I'm almost certain that's 6.64 million NEW on top of the 3.3 million last week. We are at 10 million already over the last two weeks
Ground_Chuck said:packgrad said:
Respectfully, I don't think you do understand their role. if you are saying that it does not matter that they are a propaganda bullhorn for China.
Maybe you're just thread policing though. Who knows what is allowed to talk about on this thread anymore? Can't talk about deaths as they are related to traffic accidents, but can talk about condo rentals. The world health organization is now irrelevant, but early in the thread they were who we are supposed to listen to. Who knows?
Maybe I don't understand their role, or maybe I don't understand your interpretation of their role.
I agree with your last comment. They are irrelevant now to US decisions. That was the point I was kind of getting at. Does it matter what the WHO is saying now?
Daviewolf83 said:Did you mean cases and not deaths? I am not seeing total deaths increasing by 3-4,000 a day. As you pointed out and as confirmed in the Worldometer tracking, new deaths increased by 1,049 yesterday.RunsWithWolves26 said:
I noticed the total deaths went up by 3,000-4,000 a day each of the past 2 days. Hoping to see that total increase each day decline soon. For some reason, j don't see total cases leveling off until around next weekend. Sure hope I am wrong
I'd see if they'll let you push the booking by a month.metcalfmafia said:
What are the chances I will be able to go to my honeymoon in Jamaica at the end of May?
I guess it's possible, but I also think it would be a little nearsighted as those localities will end up getting hit as well at some point.King Leary said:
Could we see a point where infected Americans from places like NYC are actually sent to hospitals in other states where we have open beds, ventilators, etc? Or is that not feasible?
I think the issue is more about ventilators than it is actual bed space. From this standpoint, I think it is possible you could see some states that are less hard hit sending ventilators to NYC than you would see moving patients to other states. Unfortunately, many of the neighboring states to NYC are also hard hit. The governor of NY has mention the possibility of balancing patients in NY and sending some from NYC to other hospitals in areas of NY that are less impacted.King Leary said:
Could we see a point where infected Americans from places like NYC are actually sent to hospitals in other states where we have open beds, ventilators, etc? Or is that not feasible?
metcalfmafia said:
What are the chances I will be able to go to my honeymoon in Jamaica at the end of May?
packgrad said:Ground_Chuck said:packgrad said:
Respectfully, I don't think you do understand their role. if you are saying that it does not matter that they are a propaganda bullhorn for China.
Maybe you're just thread policing though. Who knows what is allowed to talk about on this thread anymore? Can't talk about deaths as they are related to traffic accidents, but can talk about condo rentals. The world health organization is now irrelevant, but early in the thread they were who we are supposed to listen to. Who knows?
Maybe I don't understand their role, or maybe I don't understand your interpretation of their role.
I agree with your last comment. They are irrelevant now to US decisions. That was the point I was kind of getting at. Does it matter what the WHO is saying now?
It specifically states their role. If you don't understand it, I can't make you. The WHO doesn't affect our decisions now. Perhaps they did before.
PossumJenkins said:
The WHO absolutely affected our decision making process previously and to say it didn't is asinine. The WHO reporting the cases and info out of China made us believe...as has been stated by Dr. Birx..this was a SARS type infection (which to some degree it is and in the same family) but that containment would be similar to the SARS outbreak. It is not...and therefore preparedness suffered. I'm not saying that's the ONLY reason it suffered. There's plenty of blame to be laid. The WHO also reported chinas initial reports it was not transmitted person to person. As well the WHO is an organization still saying masks don't help. So stop..again...there's no one person group or organization to blame...but to say they didn't affect policy is not honest
Ground_Chuck said:PossumJenkins said:
The WHO absolutely affected our decision making process previously and to say it didn't is asinine. The WHO reporting the cases and info out of China made us believe...as has been stated by Dr. Birx..this was a SARS type infection (which to some degree it is and in the same family) but that containment would be similar to the SARS outbreak. It is not...and therefore preparedness suffered. I'm not saying that's the ONLY reason it suffered. There's plenty of blame to be laid. The WHO also reported chinas initial reports it was not transmitted person to person. As well the WHO is an organization still saying masks don't help. So stop..again...there's no one person group or organization to blame...but to say they didn't affect policy is not honest
I did a quick google search, apparently blaming the WHO for the US slow reaction is a new talking point in conservative media.
FWIW, WHOs site recommends wearing a mask if you are coughing/sneezing, and when caring for a person who may have covid19.
The person to person claim comes from a mid January report. It was amended as data became available.
I don't see in evidence that this influenced the US to react as if covid19 was "just the flu" or a "hoax."
Mormad said:
I think Wesley has about 18, but that is a 500 percent increase in ICU cases in 3 days. 2 dead already. Our hospital has many more beds, but if Wesley filled up that fast, they'll fill ours up pretty quickly. It just chafes my ass when I leave the hospital after watching this virus destroy lives and destroy families to read nonsense about hysteria, politics, and overreaction. How many have to die before it becomes a real problem and one that people should heed the pleas, advice, and warnings of those who see it everyday? It's flabbergasting. Sorry to rant, but I just find it so ridiculous. I've lost a shtload of money, income, and I've seen my friends lose businesses, but there are outcomes worse than that, so I'm sensitive to those who are worried or angry about that aspect of this pandemic. But there are worse things you could lose, and we're simply trying to limit how often people lose their loved ones.
Same could be said regarding a variety of different topics. Imagine working in the hospitals on the south side of Chicago that are just a revolving door of gun shot victims. People die all the time and from a variety of different reasons. I am not saying that this virus isn't serious but I am not going to completely shut my life down because of it. (Or at least I wasn't until I was forced to). The issue is we weren't prepared and hospitals are overwhelmed, not the fact that the virus kills people.RunsWithWolves26 said:Mormad said:
I think Wesley has about 18, but that is a 500 percent increase in ICU cases in 3 days. 2 dead already. Our hospital has many more beds, but if Wesley filled up that fast, they'll fill ours up pretty quickly. It just chafes my ass when I leave the hospital after watching this virus destroy lives and destroy families to read nonsense about hysteria, politics, and overreaction. How many have to die before it becomes a real problem and one that people should heed the pleas, advice, and warnings of those who see it everyday? It's flabbergasting. Sorry to rant, but I just find it so ridiculous. I've lost a shtload of money, income, and I've seen my friends lose businesses, but there are outcomes worse than that, so I'm sensitive to those who are worried or angry about that aspect of this pandemic. But there are worse things you could lose, and we're simply trying to limit how often people lose their loved ones.
For some on here, it will only be serious and not political, or a hoax, or whatever else when they have someone they are close to die. At that point, it will be to late to be outraged or upset about it. If you don't take it seriously when it isn't affecting your loved ones at the moment, don't take it seriously when it does.
I have reservations in West Yellowstone and Jackson for the week of July 4-11 to go to Yellowstone and Grand Tetons with the family. I gather the issue is the small towns on the edge of the park where people do stay -- which have very small home populations, and no infra to support if many of them get ill because world travelers are staying there.IseWolf22 said:I'd see if they'll let you push the booking by a month.metcalfmafia said:
What are the chances I will be able to go to my honeymoon in Jamaica at the end of May?
I was hoping to plan a trip in June..., just wanted to see some national parks out West. So far I've held off
They are sending them to other parts of NY -- like Albany, already.PackBacker07 said:I guess it's possible, but I also think it would be a little nearsighted as those localities will end up getting hit as well at some point.King Leary said:
Could we see a point where infected Americans from places like NYC are actually sent to hospitals in other states where we have open beds, ventilators, etc? Or is that not feasible?
Sobering perspective.Mormad said:
I think Wesley has about 18, but that is a 500 percent increase in ICU cases in 3 days. 2 dead already. Our hospital has many more beds, but if Wesley filled up that fast, they'll fill ours up pretty quickly. It just chafes my ass when I leave the hospital after watching this virus destroy lives and destroy families to read nonsense about hysteria, politics, and overreaction. How many have to die before it becomes a real problem and one that people should heed the pleas, advice, and warnings of those who see it everyday? It's flabbergasting. Sorry to rant, but I just find it so ridiculous. I've lost a shtload of money, income, and I've seen my friends lose businesses, but there are outcomes worse than that, so I'm sensitive to those who are worried or angry about that aspect of this pandemic. But there are worse things you could lose, and we're simply trying to limit how often people lose their loved ones.
RunsWithWolves26 said:Mormad said:
I think Wesley has about 18, but that is a 500 percent increase in ICU cases in 3 days. 2 dead already. Our hospital has many more beds, but if Wesley filled up that fast, they'll fill ours up pretty quickly. It just chafes my ass when I leave the hospital after watching this virus destroy lives and destroy families to read nonsense about hysteria, politics, and overreaction. How many have to die before it becomes a real problem and one that people should heed the pleas, advice, and warnings of those who see it everyday? It's flabbergasting. Sorry to rant, but I just find it so ridiculous. I've lost a shtload of money, income, and I've seen my friends lose businesses, but there are outcomes worse than that, so I'm sensitive to those who are worried or angry about that aspect of this pandemic. But there are worse things you could lose, and we're simply trying to limit how often people lose their loved ones.
For some on here, it will only be serious and not political, or a hoax, or whatever else when they have someone they are close to die. At that point, it will be to late to be outraged or upset about it. If you don't take it seriously when it isn't affecting your loved ones at the moment, don't take it seriously when it does.
wolfpackin24 said:Same could be said regarding a variety of different topics. Imagine working in the hospitals on the south side of Chicago that are just a revolving door of gun shot victims. People die all the time and from a variety of different reasons. I am not saying that this virus isn't serious but I am not going to completely shut my life down because of it. (Or at least I wasn't until I was forced to). The issue is we weren't prepared and hospitals are overwhelmed, not the fact that the virus kills people.RunsWithWolves26 said:Mormad said:
I think Wesley has about 18, but that is a 500 percent increase in ICU cases in 3 days. 2 dead already. Our hospital has many more beds, but if Wesley filled up that fast, they'll fill ours up pretty quickly. It just chafes my ass when I leave the hospital after watching this virus destroy lives and destroy families to read nonsense about hysteria, politics, and overreaction. How many have to die before it becomes a real problem and one that people should heed the pleas, advice, and warnings of those who see it everyday? It's flabbergasting. Sorry to rant, but I just find it so ridiculous. I've lost a shtload of money, income, and I've seen my friends lose businesses, but there are outcomes worse than that, so I'm sensitive to those who are worried or angry about that aspect of this pandemic. But there are worse things you could lose, and we're simply trying to limit how often people lose their loved ones.
For some on here, it will only be serious and not political, or a hoax, or whatever else when they have someone they are close to die. At that point, it will be to late to be outraged or upset about it. If you don't take it seriously when it isn't affecting your loved ones at the moment, don't take it seriously when it does.
Furthermore, if you have a history of depression and suicide in your family as I do, I am sure you would worry a lot more about how these extreme measures we are forcing people to take are affecting folks mental health. Let's not lose site of the collateral damage we are causing by virtually shutting down the country.
Congrats Ise on the upcoming baby. It was the happiest day of my life when I found out that i was gonna be a father.IseWolf22 said:
This just got very real for me. My wife and I are young and healthy enough that we were worried about our parents, but not really ourselves.
Well she's pregnant. We're really, really happy. Also really scared about what an infection could do this early in the pregnancy. She's considered an essential worker so she can't quarantine at home unless she wants to quit. We don't really know what to do at this point other than to be exceedingly careful.
Not angering me, and I understand your viewpoint as well. I think we are all very frustrated at this point with the entire situation because it has the grips on everyone. It just stinks because had we been proactive about this rather than reactive, maybe we aren't in the situation we are currently in.Mormad said:wolfpackin24 said:Same could be said regarding a variety of different topics. Imagine working in the hospitals on the south side of Chicago that are just a revolving door of gun shot victims. People die all the time and from a variety of different reasons. I am not saying that this virus isn't serious but I am not going to completely shut my life down because of it. (Or at least I wasn't until I was forced to). The issue is we weren't prepared and hospitals are overwhelmed, not the fact that the virus kills people.RunsWithWolves26 said:Mormad said:
I think Wesley has about 18, but that is a 500 percent increase in ICU cases in 3 days. 2 dead already. Our hospital has many more beds, but if Wesley filled up that fast, they'll fill ours up pretty quickly. It just chafes my ass when I leave the hospital after watching this virus destroy lives and destroy families to read nonsense about hysteria, politics, and overreaction. How many have to die before it becomes a real problem and one that people should heed the pleas, advice, and warnings of those who see it everyday? It's flabbergasting. Sorry to rant, but I just find it so ridiculous. I've lost a shtload of money, income, and I've seen my friends lose businesses, but there are outcomes worse than that, so I'm sensitive to those who are worried or angry about that aspect of this pandemic. But there are worse things you could lose, and we're simply trying to limit how often people lose their loved ones.
For some on here, it will only be serious and not political, or a hoax, or whatever else when they have someone they are close to die. At that point, it will be to late to be outraged or upset about it. If you don't take it seriously when it isn't affecting your loved ones at the moment, don't take it seriously when it does.
Furthermore, if you have a history of depression and suicide in your family as I do, I am sure you would worry a lot more about how these extreme measures we are forcing people to take are affecting folks mental health. Let's not lose site of the collateral damage we are causing by virtually shutting down the country.
Oh I agree there will certainly be collateral damage, but I suspect more would die of this virus than will die of the collateral damage. One way or the other we have to try to limit the death toll. The death toll for collateral damage will pale in comparison to this virus, especially if we just everybody continue to go about their business unchanged. You might not let it shut down your life, but you may let it take your life. And yes people are dying every day from one tragedy or another, but there are already measures to try to limit those deaths (we can argue effectiveness), and those deaths related to covid are IN ADDITION to those every day deaths. So measures have been taken, and yes they're drastic, but damn if they're not necessary. So I find the "people are dying every day" arguement to be hollow. Just let more die so you don't have to shut your life down? That sounds a little ridiculous? I'm really not trying to be a tailhole, so I hope I'm not angering anyone. This just hits really close to home for me.