The coronavirus
Comments
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bbiggs said:bootlegger10 said:Everyone I talk to in different markets is saying house sales are booming (less inventory so lots of demand and competition). Great time to be selling a house in a lot of areas (and bad for me who wants to buy one).0
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bbiggs said:F Me In The Brain said:The Juggler said:So now they’re making hospitals report cases directly to the White house instead of the cdc?
We are so fucked. Most people aren’t going to pay attention to that. They’re just going to see the numbers magically go down...meanwhile people will still be getting sick and dying.It’s like we’re living in a. Science fiction horror movie
The need to fly weekly is gone for the foreseeable future and all reasons to be nearby a city are also muted to dead for the foreseeable future.
Might be time to head to the hills and just sock away the additional savings for a time.
Fuck that goddamned idiot for offering no leadership/direction/hope. The virus isn't his fault but the position we are in I squarely blame him and the moron sheep following him for.I agree, I think cities and suburbia are dying.I'm going to recommend a book and a film that talk about this, but with one major caveat: the author of the book (who is also in the documentary) is a fine writer and a fascinating futurist. But in terms of politics, he has gone off the deep end. Read is Clusterfuck blog and you'll see what I mean. But, that said, I think he is right on about cities and suburbs in these works:
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
tempo_n_groove said:JW269453 said:what dreams said:JW269453 said:what dreams said:pjl44 said:For where we're at in the process, this is pretty good news on the vaccine front
https://apnews.com/e4d5259bfc6c74fcb090d885737c55a6?utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=AP&utm_campaign=SocialFlow
Here's the guy from Merck. He has more credibility than me on this.10:14 p.m.Promises of a vaccine in near future do the public a ‘grave disservice,’ says CEO of pharma giant Merck
The promise has come from the Trump administration’s politicos and infectious-disease experts alike: There will be a coronavirus vaccine by the end of the year or by early 2021, a timeline so fast that the White House came up with a name for the project that seemed ripped from a comic book — Operation Warp Speed.
But Ken Frazier, CEO of Merck & Co., one of the largest pharmaceutical companies in the world, said such vows ignore the country’s troubled history of breakneck vaccine development and can undermine important public health measures.
“When people tell the public that there’s going to be a vaccine by the end of 2020 … they do a grave disservice to the public,” Frazier said in a video interview with Tsedal Neeley, a professor at Harvard Business School. “I think at the end of the day, we don’t want to rush the vaccine before we’ve done rigorous science. We’ve seen in the past, for example, with the swine flu, that that vaccine did more harm than good. We don’t have a great history of introducing vaccines quickly in the middle of a pandemic. We want to keep that in mind.”
Frazier added: “When we do tell people that a vaccine’s coming right away, we allow politicians to actually tell the public not to do the things that the public needs to do like wear the d--- masks. Okay? We were so unprepared for this pandemic. It’s not even funny on so many levels.”
Merck, one of the leading vaccine producers, announced in May that it would develop and manufacture two covid-19 vaccines and an experimental antiviral treatment. The company publicized its plans months after some of its competitors, and Frazier said that when a vaccine is ready, Merck is committed to “broad, equitable, affordable access” to the drug “no matter where you are in the world.”
Anthony S. Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has tempered Trump’s “warp speed” pledge slightly, saying in May that a vaccine could be ready in 12 to 18 months. On Tuesday, Fauci said he is “cautiously optimistic” about the state of vaccine development, citing positive early reports from one drug’s trials and other promising candidates.
“I think we’re in a pretty good place when it comes to vaccines,” Fauci said.
By Reis ThebaultHomie didn't seem like he was a fan of anything. Not even Jim Carrey
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brianlux said:bbiggs said:F Me In The Brain said:The Juggler said:So now they’re making hospitals report cases directly to the White house instead of the cdc?
We are so fucked. Most people aren’t going to pay attention to that. They’re just going to see the numbers magically go down...meanwhile people will still be getting sick and dying.It’s like we’re living in a. Science fiction horror movie
The need to fly weekly is gone for the foreseeable future and all reasons to be nearby a city are also muted to dead for the foreseeable future.
Might be time to head to the hills and just sock away the additional savings for a time.
Fuck that goddamned idiot for offering no leadership/direction/hope. The virus isn't his fault but the position we are in I squarely blame him and the moron sheep following him for.I agree, I think cities and suburbia are dying.I'm going to recommend a book and a film that talk about this, but with one major caveat: the author of the book (who is also in the documentary) is a fine writer and a fascinating futurist. But in terms of politics, he has gone off the deep end. Read is Clusterfuck blog and you'll see what I mean. But, that said, I think he is right on about cities and suburbs in these works:0 -
mrussel1 said:brianlux said:bbiggs said:F Me In The Brain said:The Juggler said:So now they’re making hospitals report cases directly to the White house instead of the cdc?
We are so fucked. Most people aren’t going to pay attention to that. They’re just going to see the numbers magically go down...meanwhile people will still be getting sick and dying.It’s like we’re living in a. Science fiction horror movie
The need to fly weekly is gone for the foreseeable future and all reasons to be nearby a city are also muted to dead for the foreseeable future.
Might be time to head to the hills and just sock away the additional savings for a time.
Fuck that goddamned idiot for offering no leadership/direction/hope. The virus isn't his fault but the position we are in I squarely blame him and the moron sheep following him for.I agree, I think cities and suburbia are dying.I'm going to recommend a book and a film that talk about this, but with one major caveat: the author of the book (who is also in the documentary) is a fine writer and a fascinating futurist. But in terms of politics, he has gone off the deep end. Read is Clusterfuck blog and you'll see what I mean. But, that said, I think he is right on about cities and suburbs in these works:This weekend we rock Portland0 -
mrussel1 said:pjl44 said:mrussel1 said:pjl44 said:Another question: If you're a big believer in a move to remote work, will that ultimately drive up the suburban real estate market? Will more people want dedicated office space in their homes? I can tell you from firsthand experience that a lot of people with good jobs are working from their dining room table, a corner of their basement, etc. If this is the wave of the future, that ain't sustainable.
1. Corps were moving from mid/small cities back into dense urban areas in their recruiting of young talent. The theory was that young people wanted to be urban and highly mobile. I saw this directly at Capital One, here in Richmond. We have the ops hq since teh beginning but over the past 5 years, they have been backfilling less here in Richmond, and adding more jobs in Chicago, NY, and DC suburbs. This is where the high quality young talent wanted to be.
2. After consolidating real estate for years, and encouraging work from home, over the past several years corps have reversed that. They wanted people in the office.
COVID has blown up both of these strategies. Today there are entire call centers working from home. These are people who are non-exempt and have access to NPI. It was unthinkable to WFH. No way, never. But in the course of two weeks, everyone is working from home, having loaded PCs and call center stuff in the back of cars and sent them on their way.
So yes, I think there will be a period of exodus back to the suburbs and some rising prices. I think WFH will be here for at least a few years, although once commercial pricing stays low (if it stays low), there may be a move back. It's crazy how this has disrupted so many 'sacred cows' in business.0 -
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static111 said:So housing market aside. What are everyone’s thoughts on the White House being in charge of all corona virus data sidestepping the cdc and not having the data available to the public?hippiemom = goodness0
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mrussel1 said:brianlux said:bbiggs said:F Me In The Brain said:The Juggler said:So now they’re making hospitals report cases directly to the White house instead of the cdc?
We are so fucked. Most people aren’t going to pay attention to that. They’re just going to see the numbers magically go down...meanwhile people will still be getting sick and dying.It’s like we’re living in a. Science fiction horror movie
The need to fly weekly is gone for the foreseeable future and all reasons to be nearby a city are also muted to dead for the foreseeable future.
Might be time to head to the hills and just sock away the additional savings for a time.
Fuck that goddamned idiot for offering no leadership/direction/hope. The virus isn't his fault but the position we are in I squarely blame him and the moron sheep following him for.I agree, I think cities and suburbia are dying.I'm going to recommend a book and a film that talk about this, but with one major caveat: the author of the book (who is also in the documentary) is a fine writer and a fascinating futurist. But in terms of politics, he has gone off the deep end. Read is Clusterfuck blog and you'll see what I mean. But, that said, I think he is right on about cities and suburbs in these works:The book and the film make it look like this all will happen quickly, but I don't know that that is how it will happen. I think it will be a slower crumbling of civilization as we know it. Fossil fuels are running out less quickly than Kunslter and others predicted, oil is not a limitless resource and when it does became more scarce, cities and suburbs will be unsustainable. At that point, more people will need to do the work of food production meaning a movement of people out of cities and suburbs.I don't mean to suggest that I think this is a certain scenario. But it's one that seems quite likely to me. I hope it doesn't happen. Our best cities are great places of culture and intellect. I would do not relish their demise."It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
JW269453 said:tempo_n_groove said:JW269453 said:what dreams said:JW269453 said:what dreams said:pjl44 said:For where we're at in the process, this is pretty good news on the vaccine front
https://apnews.com/e4d5259bfc6c74fcb090d885737c55a6?utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=AP&utm_campaign=SocialFlow
Here's the guy from Merck. He has more credibility than me on this.10:14 p.m.Promises of a vaccine in near future do the public a ‘grave disservice,’ says CEO of pharma giant Merck
The promise has come from the Trump administration’s politicos and infectious-disease experts alike: There will be a coronavirus vaccine by the end of the year or by early 2021, a timeline so fast that the White House came up with a name for the project that seemed ripped from a comic book — Operation Warp Speed.
But Ken Frazier, CEO of Merck & Co., one of the largest pharmaceutical companies in the world, said such vows ignore the country’s troubled history of breakneck vaccine development and can undermine important public health measures.
“When people tell the public that there’s going to be a vaccine by the end of 2020 … they do a grave disservice to the public,” Frazier said in a video interview with Tsedal Neeley, a professor at Harvard Business School. “I think at the end of the day, we don’t want to rush the vaccine before we’ve done rigorous science. We’ve seen in the past, for example, with the swine flu, that that vaccine did more harm than good. We don’t have a great history of introducing vaccines quickly in the middle of a pandemic. We want to keep that in mind.”
Frazier added: “When we do tell people that a vaccine’s coming right away, we allow politicians to actually tell the public not to do the things that the public needs to do like wear the d--- masks. Okay? We were so unprepared for this pandemic. It’s not even funny on so many levels.”
Merck, one of the leading vaccine producers, announced in May that it would develop and manufacture two covid-19 vaccines and an experimental antiviral treatment. The company publicized its plans months after some of its competitors, and Frazier said that when a vaccine is ready, Merck is committed to “broad, equitable, affordable access” to the drug “no matter where you are in the world.”
Anthony S. Fauci, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has tempered Trump’s “warp speed” pledge slightly, saying in May that a vaccine could be ready in 12 to 18 months. On Tuesday, Fauci said he is “cautiously optimistic” about the state of vaccine development, citing positive early reports from one drug’s trials and other promising candidates.
“I think we’re in a pretty good place when it comes to vaccines,” Fauci said.
By Reis ThebaultHomie didn't seem like he was a fan of anything. Not even Jim Carreyhttps://youtu.be/6uctVORpyPE
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I cannot imagine living in a downtown high rise apartment in a large city right now. Having to share elevators, circulated air, etc. Props to those that do and are not going insane.
My garden and backyard are my peace. If I had to mask up and deal with the anxiety of being around people every time I opened my door, I would not be handling this stuff well.0 -
America is running short on masks, gowns and gloves. Again.
Health-care workers are scrambling for supplies and reusing equipment as the coronavirus pandemic surges
https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2020/07/08/ppe-shortage-masks-gloves-gowns/
I'm sure it would have been the same under Hillary.0 -
bbiggs said:bootlegger10 said:Everyone I talk to in different markets is saying house sales are booming (less inventory so lots of demand and competition). Great time to be selling a house in a lot of areas (and bad for me who wants to buy one).0
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Halifax2TheMax said:static111 said:So housing market aside. What are everyone’s thoughts on the White House being in charge of all corona virus data sidestepping the cdc and not having the data available to the public?cincybearcat said:static111 said:So housing market aside. What are everyone’s thoughts on the White House being in charge of all corona virus data sidestepping the cdc and not having the data available to the public?
BS is right.0 -
PJPOWER said:I cannot imagine living in a downtown high rise apartment in a large city right now. Having to share elevators, circulated air, etc. Props to those that do and are not going insane.
My garden and backyard are my peace. If I had to mask up and deal with the anxiety of being around people every time I opened my door, I would not be handling this stuff well.
Ironically, my brother had to move into his new mid rise apartment on March 13th--literally right when the quarantine was getting started. My other brother and I helped him. It was a dreadful day and I could not help thinking that I was literally risking my life to move this fucking kid into his new place.
Probably got it that day too. I remember feeling sick for a few days afterwards.
www.myspace.com0 -
cutz said:Halifax2TheMax said:static111 said:So housing market aside. What are everyone’s thoughts on the White House being in charge of all corona virus data sidestepping the cdc and not having the data available to the public?cincybearcat said:static111 said:So housing market aside. What are everyone’s thoughts on the White House being in charge of all corona virus data sidestepping the cdc and not having the data available to the public?
BS is right.www.myspace.com0 -
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"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0
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PJPOWER said:I cannot imagine living in a downtown high rise apartment in a large city right now. Having to share elevators, circulated air, etc. Props to those that do and are not going insane.
My garden and backyard are my peace. If I had to mask up and deal with the anxiety of being around people every time I opened my door, I would not be handling this stuff well.'05 - TO, '06 - TO 1, '08 - NYC 1 & 2, '09 - TO, Chi 1 & 2, '10 - Buffalo, NYC 1 & 2, '11 - TO 1 & 2, Hamilton, '13 - Buffalo, Brooklyn 1 & 2, '15 - Global Citizen, '16 - TO 1 & 2, Chi 2
EV
Toronto Film Festival 9/11/2007, '08 - Toronto 1 & 2, '09 - Albany 1, '11 - Chicago 10 -
I live in an apartment building. It isn’t bad at all. You don’t run into people that often. Wear a mask. Doesn’t bother me at all and I take this seriously. Sure there is a better chance of contracting the virus in an apartment building versus a home in the suburbs but I just don't think walking down a hallway or being on an elevator with someone for 30 seconds is a huge risk (assuming everyone is masked up).Post edited by bootlegger10 on0
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