Jimdamick
Well-Known Member
Yea, I had Sisters of Charity & Dominican monksPunisher Nuns of NotreDame
A bunch of cunts/sadists that drove me away from religion forever (except for Buddhism)
Yea, I had Sisters of Charity & Dominican monksPunisher Nuns of NotreDame
He'll pay for it, one way or the other.Mueller prosecutor Glenn Kirschner: Trump is a "career criminal" guilty of "negligent homicide"
Career federal prosecutor on Trump's crimes, Bill Barr's schemes and where the Mueller investigation went wrongwww.salon.com
Mueller prosecutor Glenn Kirschner: Trump is a "career criminal" guilty of "negligent homicide"
Career federal prosecutor on Trump's crimes, Bill Barr's schemes and where the Mueller investigation went wrong
Donald Trump has inflicted mass death on the American people through his malevolent, indifferent and willfully cruel response to the coronavirus pandemic. In the United States more than 5 million people have been diagnosed and 166,000 people have now died — and the true numbers are likely much higher. Public health experts predict that the final death toll may be as high as 250,000 to 300,000.
Yale University public health expert Dr. Gregg Gonsalves summarized this dire situation in a recent conversation with Salon:
Trump's pandemic response is not the same as Nazi Germany. It is not Rwanda. But Trump's response is something that is well beyond a policy mistake. One hundred thousand people are dead. There are likely to be 150,000 or perhaps even 200,000 dead from the coronavirus pandemic in the United States. The estimates are that two-thirds or more of the deaths could have been prevented. ...
Moreover, it was premeditated. There were people in the White House and elsewhere warning Donald Trump, "People are going to die. We need to do something about this." And the White House made a concerted policy decision to let people die…. What the Trump administration is doing in response to the coronavirus is something we have not seen in the United States in a long time, which is basically wiping out a whole group of people by public policy.
In a recent interview with Chris Wallace on Fox News, Trump responded to a question about deaths from the pandemic by saying, "It is what it is."
Vanity Fair reports that Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner (who was tasked with leading a so-called coronavirus task force) advised the president to abandon a plan for national testing because the pandemic, at the time, was primarily impacting Democratic cities and states. Kushner and the Trump regime made the grotesque decision that sick and dying people in New York, Boston, Chicago and California would somehow help Donald Trump's re-election chances.
Many of the Americans who have died (and will die) from the coronavirus pandemic would likely still be alive if Trump and his regime had treated the coronavirus as a serious public health emergency months ago instead of at first ignoring it, then sabotaging the response for personal and political reasons, and now continuing to risk human lives (including children and elderly people) in a quest to aid Trump's chances of victory by forcibly "reopening" the economy.
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In a new essay at the Atlantic, Ed Yong shows in rich and compelling detail how American government and society failed in its response to the pandemic, observing that Trump is himself a type of "comorbidity" for the pandemic disaster.
During congressional hearings in July, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker summarized the Trump regime's abandonment of responsibility for the common good and general welfare as resembling a real-life version of the "Hunger Games" books and movies.
It has now been reported that Donald Trump did not care about the coronavirus pandemic until it started to sicken and kill "our people," meaning likely Republican voters in red states. This is more proof, if we needed it, that Trump feels no responsibility to the majority of Americans who do not support him and his regime.
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during Ebola, we had two deaths under Obama..he shut that shit down quickly.Not much more on convalescent plasma therapy, it is difficult to organise large scale trials with placebo volunteers, permissions from large numbers of patients and hospitals are required. The virus has been knocked down in most places and is a fast moving target for gold standard double blinded studies, these problems have been encountered with all the antiviral drugs too. It is hard to gather enough evidence meeting a sufficient standard to call it proof, there will need to be a different approach taken to these issues, like federal regulations and standards of medical evidence in deadly and rapidly evolving pandemics on a risk vs potential benefit basis while evidence is gathered more systematically. A national computerised medical information system would help a lot here, states implement systems with limited customisation to compatibility standards set by the federal government.
For any country that has taken public health measures to knock this pandemic down, as have most countries, antiviral therapies like convalescent plasma, monoclonal antibody therapy (this fall), antiviral drugs and supportive theories like blood thinners and steroids, can have a major impact. I live in NS with a population of almost a million people, we have no current cases but had over a thousand, if someone were to become ill with covid this fall or winter, they might be treated immediately upon testing and showing symptoms with all of the above options. Also since our contact tracers are not busy at all, they would have a lot of them on the case. We hope to have a small rapid testing machine deployed by fall that should help monitor businesses and schools across the country and make reopening much safer. Even though there are no reported cases here, we still require masks to be worn inside or where ya can't social distance, because we want to keep it that way.
If America had responsible government and almost anybody else was president, the situation in the USA would be much like Canada or other developed countries and in some places, much like here in the Atlantic provinces with virtually no cases. After Joe is inaugurated, I believe it will take about 3 months minimum to get covid under control and by june you should be out of the woods, depending on how big a mess Donald is allowed to leave behind.
Donald can be impeached after nov 3rd too ya know and there might be a lot of pissed off and future unemployed republicans in congress by then. They will have nothing to lose they might be looking for revenge and to rehabilitate their reputations by then. Besides Donald could be indicted by NY state by then too, Donald might be gone before Jan 20th. impeached by the house and removed by the senate almost overnight. Pence could follow Joe's orders until then, in exchange for lenient treatment, or even a pardon from Joe (Mitch too, if he plays ball), hire Joe's pandemic team in november and set to work earning redemption by saving lives. Pence is a rat, but a reasonable one who can be dealt with, give this rat a way out (and the presidency) and he will do whatever Joe wants, including appointing his man as AG, as well as his Pandemic team. He can also start holding transition talks with Joe and hand off power in a dignified manner, having Donald in jail by inauguration day would help his case a lot.
Perhaps if Nancy impeached Trump (pick a charge(s) and timed it so they held the senate trial after the election, America would be the jury for Trump's immediate removal in nov.
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Study hints, can't prove, survivor plasma fights COVID-19
Mayo Clinic researchers reported a strong hint that blood plasma from COVID-19 survivors helps other patients recover, but it’s not proof and some experts worry if, amid clamor for the treatment, they'll ever get a clear answer.apnews.com
Study hints, can’t prove, survivor plasma fights COVID-19
Mayo Clinic researchers reported a strong hint that blood plasma from COVID-19 survivors helps other patients recover, but it’s not proof and some experts worry if, amid clamor for the treatment, they’ll ever get a clear answer.
More than 64,000 patients in the U.S. have been given convalescent plasma, a century-old approach to fend off flu and measles before vaccines. It’s a go-to tactic when new diseases come along, and history suggests it works against some, but not all, infections.
There’s no solid evidence yet that it fights the coronavirus and, if so, how best to use it. But preliminary data from 35,000 coronavirus patients treated with plasma offers what Mayo lead researcher Dr. Michael Joyner on Friday called “signals of efficacy.”
There were fewer deaths among people given plasma within three days of diagnosis, and also among those given plasma containing the highest levels of virus-fighting antibodies, Joyner and colleagues reported.
The problem: This wasn’t a formal study. The patients were treated in different ways in hospitals around the country as part of a Food and Drug Administration program designed to speed access to the experimental therapy. That so-called “expanded access” program tracks what happens to the recipients, but it cannot prove the plasma — and not other care they received — was the real reason for improvement.
Rigorous studies underway around the country are designed to get that proof, by comparing similar patients randomly assigned to get plasma or a dummy infusion in addition to regular care. But those studies have been difficult to finish as the virus waxes and wanes in different cities. Also, some patients have requested plasma rather than agreeing to a study that might give them a placebo instead.
“For 102 years we’ve been debating whether or not convalescent plasma works,” said Dr. Mila Ortigoza of New York University, referring to plasma’s use in the 1918 flu pandemic. This time around, “we really need indisputable evidence.”
Ortigoza is co-leading one such study, which this week is expanding to three other states — Connecticut, Florida and Texas. Her team also is working to pool data with several other clinical trials in other regions, in hopes of faster answers.
“There’s concern about when there will be a clear answer,” agreed infectious disease specialist Dr. Jeffrey Henderson of Washington University in St. Louis.
He’s hopeful the clinical trials will push forward but said the Mayo report is consistent with smaller, earlier plasma studies and “an example of making the best you can of the data that’s available.”
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St. Joseph's in Mendham NJ..Sr Thomasina (short little nun with a pinched red face) like to squeeze the back of little boys' necks and the ruler on knuckles.Yea, I had Sisters of Charity & Dominican monks
A bunch of cunts/sadists that drove me away from religion forever (except for Buddhism)
Sr. Mary Cyril, Sister of Fucking Charity ( Ha ha ha ) used too love to flick my ear lobe with her fingers, especially when it was very cold so she could inflict the most pain.St. Joseph's in Mendham NJ..Sr Thomasina (short little nun with a pinched red face) like to squeeze the back of little boys' necks and the ruler on knuckles.