Covid-19

greg nr

Well-Known Member
Only in murica....


WHITSETT, N.C. (WTHR) — Deputies in Guilford County, North Carolina stumbled across a heist of 18,000 pounds of toilet paper.
The deputies spotted a semi make a traffic violation on Wednesday and decided to follow it.
When it got to a waehouse, deputies confronted the driver.
It turned out the semi had been stolen and inside was a load of commercial toilet paper.
The investigation is ongoing and there have been no arrests yet.


Filed under:

North Carolina
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Same thing as 911 with anthrax scripts and smallpox vaccines.
Hoarded by govt use and the remainder were on the market, so to speak.
I got a smallpox vaccine back in the early seventies in grade school before they declared it eradicated in the United States and stopped vaccinating for it. I do remember people younger than me being worried. I think I got it either the last year they gave them or the year just prior. They stopped in 1972.
 

DCcan

Well-Known Member
I got a smallpox vaccine back in the early seventies in grade school before they declared it eradicated in the United States and stopped vaccinating for it. I do remember people younger than me being worried. I think I got it either the last year they gave them or the year just prior. They stopped in 1972.
I got at least nine, plus a couple extra polio that were going to expire, and yellow fever that was expired.
Army nurses dont give 2 fucks about your shot record. One pretended to read it while the other stabbed me, tricky bitch.
 

greg nr

Well-Known Member
2nd one : NEW -- Sen. Kelly Loeffler Dumped Millions in Stock After Coronavirus Briefing

2,099 people are talking about this





The Senate’s newest member sold off seven figures worth of stock holdings in the days and weeks after a private, all-senators meeting on the novel coronavirus that subsequently hammered U.S. equities.

Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) reported the first sale of stock jointly owned by her and her husband on Jan. 24, the very day that her committee, the Senate Health Committee, hosted a private, all-senators briefing from administration officials, including the CDC director and Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institutes of Health of the United States, on the coronavirus.

“Appreciate today’s briefing from the President’s top health officials on the novel coronavirus outbreak,” she tweeted about the briefing at the time.

That first transaction was a sale of stock in the company Resideo Technologies worth between $50,001 and $100,000. The company’s stock price has fallen by more than half since then,and the Dow Jones Industrial Average overall has shed approximately 10,000 points, dropping about a third of its value.

It was the first of 29 stock transactions that Loeffler and her husband made through mid-February, all but two of which were sales. One of Loeffler’s two purchases was stock worth between $100,000 and $250,000 in Citrix, a technology company that offers teleworking software and which has seen a small bump in its stock price since Loeffler bought in as a result of coronavirus-induced market turmoil.
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
2nd one : NEW -- Sen. Kelly Loeffler Dumped Millions in Stock After Coronavirus Briefing

2,099 people are talking about this




The Senate’s newest member sold off seven figures worth of stock holdings in the days and weeks after a private, all-senators meeting on the novel coronavirus that subsequently hammered U.S. equities.

Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) reported the first sale of stock jointly owned by her and her husband on Jan. 24, the very day that her committee, the Senate Health Committee, hosted a private, all-senators briefing from administration officials, including the CDC director and Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institutes of Health of the United States, on the coronavirus.

“Appreciate today’s briefing from the President’s top health officials on the novel coronavirus outbreak,” she tweeted about the briefing at the time.

That first transaction was a sale of stock in the company Resideo Technologies worth between $50,001 and $100,000. The company’s stock price has fallen by more than half since then,and the Dow Jones Industrial Average overall has shed approximately 10,000 points, dropping about a third of its value.

It was the first of 29 stock transactions that Loeffler and her husband made through mid-February, all but two of which were sales. One of Loeffler’s two purchases was stock worth between $100,000 and $250,000 in Citrix, a technology company that offers teleworking software and which has seen a small bump in its stock price since Loeffler bought in as a result of coronavirus-induced market turmoil.
why do all these guys have (R) in front of their names?....asking for a friend
 

tangerinegreen555

Well-Known Member
Only in murica....


WHITSETT, N.C. (WTHR) — Deputies in Guilford County, North Carolina stumbled across a heist of 18,000 pounds of toilet paper.
The deputies spotted a semi make a traffic violation on Wednesday and decided to follow it.
When it got to a waehouse, deputies confronted the driver.
It turned out the semi had been stolen and inside was a load of commercial toilet paper.
The investigation is ongoing and there have been no arrests yet.


Filed under:

North Carolina
Greedy bastard, he should have just taken a case and left the trailer open for the next guy.
 

lokie

Well-Known Member
I got a smallpox vaccine back in the early seventies in grade school before they declared it eradicated in the United States and stopped vaccinating for it. I do remember people younger than me being worried. I think I got it either the last year they gave them or the year just prior. They stopped in 1972.
I did not know that.

I thought everyone had one of these.
Image result for smallpox arm vaccination scar gif

How to spot a cougar at the bar: the vaccine that left a scar
 

natureboygrower

Well-Known Member
I live in a small community with a lot of "summer homes" Today I noticed an out of state suv pulling an empty flat screen box out of the back to recycle at the dump. I instantly realized these people are fleeing the cities.
We had our first confirmed case in my county this evening. Sure enough, from a town very close with a high amount of those "summer homes" :finger: oh well, it was bound to get here sometime.
 

greg nr

Well-Known Member
Wow, it's a good thing that everyone who wants a test in the us can get one.....

Scientists say mass tests in Italian town have halted Covid-19 there
Scientists say mass tests in Italian town have halted Covid-19 there

A study in Vò, which saw Italy’s first death, points to the danger of asymptomatic carriers

Read it here:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/18/scientists-say-mass-tests-in-italian-town-have-halted-covid-19

(snips)
The small town of Vò, in northern Italy, where the first coronavirus death occurred in the country, has become a case study that demonstrates how scientists might neutralise the spread of Covid-19.

A scientific study, rolled out by the University of Padua, with the help of the Veneto Region and the Red Cross, consisted of testing all 3,300 inhabitants of the town, including asymptomatic people. The goal was to study the natural history of the virus, the transmission dynamics and the categories at risk.

The researchers explained they had tested the inhabitants twice and that the study led to the discovery of the decisive role in the spread of the coronavirus epidemic of asymptomatic people.

When the study began, on 6 March, there were at least 90 infected in Vò. For days now, there have been no new cases.
Coronavirus: the week explained - sign up for our email newsletter

“We were able to contain the outbreak here, because we identified and eliminated the ‘submerged’ infections and isolated them,” Andrea Crisanti, an infections expert at Imperial College London, who took part in the Vò project, told the Financial Times. “That is what makes the difference.”
and.....
The research allowed for the identification of at least six asymptomatic people who tested positive for Covid-19. ‘‘If these people had not been discovered,” said the researchers, they would probably have unknowingly infected other inhabitants.

“The percentage of infected people, even if asymptomatic, in the population is very high,” wrote Sergio Romagnani, professor of clinical immunology at the University of Florence, in a letter to the authorities. “The isolation of asymptomatics is essential to be able to control the spread of the virus and the severity of the disease.”
 

DarkWeb

Well-Known Member
I live in a small community with a lot of "summer homes" Today I noticed an out of state suv pulling an empty flat screen box out of the back to recycle at the dump. I instantly realized these people are fleeing the cities.
We had our first confirmed case in my county this evening. Sure enough, from a town very close with a high amount of those "summer homes" :finger: oh well, it was bound to get here sometime.
Same shit here!
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Wow, it's a good thing that everyone who wants a test in the us can get one.....

Scientists say mass tests in Italian town have halted Covid-19 there
Scientists say mass tests in Italian town have halted Covid-19 there

A study in Vò, which saw Italy’s first death, points to the danger of asymptomatic carriers

Read it here:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/18/scientists-say-mass-tests-in-italian-town-have-halted-covid-19

(snips)
The small town of Vò, in northern Italy, where the first coronavirus death occurred in the country, has become a case study that demonstrates how scientists might neutralise the spread of Covid-19.

A scientific study, rolled out by the University of Padua, with the help of the Veneto Region and the Red Cross, consisted of testing all 3,300 inhabitants of the town, including asymptomatic people. The goal was to study the natural history of the virus, the transmission dynamics and the categories at risk.

The researchers explained they had tested the inhabitants twice and that the study led to the discovery of the decisive role in the spread of the coronavirus epidemic of asymptomatic people.

When the study began, on 6 March, there were at least 90 infected in Vò. For days now, there have been no new cases.
Coronavirus: the week explained - sign up for our email newsletter

“We were able to contain the outbreak here, because we identified and eliminated the ‘submerged’ infections and isolated them,” Andrea Crisanti, an infections expert at Imperial College London, who took part in the Vò project, told the Financial Times. “That is what makes the difference.”
and.....
The research allowed for the identification of at least six asymptomatic people who tested positive for Covid-19. ‘‘If these people had not been discovered,” said the researchers, they would probably have unknowingly infected other inhabitants.

“The percentage of infected people, even if asymptomatic, in the population is very high,” wrote Sergio Romagnani, professor of clinical immunology at the University of Florence, in a letter to the authorities. “The isolation of asymptomatics is essential to be able to control the spread of the virus and the severity of the disease.”
The US response has been a pathetic example of incompetence. The people running the show at the federal level are unqualified for the positions they're in. There are kids in high school that could do a better job. The idiots in charge were busy dumping their stock instead of doing what needed to be done.
 
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