ImageImageImageImageImage

Political Roundtable Part XXXII

Moderators: montestewart, LyricalRico, nate33

User avatar
pancakes3
General Manager
Posts: 9,588
And1: 3,017
Joined: Jul 27, 2003
Location: Virginia
Contact:

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#101 » by pancakes3 » Mon Mar 6, 2023 7:54 pm

CntOutSmrtCrazy wrote:
pancakes3 wrote:imagine being a self-styled 34 year old libertarian in the year of our lord 2023.

The lib argument against going full open during pandemic was always that while most people will survive, (1) it would kill many elderly and those with comorbidities, (2) we didn't know what the long term impact of Covid is (long term impacts for no-vax full covid is a lot different than post-vax omicron), and (3) we didn't know the impact it would have on children (opening you're saying you're ok with risking 50 Million+ children growing up and living the rest of their lives with diminished lung capacity).

The republican stance on Covid took advantage of those with a narrower, more selfish world view by harping on the fact that most people will survive, and then burying their heads in the sand re: the unknown long term consequences of surviving covid. Yeah, sure, Nate may have been ok. Nate's parents wouldn't have. My parents would not have. Millions of older people would not have.

And re: the Cochrane Library study - the takeaway of the study isn't that masks don't work. The takeaway is that the network effect of masks matter more than the actual mask itself. The point of putting a mask on isn't to put up a force field that filters out Covid. The point is to catch sneezes and limit carriers from expelling it to others. When you sneeze, the mask catches your spit and keeps it from being aerosolized. An unmasked sneezer's spit gets out into the air and is aerosolized, is floating out there, and there are lots of ways to get around a recipient's mask that's not airtight around the wearer's nose/mouth. What I mean by network effect is that on an individual level, putting on a mask vs. not is not a measurable independent variable to measure. The value of putting on a mask vs. not contributes to the overall compliance rate for the population, which is a much more difficult model and one that the Cochrane Library declined to roll their sleeves up on. My personal infection rate of putting on a mask or not is affected by how many people around me also choose to put on a mask vs. not. That's why the result of mask efficacy (for an individual) returns the null hypothesis in the Cochrane study. To which I say, uh doi, Cochrane. What's your point?

https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2014564118

The pushback from credible non-maskers is that "if 99% of the population is healthy, why mandate it?" Well ok, if it's May 2020 and we had only a few dozen cases, no, we don't need mask mandates. But we need testing to find out who has it, so we can quarantine them, and everyone else can go about their lives. But without testing and without masks, a soft lockdown isn't going to do squat re: containing the disease.

it's weird that you remember it as just libs dumping on Nate's "even keeled, fact-based reasoning."


Obviously externalities mean nothing to you because the residual harm caused by lockdowns whether you talk about learning setbacks across young age groups, depression across all age groups, rise in homeless populations, crime going up, and inflation has been palpable and have been exacerbated by said lockdowns and other poor policies. As they say, the path to hell was paved with good intentions. You seem okay with that, because "we didn't know", that is was okay to undertake massive social engineering for a virus that you seem to want to act as if it is a modern day plague when it simply isn't. With that said, I'm also not saying one shouldn't be diligent with preventing said spread of Covid, but when it captures the entirety of society and peoples lives and causes catastrophic externalities, then you have a problem with your policy.

One of the biggest measurements of the pandemic from various organizations, institutions, and media were deaths attributed to Covid and even the methodology behind how those deaths were/are counted is shaky (i.e., someone already being very sick and also having Covid, but the death definitively being attributed to Covid).

But go ahead, continue opening your arguments with attacks on folks political philosophies like you did with me. Lest us no forget how enlightened you are with your tribalism and virtue signaling. You can't stand the fact that someone who has admittedly had long history of supporting Democrats, that they wouldn't subscribe to your group-think, foaming at the mouth mentality. I think the real illness we should be concerned with is the mental one which you so perfectly encapsulate, that those dissenting are bad or stupid and that being wrong, in your case, is some form of a psychic death to you, which it isn't. This exact mentality has part of the reason for my own personal political shifts, because your arguments and attitudes are scary looking at the long-term.

If you can't take a step back, and say hey, Democrats and their policies didn't handle this great either, and that maybe that the knee-jerk reactions to the pandemic were in part politically motivated to get Trump out of office, then you are living in a dream world. Again I voted against Trump twice, and would do so again, but don't sit here and act like Dems haven't been baited into doing the exact opposite of what Trump wants/says, even when it is probably isn't the best idea.

But continue to peddle out that I'm a right winger, or some dummy in the year of our lord 2023, you can only attack because you have nothing else to tread on.


lol, ok buddy.

i never said that dems handled the pandemic perfectly, mostly because dems weren't the ones handling the pandmic, lest you forget that trump was president during pandemic. you're the one that's breaking this down along party lines. it's not cool to frame this as a political issue, and for all your talk of knee-jerk reactions to political affiliation, it's pretty obvious that with republicans calling it a fake pandemic, bleaching colons, and perpetuating anti-mask/vaccine pearlclutching, that they were the reactionaries to what they perceived and perpetuated as the "dem response." Dems, LEST YOU FORGET, did not have control of the presidency, House, or Senate. and now you have those same dummies tapdancing like crazy to reconcile the fact that (a) a republican government implemented operation warp speed, eviction moratorium, PPP, etc.; yet (b) it was a fake plague and we should have just ignored it. Nota bene, when I say tapdancing, i really mean gaslighting.

The pandemic response was never a partisan issue until the republicans made it one. nobody campaigned on pandemic response prior to it happening. neither party has a historical stance on what to do in the event of a pandemic. if anything, anti-vax was a a torch that rich coastal elite moms were carrying the torch for, and a thorn for the Dems. Pandemic response is as purple an issue as it gets, and the politicization of it is as pure an instance of one party artificially creating a wedge issue out of whole cloth against the status quo so as to accrue political capital. hint, it's the party that has staked its entire political strategy on eliciting an emotional response from fake grievances against the perceived "other."

i was simply trying to point out why your article doesn't say what you think it says. Fairview sat down and presented some cogent arguments as well. our posts aren't the work of a dem shadow cabal. it's two individuals who arrived at their opinions independently. Compare that to your straw-grasping post; you handwave a laundry list of society's ills as negative "externalities" of "lockdowns and other poor policies." How am I suppose to respond to that? How am I suppose to base a political opinion on that? At best, it's a tautological assertion that bad policies are bad.

But really, I dont know what the f you're trying to say. Did masks cause homelessness? Are vaccines causing depression? Was China's lockdown policy that led to a supply chain disruption somehow part of the Dem agenda to... increase crime? Do you even know what you're mad at? Or what Nate was right about? I'm here trying to map out what your point is, and I really don't get it. It seems to boil down to (1) republicans didn't want to do anything re: pandemic; (2) dems were the ones that pushed to do stuff re: pandemic; (3) a bunch of bad stuff happened during and after the pandemic; (4) because dem did stuff, their stuff must have caused the bad stuff; (5) if we didn't do stuff, we wouldn't have had bad stuff; (6) the dem stuff caused the bad stuff. Sorry, but that's just garbage logic. If that's not what you were trying to say, maybe say it clearer.

as for your libertarianism? sorry to say, that's dumb because you should know better. it's cute for a 24 year old to think that Econ 201 is the panacea for all that ails you but it's embarrassing at 34. classical economics teaches that the intersection of a supply and demand curve is the equilibrium point - the most efficient price point of a given good, determined by the market. everyone to the right of the equilibrium gets a discount because they're willing to pay more and are getting it at a lower price, and everyone to the left of the curve is priced out of the market. works great for widgets. doesn't work as great when it comes to gas, health care, and childcare. it is tantamount to institutionalized murder when applied to food/clothing/shelter. the fact that the model is built such that there will always be a segment of the population who cannot afford necessary goods in the name of efficiency is flawed. which is why the model has to introduce price ceilings, subsidies, and other mechanisms. politics, to me, is the discussion of what mechanisms should be implemented, and how. but libertarians argue for the removal of these mechanisms because they don't like the concept of implementing period? the inability to accept that these mechanisms as necessary to prevent the market from pricing people out of food/clothing/shelter, a/k/a libertarians, is dumb. or cruel. it's certainly bad. it's also consistent with your world view that pandemic is gonna kill who the pandemic is gonna kill. it's a f*cked way to conceptualize society, and you're a bad person for nodding your head along to it. i'd suggest you take a step back and reassess if you really think libertarianism is a good system, or if it's just a simple system.

to me, it's just a simple system. you don't have to think about anything. just go with the "freest" civic. anything that involves the government, bad. anything that restricts individual decisionmaking, bad. it's not like we live in a society that demands the cooperation of the participants, or that in the absence of governmental intervention, modern society devolves into a private plutocracy that results in fewer net freedoms for the individual.
Bullets -> Wizards
User avatar
pancakes3
General Manager
Posts: 9,588
And1: 3,017
Joined: Jul 27, 2003
Location: Virginia
Contact:

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#102 » by pancakes3 » Mon Mar 6, 2023 7:58 pm

effectively scooped by fairview. i guess not so much scooped as we both cribbed from the same copy that Soros sent us.
Bullets -> Wizards
User avatar
doclinkin
RealGM
Posts: 15,106
And1: 6,837
Joined: Jul 26, 2004
Location: .wizuds.

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#103 » by doclinkin » Mon Mar 6, 2023 9:24 pm

I'd say it is a fair exercise to retrospectively examine what we did right and wrong, and do our best to craft future policy based on this. I'd suggest that the articles cited don't strictly serve as proof positive that the right thing to do would have been to let the virus rage and try to develop herd immunity. If we are reflecting on nate's points they were primarily that: we surely would develop natural immunity if we allowed the virus to take its course and only quarantined the most vulnerable. That since people under 50 suffered less, it would be unconscionable to push for mass vaccinations. I don't see how those points have been vindicated by history, but I'm willing to listen.

I myself never trashed nate about it, even on issues where we disagreed. I respect skepticism, and don't trust mass government whatever. I did trash some of the sources of mis-information he leaned on. If the question is which organization is more or less likely to mislead people for political purposes, it is eminently clear that Fox News was eagerly doing so. Anchors and pundits who argued against vaccine mandates, while being first in line to receive vaccines, operate at a level of hypocrisy that equates to malevolence. Which proved fatal in the very population that was most vulnerable to their misinformation.

But sure. Let's look at which policies proved least deadly.

The US had periodic lockdowns and some soft releases as we developed testing and vaccines. These releases and lockdowns were often driven by political/economic or other factors not based on science.

Sweden relied on nate's model, albeit under a social democracy, not the les affaire capitalism promoted by Fox et al. Sweden decided they would let the virus rage, but trust that old people will keep quarantine, and being a social democracy they'd provide social support (income, health care, etc) for folks who were unable to work. As a relatively homogenous country, people tend to follow the government's suggestions. Any policy they developed relied on this social support to ensure their elder relatives would survive.

Germany combined these approaches: rigorous lockdowns, but paid companies to pay their employees, thus ensuring a universal basic income and putting a breaker against the wave of bankruptcies suffered here.

https://ourworldindata.org/covid-deaths

Selecting those 3 based not on 'Covid' related deaths, but based on excess mortality rates (which would include any deaths caused by lockdowns, suicides, etc) suggests that Germany's approach was notably successful.

Granted, there is no chart for quality of life, nor long term psychological effects of the lockdown. The long term psychological effect of 7 million excess deaths (worldwide) would have to be calculated into the study of the effects of stress caused by the lockdown in particular. These were stressful times. Maddening. Even absent a pandemic.

Still the 'quality of life' of those 7 million dead people may trump the trauma and disorders in those of us who survived these times. There is no therapy for the dead.

I'm not sure what country to select as an example of those who simply let the virus rage. India maybe (rich Indians were vaccinated, much of the rest of the population was not, or were vaccinated late, or with ineffective vaccines). India provided no data on this chart, however. The nearest I can find is this study:

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abm5154

Which suggests an excess mortality rate of +26-29% above normal for this time. That would be twice the percentage of the US, even with our politicized science and market influenced endings to lockdowns etc. So, 2 million excess deaths, instead of 1.1 million. Seems to me skepticism of nate's proposed approach was warranted based on the available statistics we have.

I personally think the development and distribution of vaccines and testing without regard to profit (largely) proved to be a remarkable success and a feather in the cap of the human race. Ok, we can be upset at being used as guinea pigs for the largest medical trial of these untested brand new vaccines, but the fact that a) they worked and b) we generally all participated even in an incendiary political climate, points towards reasons for hope and faith in humanity as a whole. Yes certain thought-tribes and mindsets still basically suck, but as a whole it makes me stand up and applaud humanity in general and the scientific community in particular.

Thank you Science, scientists and all medical professionals. You deserve a toast and a parade as far as I'm concerned. Or shoot, a holiday in your honor.
Zonkerbl
Retired Mod
Retired Mod
Posts: 9,071
And1: 4,756
Joined: Mar 24, 2010
       

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#104 » by Zonkerbl » Tue Mar 7, 2023 6:34 am

I took extreme umbrage at Nate's interpretation of comorbidity's contribution to the likelihood of death. The correct interpretation of that information is not "shutting down the economy is more harmful than letting a million old fat people die."

Had Republicans cooperated, locking down the economy would have been more effective. We can't know for sure, but one nightmare scenario would have been for Trump to aggressively follow the cdc's advice, crushing covid just in time to sail to victory in November as the president you don't necessarily like, but at least has the cojones to make the hard decisions in an emergency.

Turns out he was a complete failure as a leader and that is largely why a lot of the countermeasures didn't work, because Trump was deliberately undermining them.

Also I have to question the intelligence of someone who thinks vaccinated people catching covid is evidence we shouldn't vaccinate. That's just plain stupid.
I've been taught all my life to value service to the weak and powerless.
Pointgod
RealGM
Posts: 24,184
And1: 24,495
Joined: Jun 28, 2014

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#105 » by Pointgod » Tue Mar 7, 2023 2:12 pm

CntOutSmrtCrazy wrote:
Pointgod wrote:
dckingsfan wrote:What points, be specific and cite the studies against the point(s) he was making.


Right wingers when asked to cite sources:

Image


Didn't realize I was on the the clock, but good to see I gave you enough time to use ad hominem attacks to call me a "right winger. For the record, not that it's any of your business, but I'll play along: I've never voted for a Republican in my life or anyone right of them, and I've voted for Biden, HRC, and Obama X 2 (I'm 34 years old).

Now, I consider myself more of a civil liberties liberal with a western libertarian-type streak and have voted for Dems because they have in my calculation been the lesser of two terrible choices, but listening to folks from the left getting baptized in group-think and their bubbles has me truly second guessing that logic.

What memory does serve me is Nate held positions that lockdowns were unnecessary, that vaccines weren't surefire by any means or the only solution, and that masks in most cases have low efficacies. I can't recall everything, but I know he was nuked by several posters, derided, and called this, that, and the other thing, because he held beliefs and presented data that didn't align with by-and-large dogma dished out by those left of the aisle.


I just always really wanted to use that GIF lol nothing personal. I’ll address each one of your points quickly because a lot has been said already.
Here are some example of recent work backing just that:



Natural immunity is great. But natural immunity also wanes and is less effective against variants. Even pulled from your own article the conclusion isn’t that natural immunity prevents transmission, but is just as effective as the vaccine in preventing severe illness. The problem with your hypothesis is that arguing that that everyone should just get COVID to build natural immunity despite the severe side effects (like death), long term health consequences.



This is an example of the person from the reason going out to find information that suits their preconceived notions. The methodology of the Cochrane study has already been questioned:

https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/2023/2/22/23609499/masks-covid-coronavirus-cochrane-review-pandemic-science-studies-infection

If you’re open minded I encourage you to read the whole article. Masks work to varying degrees depending on the mask quality and having even a cloth mask is better than no mask. The biggest THJ g about masks and vaccines is that they’re only as effective if enough people use them, but to say masks are ineffective goes against multiple studies and a lot of evidence to the contrary even before COVID.

https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/71/wr/mm7106e1.htm



I don’t know what to tell you here. The problem with your argument here is that we can never know the counter factual. I don’t know if you’ve had the misfortune of getting COVID but I did and I got it for on a large gathering. I can’t see the argument that letting millions of children go to school catch COVID, get their teachers sick. I agree that there were negative affects from virtual learning, that can’t be understated. The way to approach that is to increase the amount of mental health resources available to everyone impacted by COVID and their families and more investment into resources for schools. I haven’t seen a single Republican propose that, they’d just rather let people get sick and die for reasons I honestly can’t comprehend.

In the end the problem with the Libertarian mindset is that it’s easy to put others at risk because it doesn’t affect you. You mentioned your wife was a RN, but I’m pretty sure you’d be against her hospital administration or a politician forcing her to work in COVID wing with no mask and PPE because well masks don’t work and natural immunity is better. Maybe you and her wouldn’t care, which is your right but I can’t understand the line of thinking of putting other people’s families at risk because of an ideology. We know restrictions, masks, vaccines work, it’s just a matter of the degree of how much we rely on them and when. That’s a conversation worth having, but if we can’t come to the table with a baseline set of facts that these saved more lives and improved the quality of life if they hasn’t been used then there’s no way to have a healthy discussion on what could be done better when the next pandemic hits and it will.
Zonkerbl
Retired Mod
Retired Mod
Posts: 9,071
And1: 4,756
Joined: Mar 24, 2010
       

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#106 » by Zonkerbl » Tue Mar 7, 2023 3:30 pm

The problem with the "libertarian mindset" is its flat out fricking wrong, a fantasy with no theoretical or empirical basis at all. Anyone with the slightest bit of economics training knows this. Market failures exist. Government intervention is necessary. The standard economic critique is that government interventions tend to be poorly conceived and executed, not that they shouldn't happen at all.

Anyone saying vaccine mandates are an important element of an informed policy to minimize the impact of COVID is not a libertarian. Anyone saying we shouldn't have vaccine mandates is an IDIOT.

"I'm not a right wing extremist, I'm a libertarian!" Jfc.
I've been taught all my life to value service to the weak and powerless.
dckingsfan
RealGM
Posts: 34,967
And1: 20,484
Joined: May 28, 2010

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#107 » by dckingsfan » Tue Mar 7, 2023 4:09 pm

Zonkerbl wrote:The problem with the "libertarian mindset" is its flat out fricking wrong, a fantasy with no theoretical or empirical basis at all. Anyone with the slightest bit of economics training knows this. Market failures exist. Government intervention is necessary. The standard economic critique is that government interventions tend to be poorly conceived and executed, not that they shouldn't happen at all...

House cats. Convinced of their independence while dependent on system(s) they can't understand.

Where did those roads, railroads, airports all come from?
dckingsfan
RealGM
Posts: 34,967
And1: 20,484
Joined: May 28, 2010

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#108 » by dckingsfan » Tue Mar 7, 2023 4:26 pm

Zonkerbl wrote:I took extreme umbrage at Nate's interpretation of comorbidity's contribution to the likelihood of death. The correct interpretation of that information is not "shutting down the economy is more harmful than letting a million old fat people die."

Had Republicans cooperated, locking down the economy would have been more effective. We can't know for sure, but one nightmare scenario would have been for Trump to aggressively follow the cdc's advice, crushing covid just in time to sail to victory in November as the president you don't necessarily like, but at least has the cojones to make the hard decisions in an emergency.

Turns out he was a complete failure as a leader and that is largely why a lot of the countermeasures didn't work, because Trump was deliberately undermining them.

Also I have to question the intelligence of someone who thinks vaccinated people catching covid is evidence we shouldn't vaccinate. That's just plain stupid.

To add, those that think that we overcounted Covid deaths but can't explain the excess deaths. Check out the death rate of teachers that stayed home vs. frontline nurses (reminder, those nurses had PPE). Those that compare the US to Sweden but don't want to compare the US to say SK, Australia, NZ or any of the countries that had effective NPIs as a better model. Those that refuse to see the death and hospitalization rate from the vaccinated/unvaccinated pool, the latter to see what would have happened to our hospital systems (oh wait, I am a libertarian, I don't need no frick'in hospital).
Wizardspride
RealGM
Posts: 17,391
And1: 11,573
Joined: Nov 05, 2004
Location: Olney, MD/Kailua/Kaneohe, HI
       

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#109 » by Wizardspride » Tue Mar 7, 2023 8:14 pm

popper wrote:
CntOutSmrtCrazy wrote:
Pointgod wrote:
Right wingers when asked to cite sources:

Image


Didn't realize I was on the the clock, but good to see I gave you enough time to use ad hominem attacks to call me a "right winger. For the record, not that it's any of your business, but I'll play along: I've never voted for a Republican in my life or anyone right of them, and I've voted for Biden, HRC, and Obama X 2 (I'm 34 years old).

Now, I consider myself more of a civil liberties liberal with a western libertarian-type streak and have voted for Dems because they have in my calculation been the lesser of two terrible choices, but listening to folks from the left getting baptized in group-think and their bubbles has me truly second guessing that logic.

What memory does serve me is Nate held positions that lockdowns were unnecessary, that vaccines weren't surefire by any means or the only solution, and that masks in most cases have low efficacies. I can't recall everything, but I know he was nuked by several posters, derided, and called this, that, and the other thing, because he held beliefs and presented data that didn't align with by-and-large dogma dished out by those left of the aisle.

Here are some example of recent work backing just that:

On herd immunity:
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/natural-immunity-protective-covid-vaccine-severe-illness-rcna71027

On masks efficacy:
https://reason.com/2023/02/07/masks-covid-dont-work-cochrane-library-review-mandate/

On impacts of lockdowns:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/wellness/2022/12/01/pandemic-stress-aging-teen-brains/

These are just a few, from a variety of sources, many more exists but alas I don't have time to post every one of them. Also was talking with the OBGYN at my wife's doctor appointment the other day as we are expecting our first kid in about a month, and she was among just another doctor saying that studies are saying that Covid (my wife and I got for the first time this past December) has just about absolutely no impact on pregnancy other than if you have existing comorbidities, which in the case you are already at higher risk. Anecdotal, but goes to show how far we've come in our knowledge of Covid.

To add, my wife has been an RN for 10 years and worked the majority of here career in the ER at George Washington University Hospital during the height of the pandemic, and has here MPH in public health, so this is something that I care about and how it impacted and continues to do so with her as well as something that is a evergreen topic at our dinner table given her background.

Some Dems and those on the left seem to have adopted puritanical ideas of how people should talk about and think about Covid, and it is worrisome.


Well said. I believe Nate also warned that the Russian collusion narrative was contrived to frame Orange Man by his political opponents, FBI and DOJ.



Not sure if you've read any of the report (many people haven't) but this is the part that is always left out...

Read the conclusion.

Read on Twitter
?t=bTlQql7yVCMDGAkoneokMQ&s=19

President Donald Trump referred to African countries, Haiti and El Salvador as "shithole" nations during a meeting Thursday and asked why the U.S. can't have more immigrants from Norway.
popper
Veteran
Posts: 2,866
And1: 405
Joined: Jun 19, 2010

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#110 » by popper » Tue Mar 7, 2023 8:52 pm

Wizardspride wrote:
popper wrote:
CntOutSmrtCrazy wrote:
Didn't realize I was on the the clock, but good to see I gave you enough time to use ad hominem attacks to call me a "right winger. For the record, not that it's any of your business, but I'll play along: I've never voted for a Republican in my life or anyone right of them, and I've voted for Biden, HRC, and Obama X 2 (I'm 34 years old).

Now, I consider myself more of a civil liberties liberal with a western libertarian-type streak and have voted for Dems because they have in my calculation been the lesser of two terrible choices, but listening to folks from the left getting baptized in group-think and their bubbles has me truly second guessing that logic.

What memory does serve me is Nate held positions that lockdowns were unnecessary, that vaccines weren't surefire by any means or the only solution, and that masks in most cases have low efficacies. I can't recall everything, but I know he was nuked by several posters, derided, and called this, that, and the other thing, because he held beliefs and presented data that didn't align with by-and-large dogma dished out by those left of the aisle.

Here are some example of recent work backing just that:

On herd immunity:
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/natural-immunity-protective-covid-vaccine-severe-illness-rcna71027

On masks efficacy:
https://reason.com/2023/02/07/masks-covid-dont-work-cochrane-library-review-mandate/

On impacts of lockdowns:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/wellness/2022/12/01/pandemic-stress-aging-teen-brains/

These are just a few, from a variety of sources, many more exists but alas I don't have time to post every one of them. Also was talking with the OBGYN at my wife's doctor appointment the other day as we are expecting our first kid in about a month, and she was among just another doctor saying that studies are saying that Covid (my wife and I got for the first time this past December) has just about absolutely no impact on pregnancy other than if you have existing comorbidities, which in the case you are already at higher risk. Anecdotal, but goes to show how far we've come in our knowledge of Covid.

To add, my wife has been an RN for 10 years and worked the majority of here career in the ER at George Washington University Hospital during the height of the pandemic, and has here MPH in public health, so this is something that I care about and how it impacted and continues to do so with her as well as something that is a evergreen topic at our dinner table given her background.

Some Dems and those on the left seem to have adopted puritanical ideas of how people should talk about and think about Covid, and it is worrisome.


Well said. I believe Nate also warned that the Russian collusion narrative was contrived to frame Orange Man by his political opponents, FBI and DOJ.



Not sure if you've read any of the report (many people haven't) but this is the part that is always left out...

Read the conclusion and give me your thoughts please...

Read on Twitter
?t=bTlQql7yVCMDGAkoneokMQ&s=19


My conclusion is that approx 17 experienced prosecutors who hated Trump spent two years and tens of millions of dollars trying to find something to prosecute. They failed in that, but successfully diminished his presidency and carried the investigation all the way through the mid terms which was advantageous to the Democratic party (which IMO was the plan all along). It also significantly boosted the ratings of CNN and MSNBC, and facilitated Pulitzer Prize awards for the NYT and WaPo. So it was a big win for the D party and their mouthpieces and a big loss for those who care about justice.
User avatar
TGW
RealGM
Posts: 13,362
And1: 6,732
Joined: Oct 22, 2010

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#111 » by TGW » Tue Mar 7, 2023 9:44 pm

Russiagate was a joke and a embarassment to political discourse in America. But yea, popper is right. Russiagate grifters like Adam Schiff and Rachel Maddow squeezed every bit of juice out of that lemon.
Some random troll wrote:Not to sound negative, but this team is owned by an arrogant cheapskate, managed by a moron and coached by an idiot. Recipe for disaster.
dckingsfan
RealGM
Posts: 34,967
And1: 20,484
Joined: May 28, 2010

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#112 » by dckingsfan » Tue Mar 7, 2023 10:17 pm

Wow, now we have the ignorance about Russian hybrid warfare and disinformation. Next the war atrocities (you know, rape, torture, bombing civilian infrustructure, housing and hospitals) was all fake news too.

https://www.csis.org/blogs/post-soviet-post/countering-russian-disinformation

https://www.politico.eu/article/russia-china-disinformation-coronavirus-covid19-facebook-google/
User avatar
pancakes3
General Manager
Posts: 9,588
And1: 3,017
Joined: Jul 27, 2003
Location: Virginia
Contact:

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#113 » by pancakes3 » Tue Mar 7, 2023 10:22 pm

idk how a failed indictment of Trump was a big win for capital d Dems AND a big loss for those who care about justice, but i guess i'm not big brained enough. or why the plan was to "diminish" trump through midterms instead of tossing his ass in jail. like, if it's a hoax investigation anyway, prosecutors have put away people for decades with much less evidence. whoever came up with that plan sounds pretty dumb.
Bullets -> Wizards
Wizardspride
RealGM
Posts: 17,391
And1: 11,573
Joined: Nov 05, 2004
Location: Olney, MD/Kailua/Kaneohe, HI
       

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#114 » by Wizardspride » Tue Mar 7, 2023 10:41 pm

popper wrote:
Wizardspride wrote:
popper wrote:
Well said. I believe Nate also warned that the Russian collusion narrative was contrived to frame Orange Man by his political opponents, FBI and DOJ.



Not sure if you've read any of the report (many people haven't) but this is the part that is always left out...

Read the conclusion and give me your thoughts please...

Read on Twitter
?t=bTlQql7yVCMDGAkoneokMQ&s=19


My conclusion is that approx 17 experienced prosecutors who hated Trump spent two years and tens of millions of dollars trying to find something to prosecute. They failed in that, but successfully diminished his presidency and carried the investigation all the way through the mid terms which was advantageous to the Democratic party (which IMO was the plan all along). It also significantly boosted the ratings of CNN and MSNBC, and facilitated Pulitzer Prize awards for the NYT and WaPo. So it was a big win for the D party and their mouthpieces and a big loss for those who care about justice.

So basically you haven't read the underlying reasons behind Mueller's conclusion ....or just don't care.

That's fine.

President Donald Trump referred to African countries, Haiti and El Salvador as "shithole" nations during a meeting Thursday and asked why the U.S. can't have more immigrants from Norway.
Wizardspride
RealGM
Posts: 17,391
And1: 11,573
Joined: Nov 05, 2004
Location: Olney, MD/Kailua/Kaneohe, HI
       

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#115 » by Wizardspride » Tue Mar 7, 2023 10:57 pm

Read on Twitter
?t=YqALd625bAt-Z9TA69PNKg&s=19


Read on Twitter
?t=4nOUtvOGPkw4gDtEWZhxoA&s=19

President Donald Trump referred to African countries, Haiti and El Salvador as "shithole" nations during a meeting Thursday and asked why the U.S. can't have more immigrants from Norway.
User avatar
pancakes3
General Manager
Posts: 9,588
And1: 3,017
Joined: Jul 27, 2003
Location: Virginia
Contact:

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#116 » by pancakes3 » Wed Mar 8, 2023 2:42 am

and yet he releases footage of Jan 6, edited to depict it as "peaceful chaos"
Bullets -> Wizards
Wizardspride
RealGM
Posts: 17,391
And1: 11,573
Joined: Nov 05, 2004
Location: Olney, MD/Kailua/Kaneohe, HI
       

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#117 » by Wizardspride » Wed Mar 8, 2023 2:44 am

Read on Twitter
?t=kW-fnNfJqsOqON6zRwqR3A&s=19


Read on Twitter
?t=tUADPzowykcmDLJo-HrW_A&s=19

President Donald Trump referred to African countries, Haiti and El Salvador as "shithole" nations during a meeting Thursday and asked why the U.S. can't have more immigrants from Norway.
Zonkerbl
Retired Mod
Retired Mod
Posts: 9,071
And1: 4,756
Joined: Mar 24, 2010
       

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#118 » by Zonkerbl » Wed Mar 8, 2023 4:52 am

Mueller hated Trump? That's a stretch. Trump's FBI investigated Trump and shockingly found nothing, because key evidence was destroyed and key witnesses were blocked from testifying, one currently in jail for his role in setting up an agreement with the Russian government.

You have to be willfully ignorant to believe the right wing talking points on this. They directly contradict the facts and common sense. You can think for yourself you know! Tucker Carlson is a terrible sex cult leader, he's ugly! And probably a robot!
I've been taught all my life to value service to the weak and powerless.
Wizardspride
RealGM
Posts: 17,391
And1: 11,573
Joined: Nov 05, 2004
Location: Olney, MD/Kailua/Kaneohe, HI
       

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#119 » by Wizardspride » Wed Mar 8, 2023 4:28 pm

Read on Twitter
?t=OojsQoQcONYaNM2mNX5jfg&s=19


Read on Twitter
?t=-v2l1jce_gpsSAekTMS-9g&s=19

President Donald Trump referred to African countries, Haiti and El Salvador as "shithole" nations during a meeting Thursday and asked why the U.S. can't have more immigrants from Norway.
Wizardspride
RealGM
Posts: 17,391
And1: 11,573
Joined: Nov 05, 2004
Location: Olney, MD/Kailua/Kaneohe, HI
       

Re: Political Roundtable Part XXXII 

Post#120 » by Wizardspride » Wed Mar 8, 2023 9:55 pm

Read on Twitter
?t=Ny8WZm2RI0VPaVFTHG8lCw&s=19

President Donald Trump referred to African countries, Haiti and El Salvador as "shithole" nations during a meeting Thursday and asked why the U.S. can't have more immigrants from Norway.

Return to Washington Wizards