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  1. #12951
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    U.S. states with most COVID deaths per 100,000 people:

    1. Mississippi: 308
    2. New Jersey: 306
    3. Louisiana: 288
    4. New York: 281
    5. Massachusetts: 267
    6. Arizona: 266
    7. Rhode Island: 265
    8. Alabama: 262
    9. Arkansas: 245
    10. Florida: 237

  2. #12952
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    Quote Originally Posted by steepconcrete View Post
    U.S. states with most COVID deaths per 100,000 people:

    1. Mississippi: 308
    2. New Jersey: 306
    3. Louisiana: 288
    4. New York: 281
    5. Massachusetts: 267
    6. Arizona: 266
    7. Rhode Island: 265
    8. Alabama: 262
    9. Arkansas: 245
    10. Florida: 237
    Let's see it for 2021 only after vaccines became available and mask mandates were dropped by certain states.. If you scroll up you'll see some. It's already been covered that this data has inflected greatly thanks to antivaxxers..
    Go that way really REALLY fast. If something gets in your way, TURN!

  3. #12953
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    Italy saw a 14.1% case fatality rate through August 2020. The Northeastern United States was also hit hard early in the pandemic. Both served to show how deadly Covid is when it hits a naive unprepared population.

    That was then, now, slower vaccine uptake means more deaths. If you live in Florida or Mississippi you're 10x more likely to be killed by Covid today than if you live a state with higher vax rates.

  4. #12954
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    Quote Originally Posted by MultiVerse View Post
    Physicists either invented a new dimension to accommodate the version of chess being played here, or this is just one dimensional checkers:

    https://www.breitbart.com/entertainm...p-voters-dead/
    I'm starting to feel more and more sorry for these people - ignorant and fearful minds so twisted in knots by manipulative fuckers they don't know which way is up.

  5. #12955
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    Jamie Azar left a rehab hospital in Tennessee this week with the help of a walker after spending the entire month of August in the ICU and on a ventilator. She had received a shot of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine in mid-July but tested positive for the coronavirus within 11 days and nearly died.

    Now Azar, who earns about $36,000 a year as the director of a preschool at a Baptist church in Georgia, is facing thousands of dollars in medical expenses that she can’t afford.

    “I’m very thankful to be home. I am still weak. And I’m just waiting for the bills to come in to know what to do with them,” she said Wednesday, after returning home.

    In 2020, as the pandemic took hold, U.S. health insurance companies declared they would cover 100 percent of the costs for covid treatment, waiving co-pays and expensive deductibles for hospital stays that frequently range into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    But this year, most insurers have reinstated co-pays and deductibles for covid patients, in many cases even before vaccines became widely available. The companies imposed the costs as industry profits remained strong or grew in 2020, with insurers paying out less to cover elective procedures that hospitals suspended during the crisis.

    Now the financial burden of covid is falling unevenly on patients across the country, varying widely by health-care plan and geography, according to a survey of the two largest health plans in every state by the nonprofit and nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation.

    If you’re fortunate enough to live in Vermont or New Mexico, for instance, state mandates require insurance companies to cover 100 percent of treatment. But most Americans with covid are now exposed to the uncertainty, confusion and expense of business-as-usual medical billing and insurance practices — joining those with cancer, diabetes and other serious, costly illnesses.



    A widow with no children, Azar, 57, is part of the unlucky majority. Her experience is a sign of what to expect if covid, as most scientists fear, becomes endemic: a permanent, regular health threat.

    The carrier for her employee health insurance, UnitedHealthcare, reinstated patient cost-sharing Jan. 31. That means, because she got sick months later, she could be on the hook for $5,500 in deductibles, co-pays and out-of-network charges this year for her care in a Georgia hospital near her home, including her ICU stay, according to estimates by her family. They anticipate she could face another $5,500 in uncovered expenses next year as her recovery continues.

    Bills related to her stay at the out-of-network rehab hospital in Tennessee could climb as high as $10,000 more, her relatives have estimated, but they acknowledged they were uncertain this month what exactly to expect, even after asking UnitedHealthcare and the providers.
    I have been in this State for 30 years and I am willing to admit that I am part of the problem.

    "Happiest years of my life were earning < $8.00 and hour, collecting unemployment every spring and fall, no car, no debt and no responsibilities. 1984-1990 Park City UT"

  6. #12956
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    “I’m not paying for anyone’s bad choices! Git yer own health care.”

    Gets covid. Gets intubated. Asks for lung transplant. Gets flown 6 states away on special ICU plane. Goes on ECMO. Survives. Months of costly rehab. Who is paying for all this?

    Numerous others infected at same time. Long covid everywhere.

    Then idiots are all like….”let’s just look solely at death rates to see how states are doing.”

  7. #12957
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    Quote Originally Posted by Smoova View Post
    I'm starting to feel more and more sorry for these people - ignorant and fearful minds so twisted in knots by manipulative fuckers they don't know which way is up.
    I'm guessing you read the comments? I had to check to see if anyone called him out for the obvious attempt to manipulate them. Judging from what I saw they didn't catch on, so he probably struck the right tone for the "wouldn't put it past em" crowd. Oof.

  8. #12958
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    Quote Originally Posted by mcski View Post
    NPR has hired a Senior Horse Pill Correspondent

    https://www.npr.org/sections/health-...fyJfU2USnkaGps
    Includes updates on the Ohio case but NPR should not say the ruling was "reversed." A reversal implies that a higher court found that the lower court made an incorrect decision based on the evidence and law at the time the lower court made the ruling. That is not what occurred. Here is what occurred:

    -8/20 plaintiff/wife filed complaint. Case assigned to Judge Oster, who would normally be making all decision on the case.
    -8/23, due to the emergency nature of the request, court set an emergency temporary injunction hearing. Judge Oster is busy on this date so Judge Howard filled in. Because this hearing was only three days after the complaint was filed, the Hospital/defendant presented no evidence to counter claims made by plaintiff. Judge Howard issued a temporary order that automatically expires in 14 days ordering the hospital to give the guy ivermectin. Judge Howard set a future hearing exactly 14 days from his order (the date it expires) in front of the originally assigned judge, Judge Oster. Judge Oster and Judge Howard are the same level of judges (one is not a higher court).
    -9/7, 14 days after the original temporary order, Judge Oster denies plaintiff's request for an injunction. Between 8/23 and the hearing on 9/7, the defendant/hospital filed substantial evidence outlinging the dangers and and lack of effectiveness of ivermectin (again, this evidence was not before Judge Howard when he made his decision). Also, after 8/23, but before the hearing on 9/7, the CDC, FDA, AMA all issued statements against the use of ivermectin for COVID, which was presented by the hospital and considered by Judge Oster. Finally, Dr. Wagshul, the plaintiff's star witness, testified that he had prescribed ivermectin despite the fact he had never met the patient in person and that he "honestly didn't know" if continuing to administer ivermectin would benefit the patient in any way. So Judge Oster made the easy and obvious choice to rule in favor of the hospital/defendant.

    It may be semantics, but it is important for the media to accurately report what happens in the courts or Americans lose faith in the judiciary and decry activist, politicized judges. Judge Oster did not "reverse" Judge Howard (they were different hearings, at different times, and took in consideration different facts) In fact, if Judge Oster had been the judge at the first hearing it is completely plausible, and even likely, that he would have ruled the exact same way. Poor Judge Howard had this thrown on his lap and now America thinks he's a right wing nut job because of the media's poor reporting on the case. If there is any bad guy here it is definitely Dr. Wagshul. But America loves doctors and hates lawyers so Wagshul won't suffer any consequences.

    NPR at least had the decency to link Judge Oster's ruling, which is the basis for all of the facts above:

    https://www.documentcloud.org/docume...87-oster-order

  9. #12959
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    Quote Originally Posted by MultiVerse View Post
    Physicists either invented a new dimension to accommodate the version of chess being played here, or this is just one dimensional checkers:

    https://www.breitbart.com/entertainm...p-voters-dead/
    Because leftists like Stern and CNNLOL and Joe Biden and Nancy Pelosi and Anthony Fauci are deliberately looking to manipulate Trump supporters into not getting vaccinated.
    Works for me. Now they can own the libs by getting vaccinated! That'll learn 'em!

    If this is what it takes I say go for it.

  10. #12960
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    Thanks for the procedural write up altasnob. Journalists often struggle with explaining these processes and standards that courts must follow and much gets lost in the shuffle. Both of these hearings had different standards the court needed to adhere to at the time. It certainly shows how important the judicial standard being applied in a case can sway the outcome of the issue at hand.

  11. #12961
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    It may be semantics, but it is important for the media to accurately report what happens in the courts or Americans lose faith in the judiciary and decry activist, politicized judges.
    ain’t the media’s fault judges don’t give a damn about explaining themselves clearly to the public.

  12. #12962
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    Quote Originally Posted by dunfree View Post
    ain’t the media’s fault judges don’t give a damn about explaining themselves clearly to the public.
    Bullshit. NPR either has their own lawyers on staff to help them accurately report legal decisions, or they can reach out to attorneys to help them (who will assist for free if the media agrees to name drop the attorney in the article). This is law school 101/high school civics class stuff here. They know exactly what they are doing when they use the word "reverse." They want to paint a picture of a rouge, radical, idiot, lower court judge making an unpopular opinion and then get "reversed" by the intelligent higher appellate judge. The truth is boring and NPR's version helps them get clicks.

  13. #12963
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  14. #12964
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    Quote Originally Posted by altasnob View Post
    Bullshit. NPR either has their own lawyers on staff to help them accurately report legal decisions, or they can reach out to attorneys to help them (who will assist for free if the media agrees to name drop the attorney in the article). This is law school 101/high school civics class stuff here. They know exactly what they are doing when they use the word "reverse." They want to paint a picture of a rouge, radical, idiot, lower court judge making an unpopular opinion and then get "reversed" by the intelligent higher appellate judge. The truth is boring and NPR's version helps them get clicks.
    oh fuck off. The judicial system doesn’t want to explain itself to the people who pay their bills. Yeah, it’s all a conspiracy

    And fyi, often editors do that shit, not the reporter.

  15. #12965
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    The antivaxxers sure are high on things like ivermectin and monoclonal antibodies, and certainly the latter at least is known to be effective, but doesn't it seem preferable to not get severe Covid in the first place? Luckily we have these things called vaccines that are very effective at doing just that. Would you rather play Russian roulette or just not have a gun pointed at your temple in the first place?

  16. #12966
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    So the libs like vaccines and the MAGAs like monoclonal antibodies.
    It's a matter of style--like skiing vs snowboarding.

    Isn't it?

  17. #12967
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    Quote Originally Posted by old goat View Post
    So the libs like vaccines and the MAGAs like monoclonal antibodies.
    It's a matter of style--like skiing vs snowboarding.

    Isn't it?
    Maybe more like jumping off a bridge with a bungee cord vs. without one.

  18. #12968
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    Quote Originally Posted by altasnob View Post
    In fact, if Judge Oster had been the judge at the first hearing it is completely plausible, and even likely, that he would have ruled the exact same way. Poor Judge Howard had this thrown on his lap and now America thinks he's a right wing nut job because of the media's poor reporting on the case.
    Judge Oster also ruled even though the parties did not address any harm to third parties or the public interest, "The public interest would not be served by issuing the preliminary injunction":

    "While this court is sympathetic to the Plaintiff and understands the idea of wanting to do anything to help her loved one, public policy should not and does not support allowing a physician to try “any” type of treatment on human beings ... What is more, public policy in this case encompasses a number of broader issues including a hospital's standard of care decisions, mandating doctors and nurses to provide care they believe unnecessary, ethical concerns of all doctors involved, patient autonomy, fiduciary duty, accreditation standards for patient protections, obligating one doctor to carry out the treatment regimen/plan of another doctor, ... "


    In other words, because Oster says as a first principle the court should not medicate or legislate from the bench it's more likely he would not have ruled the same way as Judge Howard.

  19. #12969
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    Quote Originally Posted by Carl_Mega View Post
    I'd have no problem with this position discussion... However, in my observations - there are like 5 maybe 6 people total taking this stance and none in a position of authority. It's a unicorn hypothetical.

    Instead, we have people that are being purposely adversarial to bettering our situation - virtually at all costs....until it's too late. Further, the standard is to use disinformation to undermine any effective means.... this includes:

    COVID denial
    COVID downplay
    COVID as a ruse for "new world order"
    Mask downplay
    Baseless mask 'risks'
    Distancing downplay
    badfaith zero-sum game position pitting COVID/measures vs. Liberty, Economics, your health
    Vaccines don't work
    Vaccines are worse than the disease
    Vaccines as a nefarious mechanism for trans human / tracking / dna modifier - outlandish conspiracy
    Vaccinated vs. unvaxed as equal risks/transmission/outcome
    Conspiracy that leads to some other remedy being denied to us
    Natural immunity as a viable "out" of the situation
    Political boogey-manship - some authority is out to get you
    Players who know the dangers, risks and best course of action but lean into the denier narrative for tribal wins
    Hypocrites who take protective measures themselves but preach non-compliance for political gamesmanship: foreign actors, financial opportunists, political hacks

    I've mentioned before - actual policy discussion is a good thing. Bad-faith posturing, backed by disinformation obfuscation is the opposing narrative norm. I'd love to see it some other way but the benevolent, principled libertarian strawman you present simply isn't representative enough to even enter the conversation - it's used as another ploy... an additional 'what if....." to give legitimacy to those who deserve none.
    This forum needs an upvote button

    Thank you for the list

  20. #12970
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    Quote Originally Posted by MultiVerse View Post
    Judge Oster also ruled even though the parties did not address any harm to third parties or the public interest, "The public interest would not be served by issuing the preliminary injunction":

    "While this court is sympathetic to the Plaintiff and understands the idea of wanting to do anything to help her loved one, public policy should not and does not support allowing a physician to try “any” type of treatment on human beings ... What is more, public policy in this case encompasses a number of broader issues including a hospital's standard of care decisions, mandating doctors and nurses to provide care they believe unnecessary, ethical concerns of all doctors involved, patient autonomy, fiduciary duty, accreditation standards for patient protections, obligating one doctor to carry out the treatment regimen/plan of another doctor, ... "


    In other words, because Oster says as a first principle the court should not medicate or legislate from the bench it's more likely he would not have ruled the same way as Judge Howard.
    Did the original ruling result in the guy getting Ivermectin, or did it just mean the matter was delayed 14 days?

  21. #12971
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    In response to the original judge's emergency order the hospital administered 30mg of ivermectin a day to the patient. So semantics and blah blah aside, Judge Oster either reversed or dismissed or whatever the original action of 'poor' Judge Howard.

  22. #12972
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    Quote Originally Posted by MultiVerse View Post
    In other words, because Oster says as a first principle the court should not medicate or legislate from the bench, it's far more likely he would not have ruled the same way as Judge Howard.
    I disagree. Remember, there was no evidence in front of Judge Howard except what was presented by the plaintiff. A similar situation occurs in requests for domestic violence protection orders. To get a protection order, the plaintiff fills out a form saying what bad things the defendant did or is going to do and signs it under penalty of perjury. The judge reads that form and if it meets the requirement of the law, the judge issues a temporary order that automatically expires in, say, 14 days. The judge grants this temporary order without ever hearing any evidence from the defendant/domestic violence bad guy (because the plaintiff is making this request themselves, and has no legal duty to inform the defendant of the hearing at this stage). At a typical docket, the judge may here 10 to 30 of these requests and judges definitely errors on the side of granting the plaintiff's request, no matter how bs their claims may sound. Then, in 14 days, there is a "full hearing" where for the first time the defendant gets a chance to counter the plaintiff's claims. This second, full hearing is the important hearing where the court is considering all the evidence and making a ruling that will last much longer than 14 days.

    The point being, at the first, emergency hearing, when there is very little evidence before the court, the court errors on siding with the plaintiff. The court wants to keep the status quo, and in the ivermectin case, the status quo is giving the guy the drug so his wife can't claim the court and hospital killed him. Then, at the full hearing 14 days later, when both sides now have have had time to make their case, the court can make a ruling based on the full facts, without defaulting for the plaintiff. This system works because what's the harm of giving the guy ivermectin for 14 days just like what's the harm of issuing a protection order for 14 days even if, in reality, the plaintiff hasn't met the burden? Again, the important hearing is the second, non-emergency, full hearing.

    Judge Oster's ruling did a great job of explaining everything in the case and he definitely made a point of trying to explain Judge Howard's previous ruling. My guess is Judge Howard foolishly didn't realize his initial two page ruling was going to make international news, and he probably should have taken time to give a more full explanation of the ruling. But judges typically don't even draft the orders they sign. They make the prevailing party draft it and if the other side has no objections, the judge signs it, sometimes without really reading it. Judges, particularly trial court level judges like we have here, are actually busy. They are the ER doctors of the court system. In the trenches so to speak.

  23. #12973
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    While you're entitled to your opinion, Judge Oster clearly says even though neither party addressed the issue, let alone presented evidence, the court should not medicate or legislate from the bench. That's his written opinion. It's not unreasonable to think he would have applied the same reasoning initially too.

  24. #12974
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    Quote Originally Posted by MultiVerse View Post
    In response to the original judge's emergency order the hospital administered 30mg of ivermectin a day to the patient. So semantics and blah blah aside, Judge Oster either reversed or dismissed or whatever the original action of 'poor' Judge Howard.
    That's not correct. The original decision has no bearing on the result of the second hearing. A judge can rule one way on the first hearing, and then rule a different way on the second hearing, and they are not reversing themselves. The original order automatically expired. There is no dismissing, there is no reversing. Same for protection order cases I described above.

    I get it that it is easier for the media to just say Judge Oster "reversed" Judge Howard rather than explain the exact procedural history. But the procedural history is important here so Americans have a more accurate view of how their legal system operates. Both Judge Howard and Judge Oster and basically every other attorney would agree with me here.

  25. #12975
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    Maybe they should have thought a little more about what they were doing, or just quit, if they didn’t realize ordering a hospital to deliver quack cures would be bad.

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