...year groups and their teachers in a bubble...basically like the compartments in the Titanic's hull...
Meanwhile in Utah...
What a freakshow. I hope @ryzno is reading, as compared to this the effect of his migrant Californians affecting voting patterns and house prices is negligible by comparison.This is peak southern Utah (where St. George is). It's called Utah's Dixie, which today people like to think means it's due to the mild weather, but really a majority of the residents are descendants from southerners that moved there in the 1850s.
For extra credit, he's someone who doesn't like the rules. As a result, he shouldn't be allowed at the hospital unless he learns to act like a mature person.Test your powers of deduction...
Situation: An obese guy is lined up to go to the same in-hospital anti-coagulation lab that I visit each month. The screener at the front desk insisted he position his mask properly over his nose (not just covering his mouth). As soon as he's around the corner, he pulls his mask down again. He is wearing a cap.
Question: Based on the above information, what is the color of the cap? For bonus points, what is the slogan on the cap?
LOL. May I suggest putting some posters up?Test your powers of deduction...
Situation: An obese guy is lined up to go to the same in-hospital anti-coagulation lab that I visit each month. The screener at the front desk insisted he position his mask properly over his nose (not just covering his mouth). As soon as he's around the corner, he pulls his mask down again. He is wearing a cap.
Question: Based on the above information, what is the color of the cap? For bonus points, what is the slogan on the cap?
I'm not too worried about grade schools capsizing the boat either. Universities on the other hand...Tough year for these kids, but I'm not concerned schools are going to capsize the boat here...
It's not just schools. It's the entire country from what reports I have been hearing.News about schools in Israel, which is about to enter a strong lockdown for three weeks. No more than 500 meters travel from home. The author calls out the opening of schools as being a significant part of the massive recent upsurge in cases.
"Looking back, as several of the experts warned, the primary contribution to the current jump in the numbers comes from the schools. After a sharp rise in the incidence of infection that resulted from the reopening of ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) yeshivas in mid-August and from the large weddings in the Arab community, there was another uncontrolled opening of the state and state-religious schools.
The relaxed Israeli interpretation of study “capsules,” in which pupils and teachers move between several classrooms daily, children play together at recess and travel together in vans and buses, has crashed on the rocks of reality. The source of some 20 percent of the infections over the past week was the education system."
Here is the full article - https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news...oronavirus-will-continue-its-spread-1.9162781
Imagine what the case numbers will look like in two weeks when people getting tested today get their test results back.
iHowever, the plans also include invoking a separate emergency power which would give the government and all firms, organisations and people involved in the supply chain, from manufacture to administering the jab to individuals, immunity from being sued in the civil courts if someone becomes ill or dies as a result of an unlicensed vaccine.
But, he is. Getting a PhD is a pretty exhaustive peer review process. Very few qualifications require the approval of your peers to obtain. @Touring Mars's PhD might not be in epidemiology, but his background in a fairly closely related field make him more than qualified enough to point out the flaws in what you posted.
Says the guy who used lockdownskeptics.org as a source. Excuse me while I go erase that link from my browser history.
Paranoid are we?
...Nope, from the looks of it, only you are.
Seriously now, what are you trying to achieve by all these "Hah, look over here! Got ya!" posts?
I come here to get information on this deadly pandemic that I otherwise might have missed elsewhere, yet you're making it harder to sift through endless posts debunking your less-than-honest "findings".
I won't tell you to stop, but maybe it's time you take a hard look at what you're doing right now first.
Dr. Yeadon is an Allergy & Respiratory Therapeutic Area expert, developed out of deep knowledge of biology & therapeutics and is an innovative drug discoverer with 23y in the pharmaceutical industry. He trained as a biochemist and pharmacologist, obtaining his PhD from the University of Surrey (UK) in 1988 on the CNS and peripheral pharmacology of opioids on respiration. Dr Yeadon then worked at the Wellcome Research Labs with Salvador Moncada with a research focus on airway hyper-responsiveness and effects of pollutants including ozone and working in drug discovery of 5-LO, COX, PAF, NO and lung inflammation. With colleagues, he was the first to detect exhaled NO in animals and later to induce NOS in lung via allergic triggers. Joining Pfizer in 1995, he was responsible for the growth and portfolio delivery of the Allergy & Respiratory pipeline within the company. During his tenure at Pfizer, Dr Yeadon was responsible for target selection and the progress into humans of new molecules, leading teams of up to 200 staff across all disciplines and won an Achievement Award for productivity in 2008. Under his leadership the research unit invented oral and inhaled NCEs which delivered multiple positive clinical proofs of concept in asthma, allergic rhinitis and COPD. He led productive collaborations such as with Rigel Pharmaceuticals (SYK inhibitors) and was involved in the licensing of Spiriva® and acquisition of the Meridica (inhaler device) company. Dr Yeadon has published over 40 original research articles and now consults and partners with a number of biotechnology companies. Before working with Apellis, Dr Yeadon was VP and Chief Scientific Officer (Allergy & Respiratory Research) with Pfizer.
Data from the Covid Symptom Tracker app, run by King's College London, shows there were days in March and April when more than 100,000 cases of coronavirus were estimated to have been caught in the UK. But testing figures were showing fewer than 6,500, meaning that the numbers of cases now cannot be compared like for like, because the currently estimated number of new cases is around 3,200 and many of them are now being picked up by tests, whereas only a vanishingly small number were at the start
How about YOU show us one thing you've learned about COVID-19 from the wondrous posts that don't belong to YOU? You don't seem to want to ever acknowledge points anyone has made that go against yours, or even read your entire sources before posting them.Okay sonny. Show me one thing you've learned about Covid-19 from the wondrous posts that don't belong to me.
It would help if you took the time to write a paragraph or so explaining the point that you are making with the video link, rather than just dropping a link in the post. Based on the rest of this post now, you are saying that there are way more cases being reported right now than before because there are false positives? That is fine, and I'm not going to try and dispute that, but you could also argue that if there was near as much testing in April, the case numbers would have ballooned for the same reason. If all of these extra cases are false positives, then we shouldn't see any change in the death count over the next week or two (remember it takes time for people to die after getting tested). Head count in hospitals, ICUs and morgues should be a bigger concern than case numbers anyway.No opinion about Mike Yeadon though.
I'm predicting no response.