"WW C"- COVID-19, GLOBAL CASES SURPASS 676 MILLION...Here we go again 2025 are we ready for Trump to fuck this up again?

Apparently the rules don’t apply to them.



At this point I feel like anyone who insists on ignoring this shit and continues to gather in crowds and ignore the recommendations should automatically forfeit any medical treatment required to save their lives should they contract COVID-19.

Particularly the use of a ventilator since they are in such short supply.
 
Below article kinda makes sense. This week Diamond and Silk said the economy is being destroyed to stop Trump.
And some 'Q' like anti-Deep state ops blame Facui as the reason the economy is shut down.

Interesting, today's press conference a question was on this and if Facui is receiving security due to recent threats.

J7SYHGXGGVGKNKC7OLLSK7XHCI.jpg

Dr Anthony Facui receiving death threats.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...861a16-744d-11ea-85cb-8670579b863d_story.html
April 1, 2020 at 7:11 p.m. CDT

Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s top infectious-diseases expert and the face of the U.S. response to the novel coronavirus pandemic, is facing growing threats to his personal safety, prompting the government to step up his security, according to people familiar with the matter.

The concerns include threats as well as unwelcome communications from fervent admirers, according to people with knowledge of deliberations inside the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Justice.

The exact nature of the threats against him was not clear. Greater exposure has led to more praise for the doctor but also more criticism.

Fauci has become a public target for some right-wing commentators and bloggers, who exercise influence over parts of the president’s base. As they press for the president to ease restrictions to reinvigorate economic activity, some of these figures have assailed Fauci and questioned his expertise.

Last month, an article depicting him as an agent of the “deep state” gained nearly 25,000 interactions on Facebook — meaning likes, comments and shares — as it was posted to large pro-Trump groups with titles such as “Trump Strong” and “Tampa Bay Trump Club.”
 
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Apparently the rules don’t apply to them.



I hate these assholes with a passion man:

On March 29th, FBI agents were in the process of arresting Baruch Feldheim at his Brooklyn home on charges of price-gouging on sales of N95 masks and other medical supplies when he coughed in the direction of the nearby agents and said he had the coronavirus, the U.S. Attorney's office in Newark said in a release Monday.

:smh: :smh: :smh:

 
i am getting calls literally everyday about people that I KNOW dying.

stfu
The death rate is low and people should be careful but not freak out. 1-3% death rate is low. The problem is the infection number is high so 1-3% of a a few million people will seem like a lot of dead bodies

When you only publish the deaths and never the recovery it seems like a death sentence
 
My cousin and a childhood friend died today. My childhood friend died about 3 hours ago, and my cousin died about an hour ago. Funny, because I was at Costco today wearing a mask, and this black dude looked at me and said "Why y'all niggas wearing that shit?" Ask my cousin.
sorry to hear brotha, my condolences, i know in times like these u just wanna be around folks to talk to and just not feel so alone. sending u strength good brother AŚÉ
 
we really need to just ban these people from bgol, her we are trying to share pertinent info for the black community & world at large and these people keep showing up with the distraction & gaslighting, im getting tired of it
Nigga stop crying and acting scared. Take every precaution there is but realize that the death rate is very low despite the media and social media flooding you with grim news
 


Johnny Lee Baynes -
A Brooklyn judge died of pneumonia related to coronavirus Thursday, officials confirmed to the Daily News.

Johnny Lee Baynes, 64, was a Brooklyn judge since 2005 and served in Civil Court in Downtown Brooklyn. He was known among peers as a fair jurist, who gave time to anyone who came before the court.

“You were heard in his courtroom. He was just a very wonderful individual,” said Brooklyn Supreme Court Judge Lisa Ottley, who knew Baynes since the turn of the century, calling him a big brother figure. “This thing is insane. Coronavirus has really had a tremendous effect on a lot of us."

Originally from the south, Baynes graduated from Howard University and passed the bar in 1985. He served as a housing court judge in Brooklyn before moving to civil court.

“It’s ironic that he made the decision to keep the hospital open and he passed during this health crisis,” said Appellate Judge Sylvia Hinds-Radix, who knew Baynes since they passed the bar exam together.

“I still can’t believe it. I’m still in shock. A death is something that happens but to get that telephone call that he had gone, that was hard,” she said.
https://www.nydailynews.com/coronav...0200401-iqwz7hrpuzaatpjrrkgkgben2m-story.html
 
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The death rate is low and people should be careful but not freak out. 1-3% death rate is low. The problem is the infection number is high so 1-3% of a a few million people will seem like a lot of dead bodies

When you only publish the deaths and never the recovery it seems like a death sentence
It's the sheer number and the speed. The flu kills thousands, but when is the last time you heard of a hospital shut down from the flu?
 
bruh !there was 2 jewish weddings in williamsburg brooklyn last 2 weekends! someone evetually snitched and thats what made the marshalls come shut them down ! they apparently have some "jewish" tradition that says weddings are exempt from global tragedies or some shit like that !
Maybe that’s why the question about religious traditions was brought up to De Blasio today.
 
bruh !there was 2 jewish weddings in williamsburg brooklyn last 2 weekends! someone evetually snitched and thats what made the marshalls come shut them down ! they apparently have some "jewish" tradition that says weddings are exempt from global tragedies or some shit like that !

They already had a measles outbreak going on because they reject science/vaccinations. The article in the Times about the weddings was wild :smh: :smh:
 
It's the sheer number and the speed. The flu kills thousands, but when is the last time you heard of a hospital shut down from the flu?
Yeah and that is why people are freaking out and mentally about to break. I keep trying to tell people that most people will be alright and only a few will have medical issues. But to extreme caution because you don’t want to roll the dice
 
And you still have dumb motherfuckers on here talking about this being overblown :smh: We are going to be losing 2-3k per day and these same idiots will still be in denial...
One day I'll post the back and forth I had on Facebook with a woman that "works in a doctor's office"
The day the NBA shut down that jazz game she was saying everyone is overreacting and its just like the flu.
I told her it is more serious than the flu because it's more deadly and more contagious and there is a chance it will overwhelm our healthcare system.
She proceeded to tell me that she works in a doctor's office and that I was wrong and I was spreading misinformation.
I then proceeded to post links that had dr Fauci backing up what I was saying.
She then says this isnt the place to debate and to have fun with my "deadly flu lol lol lol"
A week went by and shit started hitting the fan so me being petty as fuck went back to the post and I commented on the convo
"so...." :lol:
She didn't respond back.
Another week has passed and now this shit is doing what I said it would.
I went back to the convo again and posted a winking emoji.
:lol:
Why, because I'm fucked up like that.
She hasn't commented.
I went to her page and she has some shit on her profile picture saying something like "I can't stay home, I'm a healthcare worker"
Bitch please
:roflmao:
 
bruh !there was 2 jewish weddings in williamsburg brooklyn last 2 weekends! someone evetually snitched and thats what made the marshalls come shut them down ! they apparently have some "jewish" tradition that says weddings are exempt from global tragedies or some shit like that !
I heard that american jews used weddings as a reason for military service exemptions durring war times. :dunno:
 
No, this is not April Fools. This actually happened today. The first picture shows the location of the train.
The second picture is the US Mercy in relation to the train. If you don't know the Hospital ship was sent to California for virus support.

Ready? The train conductor's goal was to crash the train into the US Mercy Hospital Ship. :smh:

Why? The conductor thought the US Mercy (Along with US Comfort in New York) was part of a take over of the government. And he wanted to crash into the boat to expose troops hidden inside.



 
WE ARE FUCKING DOOMED UNDER THIS INCOMPETENT ADMINISTRATION...
.

Rachel Maddow: "U..S. companies that make PPE are making and selling it to countries overseas as of this week"

I Spent A Day In The Coronavirus-Driven Feeding Frenzy Of N95 Mask Sellers And Buyers And This Is What I Learned


WASHINGTON POST: protective gear in national stockpile is nearly depleted, DHS officials say

The government's emergency stockpile of respirator masks, gloves,and other medical supplies is running low and is nearly exhausted due to the coronavirus outbreak, leaving the Trump administration and the states to compete for personal protective equipment in a freewheeling global market place rife with profiteering and price-gouging...
Two DHS officials said the stores kept in the Department of Health abd Human Service' Strategic National Stockpile are nearly gone. Despite assurance from the White House that there is availability.


Hmmm, I wonder where everything went.... did it "go out the back door?"... Maybe Trump should look into that.....
.


.
 
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Looks like palm trees in the background. Are there many palm trees in NYC? :yawn:
No, this is not April Fools. This actually happened today. The first picture shows the location of the train.
The second picture is the US Mercy in relation to the train. If you don't know the Hospital ship was sent to California for virus support.

Ready? The train conductor's goal was to crash the train into the US Mercy Hospital Ship.
:smh:


Why? The conductor thought the US Mercy (Along with US Comfort in New York) was part of a take over of the government. And he wanted to crash into the boat to expose troops hidden inside.



 
The Trump administration allowed the contract to maintain these machines to lapse last summer.

A Ventilator Stockpile, With One Hitch: Thousands Do Not Work
While President Trump has assured states that thousands of ventilators remain at the ready, thousands more are in storage, unmaintained or otherwise unusable.


WASHINGTON — President Trump has repeatedly assured Americans that the federal government is holding 10,000 ventilators in reserve to ship to the hardest-hit hospitals around the nation as they struggle to keep the most critically ill patients alive.

But what federal officials have neglected to mention is that an additional 2,109 lifesaving devices are unavailable after the contract to maintain the government’s stockpile lapsed late last summer, and a contracting dispute meant that a new firm did not begin its work until late January. By then, the coronavirus crisis was already underway.

The revelation came in response to inquiries to the Department of Health and Human Services after state officials reported that some of the ventilators they received were not operational, stoking speculation that the administration had not kept up with the task of maintaining the stockpile.

In fact, the contract with a company that was maintaining the machines expired at the end of last summer, and a contract protest delayed handing the job to Agiliti, a Minneapolis-based provider of medical equipment services and maintenance. Agiliti was not given the $38 million task until late January, when the scope of the global coronavirus crisis was first becoming clear.

CONTINUED:
 
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Detroit's ballroom dance community rocked by coronavirus, including multiple deaths

BRIAN MCCOLLUM| DETROIT FREE PRESS
Updated 1 hour ago






For decades, urban ballroom dancers have assembled in clubs and venues across the metro area to take part in one of Detroit’s richest and most distinctive social traditions. And during the second week of March, just before Michigan’s ban of mass gatherings, there they still were, dancing as they’ve always done — mingling closely, hand in hand, cheek to cheek.

By month’s end, the coronavirus had swept ferociously through Detroit’s ballroom dance family, igniting ongoing waves of grief and pangs of anxiety among a tight-knit group mostly made up of older African Americans, for whom dancing was supposed to be a respite from life’s rigors.

“This thing has been a direct hit on us,” said dancer Darrell Wilson. “Facebook is like an obituary page right now. Every time I look up, somebody I know has died.”

People entrenched in Detroit’s urban ballroom scene offer varying estimates of the toll on their community to this point. Some say they know of five, six, 10, a dozen dancers who have died during the past two weeks. Others put the count at more than 30.

Whatever the precise number, the tragic stories continue to mushroom. Friends and dance partners in the ballroom community often find themselves struggling to absorb the magnitude of the crisis in their sphere.


Club Yesterday's in Redford Township.

GOOGLE MAPS
“We’re all shell-shocked,” said a Southfield resident and ballroom regular who asked not to be named. “The dance community is losing people daily.”


Some ballroom dancers, promoters and DJs declined to speak on the record for this article — or to even talk at all — citing the ongoing emotional trauma and a sensitivity for victims’ families. They also worry their community might be unfairly stigmatized and scapegoated in a city that has emerged as a coronavirus hot spot.

That stance is understandable, and it’s important to stress there’s no available data confirming that any given dance event or venue was an exposure site, or that dancing was a transmission point at all for people who since have tested positive.

Michael McElrath, spokesman for the Wayne County Public Health Division, said the county is not conducting retrospective investigation into early coronavirus clusters.

“We are aware of places people gathered,” he said. But with the subsequent escalation of coronavirus across the region, “we now assume everywhere is an exposure site.”

McElrath said his own mother is a Detroit ballroom dancer, and he acknowledged that coronavirus has struck that community in a “devastating” way.

“She is in (emotional) pain right now,” he said. “Every day she’s calling me about someone in her ballroom group."

Some of Michigan’s most publicized COVID-19 victims were ballroom dancers, including Michigan state Rep. Isaac Robinson and Wayne County Sheriff Cmdr. Donafay Collins, who also moonlighted as a DJ.

In Detroit, urban ballroom is a lifestyle for many involved — part exercise, part therapy, part social connection. It's an accessible community that eagerly welcomes newcomers, said Jay Danzie, who oversees the online group Ballroom Nation.

But when it comes to coronavirus, ballroom's virtues may have been its vulnerability.
"Because the dancers come together — it’s a contact sport — naturally it might be a haven for a rapid spread," Danzie said.

On social media, the scope of the outbreak among ballroom dancers is stark and poignant. There are tearful tributes to those known dead, and frantic questions about friends whose accounts have abruptly gone quiet.

Some users have turned amateur detective, piecing together dates and venues possibly linking those who have fallen sick or died of COVID-19 — including events the second week of March at popular nightspots such as Club Yesterday’s in Redford Township, EARS Showplace in Hamtramck and the Paradise in Southfield.

On Friday, March 13, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer issued the first in a series of orders limiting public assemblies. Within days, as the mandate tightened to ban gatherings of 10 or more people, dance and music events were effectively shut down.

“I started noticing after that weekend that people were getting sick,” said Charles Hicks, 65, a longtime event DJ. “After that, all hell started breaking loose. That’s when we realized this was real.”

Urban ballroom dancing — sometimes known elsewhere as Detroit-style ballroom — is a pastime that goes back decades to venues such as the Graystone and the black patrons who crafted their own signature steps.

The style was formalized in the 1970s by Detroiters who combined the grace of classic ballroom dance with contemporary urban moves, typically to a playlist of midtempo R&B, and who took the phenomenon nationwide.

In recent years, urban ballroom has continued to draw dancers to near-daily events across metro Detroit, including group classes, lunch-hour sessions and nightclub parties. All told, the events likely draw thousands of participants collectively month to month, though dedicated ballroom dancers interviewed by the Free Press suggest there are about 500 people in the core group of enthusiasts who attend multiple events each week.

They include people from all walks of life, from blue-collar workers to nurses to judges to CEOs, said Jeannine Gant, a ballroom dancing fan from Detroit.

And coronavirus has struck the scene across the board.
“It’s really frightening — especially when you consider it’s just something you do to have fun and gather as a community,” said Gant. “The other thing that’s really concerning is you see a lot of older people ballroom dancing, so you’re talking about high-risk people here.”


For Sherrad Glosson, a Detroit dance instructor and publisher of Go Dance Detroit, the impact on the ballroom scene hits on multiple fronts: Like others in the community, he has grieved the sudden loss of multiple friends and colleagues. On top of it, as an independent business operator, he is confronting the loss of income amid the coronavirus shutdown, uncertain what forms of government relief may come his way.

Detroit dance instructor Sherrad Glosson, left, has watched as the urban ballroom dance community has been ravaged by the coronavirus outbreak.
SHERRAD GOSSON
Moreover, Glosson said, he worries for his students, many of them older folks who had turned to ballroom dance as therapy following divorces, family deaths and other life blows.

"It’s affecting people who were using dance to help change their lives," he said. "I’m seeing that a lot right now — people are missing out."

What's new normal for dancers?
Joelle Gwynn, a former Detroiter who lives in North Carolina, has been following the developments on her hometown ballroom scene via social media.

"I started seeing this anomaly of postings by African Americans," she said of the wave of reports about dancers who had fallen ill or died.

Gwynn is launching a campaign calling for increased coronavirus tracking and changes in testing policy. Many of the ballroom dancers who have died did not show the symptoms currently tagged as prerequisites for testing, including fever, she said. She is also calling for better tracking of outbreak clusters in high-risk populations.

"I believe they need to address this on a hierarchy of risk, based on known exposures and preexisting conditions," Gwynn said.

As the ballroom dance family continues to absorb the immediate pain of coronavirus, some are wondering what's in store for the long haul — and what the new "normal" might entail for an activity that's all about partners together, up close.

"When things are lifted, and this virus is 'clear' or 'flattened,' how does this impact the community when it’s time to return?" said Glosson. "How does it affect the morale? Will people fear: 'Do I really want to go out dancing tonight?' "
 
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