My last recommendation of Ted Lasso seems to have been largely ignored but I'll try one more. Mythic Quest is a really good show. It's created by a couple of the people from "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" and is workplace comedy about a video game company.
It's not about keeping people safe. It's about not getting killed in the media for letting someone they know has COVID play in a tournament. It's probably also about some liability from the same thing. If they let someone they know has it play and someone else that was anywhere near them gets...
He was in the contact tracing protocol and was not allowed in the locker room or other indoor areas. I posted that above. The PGA followed their protocol just like they have for the last 50 events. This has happened to other golfers several times, they just weren't leading the golf tournament...
The PGA did pretty much what you would have done. He was restricted from common areas for the tournament and had to test ever day. Most golfers just have to test before the tournament. The PGA's policy of disqualifying someone for COVID is not because he is a threat to spread it. It would be...
I would go to Dahlonega. I grew up there and it is a great small town. Lot's of outdoor stuff to do. If your wife doesn't like driving around Atlanta, I wouldn't think Buford would be much better traffic wise. If I had to go back to Georgia and could live anywhere, it would probably be...
But a couple of weeks ago, cases was the number that mattered. The seven day moving average of cases has been going down for 2 weeks now. The average of deaths will follow and then you will have to make up a whole new metric to say how bad we are doing. Wonder what it will be?
It's not impossible. If there was a statistically large number of people that haven't been counted, some family member or someone would have at least pointed out one. Maybe they have and I haven't seen it but so far no one has as far as I know. I think the numbers are fairly accurate right...
It's funny to me that people that think things are undercounted point to studies and theories without any concrete proof. However,on the other side, I see stories like this almost every day...
Ok. Let's say that closing down prevents deaths (I don't think it prevents significantly more deaths than it causes). If it does, how long would you propose shutting down and how would you reopen? How much would you shut down? How would you enforce said shut down?
How were they prevented? Did the virus disappear so that it couldn't infect anyone ever again? No. It isn't going anywhere. Shutdowns are just kicking the can down the road and the people that did that study covered their butts by having the word delayed in there. That study really isn't...
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