14 members of the local hockey team got it
View: https://twitter.com/DrEricDing/status/1378479376946315272
View: https://twitter.com/DrEricDing/status/1378479376946315272
I think I see... please correct me if I have misunderstood, I've taken it to mean you are saying there should be no passport system (I agree it'll be too easily ignored) and that restrictions should remain in place until everyone has been fully vaccinated because that's the only way to keep everyone away from the contagion (I also agree)?The passport isnt about keeping people safe from a virus, its about getting people back to normality and easing restrictions sooner though
correctI think I see... please correct me if I have misunderstood, I've taken it to mean you are saying there should be no passport system (I agree it'll be too easily ignored) and that restrictions should remain in place until everyone has been fully vaccinated because that's the only way to keep everyone away from the contagion (I also agree)?
Ace, many thanks. Can't say I disagree at all, after a year of this tomfoolery I'd rather we all be overcautious for a few more months rather than risk all the advancement just because some guy couldn't resist the lure of the bar-top and covered it in a new variant that cooked up in his asymptomatic lungs which bypasses that year of work.correct
Ah if only this was the biggest concern. In truth while virus do mutate in a specific species they typically do not get more lethal but often get less lethal but more infectious. Its typically not until a virus makes jumps between species that bad things happen like become more lethal. In the case of SARS and SARS-Cov-2 it already has a huge animal reservoir so its not like a vaccine is going to make this virus go away (every vertebrate has a form of Coronavirus infection). The best we can hope for is to reduce our immune over active response to it and instead treat it much like influenza. While still killing millions a year influenza is for the most part an inconvenience to most. Other children in the Covid family are far more lethal like MERS (jumped from camels) and SARS (jumped from cats)Ace, many thanks. Can't say I disagree at all, after a year of this tomfoolery I'd rather we all be overcautious for a few more months rather than risk all the advancement just because some guy couldn't resist the lure of the bar-top and covered it in a new variant that cooked up in his asymptomatic lungs which bypasses that year of work.
This! ^^ This is exactly what the outcome of this pandemic should be.My biggest hope is that this is a wake up call to the world that we had a gentle reminder that life is fleeting and this "Pandemic" was at most a baby pandemic and meek at that. That we should be working on actionable plans for a real pandemic.
They may have changed the layout of the website a bit, I'm not sure...- World: John Hopkins University Data page responds with "Request cannot be served." No current up to date data to report as a result.
Thanks for the kind advice, I've been using coronavirus.jhu.edu/ but it looks like either they no longer support the browser/s I'm using or I've visited the site every day for a year and they are no longer willing to host me :D The Map page is also banjaxed, won't load correctly so I'm thinking it's more Browser Support has been redacted.They may have changed the layout of the website a bit, I'm not sure...
Try https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html
if that doesn't work try this
Home - Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center
Johns Hopkins experts in global public health, infectious disease, and emergency preparedness have been at the forefront of the international response to COVID-19.coronavirus.jhu.edu
If there's still no joy... you can also try ... it's a bit more in-depth, and (I think) by one of the professors involved. He gets a little bogged down sometimes so it tends to be a day behind.
An interactive visualization of COVID-19 | 91-DIVOC
An interactive, data-forward visualization of COVID-19 data by Prof. Wade at The University of Illinois. Updated daily.91-divoc.com
There are a few other sources, and some seem to be having access problems due to whatever is going on at John Hopkins.
EDIT: OR just continue to use Google... it seems to be just a few hours behind the data at John Hopkins.
I don't think it's the browser, I have Chrome on my PC, but I have another ... uh not PC... but made in the UK (yes, a Raspberry PI 4B)... that uses Firefox and it works.Thanks for the kind advice, I've been using coronavirus.jhu.edu/ but it looks like either they no longer support the browser/s I'm using or I've visited the site every day for a year and they are no longer willing to host me :D The Map page is also banjaxed, won't load correctly so I'm thinking it's more Browser Support has been redacted.
I got the following yesterday and today so thought it was the site having issues over the Public Holiday:
View attachment 20573
If you are still seeing it correctly I might have to change my IP address if I've been excluded or might even have to download Google Chrome if they have dropped support for FireFox.
EDIT - Just checked my cache, it was 1gb, cleared that but still no joy.
It could be anywhere, we'll find out I suppose. Weekly suppositories... I had to have one of those once. I'd take a shot in the ass before that. You know your ass conspires against you when you get one... At first it says what the hell is that? Then it sucks it in despite whatever you think about it.Fear not citizens, for I am fully vaccinated. I don't know where we go from here though. 6 month boosters? Multiple vaccines for multiple strains? Weekly suppositories?
Why does this make me think of a newbies first experience in the prison game play loop?It could be anywhere, we'll find out I suppose. Weekly suppositories... I had to have one of those once. I'd take a shot in the ass before that. You know your ass conspires against you when you get one... At first it says what the hell is that? Then it sucks it in despite whatever you think about it.
Thanks for keeping us informed, great to hearFear not citizens, for I am fully vaccinated. I don't know where we go from here though. 6 month boosters? Multiple vaccines for multiple strains? Weekly suppositories?
Anal swabs are a lot easier to take than a suppository, let me tell ya. It only goes in a couple inches, and it's smaller than your left index finger. It is also capable of detecting the virus far earlier and more accurately than a nose swab, and it sure as hell doesn't make you feel like they're tickling your brain.The suppositories would explain why some countries kept giving people anal swabs at the boarders...
However, the statement in the article left those questions more hanging in the air:However, Covid-19 didn't necessarily increase the risk for the full spectrum of neurological illness.
"Two important negative findings were related to parkinsonism and Guillain-Barré syndrome," Taquet said. "Both of those conditions are neurological conditions that we know are sometimes associated with viral infection. We did not find that they were more more common after Covid-19 and after the other respiratory tract infections that we looked at."
Whether COVID-19 is associated with Guillain-Barré syndrome remains unclear; our data were also equivocal, with HRs increased with COVID-19 compared with other respiratory tract infections but not with influenza (table 3), and increased compared with three of the four other index health events (appendix p 34). Concerns have also been raised about post-COVID-19 parkinsonian syndromes, driven by the encephalitis lethargica epidemic that followed the 1918 influenza pandemic. Our data provide some support for this possibility, although the incidence was low and not all HRs were significant. Parkinsonism might be a delayed outcome, in which case a clearer signal might emerge with a longer follow-up.