People be very careful this virus is not done yet

My wife is back on her feet....100% full throttle.
She was able to get back to working remotely on yesterday....even went for a walk around the block a few times last night with her. She took another covid test today and it came back negative.
I can finally stop sleeping on that damn couch. Been 2 weeks....I miss my bed.

Her and the kids going to get their vaccine shot this weekend.

:cheers:My brotha.
 
Reports: John Smoltz, Al Leiter won't appear in studio for MLB Network after refusing COVID-19 vaccine
7:12 PM ET
John Smoltz and Al Leiter are not making in-studio appearances for MLB Network after refusing to get the coronavirus vaccine, according to multiple reports.

MLB Network's policy making it mandatory for all employees to be vaccinated took effect Wednesday. Smoltz and Leiter will still do analysis for studio shows, but it will be remote instead of from the network's Secaucus, New Jersey, studio.

The New York Post was the first to report the story. MLB Network declined to comment in an email to the AP.

Smoltz, 54, is also the lead analyst on Fox's coverage of the MLB, making the calls on the biggest games, including the World Series.
Leiter, 55, is also a Mets advisor.

Leiter has been a part of MLB Network since it went on the air in 2009. Smoltz joined MLB Network the following year and has been a part of Fox's top MLB team since 2016.

They gonna end up like other conservative talk show hosts. Dead
 
Seriously tho... check with the Doctor before she gets it. She got the monoclonal antibodies, so this says to wait 90 days,.


This says the same thing and they are quoting a diff doc.


Very very important information here
 



I am currently working in a high school clinic. You would think that my biggest concern would be COVID right now, and you'd be right... but there is another problem that sits in the shadow of that menace, and it's just as destructive, but no one seems to be noticing...

1
Well over 50% of the students I see on a given day aren't coming in there with skinned knees, or the sniffles. They're coming to my clinic in varying degrees of breakdown.

I'm seeing students in full-on panic attacks. Not "OMG I'm totally freaking out!" drama. Real attacks.

2
Why is this a trend I'm seeing?

Well, it's layered.

On the surface, you have the obvious: these kids are afraid of COVID, and they have a reason to be. Their governor is more interested in fawning over his Republican base than doing the right thing, so not only...

3
... are mask mandates not in place at the state level, he's actually sabotaging any district's attempt to put one in place to protect the students.

So, that's a big part of it. But these are also some hardworking kids. They're dedicated to their education.

4
When they have to stay home to quarantine, it eats at them.

Social media is a poor substitute for human interaction, and they're losing a lot of that.

And despite the misconceptions of the older generations, these kids have a strong work ethic.

5
The ones with part time jobs can't just quit and draw unemployment. Their bosses know that, and they're working them right into the gray area of legality. These kids are getting up, going to school, going home, changing clothes, working into the night...

6
...going home, squeezing in their homework, and crashing for a few hours before starting all over again.

Any of us would have a tough time handling a schedule like that as grown adults. What chance do these kids have?

7
And let's not forget that the jobs these kids have are the least likely to take precautions against COVID contact, and the most likely to have customers prone to verbally abuse the employees, who are nowhere near emotionally prepared to handle that.

9
This pandemic, along with all the peripheral elements that go with it, is killing our kids slowly. And when they look around, all they see is a bunch of supposed adults ignoring their suffering as they play politics and act like poster children for Dunning Kruger.

10
So I let them sit, or lie down, in my clinic. I let them cry. I let them rage. And, perhaps most importantly, I listen to them.

It's time more of us did.

END
UPDATE: Oh my gods,I thought I was just yelling into the abyss! Thank you, all of you, who have reached out to me with your own stories and encouragement. You all have made more of an impact than you can imagine!

If I don't respond back to you...

1/2
... please don't take it personally; I have a lot on my plate. But I want you all to know that we are in this together, and we CAN make a difference for our kids! Please stay strong and take care of yourselves! ❤
 
Taking my son to go get vaccinated Tuesday.
Glad they taking this shit serious now.
My wife has already gotten her first shot.

Did you read those articles I posted last week? Supposedly getting the vaccine too soon after the monoclonal antibodies messes up her protection.


2. If you had COVID-19 and were treated with monoclonal antibodies or convalescent plasma, wait at least 90 days before getting a COVID-19 vaccine. A number of patients have received convalescent plasma, which is blood from recovered COVID-19 patients; it is authorized for hospitalized patients. Another treatment, monoclonal antibodies, aims to prevent high-risk COVID-19 patients from having to be hospitalized. Monoclonal antibodies are given as an intravenous infusion to patients who have mild to moderate symptoms of COVID-19 and are at high risk of their illness becoming severe. This includes people 65 and older and those who are obese or have medical conditions such as diabetes, obesity, or kidney disease.


All the vaccines are based upon exposing a person to the spike protein, which is found on the surface of the virus that causes COVID-19. This exposure is what stimulates an immune response. Monoclonal antibodies may stay in your system for up to 90 days, and they might neutralize the spike protein in the vaccine and prevent the immune response from occurring, Dr. Goldberg explains.


How long should you wait to be vaccinated if you’ve had COVID-19?

“The time frame that we recommend for being vaccinated after having a COVID-19 infection is as soon as you’re out of quarantine,” says Dr. Englund.


There is one caveat, however.


If you’ve received monoclonal antibodies, you must wait 90 days after recovering from COVID-19 to receive the vaccine. According to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), monoclonal antibodies are proteins made in a laboratory that mimic your body’s immune response. Dr. Englund says some people might not need to be hospitalized for COVID-19, but might receive these antibodies from their doctor as an infusion treatment to help fight the virus.


“If you’ve had that monoclonal antibody, it is going to keep you from being able to develop a nice, robust response to the vaccine. So that’s why we have to wait for 90 days until that monoclonal antibody has gotten out of your system.”
 
Did you read those articles I posted last week? Supposedly getting the vaccine too soon after the monoclonal antibodies messes up her protection.


2. If you had COVID-19 and were treated with monoclonal antibodies or convalescent plasma, wait at least 90 days before getting a COVID-19 vaccine. A number of patients have received convalescent plasma, which is blood from recovered COVID-19 patients; it is authorized for hospitalized patients. Another treatment, monoclonal antibodies, aims to prevent high-risk COVID-19 patients from having to be hospitalized. Monoclonal antibodies are given as an intravenous infusion to patients who have mild to moderate symptoms of COVID-19 and are at high risk of their illness becoming severe. This includes people 65 and older and those who are obese or have medical conditions such as diabetes, obesity, or kidney disease.


All the vaccines are based upon exposing a person to the spike protein, which is found on the surface of the virus that causes COVID-19. This exposure is what stimulates an immune response. Monoclonal antibodies may stay in your system for up to 90 days, and they might neutralize the spike protein in the vaccine and prevent the immune response from occurring, Dr. Goldberg explains.


How long should you wait to be vaccinated if you’ve had COVID-19?

“The time frame that we recommend for being vaccinated after having a COVID-19 infection is as soon as you’re out of quarantine,” says Dr. Englund.


There is one caveat, however.


If you’ve received monoclonal antibodies, you must wait 90 days after recovering from COVID-19 to receive the vaccine. According to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), monoclonal antibodies are proteins made in a laboratory that mimic your body’s immune response. Dr. Englund says some people might not need to be hospitalized for COVID-19, but might receive these antibodies from their doctor as an infusion treatment to help fight the virus.


“If you’ve had that monoclonal antibody, it is going to keep you from being able to develop a nice, robust response to the vaccine. So that’s why we have to wait for 90 days until that monoclonal antibody has gotten out of your system.”
Yeah I did. Turns out they didn't give her the remdisivir.....it was something totally different. That's why she went ahead and got vaccinated.
 
Yep this is why I don’t understand why some Republicans are still acting stupid but hey is there a lost

:smh:

Bruh, you're tryna fight your opponent, by thinking like yourself, instead of thinking like him...

Rich white people have NEVER...EVER liked POOR people, no matter what color. That includes whites...

Why do you think they originally made it so that poor people couldn't vote, women couldn't vote...black people weren't even a whole person?

If you didn't own land, you couldn't vote.

These ol men are playing chess. If you play, you know that YOUR PAWNS are there to be

SACRIFICED

Don't assume that they'd shed one tear if all the poor black and poor whites died.


That may be a stretch, but I'm just going by their track record...
 
:smh:

Bruh, you're tryna fight your opponent, by thinking like yourself, instead of thinking like him...

Rich white people have NEVER...EVER liked POOR people, no matter what color. That includes whites...

Why do you think they originally made it so that poor people couldn't vote, women couldn't vote...black people weren't even a whole person?

If you didn't own land, you couldn't vote.

These ol men are playing chess. If you play, you know that YOUR PAWNS are there to be

SACRIFICED

Don't assume that they'd shed one tear if all the poor black and poor whites died.


That may be a stretch, but I'm just going by their track record...
I agree with you but the problem is they need those poor white people to keep voting for them because of the demographic changes that is all going.
 
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