Re: Uh Oh: Fatal COVID Outbreak Shutters Florida County Office
Originally posted by Adam_PoE
A COVID-19 outbreak responsible for four hospitalizations and two deaths in a single department forces closure of the Manatee County, Florida government building. One employee who was vaccinated escapes infection.Read more HERE.
"One employee who was vaccinated escapes infection" -Snip
Only a single employee was smart enough to get vaccinated? Oh Florida...
Originally posted by Robtard
"One employee who was vaccinated escapes infection" -SnipOnly a single employee was smart enough to get vaccinated? Oh Florida...
That is what happens when the Republican governor plays politics with the pandemic, keeps the state open, and lies about the infection rates and deaths.
Originally posted by RobtardSadly, no doubt. I'm still trying to understand why Nigeria has almost zero Covid. Is it the youth of the population? Centre of viral diversity. **** knows! It will take someone smarter than me...
The Delta variant (aka India strain) is going to spread in the US and it's going to be worse in states like Florida.
Nigeria should be studied then.
The good thing here, 45% of the US population is vaccinated now and that includes a 20ish% portion of the population who outright refuse to get vaccinated, the dumbdumbs if you will.
That's going to help when the Delta variant starts ripping through America, the smart people will have some immunity, so even if they contract it, it won't be as severe a sickness.
The states with the lowest vaccination rates will be hit the hardest when it comes to hospitalizations and deaths, proportionally. Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, Wyoming, Louisiana, Tennessee, Georgia, Idaho, Utah, West Virginia.
Originally posted by Robtardwe have had 2 waves some people I knew my age and older died. Testing is shit. But honestly no one has it now. Most expats and wealthy people are vaccinated. It is weird.
Nigeria should be studied then.The good thing here, 45% of the US population is vaccinated now and that includes a 20ish% portion of the population who outright refuse to get vaccinated, the dumbdumbs if you will.
That's going to help when the Delta variant starts ripping through America, the smart people will have some immunity, so even if they contract it, it won't be as severe a sickness.
The states with the lowest vaccination rates will be hit the hardest when it comes to hospitalizations and deaths, proportionally. Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, Wyoming, Louisiana, Tennessee, Georgia, Idaho, Utah, West Virginia.
Originally posted by RobtardYeah, everyone I care about over 35 is vaccinated now in the UK. But the uk is only the number of 2 large US states. Your problems are numbers. The US is really many countries together.
Delta is going to start ripping through the UK as well, but it seems your vax-rates are higher than ours.
Originally posted by Old Man Whirly!okay, I’m just going to have a joke here.
Sadly, no doubt. I'm still trying to understand why Nigeria has almost zero Covid. Is it the youth of the population? Centre of viral diversity. **** knows! It will take someone smarter than me...
Nigerian prince: come to the palace, there will be a great feast!
Liberian president: cool, what are we having?
Nigerian prince: no, you don’t understand, you are the feast.
Then the soldiers brutally attacked him cut him up and ate him. This sparked off two Liberian civil wars and another in Sierra Leone.
I know, depressing, but when a cannibal says he’s going to eat you, you say ‘**** off’
Delta Variant Caseloads Are Rising in Red States
Originally posted by Robtard
The Delta variant (aka India strain) is going to spread in the US and it's going to be worse in states like Florida.
The rapid spread of the delta variant of the coronavirus is poised to divide the United States again, with highly-vaccinated areas continuing toward post-pandemic freedom and poorly-vaccinated regions threatened by greater caseloads and hospitalizations, health officials warned this week.
The highly-transmissible strain is taxing hospitals in a rural, lightly-vaccinated part of Missouri, and caseloads and hospitalizations are on the rise in states such as Arkansas, Nevada, and Utah, where fewer than 50% of the eligible population has received at least one dose of vaccine.
Originally posted by Bashar Teg
no true hospital?
Depends on where and how rural in MO, I live in SW MO and know for a FACT many ppl didn't get the vaccine. I just walked into a pharma the day they opened it up and since no one took it I got mine in April and still I'm positive they didn't use much vaccine I saw no one there and no lines.
I doubt many ppl in this area will regardless of what you tell them.
Missouri doesn't even exist. Phaik Nooz.
They took MO off the flyover state list since our corn was growing so tall it was obstructing flights
This is what everyone who's got the plandemic poison pumped into their veins will happening to them as we speak eventually it'll will they've looking forwarded too.
#TrueStory
#TrumpSaidSo
Originally posted by Adam_PoE
Yeah, and those are all the beds they have for the entire county.
I've been vaccinated but I see MO as a problem state to get majority vaccinated, the only saving aspect is that there is alot less contact indoors since out side of KC, St Louis, Springfield it tends to be more rural. I can see Arkansas as a big problem as well......imagine redneck rural MO now multiply the redneck factor by at least 1.5 and you get Arkansas 😱 😮