Pandemic 2020

Status
Not open for further replies.

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
I thought, or at least hoped that American citizens would stand together as a family and work together to deal with this National threat, the coronavirus.
But nope, all the fucking Trump retards (I don't like that term, but it seems suitable in this case) still come up from under their rocks & fuck thing up.
Americans huh?
Fuck those self-serving, selfish pieces of shit that like to wave the American flag to prove their patriotism.
I'd like to shove those flags up they're asses.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I think we need to know what the impact of these protests are on the spread of the pandemic! Do they lead to an increase in sickness and hospitalization rates in the following weeks? Well the cops can give them a thermometer that hooks up to a tracking app on their smartphone, along with their warning ticket. They will have to take one oral and one anal temperature check a day for the next two weeks while their contacts and movements are followed! Merry lockdown Cleetus!
 

hillbill

Well-Known Member
I thought, or at least hoped that American citizens would stand together as a family and work together to deal with this National threat, the coronavirus.
But nope, all the fucking Trump retards (I don't like that term, but it seems suitable in this case) still come up from under their rocks & fuck thing up.
Americans huh?
Fuck those self-serving, selfish pieces of shit that like to wave the American flag to prove their patriotism.
I'd like to shove those flags up they're asses.
And those fucking yellow rags also, just says “I am a white fascist and racist”
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I thought, or at least hoped that American citizens would stand together as a family and work together to deal with this National threat, the coronavirus.
But nope, all the fucking Trump retards (I don't like that term, but it seems suitable in this case) still come up from under their rocks & fuck thing up.
Americans huh?
Fuck those self-serving, selfish pieces of shit that like to wave the American flag to prove their patriotism.
I'd like to shove those flags up they're asses.
There are assholes everywhere James, America has no monopoly, assholes make up about a third of every country and like there are degrees of Hell, there are degrees of assholeness. The merely stupid assholes are amusing, the racist ones who went tribal and stupid, not so much... :D

Remember you've been dealing with assholes all of your life, is this really any different? Just more intense!
 

VILEPLUME

Well-Known Member
View attachment 4545797
The same kinds of people are protesting in Canada, here is what a conservative premier thinks about it. though nobody is busting heads yet. These are mostly small business owners who are being killed by the shutdown and who's lives are being destroyed. They make up a big part of Trump's base in the states and do a bit better on average than a well paid union worker and some do quite well, almost all are in businesses that are the most impacted by the shut down. They are also the kinds of businesses that won't come back because of public fear, even if the government opened things up, many of them are going to go from easy street to living on the street. Businesses that require concentrations of people to serve or entertain are screwed, from sporting events of all kinds to bars, restaurants and even churches. Air travel and tourism are off the table, as is any form of public transport, unless by necessity, the immune, young and healthy might travel, but only with in their own countries for the next a year or two. Even if the government opened up tomorrow, not too many people are going to attend public events and people will still avoid public events. Fear is the controlling factor for the economy, fear for ones health and fear for the health of others. Who wants to kill their own mother or father?

These folks will throw grandma under the bus, greed drives them, not need, though that will soon enough. Compassion is in short supply at these protests, fear and greed are not. It's all about individual rights and not about collective responsibility.

I would have prefered they all be ticketed and fined $1K apiece, maybe next time... I wonder what the hospitalisation rate will be in a couple of weeks, they should have identified every one of them for a warning next time and matched the information on illness rates.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ford slams Toronto anti-lockdown protesters
Ontario Premier Doug Ford said protesters who rallied against lockdown measures in Toronto are "irresponsible" and "reckless."
The dumbest people in Canada come from that city.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I thought, or at least hoped that American citizens would stand together as a family and work together to deal with this National threat, the coronavirus.
But nope, all the fucking Trump retards (I don't like that term, but it seems suitable in this case) still come up from under their rocks & fuck thing up.
Americans huh?
Fuck those self-serving, selfish pieces of shit that like to wave the American flag to prove their patriotism.
I'd like to shove those flags up they're asses.
Brad Pitt channels Dr. Fauci on 'SNL'
In a surprise appearance, Brad Pitt played Dr. Anthony Fauci in the opening of Saturday's "SNL," which was produced remotely because of the coronavirus pandemic.
 

VILEPLUME

Well-Known Member

topcat

Well-Known Member

Nervous Republicans See Trump Sinking, and Taking Senate With Him
The election is still six months away, but a rash of ominous new polls and the president’s erratic briefings have the G.O.P. worried about a Democratic takeover.

WASHINGTON — President Trump’s erratic handling of the coronavirus outbreak, the worsening economy and a cascade of ominous public and private polling have Republicans increasingly nervous that they are at risk of losing the presidency and the Senate if Mr. Trump does not put the nation on a radically improved course.

The scale of the G.O.P.’s challenge has crystallized in the last week. With 26 million Americans now having filed for unemployment benefits, Mr. Trump’s standing in states that he carried in 2016 looks increasingly wobbly: New surveys show him trailing significantly in battleground states like Michigan and Pennsylvania, and he is even narrowly behind in must-win Florida.

Democrats raised substantially more money than Republicans did in the first quarter in the most pivotal congressional races, according to recent campaign finance reports. And while Mr. Trump is well ahead in money compared with the presumptive Democratic nominee, Joseph R. Biden Jr., Democratic donors are only beginning to focus on the general election, and several super PACs plan to spend heavily on behalf of him and the party.

Perhaps most significantly, Mr. Trump’s single best advantage as an incumbent — his access to the bully pulpit — has effectively become a platform for self-sabotage.

His daily news briefings on the coronavirus outbreak are inflicting grave damage on his political standing, Republicans believe, and his recent remarks about combating the virus with sunlight and disinfectant were a breaking point for a number of senior party officials.

On Friday evening, Mr. Trump conducted only a short briefing and took no questions, a format that a senior administration official said was being discussed as the best option for the president going forward.

Glen Bolger, a longtime Republican pollster, said the landscape for his party had become far grimmer compared with the pre-virus plan to run almost singularly around the country’s prosperity.

“With the economy in free-fall, Republicans face a very challenging environment and it’s a total shift from where we were a few months ago,” Mr. Bolger said. “Democrats are angry, and now we have the foundation of the campaign yanked out from underneath us.”

Mr. Trump’s advisers and allies have often blamed external events for his most self-destructive acts, such as his repeated outbursts during the two-year investigation into his campaign’s dealings with Russia. Now, there is no such explanation — and, so far, there have been exceedingly few successful interventions regarding Mr. Trump’s behavior at the podium.

Representative Tom Cole, Republican of Oklahoma, said the president had to change his tone and offer more than a campaign of grievance.

“You got to have some hope to sell people,” Mr. Cole said. “But Trump usually sells anger, division and ‘we’re the victim.’”

There are still more than six months until the election, and many Republicans are hoping that the dynamics of the race will shift once Mr. Biden is thrust back into the campaign spotlight. At that point, they believe, the race will not simply be the up-or-down referendum on the president it is now, and Mr. Trump will be able to more effectively sell himself as the person to rebuild the economy.

“We built the greatest economy in the world; I’ll do it a second time,” Mr. Trump said earlier this month, road-testing a theme he will deploy in the coming weeks.

Still, a recent wave of polling has fueled Republican anxieties, as Mr. Biden leads in virtually every competitive state.

The surveys also showed Republican senators in Arizona, Colorado, North Carolina and Maine trailing or locked in a dead heat with potential Democratic rivals — in part because their fate is linked to Mr. Trump’s job performance. If incumbents in those states lose, and Republicans pick up only the Senate seat in Alabama, Democrats would take control of the chamber should Mr. Biden win the presidency.
more...
He'll be back and keep it up. The great divider cannot help himself, it's what he does.
edit: a great example for pro-choice.
 
Last edited:

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
The T-2020 TERMINATOR, specifically designed to terminate the GOP, the death march of the damned into the political slaughterhouse.


Trump’s death march to November: If they’re not his voters, let ’em die
If you listen to Donald Trump, before him there was nothing.

According to Trump, before he was elected, the United States military, which was fighting wars in two countries, confronting foreign navies on the high seas, launching drone attacks willy-nilly, and had soldiers stationed in more than 100 outposts around the world, had no ammunition. In the Rose Garden on March 30, Trump said, “I’ll never forget the day when a general came and said, ‘Sir’ — my first week in office — ‘we have no ammunition.'”

On Oct. 9 of last year, he told the same story: “When I took over our military, we didn’t have ammunition. I was told by a top general — maybe the top of them all — ‘Sir, I’m sorry. Sir, we don’t have ammunition.’ I said, ‘I’ll never let another president have that happen to him or her.’ We didn’t have ammunition.”

But now that Trump is in charge, according to him, “We have so much ammunition. You wouldn’t believe it, how much ammunition we have.”

Before Trump, we had no supplies of any kind: “The shelves were bare,” he has told us over and over at his coronavirus briefings. The shelves he’s referring to are those of the national stockpile of emergency medical equipment, the same shelves we’ve seen in photographs of a warehouse stacked with pallets filled with medical equipment, all of which has been there for years. But according to Trump, before he came along “the shelves were empty.”

Fuhgettaboutit it when it comes to testing for the coronavirus. “We took over a dead, barren system,” Trump told “Fox & Friends” on March 30. “We inherited a broken test.” The “broken” test was created in February of this year by Trump’s Centers for Disease Control.

At his briefing on April 18, Trump said, “I inherited broken junk. Just as they did with ventilators where we had virtually none, and the hospitals were empty.”

But not to worry, he reassured us at his briefing on Wednesday, when it comes to testing now, “We’re doing it at a level that’s never been done before. We’ve got ventilators like you’ve never seen before.”

There is so much about Trump like we’ve never seen before.

We have never seen hospitals so crowded that patients in their beds are lined up in hallways outside emergency rooms and intensive care units because those rooms are full. We have never seen refrigerated trucks lined up behind hospitals to carry away bodies from overloaded morgues. We have never seen doctors standing mute in the White House while a president of the United States stood before television cameras and advocated bringing ultraviolet light “inside the body,” and injecting patients with disinfectants like isopropyl alcohol and bleach, medical “experiments” that were carried out on Jews by Nazi doctors in places like Dachau and Buchenwald.

Before Trump, we have never seen 26.5 million people apply for unemployment benefits in just five weeks. Before Trump, we have never seen 50,000 Americans perish from a virus for which the United States government was singularly unprepared.

Before Trump, we have never seen a president who wakes up every day at 5 a.m. and obsessively watches television and sends out dozens of tweets all morning and waits until noon to descend from his living quarters to go to work in the West Wing. We have never seen a president who told more than 16,000 lies in his first three years in office, an average of nearly 15 a day.

Before Trump, we have never seen a president change the color of his aerosol-sprayed hair three times in three days, from yellow to gray and back to yellow again.

Before Trump, we have never seen an election when people may have to risk becoming infected with the coronavirus to go to the polls, the way voters did in Wisconsin two weeks ago.

Before Trump, Republicans suppressed Democratic votes with ID requirements and closed polls and registration purges. Before Trump, we have never seen tens of thousands prevented from voting because they’re dead and buried in the ground.

Has Trump decided to use the coronavirus to win in November?

It sure looks that way. The tip-off came with Trump’s wild swing between Wednesday and Thursday over opening businesses in Georgia. On Wednesday, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp was a genius for allowing businesses like massage parlors and nail salons to open on Friday, with restaurants and bars opening on Monday. But less than 24 hours later, Trump had changed his mind.

“I wasn’t happy with Brian Kemp. I wasn’t at all happy,” Trump announced from the podium at the Thursday briefing. What had happened overnight to sour Trump on “liberating” Georgia? “Trump’s sudden shift came only after top health advisers reviewed the plan more closely and persuaded the president that Kemp was risking further spread of the virus by moving too quickly,” the Associated Press reported on Friday.

That same morning, the New York Times published a front page story with another clue right there in the title: “No Rallies and No Golf, Just the TV to Rankle Him: Feeling Alone, President stews Over Image.” Buried in the story was the news that among the few calls a frustrated Trump agrees to take as he molders away in the White House are from his campaign manager, Brad Parscale. After Trump has heard the bad news about the coronavirus from his medical experts at his daily press briefing, what do Trump and Parscale discuss? “The latest polling data,” the Times reports.

Bingo. At six o’clock he’s hearing that the body count has hit 50,000. At nine, he’s hearing how far he is behind Biden in the key swing states of Florida, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Ohio. If he’s running behind now, with 50,000 dead, what’s it going to look like in October or November when the number tops 100,000?

Trump is balancing the grim news from his medical experts against the equally grim news from his campaign manager. When the choice is between dead people or his reelection, it’s an easy call. He is going to let it rip. His poll numbers are already so bad, he doesn’t have anything to lose. What’s another 50,000 to 100,000 dead compared to four more years of profiteering from the White House?

But the key to Trump’s plan is who dies. Watch the way he plays the game as the rest of the states make plans to reopen. He’s seen the facts and figures that social distancing works. He knows opening the economy will cost lives. He’s going to be very, very careful with states he expects to carry, but narrowly, like Georgia. The states that are a lock for Trump, or the states he doesn’t stand a chance in? Let them rip. Get the dying out of the way now. Maybe by the fall the coronavirus infection numbers will go down, maybe not.

The number of those killed won’t go down, but Trump doesn’t give a shit. He’s not the president of the United States. He’s the president of the Confederate States of MAGA. All he wants to do is win. If they’re not Trump’s voters, let ’em die.
 
Last edited:

topcat

Well-Known Member



Thousands flood Wisconsin Capitol to protest stay-at-home orders
The protests in Madison followed similar demonstrations in recent days in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Colorado.


MADISON, Wis. — Thousands of protestors assembled on the state Capitol here Friday, expressing loud opposition to the extended stay-at-home order put in place by Democratic Gov. Tony Evers due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The anti-government protest in Madison was organized by a tapestry of online groups, including a group of Wisconsin business owners, as well as several rightwing Facebook groups, like Wisconsinites Against Excessive Quarantines.


Bob Tarantino, the leader of a group of business owners who helped plan the Madison rally, said his goal was to bring attention to the fact that Wisconsin’s “small businesses are suffering unbelievable financial harm.”

“The kind of harm that they may not recover from,” he told NBC News in an email.

Protests against state stay-at-home orders in various states have attracted a wide range of fringe activists and ardent Trump supporters, NBC News reported earlier this week. Present at the protest in Madison on Friday were anti-abortion activists as well as people carrying pro-Trump signs. According to local media reports, Facebook took down the event page for the protest Thursday because the event did not meet guidelines the social media platform had provided for events calling for protests of stay-at-home orders.

Image: Protesters against the state's extended stay-at-home order demonstrate in Madison's extended stay-at-home order demonstrate in Madison
Protesters at the Capitol building in Madison, Wis., on April 24, 2020.Daniel Acker / Reuters
Madison’s protest came just days after Evers extended the state’s stay-at-home order — which included the closure of all non-essential businesses — through May 26. His initial order had been scheduled to expire Friday. Wisconsin officials have said the order was extended to allow time for more testing to be in place. The extended order, however, also allowed for some non-essential businesses to increase services to provide deliveries and curb-side pickups.

Wisconsin Republicans, earlier this week, filed suit against Evers in the state’s Supreme Court to block the extended order.

As of Friday morning, there have been more than 5,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and at least 257 deaths from the virus. Since March 14, about 393,000 Wisconsin residents (or about 1 in 8 workers in the state) have lost their jobs.

Organizers of the protest told NBC News they were expecting up to 11,000 people to attend, citing people who had expressed interest in the event on the event’s Facebook page. But, as of 3:00 p.m. local time, only a few thousand had so far shown up.
more...
Breathe deeply, lemmings. Cough and sneeze on one another in obedient defiance. Liberate America of fools.
 
Last edited:

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
He'll be back and keep it up. The great divider cannot help himself, it's what he does.
edit: a great example for pro-choice.
This is what the last chance for gas looks like on the highway to Hell, last stop on the road to perdition... The democrats will give them an exit ramp this summer with another impeachment (can stupidity be an article?), I wonder if they will take the off ramp this time or press the pedal to the metal. Cheeto Jesus take the wheel!
 

topcat

Well-Known Member
Depublicans are too invested now. If they cave, it will mean they were wrong to vote for, and continue to support the maniac. That's too much of a price to pay for them. So, there ya' go, yawl.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Breathe deeply lemmings. Cough and sneeze on one another in defiance. Liberate America of fools.
These people need to realise there are sick people (literally and figuratively) who hate their guts and will show up to shut them up with a real big viral load! Body armor and an AR-15 won't help at all if some unarmed febrile libertard is screaming at them, an N-95 mask and glasses might, but most of these morons have full beards. Even without any malicious intent, there are probably lots of asymptomatic and presymptomatic people there anyway, the place was like a giant measles party, more people are wearing masks though. I noticed the 1/3 hard core ones were packed on the stairs and most never wore masks, many others on the lawn on either side were practicing social distancing and wearing masks too.

The business owners in distress seem to be practicing personal distancing and wearing masks while protesting somewhat responsibly. Then there are the other kind, let's call them the "antisocial" elements, they crowd together, don't wear masks and often wear MAGA hats. You hear a lot about personal freedom from them and not to much about collective responsibility, they are far too greedy and disconnected for that! It's all about them, fuck you MAGA, the trouble is it's them who are getting fucked now and we know they aren't too good at dealing with reality. :o
 

potroastV2

Well-Known Member
Depublicans are too invested now. If they cave, it will mean they were wrong to vote for, and continue to support the maniac. That's too much of a price to pay for them. So, there ya' go, yawl.

Aw c'mon Man!

A yawl is a two-masted sailboat that has the mizzen mast aft of the rudder.


:mrgreen:
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Give Them Liberty, and Give Them COVID-19
A photo essay from Wisconsin's anti-quarantine protest.
by Michael Makowski
April 25, 2020

On Friday, approximately 1,500 people gathered in Madison, Wisconsin, to protest Governor Tony Evers's extended Safer at Home order. Here are some images from the event.

Expand
4.png

A young child holding an American flag observes three protesters carrying assault rifles and wearing camouflage.
Expand
1.png

A man observes the crowd on the steps leading up to Wisconsin’s Capitol.
more morons...
 

VILEPLUME

Well-Known Member

Give Them Liberty, and Give Them COVID-19
A photo essay from Wisconsin's anti-quarantine protest.
by Michael Makowski
April 25, 2020

On Friday, approximately 1,500 people gathered in Madison, Wisconsin, to protest Governor Tony Evers's extended Safer at Home order. Here are some images from the event.

Expand
4.png

A young child holding an American flag observes three protesters carrying assault rifles and wearing camouflage.
Expand
1.png

A man observes the crowd on the steps leading up to Wisconsin’s Capitol.
more morons...
I'm surprised people who are infected aren't visiting these rallies. That would stop the protesting pretty quick.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top