The kooky COVID Cult in the news

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D FOR DEMOCRAT, D FOR DUNCE



As Michigan is in the midst of the nation’s largest current coronavirus surge, "experts" say it’s hard to put the blame on one variable. Rather, the current influx of infections could be due to several reasons.

While other states have the more contagious variants present and similarly reduced restrictions as Michigan, they aren’t experiencing the same surges and it’s hard to pinpoint why, said Joseph Eisenberg, a "global public health expert" at the University of Michigan.

It will likely take years to understand which restrictions worked to combat the spread of the coronavirus and which did not, as well as what led to the surges, Eisenberg said.

“It’s not as deterministic as some people think, the spread of a virus throughout a community,” he said. “I know it’s not a satisfying answer. Yes, variants may be playing a role and the fact that COVID fatigue is happening. It’s a combination of a lot of things but also, a lot of spread and outbreaks are what we call stochastic events. It’s random.”










https://tinyurl.com/3esshb3x
 
Hopefully you made a police report.
Posting without a link is an affront to us all and a threat to society.

Copyright laws


Nope


I merely chased his ass out of the hood while my many neighbor witnesses watched my back


I never saw him again

Lived there just fine for years
 
Hopefully you made a police report.
Posting without a link is an affront to us all and a threat to society.

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Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 107 http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html
 
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Lord Fauci ‘not sure’ why Texas doesn’t have COVID uptick after nixing masks

It’s been some five weeks since Texas lifted its mask mandate, and there has yet to be an explosion of COVID-19 cases.

It’s something Lord Fauci can’t quite explain.

“I’m not really quite sure,” he told MSNBC this week. “It could be they’re doing things outdoors.”

Daily "cases" (a mostly meaningless statistic) in Texas hovered above 7,000 in early March, when Gov. Greg Abbott lifted the state’s mask rules, leaving it up to individuals and organizations to make their own decisions.

Now, according to the Centers for Disease Control, new cases of COVID-19 are under 4,000.

Lord Fauci noted there can be a delay in how and when cases manifest.

“Often you have to wait a few weeks before you see the effect of what you’re doing right now,” he mumbled.

“I hope they continue to tick down. If they do, that would be great but there’s always the concern when you pull back on methods — particularly on things like indoor dining and bars that are crowded — you could see a delay and then all of a sudden tick right back up,” he whined unconvincingly.

“We’ve been fooled before by situations where people begin to open back up. Nothing happens and then all of a sudden several weeks later things explode on you, so we’ve got to be careful we don’t prematurely judge that,” he added with a smug, knowing grin.

Bungler Biden's handlers had instructed him to slam the decision to ease the state’s mask mandate as “neanderthal thinking.”

You are literally the dumbest inbred moron on the planet
 
Over one year ago, leaders the world over closed their borders in the name of disease transmission mitigation.

Some did so in what was an extension of policies enacted earlier, and others did so for the first time in generations.

And more than a year after those initial measures were implemented, some countries remain committed to closure: at all costs.

The Covid pandemic enticed governments to do far more than just cease leisure travel (a move that even the World Health Organization called futile during the last major global disease threat, the 2009 swine flu pandemic).

No measure was off-limits this time around.

Most countries closed their borders completely or partially, with no less than 77 issuing entry restrictions on March 16 alone. Roughly 65 percent of the world’s population of 7.7 billion people found themselves in shuttered nations. Global air passenger traffic dropped by 60 percent.



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U.S. taxi services see business boost helping Canadians avoid hotel quarantine


Airport transport service, Buffalo Limousine, lost about 70 per cent of its business during COVID-19 pandemic. But the company said its luck changed recently, thanks to Canadian snowbirds returning from U.S. sunbelt states who want to avoid Canada's hotel quarantine requirement.

"This is a huge, huge shot in the arm for us, this Canadian snowbird travel," said Carla Boccio, owner of Buffalo Limousine. "It's a godsend."

Since February 22, air passengers entering Canada have been required to quarantine for up to three days in a designated hotel and pay for the cost — up to $2,000. However, travellers entering by land are exempt from the rule.

To avoid the hotel quarantine, some snowbirds are flying to U.S. cities close to the Canadian border — such as Buffalo, N.Y. — and then hiring a ground transport service — such as Buffalo Limousine — to drive them across the Canadian border.

"When Canada imposed that hotel [quarantine], then it was just like our phones were exploding," said Boccio. "What I hear from the majority of these people, it's not even so much the cost, it's like you're in jail with this hotel quarantine."

CBC News interviewed three airport transport services based in Buffalo and one in Burlington, Vt., which is about 70 kilometres from the Quebec border. The companies said they'll drive Canadians to or across the Canadian border for around $100 US and, for an added fee, the Buffalo companies will drive passengers directly to their homes in Ontario.

Each company said it has seen a boost in business after Canada introduced the hotel quarantine requirement.

Since late February, Buffalo Limousine has, on average, transported 50 customers a day across the Canadian border, increasing its lagging business by around 50 per cent, Boccio said.

"I'm more thankful than I could even put into words."

Buffalo Limousine charges about $120 US to drive a couple from the Buffalo airport across the border to neighbouring Fort Erie, Ont., or Niagara Falls, said Boccio. A trip to downtown Toronto costs around $300 US.



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