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+2louie The Wise And Powerful 6 posters | |
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Temple Regular Member
Posts : 7317 Join date : 2014-07-29
| Subject: Re: Trump / Pence / Covid-19. Wed Oct 07, 2020 6:18 pm | |
| Superspreader Trump events have now infected 34 people affiliated with White House |
| | | Temple Regular Member
Posts : 7317 Join date : 2014-07-29
| Subject: Re: Trump / Pence / Covid-19. Wed Oct 07, 2020 6:36 pm | |
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| | | The Wise And Powerful Admin
Posts : 111040 Join date : 2014-07-29 Age : 101 Location : A Mile High
| Subject: Re: Trump / Pence / Covid-19. Thu Oct 08, 2020 10:14 pm | |
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| | | Temple Regular Member
Posts : 7317 Join date : 2014-07-29
| Subject: BWAAHA! How Desperate Can He Be- Overkill of Desperate .. Fri Oct 09, 2020 2:38 pm | |
| BWAAHAA HAA HA!!
10-9-2020
Trump brutally mocked with ‘leaked’ footage after internet learns he will get a ‘medical exam’ live on Fox News tonight.
President Donald J. Trump is scheduled to undergo a medical exam Friday night by Fox News contributor Dr. Marc Siegel and the Twittersphere hasn’t missed a beat.
In the prelude to the live televised event on Tucker Carlson Tonight at 8 p.m. ET., the media still has not been told when Trump’s last negative COVID-19 test result result came back or whether or not the president is actually fit to campaign, let alone lead the nation.
“I think I’m going to try doing a rally on Saturday night if we can, if we have enough time to put it together,” Trump told Fox’s Hannity on Thursday. “Probably in Florida on Saturday night, might come back and do one in Pennsylvania on the following night.”
He then coughed while sucking in air multiple times.
“I feel so good,” Trump added.
Siegel, a regular Fox News contributor, will conduct a medical evaluation and interview during the program.
((((BWAHAAA AHAAA!!! ^^ whata show for Idiots BWAA!))))
Siegel regularly downplays “the severity of the COVID-19 crisis and discards science in favor of right-wing talking points.”
The reactions are rolling in strongly with this one.
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| | | The Wise And Powerful Admin
Posts : 111040 Join date : 2014-07-29 Age : 101 Location : A Mile High
| Subject: Re: Trump / Pence / Covid-19. Fri Oct 23, 2020 6:49 am | |
| Coronavirus update: U.S. death toll tops 222,000 and President Trump criticizes media for constant coverage of crisis Published: Oct. 23, 2020 at 7:18 a.m. ET By Ciara Linnane | Market Watch
The U.S. death toll from the coronavirus illness COVID-19 rose above 222,000 on Thursday, and President Donald Trump again falsely claimed the virus was disappearing and criticized the media for its constant coverage of the crisis.
The U.S. leads the world by cases, at 8.3 million, and deaths at 222,239, or about a fifth of the global tallies for cases and fatalities, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University.
At a campaign rally in North Carolina, Trump said, “All you hear is Covid, Covid, Covid, Covid, Covid, Covid, Covid, Covid, Covid, Covid, Covid.”
The president repeated the word 11 times, the New York Times reported. “That’s all they put on, because they want to scare the hell out of everyone.”
Trump also falsely claimed that his presidential rival, Democrat Joe Biden, is seeking to “prolong the pandemic” and to “shut down your country,” when Biden has outlined a plan aimed at containing the virus without another lockdown.
Dr. Zeke Emanuel, oncologist, adviser to Biden and vice provost for global initiatives at the University of Pennsylvania, told MarketWatch’s Jaimy Lee that Biden would change four major things in the U.S. handling of the pandemic if elected.
“You’re going to change the tone around this,” Emanuel said in an interview. “You’re going to have a president who actually models the public-health interventions, with a mask, social distancing, not getting into crowds. You’re going to have experts giving you the briefings, not politicos. We’d have experts giving guidance, like the CDC will begin developing real guidance that it’s capable of, not the sort of light-handed guidance that we’ve gotten. You’re going to have someone or a committee that coordinates this thing, that has a sub group on [personal protective equipment], a sub group on testing, a sub group on therapeutics, a sub group on vaccines.”
Biden is also willing to work closely with states to ensure a consistent approach to the crisis, he said.
U.S. government officials said Wednesday they are “distressed” about the rising number of COVID-19 cases in the U.S., with one official noting that 75% of the country has reported an uptick in cases.
The U.S. counted 62,751 new cases on Wednesday, according to a New York Times tracker, and at least 1,170 people died. The U.S. has been averaging about 60,572 new cases a day in the last week, a 32% increase from the average two weeks earlier.
“We’re also seeing cases increase in really all parts of the country, in the Midwest, particularly, likely in part because people are moving indoors with the arrival of cooler temperatures,” Dr. Jay Butler, deputy director for infectious diseases for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said during a news conference. It was the first briefing from the CDC in about eight weeks.
“We are all getting tired with the impacts that COVID-19 has had on our lives, we get tired of wearing masks, but it continues to be as important as it’s ever been,” Butler said.
He also said that all states have submitted vaccination plans to the federal government. CDC director Dr. Robert Redfield said he expects the U.S. government will have “a limited supply of one or more COVID vaccines” available for distribution by the end of 2020.
In other news:
• France and Spain set grim milestones overnight with both countries passing the 1 million COVID-19 case mark, the Johns Hopkins data shows. They join the U.S., India, Brazil, Russia and Argentina, all of which also have more than million cases. France has imposed a four-week nighttime curfew in Paris and other cities that bans people from being out between the hours of 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. Spain’s government is reported to be considering a curfew to control its latest outbreak.
• Italy, an early hot spot in the pandemic, may impose a new lockdown on Rome if the number of patients admitted to intensive care units exceeds 2,300, newspaper Il Corriere della Sera reported, citing government sources. Italy counted 15,199 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, its biggest daily rise since the start of the outbreak. Italy has 449,648 confirmed cases and at least 36,832 Italians have died, according to the Johns Hopkins data.
• Women aged 50 to 60 are most at risk of becoming so-called “long haulers” if they contract COVID-19, according to a new study conducted by King’s College London, the Guardian reported. The study analyzed data from 4,182 users of a COVID Symptom Study app who had consistently recorded their own data. Long haulers are those who continue to suffer from severe symptoms of the illness weeks after testing positive. Older age, and experiencing five or more symptoms in the first week, were also found to come with a heightened risk of lasting problems, the paper reported.
• The CDC has tweaked its guidance for who is considered at risk of getting COVID-19 by changing the definition of a “close contact” of an infected person. In updated guidance, the agency said the definition includes someone “who was within 6 feet of an infected person for a cumulative total of 15 minutes or more over a 24-hour period starting from 2 days before illness onset (or, for asymptomatic patients, 2 days prior to test specimen collection) until the time the patient is isolated.” Previous guidance defined a close contact as someone who had spent at least 15 consecutive minutes within six feet of a patient.
Latest tallies
The number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 world-wide now stands at 41.3 million, Johns Hopkins data shows, and the death toll is 1.13 million. At least 28 million people have recovered from COVID-19.
Brazil has the second highest death toll at 155,403 and is third by cases at 5.3 million. India is second in cases with 7.7 million, and third in deaths at 116,616.
Mexico has the fourth highest death toll at 87,415 and 10th highest case tally at 867,559.
The U.K has 44,248 deaths, the highest in Europe and fifth highest in the world, and 792,194 cases.
China, where the disease was first reported late last year, has 91,055 cases and 4,739 fatalities, according to its official numbers.
What’s the economy saying?
The number of Americans who lost their jobs and applied for unemployment benefits in mid-October slid by 55,000 to a new pandemic low of 787,000, but the decline stemmed in part from fewer new claims in California after a temporary applications freeze, MarketWatch’s Jeffry Bartash reported.
Initial jobless claims filed through state programs fell below the 800,000 mark for the first time since the coronavirus epidemic began in March, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Economists polled by MarketWatch had forecast new claims to be 860,000 in the week ended Oct. 17.
New claims in the prior week were also revised down to 842,000 from 898,000 in an unusually large revision.
What makes the latest report harder to decipher was the inclusion again of new jobless claims from California after a two-week pause. The state stopped accepting applications temporarily to work down a large backload, update its computer systems and install new fraud-detection measures. The updated figures from California contributed heavily to the large downward revision two weeks ago.
California said new jobless claims totaled an unadjusted 158,877 in the past week, down from 176,083 two weeks ago. The state’s numbers had been frozen at 226,179 in the U.S. Labor Department’s national summary while it worked to improve its unemployment-compensation system. California typically accounts for almost 20% of all new jobless claims in the country, but it’s run closer to 30% during the coronavirus pandemic
Separately, existing-home sales increased for the fourth consecutive month in September, as the U.S. housing market benefited from low interest rates. Total existing-home sales rose 9.4% from August to a seasonally-adjusted, annual rate of 6.54 million, the National Association of Realtors reported Thursday.
Compared with a year ago, home sales were up nearly 21%. The fast pace of home sales has quickly dwindled the remaining supply of homes on the market, however. The total inventory of homes for sale at the end of the month dropped to a 2.7 months’ supply, the lowest on record.
What are companies saying?
• American Airlines Group Inc. AAL, +3.17% reported a narrower-than-expected third-quarter loss and revenue that fell less than forecast as it continues to struggle with lower demand for travel during the pandemic. The company swung to a net loss of $2.40 million, or $4.71 a share, from net income of $425 million, or 96 cents a share, in the year-ago period. Excluding non-recurring items, the adjusted per-share loss was $5.54, beating the FactSet loss consensus of $5.86. Revenue dropped 73.4% to $3.17 billion, but was above the FactSet consensus of $2.81 billion. Load factor fell to 57.9% from 86.6%, as traffic declined 74.2% while capacity dropped 61.5%. For the fourth quarter, the company expects capacity to be more than 50%, with long-haul international capacity down about 75%.
• AT&T Inc. T, +5.83% reported a third-quarter adjusted profit that matched expectations, while revenue fell less than forecast during the pandemic. Postpaid subscriber net additions were 1.1 million, with phone net adds of 645,000, while prepaid subscriber net adds were 245,000. Total postpaid churn was 0.85%, with postpaid phone-only churn was 0.69%. Communications revenue fell 3.1% to $34.3 billion but beat the FactSet consensus of $33.6 billion, and WarnerMedia revenue dropped 10.0% to $7.5 billion but beat expectations of $7.3 billion. The company sees fourth-quarter revenue being hurt by the partial closure of movie theaters and postponement of theatrical releases as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, and by the decline in international roaming wireless services revenue due to reduced travel.
• Coca-Cola Co. KO, +1.38% reported third-quarter earnings and revenue that beat expectations. Revenue improved compared with last quarter, but continues to feel the pressure of the declines in away-from-home channels like movie theaters and sporting events during the pandemic. The company continues its revamp, which includes a 50% reduction in the number of brands in its portfolio. It has already announced that Odwalla juices, Zico coconut water and Tab diet soda will be discontinued. Coca-Cola did not provide detailed guidance due to uncertainty from the pandemic.
• Kimberly-Clark Corp. KMB, -6.93% reported third-quarter earnings that missed Street estimates. Sales dropped in the professional segment of the business due to the pandemic. “While earnings in the quarter were down as expected, we’re raising our full-year outlook and now expect adjusted earnings per share will grow 9%-to-11% this year,” said Mike Hsu, Kimberly-Clark chief executive, in a statement. Kimberly-Clark expects 2020 adjusted EPS of $7.50 to $7.65 up from previous guidance for $7.40 to $7.60. And sales are expected to increase 2% to 3%. The FactSet consensus is for EPS of $7.71 and sales of $18.88 billion, suggesting a rise of 2.3%. Kimberly-Clark’s company restructuring is expected to be complete in 2021 with total charges at the high end of the range of $1.70 billion and $1.90 billion. The revamp is expected to produce an annual pre-tax savings of $500 million to $550 million.
• Netgear Inc. NTGR, -3.80% reported fiscal third-quarter results that soundly beat Wall Street estimates. Netgear reported net income of $25.5 million, or 85 cents a share, compared with net income of $12.5 million, or 41 cents a share, in the year-ago quarter. Revenue shot up 42% to $378.1 million from $265.9 million a year ago. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had expected net income of 66 cents a share on revenue of $314 million. Netgear shares are up 49% this year as it continues to feel the effects of the pandemic.
• Quest Diagnostics Inc. DGX, +2.85% beat third-quarter earnings estimates and raised guidance, buoyed by demand for COVID-19 testing. “Quest had a very strong third quarter, benefiting from continued demand for COVID-19 testing and the rapid recovery of health care utilization,” Chief Executive Steve Rusckowski said in a statement. “Quest Diagnostics. “Quest has performed over 22 million COVID-19 molecular and serology tests to date, more than any other provider.” The company is seeing signs that the health care system is returning to pre-pandemic levels, as base testing volume, excluding COVID-19 molecular and antibody testing, continued to recover through the quarter. “We are grateful for the CARES Act funding that provided our company with support earlier this year at a time of great uncertainty for our nation,” said Rusckowski. “Several months into this pandemic, we do not require this funding. As a result, we believe returning these funds to the government now is the right thing to do.” The company raised its guidance and now expects revenue to range from $8.8 billion to $9.1 billion, up from prior guidance of $8.4 billion to $8.8 billion. It expects adjusted EPS of $9.00 to $10.00, compared with prior guidance of $7.50 to $9.00. The FactSet consensus is for EPS of $8.82 and sales of $8.8 billion.
• Southwest Airlines Co. LUV, +5.24% reported a narrower-than-expected third-quarter loss as revenue fell less than forecast, though the airline continues to struggle with lowered demand for travel during the pandemic. Revenue dropped 68.2% to $1.79 billion, above the FactSet consensus of $1.70 billion, as monthly declines lessened in each month of the quarter. Load factor fell to 44.9% from 83.5%, but beat the FactSet consensus of 43.4%, while passenger revenue per available seat mile (PRASM) declined 58.7% to $5.49 but topped expectations of $3.45. The company reduced its October revenue decline guidance range to 65% to 70% from 65% to 75% and raised its load factor outlook to 50% to 55% from 45% to 55%. |
| | | Temple Regular Member
Posts : 7317 Join date : 2014-07-29
| Subject: Re: Trump / Pence / Covid-19. Fri Oct 23, 2020 2:43 pm | |
| trump, listenes to- Scott Atlas,” the Fox News 'radiologist' who has all but made “herd immunity” the official policy of this White House. and- Dr. Fauci says the last time President Trump has attended a coronavirus task force meeting was “several months ago.” “Direct involvement with the president in the discussions? I have not done that in a while.” |
| | | The Wise And Powerful Admin
Posts : 111040 Join date : 2014-07-29 Age : 101 Location : A Mile High
| Subject: Re: Trump / Pence / Covid-19. Tue Oct 27, 2020 3:29 pm | |
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| | | Temple Regular Member
Posts : 7317 Join date : 2014-07-29
| Subject: Re: Trump / Pence / Covid-19. Tue Oct 27, 2020 8:47 pm | |
| 10-27-2020
New Study Suggests COVID-19 May Age Some Patients' Brains By 10 Years.
The cognitive effects of the coronavirus can last for months in certain cases, according to researcher
People recovering from COVID-19 may suffer significant brain function impacts, with the worst cases of the infection linked to mental decline equivalent to the brain aging by 10 years, researchers warned on Tuesday.
A non-peer-reviewed study of more than 84,000 people, led by Adam Hampshire, a doctor at Imperial College London, found that in some severe cases, coronavirus infection is linked to substantial cognitive deficits for months.
“Our analyses ... align with the view that there are chronic cognitive consequences of having COVID-19,” the researchers wrote in a report of their findings. “People who had recovered, including those no longer reporting symptoms, exhibited significant cognitive deficits.”
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| | | The Wise And Powerful Admin
Posts : 111040 Join date : 2014-07-29 Age : 101 Location : A Mile High
| Subject: Re: Trump / Pence / Covid-19. Fri Nov 06, 2020 12:00 pm | |
| Coronavirus update:
U.S. new cases jump 20% to record 121,200 in a single day; ‘We North Dakotans are in crisis,’ says doctor Published: Nov. 6, 2020 at 1:52 p.m. ET By Ciara Linnane | marketWatch
13 states posted record case numbers on Thursday, including Illinois, Ohio, Indiana, Minnesota, Iowa, Oklahoma, Nebraska and North Dakota
Just one day after the U.S. for the first time surpassed 100,000 new cases of the coronavirus illness COVID-19 in a single day, it set a fresh record that was 20% higher, straining hospitals in areas of the Midwest and South as they struggle to cope with an influx of patients.
The U.S. reported at least 121,200 new cases on Thursday, according to a New York Times tracker, and at least 1,108 people died. In the last week, the U.S. has averaged 96,231 cases a day, an increase of 54% over the average of two weeks ago.
Data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University show 13 states posted record case numbers on Thursday, including Illinois, Ohio, Indiana, Minnesota, Iowa, Oklahoma, Nebraska and North Dakota.
North Dakota’s hospital system is at 90% capacity, according to the state health department. Dr. Jeffrey Sather, the chief of staff at Trinity Hospital in Minot, said Tuesday, “We North Dakotans are in crisis,” the Dickinson Press reported.
North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum moved nearly two dozen counties up a risk level on the state’s five-level color-coded system on Thursday, the Bismarck Tribune reported.
An Associated Press analysis of 376 counties with the highest number of new cases per capita, the overwhelming majority — 93% of those counties — voted for incumbent President Donald Trump, and most were areas with little compliance with public safety measures recommended by experts in place.
Most were rural counties in Montana, the Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa and Wisconsin, where few people are reportedly socially distancing or wearing face masks.
“Public health officials need to step back, listen to and understand the people who aren’t taking the same stance” on mask wearing and other control measures, Dr. Marcus Plescia of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials told the AP.
The analysis also found that Trump supporters were more bullish on the state of the pandemic than voters for his rival, Democrat Joe Biden. A full 36% of Trump voters said the pandemic was completely or mostly under control — as Trump has insisted — while 47% said it was somewhat under control.
In contrast, 82% of Biden voters said the pandemic is not at all under control.
Public health experts were dismayed by the latest numbers in tweets.
In other news:
• A poll worker in Missouri who tested positive for COVID-19 at a private lab on Oct. 30 failed to follow the advice of the lab to quarantine for 14 days, according to a statement from the St. Charles County health department and the county election authority. The worker showed up at the County’s Precinct 41 polling site, where 1,858 people voted. “Authorities have informed the County that this individual has died, although a cause of death has not been given at this time,” said the statement. Election workers who were at the site have been informed, and officials are working with family members to trace contacts.
• Denmark is pushing ahead with plans to cull its entire mink population of up to 17 million after a mutation of the coronavirus found in the animals spread to humans, potentially lowering the efficacy of future vaccines, the government said. Health authorities found five cases of the new virus strain had been recorded on mink farms and 12 cases in humans, Magnus Heunicke, Denmark’s minister for health, said Thursday in a statement. Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said at a news conference on Wednesday that there were now concerns that the new, mutated virus posed a “risk to the effectiveness” of a future COVID-19 vaccine. “It is very, very serious,” Frederiksen said. “Thus, the mutated virus in minks can have devastating consequences worldwide.”
• China is banning foreign arrivals from France and other countries that are experiencing a surge of infections, the Guardian reported. China, where the disease was first reported late last year, has had 91,558 cases and 4,740 fatalities, according to its official numbers. Beijing said the new restrictions are “reasonable and fair” and said it was following the practices of other countries.
• Aspirin will be investigated as a possible treatment for patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in one of the U.K.’s biggest trials looking into a range of potential treatments for the disease, MarketWatch’s Lina Saigol reported. Patients infected with coronavirus are at higher risk of blood clots forming in their blood vessels because of hyperactive platelets — small cell fragments in the blood that stop bleeding. Since aspirin is an antiplatelet agent, it may reduce the risk of blood clots in patients with COVID-19, the Randomised Evaluation of COVid-19 thERapY (RECOVERY) trial said on its website Friday. “There is a clear rationale for believing that it might be beneficial and it is safe, inexpensive and widely available,” said Peter Horby of the Nuffield Department of Medicine, a co–chief investigator of the RECOVERY trial. “We are looking for medicines for COVID-19 that can be used immediately by anyone, anywhere in the world. We do not know if aspirin is such a medicine, but we will find out,” Horby added.
Latest tallies
The number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 worldwide now stands at 48.9 million, the Johns Hopkins data show, and the death toll is 1.2 million. At least 32 million people have recovered from COVID-19.
Brazil has the second highest death toll at 161,106 and is third by cases at 5.6 million.
India is second in cases with 8.4 million and third in deaths at 124,985.
Mexico has the fourth highest death toll at 93,772 and 10th highest case tally at 949,147.
The U.K has 48,210 deaths, the highest in Europe and fifth highest in the world, and 1.1 million cases, or eighth highest in the world. |
| | | The Wise And Powerful Admin
Posts : 111040 Join date : 2014-07-29 Age : 101 Location : A Mile High
| Subject: Re: Trump / Pence / Covid-19. Fri Nov 06, 2020 10:31 pm | |
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