God imagine that shxxshow lol
I only laugh to mask the hurt from not being invited.
Congrats, btw.
God imagine that shxxshow lol
If she likes this idea, it was your idea. If she starts to hit you over the head with a bow, it was @kg01 ’s plan. Here it is:
1)Do a remote ceremony, with an online viewing RSVP passworded for the guests. Only live attendees are: Mr. & Mrs., Best man and woman, Ordained official, two rings or bands, all become the show. The main principals.
2)Not on a Sunday. Have all guests go through the local designated Chick-Fil-A drive thru. They drop off their presents and give a/or a few coupon(s) to the window employee and get the “reception food,” which comes with a brownie in lieu of cake.
Imagine the savings? Should leave some funds for the Bachelor Party and the new pad.
Good friend of mine is the head vascular surgeon here in Flint Mclaren Hospital. Travels all over the world and had some good colleagues he regularly attends conferences with. What he was telling me, based of discussions with his friends, the worst is yet to come this summer. They’re expecting a 1918 type situation and a possible Great Depression type fall out.FWIW, i'm getting very settled with the idea that not only will their not be college football this fall, there won't be college basketball next winter.
Unless an effective treatment is found very quickly we are probably looking at a situation like 1918 with multiple waves over 18 months.
I actually don't agree with this outlook, as much as I respect your opinion on basketball topics. Partially because I do not want to believe it, and partially because the world is SO much better prepared in general for such things than we were back in 1918, and finally because the mortality rate is FAR lower than the estimates for the Spanish flu on 1918. We now have antibiotics to treat secondary bacterial infections (which did not exist back then). A vaccine will, alas, be 18 months away. But overall, our health systems are so much better that I think we will get past hit much quicker and still expect to be done with the severe magnitude by the end of this Spring.FWIW, i'm getting very settled with the idea that not only will their not be college football this fall, there won't be college basketball next winter.
Unless an effective treatment is found very quickly we are probably looking at a situation like 1918 with multiple waves over 18 months.
I actually don't agree with this outlook, as much as I respect your opinion on basketball topics. Partially because I do not want to believe it, and partially because the world is SO much better prepared in general for such things than we were back in 1918, and finally because the mortality rate is FAR lower than the estimates for the Spanish flu on 1918. We now have antibiotics to treat secondary bacterial infections (which did not exist back then). A vaccine will, alas, be 18 months away. But overall, our health systems are so much better that I think we will get past hit much quicker and still expect to be done with the severe magnitude by the end of this Spring.
There will still be a virus out there, and people will still die from it, but no where near the numbers that should cause continued panic. Heck, we lose 50,000 Americans every year on the highways, so losing a few of our elderly will be nothing. Unless it is thrashed around as an election issue (always possible). America has a short attention span these days. I don't think it will stay that bad for that long.
I actually don't agree with this outlook, as much as I respect your opinion on basketball topics. Partially because I do not want to believe it, and partially because the world is SO much better prepared in general for such things than we were back in 1918, and finally because the mortality rate is FAR lower than the estimates for the Spanish flu on 1918. We now have antibiotics to treat secondary bacterial infections (which did not exist back then). A vaccine will, alas, be 18 months away. But overall, our health systems are so much better that I think we will get past hit much quicker and still expect to be done with the severe magnitude by the end of this Spring.
There will still be a virus out there, and people will still die from it, but no where near the numbers that should cause continued panic. Heck, we lose 50,000 Americans every year on the highways, so losing a few of our elderly will be nothing. Unless it is thrashed around as an election issue (always possible). America has a short attention span these days. I don't think it will stay that bad for that long.
The drug for Malaria seems promising. 40 out of a group of 40 cured in Spain.FWIW, i'm getting very settled with the idea that not only will their not be college football this fall, there won't be college basketball next winter.
Unless an effective treatment is found very quickly we are probably looking at a situation like 1918 with multiple waves over 18 months.
as of this afternoon, there are 235,000 confirmed cases globally and 9,786 confirmed deaths. That's a 4.2% mortality rate. The flu is normally 0.2% mortality. This thing is tracking at 20x the mortality of the flu and the mortality rate will likely increase before it comes down again due to the number of cases being diagnosed by the hour. (US has added 1300 cases this morning. That's a 14% increase in confirmed cases from yesterday -- 9415 -- to noon today.)
New York state now has more confirmed cases than all but seven COUNTRIES. This is not a virus that will just "go away"
You are 100% correct. The problem right now is the lack of any defense other that separation and careful personal protection. Since some COVID-19 carriers are asymptomatic, it is not possible to know for sure who in your social circle or student body or co-workers might be infecting others around them. They might not know themselves. Given that so many are trying to find a vaccine and an effective treatment, I feel we might be able to climb out of this before we reach some of those numbers.This Wuhan virus is more virulent/lethal than the flu but those numbers are misleading at this point in time. For flu we have widespread testing through multiple cheap and effective methods so we know the denominator a lot better for flu than we do Wuhan. For Wuhan we have a specialized testing method (PCR) which has been ramping up but is still only doing 25K tests per day. We don't know the incidence of the Wuhan virus yet.
Most experts believe the mortality from Wuhan will be 2-3X the flu when the data is "normalized" over time.
I agree with you 100%. I also respect Red's opinions and commentary on most things but to compare this to the Spanish Flu is ridiculous. So many factors went into the death toll, namely WORLD WAR 1 where troop movements caused most of the deaths. Not to mention that the Spanish Flu was a much more aggressive strain. There were many reports of people being fine one minute and then getting sick and dying 12 hours later. Let's take this serious but not fear monger. If we just stay away from each other for 2 to 3 weeks this trend will be reversed. Get those stupid Spring breaker kids out of Miami and Ft. Lauderdale and quarantine ALL of them. What a petrie dish that is gonna be.I actually don't agree with this outlook, as much as I respect your opinion on basketball topics. Partially because I do not want to believe it, and partially because the world is SO much better prepared in general for such things than we were back in 1918, and finally because the mortality rate is FAR lower than the estimates for the Spanish flu on 1918. We now have antibiotics to treat secondary bacterial infections (which did not exist back then). A vaccine will, alas, be 18 months away. But overall, our health systems are so much better that I think we will get past hit much quicker and still expect to be done with the severe magnitude by the end of this Spring.
There will still be a virus out there, and people will still die from it, but no where near the numbers that should cause continued panic. Heck, we lose 50,000 Americans every year on the highways, so losing a few of our elderly will be nothing. Unless it is thrashed around as an election issue (always possible). America has a short attention span these days. I don't think it will stay that bad for that long.