The CDC just added the Bahamas to the list of high risk areas, so expect to see tighter restrictions for returning to the US.
Sure seems hospitals are pretty busy and ICUs are pretty full. Is that from driving accidents? I don’t think so…
Delta decided to increase their health insurance $200/mo for the unvaccinated. I don’t personally think that’s a political stunt any more than smoking increases the cost of life insurance. It’s actuarial.
OK - so the masks aren’t perfect and neither are the vaccines. Other than the adolescent ranting, what do those opposed to these scientifically substantiated tools suggest?
Of course not. Quite the non-sequitur! Seemed like a pretty straightforward observation. Right up there with “a lie one wants to believe is still a lie”: applies to all of us.Does holding a different opinion than you do make a person dishonorable?
The CDC just added the Bahamas to the list of high risk areas, so expect to see tighter restrictions for returning to the US.
Isn't there a guy in the pa32 Facebook group who has a house there and makes the trip every month or so?That's an interesting one I hadn't really considered that as an issue and probably should have. Almost all the information I can find seems to apply to commercial air travel. Has anyone on here done it lately? Might all be different in 3 months time but who knows.
I mowed the grass today with a vented mask…..
Of course not. Quite the non-sequitur! Seemed like a pretty straightforward observation. Right up there with “a lie one wants to believe is still a lie”: applies to all of us.
Sheesh…
Yes, I meant that, especially if someone intentionally ignored the request of the shop owner, etc.Hardly a non-sequitur. Your post implied that someone who read a request on a sign and decided (for whatever reason) not to wear a mask was a dishonorable person.
I'll see your "Sheesh" and raise you an "Oh brother...."
Yes, I meant that, especially if someone intentionally ignored the request of the shop owner, etc.
Your retort was “Does holding a different opinion than you do make a person dishonorable?”. Completely different. My opinion on a matter has nothing to do with another person’s honor. Still a non-sequitir. And still “sheesh” since an “honor system” indeed depends on, well, honor.
I find that to be an arrogant and judgmental attitude, but I’m not going to take this thread any further off the primary topic.
Whatever! Oh, ouch, that stung.Whatever…
Fly safely!
LOL - what was my option: reason with someone who can’t accept that an honor system requires honor? It’s kinda in the definition.Whatever! Oh, ouch, that stung.
(This is not addressed to any specific person.) Whatever your personal and political views about masks, vaccines, etc, don't forget to be kind and civil. There's no need to try to prove a point with everything you do in.
Sorry to continue an off-topic drift, but this just isn't true. Presumably you're referring to the VAERS data, which show that some 6,000+ people in the U.S. who died had also been vaccinated against Covid. There is no evidence of causation. When you consider how many people have died (of all causes) since the vaccines became available, and the roughly half of the U.S. population who've had at least one shot, the number is probably much higher -- but still doesn't show causation.This so called vaccine is at at least 6000 deaths, and counting.
Recent CDC data found that 74% of those who tested positive for Covid-19 in a Massachusetts analysis had been fully-vaccinated. Equally as troubling for those advocating vaccination-for-all: four out of five people hospitalized with Covid were fully-vaccinated. And CDC said "viral load” — indicating how able the human host is to spread Covid-19 — is about the same among the vaccinated and unvaccinated. Contrary to the infamous misinformation by CDC Director Rochelle Walensky last May, vaccinated people can— and are— spreading Covid. (CDC officials later corrected Walensky's false claim.)
Sorry to continue an off-topic drift, but this just isn't true. Presumably you're referring to the VAERS data, which show that some 6,000+ people in the U.S. who died had also been vaccinated against Covid. There is no evidence of causation. When you consider how many people have died (of all causes) since the vaccines became available, and the roughly half of the U.S. population who've had at least one shot, the number is probably much higher -- but still doesn't show causation.
From your article: "Recent CDC data found that 74% of those who tested positive for Covid-19 in a Massachusetts analysis had been fully-vaccinated."Before the thread gets locked, and it will when other evidence is presented, I'd like to add an article that has a number of good references. There are many other things that could be mentioned as far as how to overcome (treat) this virus. So much more is now known so please take a moment to read and consider some of the other truths that are being learned and not talked about:
Article here: https://sharylattkisson.com/2021/08...cine-induced-immunity-the-definitive-summary/
PS: Not trying to get the thread locked and no intent to argue ...
From your article: "Recent CDC data found that 74% of those who tested positive for Covid-19 in a Massachusetts analysis had been fully-vaccinated."
As has been widely pointed out, 74% shouldn't be surprising in an area (Provincetown) with some of the highest vaccination rates in the country.
Illinois health officials recently announced more than 160 fully-vaccinated people have died of Covid-19, and at least 644 been hospitalized; ten deaths and 51 hospitalizations counted in the prior week. Israel’s Health Ministry recently said effectiveness of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine has fallen to 40 percent. Last month, 100 vaccinated British sailors isolated on a ship at sea reportedly came down with Covid seven weeks into their deployment. In July, New Jersey reported 49 fully vaccinated residents had died of Covid; 27 in Louisiana; 80 in Massachusetts. In Iceland there is a spike in cases, mostly among the vaccinated, among a highly-vaccinated population that had previously claimed to have defeated Covid-19. Of 116 cases diagnosed in one day, 73 were among the vaccinated; 43 were unvaccinated.
Here's something else to take a moment to consider: The percentage of those who tested positive for Covid-19 who had been fully vaccinated doesn't tell us anything without also considering the percentage of the total population that has been fully vaccinated. Why? Because no vaccine is 100% effective, and if 100% of the population were to get fully vaccinated, then ALL of the people who tested positive for Covid-19 would have been fully vaccinated.Before the thread gets locked, and it will when other evidence is presented, I'd like to add an article that has a number of good references. There are many other things that could be mentioned as far as how to overcome (treat) this virus. So much more is now known so please take a moment to read and consider some of the other truths that are being learned and not talked about:
Recent CDC data found that 74% of those who tested positive for Covid-19 in a Massachusetts analysis had been fully-vaccinated. Equally as troubling for those advocating vaccination-for-all: four out of five people hospitalized with Covid were fully-vaccinated. And CDC said "viral load” — indicating how able the human host is to spread Covid-19 — is about the same among the vaccinated and unvaccinated. Contrary to the infamous misinformation by CDC Director Rochelle Walensky last May, vaccinated people can— and are— spreading Covid. (CDC officials later corrected Walensky's false claim.)
Article here: https://sharylattkisson.com/2021/08...cine-induced-immunity-the-definitive-summary/
PS: Not trying to get the thread locked and no intent to argue ...
Well, we tried.Folks, let’s stay on topic please.