelated)
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
jfish26
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

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KUTradition wrote: Tue Apr 25, 2023 10:41 am the nation should pay heed, but it won’t

randy is just one example as to why

faux news is another (not entirely unrelated)
And this gets at the heart of the issue - one of the eight plays in the GOP's "Super Tecmo Bowl"-sized playbook is (1) kneecap government, (2) watch government fail, (3) blame government for failing.

In the "Every accusation..." line of thinking, this closely relates to rube fears over government control. All the "fear" about government control is that they're actually very much SEEKING government (their government) control, and convincing people that (not-their) government does not and cannot work is a predicate step.
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MICHHAWK
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

Post by MICHHAWK »

the china fungus response will go down as one of the greatest clusterphucques of the last hundred years.

the world could not have phucqued that up much worse if they tried.
randylahey
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

Post by randylahey »

It amazes me that so many of you were whinging about how serious covid was for years, and how we must do everything possible to slow it down

But now that its time to hold people accountable for the research that created this mess... nothing.
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KUTradition
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

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what’s amazing is your continued willful ignorance, about a great many topics
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
randylahey
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

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randylahey
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

Post by randylahey »

KUTradition wrote: Tue Apr 25, 2023 11:34 am what’s amazing is your continued willful ignorance, about a great many topics
Youre a perfect example. You insisted what a serious deal covid was, dont you want people held accountable for what happened?
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KUTradition
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

Post by KUTradition »

randylahey wrote: Tue Apr 25, 2023 11:35 am
KUTradition wrote: Tue Apr 25, 2023 11:34 am what’s amazing is your continued willful ignorance, about a great many topics
Youre a perfect example. You insisted what a serious deal covid was, dont you want people held accountable for what happened?
yes

Fauci isn’t one of those, despite your unsubstantiated claims to the contrary

we’ll never know for certain about the true origins, so accountability there is a wash

the failed government response is really the only thing that can be addressed

what should happen to trump for dismantling our surveillance network prior to the pandemic?

what should happen to trump and the rest of his administration for all of their failures laid out in the report JFish cited?
Last edited by KUTradition on Tue Apr 25, 2023 11:41 am, edited 2 times in total.
Have we fallen into a mesmerized state that makes us accept as inevitable that which is inferior or detrimental, as though having lost the will or the vision to demand that which is good?
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pdub
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Re: COVID-19 - On the Ground

Post by pdub »

I think if more reliable information continues to come out that it came from a Chinese lab then yes, absolutely, they should be held accountable.

Tough precedent though as they will deny to the bitter end.
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