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

E_wyzVyVEAQuXF_
 
Rona's doing the Lord's work now... culling that herd.... :lol:

Covid deaths caused Alabama's population to shrink for the first time
“Our state literally shrunk in 2020,” state health officer Dr. Scott Harris said.

There were more deaths than births in Alabama last year, a first since the state started keeping records and officials said it's directly tied to the coronavirus pandemic.

Last year, 64,714 Alabamians died and only 57,641 were born, the state announced Friday


“Our state literally shrunk in 2020,” state health officer Dr. Scott Harris said at a Covid briefing. He said it’s the first time in the state’s recorded history that this has happened — saying it’s never “been close” before, not even during World War II or the 1918 flu pandemic.

“It's certainly possible that can happen this year as well, if we continue at the same rate that we are seeing now,” he said. That is because, in part, while Covid-19 hospitalizations are declining in the state, more people who are hospitalized are dying, he said.


Alabama's seven-day average of new cases peaked Sept. 1 at an average of 5,538 new cases per day.

Its seven-day average of reported deaths was at 42 on Sept. 1, but that number has nearly doubled. As of Sunday, the figure stood at an average 76 deaths per day.

In the last two weeks, 795 people died in the state, the third-highest rate of reported Covid deaths in that time frame among states.

The state reported 192 deaths Sept. 17; the last time it reported that many was in February.

February was also the last time the state's seven-day average of reported deaths was more than 70. (The seven-day average is used to take a broader look at trends that can be obscured by single-day spikes and weekends, when many health departments take a break from reporting).

Since the start of the pandemic, Alabama has reported 13,210 Covid-related deaths. Adjusted for population, it has the fifth-highest rate of Covid deaths in the country.

According to an NBC News tally, 41.3 percent of the state's population is vaccinated, which totals just over 2 million people.

Alabama's death tally comes at a moment where Covid has now killed about the same number of people in the United States as the 1918 flu pandemic — around 675,000.





Covid deaths caused Alabama's population to shrink for the first time (nbcnews.com)
 
Rona's doing the Lord's work now... culling that herd.... :lol:

Covid deaths caused Alabama's population to shrink for the first time
“Our state literally shrunk in 2020,” state health officer Dr. Scott Harris said.

There were more deaths than births in Alabama last year, a first since the state started keeping records and officials said it's directly tied to the coronavirus pandemic.

Last year, 64,714 Alabamians died and only 57,641 were born, the state announced Friday


“Our state literally shrunk in 2020,” state health officer Dr. Scott Harris said at a Covid briefing. He said it’s the first time in the state’s recorded history that this has happened — saying it’s never “been close” before, not even during World War II or the 1918 flu pandemic.

“It's certainly possible that can happen this year as well, if we continue at the same rate that we are seeing now,” he said. That is because, in part, while Covid-19 hospitalizations are declining in the state, more people who are hospitalized are dying, he said.


Alabama's seven-day average of new cases peaked Sept. 1 at an average of 5,538 new cases per day.

Its seven-day average of reported deaths was at 42 on Sept. 1, but that number has nearly doubled. As of Sunday, the figure stood at an average 76 deaths per day.

In the last two weeks, 795 people died in the state, the third-highest rate of reported Covid deaths in that time frame among states.

The state reported 192 deaths Sept. 17; the last time it reported that many was in February.

February was also the last time the state's seven-day average of reported deaths was more than 70. (The seven-day average is used to take a broader look at trends that can be obscured by single-day spikes and weekends, when many health departments take a break from reporting).

Since the start of the pandemic, Alabama has reported 13,210 Covid-related deaths. Adjusted for population, it has the fifth-highest rate of Covid deaths in the country.

According to an NBC News tally, 41.3 percent of the state's population is vaccinated, which totals just over 2 million people.

Alabama's death tally comes at a moment where Covid has now killed about the same number of people in the United States as the 1918 flu pandemic — around 675,000.





Covid deaths caused Alabama's population to shrink for the first time (nbcnews.com)
Yep the story got a lot of people attention a couple of days ago
 
Rona's doing the Lord's work now... culling that herd.... :lol:

Covid deaths caused Alabama's population to shrink for the first time
“Our state literally shrunk in 2020,” state health officer Dr. Scott Harris said.

There were more deaths than births in Alabama last year, a first since the state started keeping records and officials said it's directly tied to the coronavirus pandemic.

Last year, 64,714 Alabamians died and only 57,641 were born, the state announced Friday


“Our state literally shrunk in 2020,” state health officer Dr. Scott Harris said at a Covid briefing. He said it’s the first time in the state’s recorded history that this has happened — saying it’s never “been close” before, not even during World War II or the 1918 flu pandemic.

“It's certainly possible that can happen this year as well, if we continue at the same rate that we are seeing now,” he said. That is because, in part, while Covid-19 hospitalizations are declining in the state, more people who are hospitalized are dying, he said.


Alabama's seven-day average of new cases peaked Sept. 1 at an average of 5,538 new cases per day.

Its seven-day average of reported deaths was at 42 on Sept. 1, but that number has nearly doubled. As of Sunday, the figure stood at an average 76 deaths per day.

In the last two weeks, 795 people died in the state, the third-highest rate of reported Covid deaths in that time frame among states.

The state reported 192 deaths Sept. 17; the last time it reported that many was in February.

February was also the last time the state's seven-day average of reported deaths was more than 70. (The seven-day average is used to take a broader look at trends that can be obscured by single-day spikes and weekends, when many health departments take a break from reporting).

Since the start of the pandemic, Alabama has reported 13,210 Covid-related deaths. Adjusted for population, it has the fifth-highest rate of Covid deaths in the country.

According to an NBC News tally, 41.3 percent of the state's population is vaccinated, which totals just over 2 million people.

Alabama's death tally comes at a moment where Covid has now killed about the same number of people in the United States as the 1918 flu pandemic — around 675,000.





Covid deaths caused Alabama's population to shrink for the first time (nbcnews.com)


Unfortunately I've learned recently that a few of my people in Alabama have caught COVID-19 including my cousin and cousins wife who are both hospitalized with my cousin currently on a ventilator.

Even after all this I've heard they're all still refusing to or only thinking about getting vaccinated :smh:
 
Unfortunately I've learned recently that a few of my people in Alabama have caught COVID-19 including my cousin and cousins wife who are both hospitalized with my cousin currently on a ventilator.

Even after all this I've heard they're all still refusing to or only thinking about getting vaccinated :smh:
Sorry to hear that man..... like dolphins getting caught in that tuna net.... a few of the undeserving are getting caught in Rona's net


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Sorry to hear that man..... like dolphins getting caught in that tuna net.... a few of the undeserving are getting caught in Rona's net


.

I appreciate it.

I hate to say it but family or not if they're out here being reckless and also buying into the anti-vax narrative I can't really say they don't "deserve it."

They may not deserve it as people but they are willingly endangering themselves.

A lot of good and decent people have succumbed to Aids, cancer, drugs, etc.

Unfortunately COVID-19 doesn't only affect people who are the scum of the earth.
 
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As long as their vaccine works is what is most important. We don’t need any more excuses for vaccine hesitancy at this point.
No I want people to get the vaccine you know that but Johnson and Johnson vaccine well like I said I have issues with it
 
Man who filmed Rodney King's 1991 beating by police dies of Covid-19, friend says

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George Holliday, seen in a 1997 file photo, died on Sunday of Covid-19, a friend said.

(CNN)
George Holliday, the man who shot the infamous video of Los Angeles Police Department officers beating Rodney King more than 30 years ago, has died, his friend tells CNN. He was 61.
Holliday died Sunday of Covid-19 in Simi Valley, California, according to longtime friend Robert Wollenweber.
"Unfortunately, he didn't want to get vaccinated. He wanted to get the Covid so he could build immunities and his wish came true about a month ago," said Wollenweber in a telephone interview with CNN. "He got sicker and sicker and was having trouble breathing, so they finally took him to the hospital. When his oxygen levels went down, they put them on a ventilator. And then he got pneumonia and his kidneys were shutting down and he had internal bleeding. And then he died Sunday."

Wollenweber says he met Holliday in 1996 when they worked at the same plumbing company.


They last saw each other about a month ago, before Holliday went into the hospital, he said.
Wollenweber is not sure how Holliday caught Covid-19 but thinks their line of work exposed him.
"We were both plumbers and we go to people's houses every day, so I'm assuming he picked it up from one of his customers," Wollenweber said.
Wollenweber says the Rodney King beating video changed Holliday's life.
"It's sad because the video brought him a lot of bad luck," Wollenweber said. "He was a working stiff, you know, just like all of us."
Holliday shot the video early on the morning of March 3, 1991, from the balcony of his apartment. The video was seen on televisions around the world and was a key piece of evidence in the trial of four LAPD officers, who were acquitted on all charges connected to the beating.
The April 29, 1992, acquittal sparked riots in Los Angeles.
Two of the officers, Sergeant Stacey Koon and officer Laurence Michael Powell, were convicted in 1993 of violating King's civil rights.
Rodney King died in 2012.



George Holliday, man who filmed Rodney King beating dies of Covid-19 - CNN
 

March 2020. He had one of the best responses to this shit outside of China. Way better than any other governor in the United States. Shut down the Arnold, sports, etc. Then, politics came into play and he turned into one of the biggest bitches. Been a train wreck ever since. :smh: 125 deaths reported today.
 
March 2020. He had one of the best responses to this shit outside of China. Way better than any other governor in the United States. Shut down the Arnold, sports, etc. Then, politics came into play and he turned into one of the biggest bitches. Been a train wreck ever since. :smh: 125 deaths reported today.


This state haven't been the same since Acton quit twice under him....
 
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