Vaccine

My message is csimple too: "No and never!!" I know a 2022 that had to come home from college because this is being forced on girls who want to continue playing soccer. This is so crazy. I feel for all of you who will obey so you can pay to play. Any 2022s telling Big U a Big F U? Just curious and sorry for asking such personal questions. My other buddy told me his dd is already depressed and hates practices, her environment and all the pressure to obey politics from the coach in order to play and now wants to come back home to California. On a side, my other buddy dd loves her school and is super happy so not all bad. I do hear more horrible stories then happy one, just being honest.

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Dr. Fraud is back in the news just in time for Mid Terms. Remember two weeks of lockdown and go back to normal 2 1/2 years ago? Get ready for another lockdown folks. Their play book is a joke but so many of you follow them and take all the Jabs and boosters. Let's see who obeys this time.

We Can’t Just “Put This Pandemic Behind Us”
 
The "doesn't work" denial of the last couple of years is why the number is over a million dead, and not in line with the proportion one would expect from looking at the results of more rational countries.

o.k., I'll bite. Which are the more "rational countries"? Because if you are talking deaths per capita and comparing to Europe or South America, we aren't doing very much worse than them. Once you adjust for body mass average, we're right there with them (and there's some variation in this band depending on how deaths are counted by the individual country which account for the difference between say Croatia and France). So it's not a million lives that were saved...you can argue may 100K, 200K, even 300K but it's not a million. I'm dying to know once and for all what your opinion of a country that could have saved all or nearly all million.
 
o.k., I'll bite. Which are the more "rational countries"? Because if you are talking deaths per capita and comparing to Europe or South America, we aren't doing very much worse than them. Once you adjust for body mass average, we're right there with them. So it's not a million lives that were saved...you can argue may 100K, 200K, even 300K but it's not a million. I'm dying to know once and for all what your opinion of a country that could have saved all or nearly all million.
Straw man.
 
o.k., I'll bite. Which are the more "rational countries"? Because if you are talking deaths per capita and comparing to Europe or South America, we aren't doing very much worse than them. Once you adjust for body mass average, we're right there with them (and there's some variation in this band depending on how deaths are counted by the individual country which account for the difference between say Croatia and France). So it's not a million lives that were saved...you can argue may 100K, 200K, even 300K but it's not a million. I'm dying to know once and for all what your opinion of a country that could have saved all or nearly all million.
Good bite. Ask him about the 100,000+ fentenyl deaths last year and the 150,000+ this year. 250,000 young people dead.
 
Straw man.
and you didn't answer the question. what would have saved a million lives in this country from the effects of a novel virus? denying access to unhealthy food? a miracle cure for diabetes, heart disease? Not putting vulnerable elderly people at risk? less politics?
 
The "doesn't work" denial of the last couple of years is why the number is over a million dead, and not in line with the proportion one would expect from looking at the results of more rational countries.
babbling, clueless, and linear...as expected. What rational country would you compare the US to? let's see a sweet comparison .
 
and you didn't answer the question. what would have saved a million lives in this country from the effects of a novel virus? denying access to unhealthy food? a miracle cure for diabetes, heart disease? Not putting vulnerable elderly people at risk? less politics?

The there were 3 big differences which made the US experience somewhat worse in deaths per capita than Europe:

1. Limited vaccine uptake during the early delta and omicron waves. It meant for a lot of people the virus remained novel while European nations with higher vaccine uptakes had less deaths in that time period. With 80%+ of the population now infected, however, it's moot, and even in countries with very high vaccine uptake (like Australia) and/or natural infection (such as Peru), deaths continue.

2. The higher U.S. obesity index since we know obese people tend to do worse with COVID than skinnier ones. The lockdowns, however, seemed to be counter productive with this one.

3. The failure to gird nursing homes early on in the pandemic which led to waves of mass death early on until they fixed it.

That's really it, short of the countries that were functionally islands and managed to shut themselves off from one wave or another, or China.
 
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