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Thread: Covid-19
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08-01-2022, 09:31 AM #7351
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- Feb 2008
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"...treat 'em with respect, or get out of the Gym!"
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08-01-2022, 09:48 AM #7352
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- Mar 2008
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08-01-2022, 10:00 AM #7353
I would guess that Fauci would think the vaccines are the number one thing to combat Covid.
As to why you didn't hear about the other things, I would think it might be living in a Fox bubble who spend all their time demonizing him.
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/09/18/dr-f...m-healthy.html...he went up late, and I was already up there.
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08-01-2022, 10:29 AM #7354
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Wow, you had to go all the way back to 9/18/2020 to find an example of Fauci actually doing the right thing.
You completely missed MID's point. Fauci went on TV/radio/podcasts multiple times everyday for 2 years, and virtually the only thing that he ever prescribed were masks and vaccines - both of which have shown no or very little efficacy. You show one insignificant article that maybe only 10,000 people saw as proof that he was "on it", is a complete joke.
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08-01-2022, 11:58 AM #7355
I recall hearing and reading ad nauseum how obesity and smoking were huge risk factors for severe COVID, and how "if you are overweight you should lose weight, and if you are smoking you should quit now".
Both great suggestions, but also both suggestions that take quite a bit of time to pay dividends, which doesn't necessarily help in an acute infectious disease crisis.
It continues to amaze me how fired up the far right is about some relatively brief lockdowns that ended 2 years ago.Eat Donuts!
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08-01-2022, 12:21 PM #7356
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08-01-2022, 12:26 PM #7357
I don’t listen to NPR, and I don’t listen to Fox. The people who do should realize THEY are the vocal minority, while most of us live quietly in the middle. I think if there are any bubbles to discuss, they are at either extreme.
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08-01-2022, 12:32 PM #7358
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- Mar 2008
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08-01-2022, 12:38 PM #7359
I guess that depends on if you consider school closures/ forced e-learning as part of the 'lockdowns'.
Because all of the data that seems to be materializing every day points to school closures having a major negative impact on the mental health of an entire generation of children. I'm not far right (definitely right of center) but the fact that teacher's unions were able to influence CDC guidance during a pandemic infuriates me. It's borderline criminal thuggery.dayton will lose by 40 and we will loot tonight.
-Pablo
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08-01-2022, 01:00 PM #7360
How long were schools closed in Ohio? I live in a pretty liberal district in NJ and schools were only closed for like 3 months at the beginning of the pandemic and then we went back to in person learning (albeit on a modified schedule). It wasn't an optimal school year, but I'd argue that generations of kids have lived through things like WWII, the great depression, etc. and they will recover.
I also think you are a bit dramatic calling it 'borderline criminal thuggery' that teachers didn't want to go back to in person learning and potentially get exposed to COVID and die (which actually happened at my kids' school). You can argue that the risk comes with the territory for teachers, or that they should just quit, but borderline criminal seems a bit far. I'm going to guess that you don't have a very favorable opinion of unions in general though.
But again, that was some time ago and nobody (credible) is advocating a return to that because most recognize that it did more harm than good.Last edited by boozehound; 08-01-2022 at 01:03 PM.
Eat Donuts!
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