Best case: It works.
Worst case: It kills almost everyone, the survivors become mute, and apes become super intelligent.
As long as social media is also destroyed, I for one welcome our new ape overlords.
Best case: It works.
Worst case: It kills almost everyone, the survivors become mute, and apes become super intelligent.
Initial reports say the vaccine tests have produced antibodies in patients with minimal or no side effects. Good news so far. Next step is more trials and seeing if the antibodies stay in these people.
Define minimal for me. Are we talking a small cough, a bout of the flu, or am I growing another leg here? This country (USA) needs a fucking vaccine to save itself from it's idiot inhabitants.
Yeah probably just very minimal feelings of being slightly sick for a day. Which doesn’t mean you’re sick it just means it’s your body adjusting to antibodies being acclimated with your white blood cells. I think that’s how it works anyway. So probably just minor feelings of feeling a little sick and maybe some fatigue or minor headaches.Define minimal for me. Are we talking a small cough, a bout of the flu, or am I growing another leg here? This country (USA) needs a fucking vaccine to save itself from it's idiot inhabitants.
Unfortunately, of the known coronaviruses that spread through the population, antibodies last for none - and that seems to be the case for Covid-19 as well.
The article below sums this up.
We’re wasting time talking about herd immunity | CNN
William Haseltine writes that we should not waste time trying to build herd immunity against Covid-19, because it’s unlikely we will ever be able to achieve it. New research on the development and decline of Covid antibodies and a wealth of epidemiological evidence on coronaviruses as a whole...www.cnn.com
In particular, this is what has worried me:
“While SARS and MERS are the coronaviruses that grab the headlines, there are four other mostly unknown coronaviruses that are much more common: 229E, HKU1, NL63 and OC43. What we know from 60 years of research into these viruses is that they come back year after year and reinfect the same people -- over and over again.”
It’s beginning to look like this virus is going to be with us for a very long time.
So things stay the same?Best case: It works.
Worst case: the survivors become mute, and apes become super intelligent.
Took a COVID test today. They said results in 7-10 days... so... by the time I find out if I have it... I won’t have it. This is reality today.
I read that article. So if our bodies can’t produce immunities naturally, then how are scientists in a lab going to do it? The point of vaccines are to jump start our natural immunological process. If that process doesn’t happen then why does he mention it?
And what’s the endgame for all this shit if we are just going to be continuously infected with this forever? Wear masks and never interact with other human beings ever again? Never have a family reunion, or go to church, or eat dinner at a restaurant with your friends? The only thing we are allowed to do is sit at home and throw statues in the river? This is insane.
That's the reality of living in a jurisdiction where no one takes COVID19 seriously and having shit health insurance.
Not everyone that becomes immunized with a vaccine achieves immunity either. The point is to remove enough people from the pool of potential vectors where, coupled with other public health measures, you significantly reduce transmission rates. Its why the flu shot doesn't have to be anywhere near 100% effective for it to save thousands of lives.
Until the Apes develop “Flinger,” their equivalent of Twitter.As long as social media is also destroyed, I for one welcome our new ape overlords.
One person was fined for refusing to leave a KFC restaurant, and two men were caught driving around playing the video game Pokemon GO, Deputy Commissioner Rick Nugent said.
Took a COVID test today. They said results in 7-10 days... so... by the time I find out if I have it... I won’t have it. This is reality today.
Bad news for those who wanted an eternal lockdown.
Yeah name what was still closed in California until just a few days ago. A few limited things. Bars restaurants and movie theaters were open. Now they are closed. Pretty much everything is open across the country.Dude, it’s a virus, it spreads. I’m sure lax policies have contributed to it too, but it’s no coincidence this started surging a couple weeks after the protests, which are still going on btw. And if it spread to some people and then they go back home to another county and then spread it to people there. California is surging too, it’s not a red state and they still have lockdown policies in place.
Cities in general are blue. Centers of education trend liberal. That’s normal. What you’re seeing is cities without liberal policies like mask ordinances suffer and trend higher. Yeah common sense right? Austin Houston and Dallas all wanted mask ordinances and were shot down by the Texas state Gov. now look at themCases rising in blue counties of red states is another data point suggesting that the protests/riots were a significant factor in the increased spread. Here in Memphis there were protests every night for several weeks (thankfully no riots though) and mask usage was certainly not 100%.
Yeah name what was still closed in California until just a few days ago. A few limited things. Bars restaurants and movie theaters were open. Now they are closed. Pretty much everything is open across the country.
California should be much worse than it is because of density. There is no excuse for places like Texas and Florida to be exploding withCovid.
Over 800 people died in Mexico today
CNN just jizzed in their pants.
lol, "one of the most difficult times in history." What are the odds this person has read about the Plague of Justinian or the waves of bubonic plague in medieval Europe?
Yes, India is on an almost perfect exponential curve. Only reason it was not all over the media yet, is that absolute numbers were still much lower than US and Brazil.
Man Brazil and India are fucked. Their testing is almost non existent yet there deaths and cases are climbing. US might be first for now but I bet we wont be for long.
I think looking at national averages of growth gives a really misleading picture. It isn't just that the case count is growing, it's moving, out to regions that didn't get hit hard before. If you zero in on any one state, you see a much more traditional curve, none of them have this roller coaster up and down/second wave thing.
Source: Erick Erickson
I really think the combination of weather, protests, and general lockdown fatigue combined to cause a significant number of people to stop observing social distancing and other protective measures.
Yeah, I do think there must be some kind of community immunity going on. I live in CT and we've been open for months and cases/deaths/hospitalizations are all closing in on zero. People are wearing masks indoors, but it's very rare outdoors even when there isn't 'optimal' social distancing going on. People are having picnics and parties and playing sports all over the place. We got hit hard in April, but saw a steep decline thereafter. There may be something to the T cell theory in which other coronaviruses provides some level of cross protection. And also, 20-30% being immune from having had it could certainly be enough to signficantly impact spread especially if this isn't quite as contagious as was believed earlier on.I think looking at national averages of growth gives a really misleading picture. It isn't just that the case count is growing, it's moving, out to regions that didn't get hit hard before. If you zero in on any one state, you see a much more traditional curve, none of them have this roller coaster up and down/second wave thing.
The inner city areas with the biggest protests genuinely haven't seen much growth from the protests or the eased lockdowns. That isn't because these things were responsible or because they were magic, it's much simpler; these hard hit regions already have herd immunity. We keep getting told this is a long way off and hasn't happened yet, or might never happen, but it's the only sane explanation.
Meanwhile places that didn't get hit that hard yet are now just letting it rock, but without that herd immunity so they're spreading like wildfire. Luckily, there's evidence that, at least in parts of the country, they're spreading a less deadly strain than the one that arrived in New York and the northwest earlier in the year.
I guess we'll see, but I personally think the states blowing up now will die down on a similar timeline to New York or Michigan, give it 3 months or so.
any members here who actually got coronavirus and recovered?
There's also some indication that certain blood types might have a degree of natural immunity, and like you said some less deadly strains that might boost immunity. It doesn't have to be black or white. The fact is we haven't gone totally back to normal, but a degree of herd immunity on top of the precautions that are still in place and masks and all that seem to be keeping that R under 1.0 in those areas.Yeah, I do think there must be some kind of community immunity going on. I live in CT and we've been open for months and cases/deaths/hospitalizations are all closing in on zero. People are wearing masks indoors, but it's very rare outdoors even when there isn't 'optimal' social distancing going on. People are having picnics and parties and playing sports all over the place. We got hit hard in April, but saw a steep decline thereafter. There may be something to the T cell theory in which other coronaviruses provides some level of cross protection. And also, 20-30% being immune from having had it could certainly be enough to signficantly impact spread especially if this isn't quite as contagious as was believed earlier on.
I think these other states could fall off a cliff just like the northeast and some others did once we got into May. I'd be even a bit more aggressive. In a month they could all be on the back side of this, not three.
Yeah, I do think there must be some kind of community immunity going on. I live in CT and we've been open for months and cases/deaths/hospitalizations are all closing in on zero. People are wearing masks indoors, but it's very rare outdoors even when there isn't 'optimal' social distancing going on. People are having picnics and parties and playing sports all over the place. We got hit hard in April, but saw a steep decline thereafter. There may be something to the T cell theory in which other coronaviruses provides some level of cross protection. And also, 20-30% being immune from having had it could certainly be enough to signficantly impact spread especially if this isn't quite as contagious as was believed earlier on.
I think these other states could fall off a cliff just like the northeast and some others did once we got into May. I'd be even a bit more aggressive. In a month they could all be on the back side of this, not three.
any members here who actually got coronavirus and recovered?
There's also some indication that certain blood types might have a degree of natural immunity, and like you said some less deadly strains that might boost immunity. It doesn't have to be black or white. The fact is we haven't gone totally back to normal, but a degree of herd immunity on top of the precautions that are still in place and masks and all that seem to be keeping that R under 1.0 in those areas.
Which doesn't mean we should just "let it rip" Sweden style, because we don't want to just overload the hospitals; I know a couple nurses and Covid is hell to care for. We should do what we can, wear the masks, try to limit gatherings to outdoors (it's summer anyway). But I really do think by October we're gonna see it really flatten out nationwide.
There's also some indication that certain blood types might have a degree of natural immunity, and like you said some less deadly strains that might boost immunity. It doesn't have to be black or white. The fact is we haven't gone totally back to normal, but a degree of herd immunity on top of the precautions that are still in place and masks and all that seem to be keeping that R under 1.0 in those areas.
Which doesn't mean we should just "let it rip" Sweden style, because we don't want to just overload the hospitals; I know a couple nurses and Covid is hell to care for. We should do what we can, wear the masks, try to limit gatherings to outdoors (it's summer anyway). But I really do think by October we're gonna see it really flatten out nationwide.
Were you tested for it at the time? I just ask because February was when it was only hitting a very small segment of people. I have seen people saying they think they had it over Christmas and crazy shit like that, and unless you were celebrating Chrismas with Bat Soup from a Wuhan wet market, no you didn't.I'm pretty sure that a number of folks have had it, as I've read that in a few threads. I had it during the first week of February.
I was not tested around the time I was sick, as we weren't in full pandemic mode back then. I also took an Abbot antibody test the week that it was available, but it came back negative. Based on reports and data that I've read, that's not very surprising.
My experience completely falls in line with the virus however. The headache, the eye pain, loss of smell / taste, body weakness, chills / fever that dragged on for days, the cough, my kids being sick but much much milder, etc. Unfortunately, I do have a coworker that died from a stroke that we all believe was brought on from COVID. That being said, he was an alcoholic and absolutely did not take care of himself. He had the stroke and was hospitalized, and seemed to be recovering OK. Then suddenly he went into multiple organ failure and passed away.
Yeah, who really knows then. The antibody tests are not good. To the point where they're barely even useful at all. I definitely went through a couple weeks where I felt tired and weak and had breathing trouble. Could have been covid, could have been allergies from being cooped up with cats and smoking too much weed because I was bored. . I have no idea.I was not tested around the time I was sick, as we weren't in full pandemic mode back then. I also took an Abbot antibody test the week that it was available, but it came back negative. Based on reports and data that I've read, that's not very surprising.
My experience completely falls in line with the virus however. The headache, the eye pain, loss of smell / taste, body weakness, chills / fever that dragged on for days, the cough, my kids being sick but much much milder, etc. Unfortunately, I do have a coworker that died from a stroke that we all believe was brought on from COVID. That being said, he was an alcoholic and absolutely did not take care of himself. He had the stroke and was hospitalized, and seemed to be recovering OK. Then suddenly he went into multiple organ failure and passed away suddenly.
The rumours that certain blood type have better immmunity has been debunked and proven false
Yup my wife and I had something in February. Fatigue so bad you couldn't even sit up in a chair. I didn't have a bad cough, but she had a serious dry cough that lasted for days.