Is positive news on Covid newsworthy?

hal9000

Duke status
Jan 30, 2016
56,181
16,672
113
Urbana, Illinois
There’s been literally tons of great news about breakthroughs in treatments and vaccines in the last few days yet you somehow managed to turn that into a negative.

What a sad, pathetic, small, bitter man.
 

hal9000

Duke status
Jan 30, 2016
56,181
16,672
113
Urbana, Illinois
Really? How many threads have you started about these breakthroughs?
just go read the science section of the NYT or go to science.com or nature.com and read about some recently published studies and/or breakthroughs.

you‘re just bloviating at this point. But it is fun to watch your epic erBB meltdown.
 

kidfury

Duke status
Oct 14, 2017
24,940
10,684
113
CDC Director Robert Redfield asked governors to fast-track permits and licenses in an attempt to make vaccine sites operational by Nov. 1, just two days before the presidential election.
Dr. Ali Khan, former director of the Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response at the CDC, called that timetable unlikely.
"I do not believe that this is going to be ready in a matter of weeks," he said.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is asking states to have a plan in place to distribute a COVID-19 vaccine as soon as late October — but that doesn't mean an effective treatment will be ready quite so soon.
In separate interviews Thursday with NPR, the chief scientific adviser to the Trump administration's vaccine development effort and the former director of the CDC's office of public health preparedness cautioned that an effective vaccine is likely still months away.


THE ONGOING POLITICIZATION OF COVID BY TRUMP AND THE REPUBLICANS IS DESPICABLE
 
  • Like
Reactions: hal9000

hal9000

Duke status
Jan 30, 2016
56,181
16,672
113
Urbana, Illinois
CDC Director Robert Redfield asked governors to fast-track permits and licenses in an attempt to make vaccine sites operational by Nov. 1, just two days before the presidential election.
Dr. Ali Khan, former director of the Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response at the CDC, called that timetable unlikely.
"I do not believe that this is going to be ready in a matter of weeks," he said.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is asking states to have a plan in place to distribute a COVID-19 vaccine as soon as late October — but that doesn't mean an effective treatment will be ready quite so soon.
In separate interviews Thursday with NPR, the chief scientific adviser to the Trump administration's vaccine development effort and the former director of the CDC's office of public health preparedness cautioned that an effective vaccine is likely still months away.


THE ONGOING POLITIZATION OF COVID BY TRUMP AND THE REPUBLICANS IS DESPICABLE

the statement you made at the bottom will be used by Dummy as some ham-handed erbb “gotcha”
 

hal9000

Duke status
Jan 30, 2016
56,181
16,672
113
Urbana, Illinois
READ? SCIENCE? you're speaking devil words!

since dumb-dumb is too lazy and ghosty to do it, here are some links:





 

GromsDad

Duke status
Jan 21, 2014
54,669
16,525
113
West of the Atlantic. East of the ICW.
Is this chart from the New Jersey Health Department newsworthy? Why is it that all we get is fear spreading news when the actual fact is that the virus peaked in early April and ended here by early June. Why is it not reported that the surge due to our beaches opening that the fearmongers predicted never happened?

Capture.jpg
 

Ifallalot

Duke status
Dec 17, 2008
88,766
17,862
113
CDC Director Robert Redfield asked governors to fast-track permits and licenses in an attempt to make vaccine sites operational by Nov. 1, just two days before the presidential election.
Dr. Ali Khan, former director of the Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response at the CDC, called that timetable unlikely.
"I do not believe that this is going to be ready in a matter of weeks," he said.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is asking states to have a plan in place to distribute a COVID-19 vaccine as soon as late October — but that doesn't mean an effective treatment will be ready quite so soon.
In separate interviews Thursday with NPR, the chief scientific adviser to the Trump administration's vaccine development effort and the former director of the CDC's office of public health preparedness cautioned that an effective vaccine is likely still months away.


THE ONGOING POLITICIZATION OF COVID BY TRUMP AND THE REPUBLICANS IS DESPICABLE
Meanwhile there are people whining about it being fast-tracked

They'd rather continue to hide at home than end this thing