SMH. The information was always out there. Some people just refused to believe it.
The only thing that could top this is if WHO/CDC came out and said the same thing.
Maybe then will they finally reconsider their position on wearing masks.
Moderators: Clav, Domejandro, ken6199, bisme37, Dirk, KingDavid, cupcakesnake, bwgood77, zimpy27, infinite11285


One million Rohingya refugees, half of whom are children, have been sheltering in sprawling camps in Cox’s Bazar since August 2017, when they were forced to flee their homes in the face of horrific violence. For almost three years, Rohingya refugees have been telling us they want to go home and resume normal life. They want their children to go to school and for families separated by the conflict to be reunited. So far, international attempts to hold Myanmar accountable for alleged crimes against the Rohingya and improve conditions in Rakhine state have failed spectacularly. In short, it will be years until the Rohingya see justice.
Since being hastily erected in 2017, the Cox’s Bazar camps have precariously survived despite nearly constant threats from monsoon floods, cyclones, and rampaging elephants, but the spread of the virus would be the “worst nightmare come true,” Egeland said.
In Cox’s Bazar, a patchwork of 34 refugee camps houses about 855,000 refugees, and more than 400,000 Bangladeshis live in close proximity to the camps. A risk report on the possibility of the spread of the coronavirus in the Cox’s Bazar camps produced in March by ACAPS, a Norwegian humanitarian-analysis group, found that the population density in the camps averages 40,000 people per square kilometer, but increases to 70,000 in the most cramped areas. By comparison, ACAPS said, the overall population density in Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak, is 6,000 people per square kilometer.
Bangladesh, a poor country of more than 160 million, is, like many other places with large refugee populations, gravely unprepared for a wider outbreak. The authorities have imposed a near-total lockdown, shutting down public transportation and roads, and so far the country has recorded 54 cases of the virus and six deaths. But fewer than 2,000 people have been tested for the virus, health officials said Sunday, and the country’s health-care system is in dire condition. A response plan compiled by the World Health Organization and obtained by Netra News, a Bangladeshi news outlet, estimates that without interventions, 500,000 to 2 million people in the country could die from COVID-19. “These figures are not surprising when considered against modeling in other countries but they are astounding and should serve as a call to action,” the memo says.
KingDavid wrote:Optimus_Steel wrote:Jobless claims soar to record-breaking 6.648 million
The U.S. Labor Department released fresh data on Thursday morning that showed the effect of the novel coronavirus on employment in the U.S. The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits spiked to a record-breaking 6.648 million for the week ending March 28. Consensus expectations were for 3.76 million claims. The prior week’s figure was revised higher to 3.307 million claims from 3.283 million. Prior to the week ending March 21, the previous record was 695,000 claims filed the week ended October 2, 1982.
“The deterioration of the labor market in the past two weeks almost defies belief,” Nick Bunker, Indeed Hiring Lab's director of economic research, wrote in an email Thursday. “Since March 14, approximately 3.8% of the working age population has filed for unemployment. For context, during the Great Recession, the share of the population dropped 4.6 percentage points from December 2007 to December 2009. That took two years. The labor market is in a historic freefall."
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/coronavirus-covid-weekly-initial-jobless-claims-march-28-165758189.html
This is just the beginning on unemployment filings. In upsets me that congress passed legislation that comes nowhere near close to help everyday Americans with this, as we all healthcare coverage.
Damn, this must be driving Trump up a wall. One of his staples is jobs.

Among Nigeria’s registered health professionals are 75,000 doctors, 180,709 nurses and 25,000 pharmacists, according to the health ministry. With 0.5% hospital beds per 1,000 people and a population of roughly 200 million, that’s far below thresholds set by the World Health Organization. Only five laboratories are able to test for the virus.
Optimus_Steel wrote:Jobless claims soar to record-breaking 6.648 million
The U.S. Labor Department released fresh data on Thursday morning that showed the effect of the novel coronavirus on employment in the U.S. The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits spiked to a record-breaking 6.648 million for the week ending March 28. Consensus expectations were for 3.76 million claims. The prior week’s figure was revised higher to 3.307 million claims from 3.283 million. Prior to the week ending March 21, the previous record was 695,000 claims filed the week ended October 2, 1982.
“The deterioration of the labor market in the past two weeks almost defies belief,” Nick Bunker, Indeed Hiring Lab's director of economic research, wrote in an email Thursday. “Since March 14, approximately 3.8% of the working age population has filed for unemployment. For context, during the Great Recession, the share of the population dropped 4.6 percentage points from December 2007 to December 2009. That took two years. The labor market is in a historic freefall."
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/coronavirus-covid-weekly-initial-jobless-claims-march-28-165758189.html
This is just the beginning on unemployment filings. In upsets me that congress passed legislation that comes nowhere near close to help everyday Americans with this, as we all healthcare coverage.
Doug_12 wrote:Neutral 123 wrote:Mister Ze wrote:
World leaders were given this information weeks after the communist party were made aware of it. Better reaction times would have significantly lowered the spread. China is guilty of negligence here. They censored their own citizens from spreading awareness about the outbreak.
There were many many reports long before this spread worldwide. They could have informed earlier, but that is NOT why it spread. I knew about this and the danger long before it spread.
The blame belongs squarely on every leader worldwide. They each failed their citizens. Chinese citizens should deal with their own leadership, but we gotta deal with ours.
Exactly.
By early February it was evident that this is a dangerous virus, yet the majority of the leaders started to act in like mid March.
Every EU leader was like we cannot get that. There were diseases here and there but they stayed away from Europe in the last 100 years - this will be the same. They had no valid reasoning for that only some historical experiences. It is surprising how many people tend to think that what happened yesterday will definitely happen tomorrow as well.
In that sense it's the same as how we treat climate change...
Stillwater wrote:How much are people in your state following social distance rule? Everyone including restaurant are still open to deliver or pick up with many people still using fast food drive thru lines etc.
Those 100-240k CDC projected dead in next two weeks figures have to be the low estimate in hope that infected or those who know someone infected stay home but many that have had contact with untested sick people are not stopping their lives. I'm seeing and hearing about the majority of Ohio people who have had contact with sick people are still plugging along with their jobs in hopes it's all a bad dream ... And so it will be. I predicted a long time ago astronomical death rates and it got hate and shushed.
I was right and it ain't over not even close.
Roxane put on the red light...
I'm guessing he's getting his information from Dr Toomey. She's an epidemiologist with a MD from Harvard and actually served time with the CDC.Optimus_Steel wrote:
He chose to be ignorant. He was actively going out of his way to not recognize the problem.
Neutral 123 wrote:Doug_12 wrote:Neutral 123 wrote:There were many many reports long before this spread worldwide. They could have informed earlier, but that is NOT why it spread. I knew about this and the danger long before it spread.
The blame belongs squarely on every leader worldwide. They each failed their citizens. Chinese citizens should deal with their own leadership, but we gotta deal with ours.
Exactly.
By early February it was evident that this is a dangerous virus, yet the majority of the leaders started to act in like mid March.
Every EU leader was like we cannot get that. There were diseases here and there but they stayed away from Europe in the last 100 years - this will be the same. They had no valid reasoning for that only some historical experiences. It is surprising how many people tend to think that what happened yesterday will definitely happen tomorrow as well.
In that sense it's the same as how we treat climate change...
The campaigns of disinformation have already started. My hope is that people are aware enough not to fall for it. To blame China is to completely miss what really happened here. I don't expect the CCP to protect me. SMH



Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, US, used high-speed cameras and other sensors to assess precisely what happens after a cough or sneeze.
They found that an exhalation generates a small fast-moving cloud of gas that can contain droplets of liquid of varying sizes - and that the smallest of these can be carried in the cloud over long distances.
The study - conducted in laboratory conditions - found that coughs can project liquid up to 6m away and that sneezes, which involve much higher speeds, can reach up to 8m away.

ClipsFanSince98 wrote:For the anti Hydroxychloroquine+Zpak, someone posted good data. The risk of QT interval is EXTREMELY overstated. I'm shocked like he is that at such a low occurance the FDA makes them blast prolonged QT interval warnings on these drugs.
