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Mrs. Doubtpfizer.

-"BB"-
Hen has had her first jab, Hatch gets her first on FridayMore than two-thirds of Australians have been placed under new lockdown rules as cases of the Indian variant have flared up across the country after escaping from quarantine hotels.
With just 5 per cent of the population fully vaccinated and the more infectious strain on the loose, Australia's vaunted 'zero Covid' strategy - which allowed its economy to get back up and running last year - is on precarious ground.
Around 18 million Australians, 70 per cent of the population, are now under some form of lockdown restrictions after cases of the Indian variant exploded out of quarantine hotels in Brisbane, Darwin, Perth and Sydney.
The largest outbreak is in Sydney, where 130 people have tested positive for Covid-19 since a limousine driver for an international flight crew was diagnosed with the Indian variant on June 16. The city's residents are now under a draconian stay-at-home order for two weeks.
Scott Morrison, who is under fire for the glacial vaccine roll-out, constant 'circuit breakers' and brutal border restrictions, chaired a national security committee on Monday before announcing that all care home workers must have a vaccine. The PM also ordered mandatory jabs for anyone working, either directly or indirectly, in quarantine hotels - including airport private hire drivers.
Mr Morrison made another policy shift as he invited anyone under 40 to get an AstraZeneca jab if they want to, despite earlier advice that younger people should get another vaccine.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... tions.html
Big, I respect you for your honesty and integrity, but even an honest man can be wrong. You believe we are a nation; is it all for one and one for all? Are we a family? Recently a black athlete turned her back on the flag and national anthem in the Olympics’ qualifications award ceremony. She was saying it is not my nation, and she is correct; it is not her nation because there is no nation. And by the way, she was praised by liberals.
The measure of willingness to sacrifice for the common good, for almost all of us, is the payment of taxes for roads, schools, healthcare for the indigent, keeping air and water clean, defense against foreign and domestic enemies and so on. That is a trait not common among the rich, especially those 'business leaders' who do not understand that other people's generosity in building infrastructure and education is why they are rich.
True, but then. most wiilingly made the sacrifices and did the "right thing". True, there were some loud mouths egegd on by Trump, but most people, like it or not, socially distanced, stayed home, worked remotely, wore masks, and were became vaccinated when it was offered--a pretty stellar record given the asinine behavior of Trump seeking to divide us. I'm more encouraged rather than discouraged.But I do share Big RR's point: that come some common emergency, Americans will unite despite their differences. Exception and Exhibit A for the prosecution: Trump and the response to COVID. The most horrifying thing to me is that in the face of a common enemy, Trump did not hesitate to divide people.
Delta variant sparks COVID outbreak in Oklahoma gymnastics gym — 85% were unvaccinated
A COVID-19 outbreak in an Oklahoma gymnastics gym infected 47 people in just over two weeks, including gymnasts, staff members and household contacts — 40 of them unvaccinated, federal health officials report.
Only 21 of the COVID-19 cases were sequenced to determine what version of the coronavirus caused them, but all of those samples were identified as the highly contagious delta variant, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report published Friday.
The outbreak, which occurred between April 15 and May 3, adds to existing evidence that suggests the delta variant has higher attack rates than other variants of concern, meaning it can infect more people after exposure.
The attack rate among infected gymnasts and staff members was 20% and 53% among their household contacts.
Forty of the infected people were unvaccinated, three were partially vaccinated with one dose completed and four were fully vaccinated. Those who were infected ranged from 5 to 58 years old, though the median age was 14. (Fully half of those infected in this outbreak were under 14. So much for the "children are not at risk" fairytale.)
Two unvaccinated adults required hospitalization and one required intensive care.
The Oklahoma outbreak joins two others reported this week.
In Texas, more than 125 campers and adults who attended a church camp tested positive for COVID-19, with hundreds more people likely exposed either at the camp or at home. A country music festival in Colorado has also led to a coronavirus outbreak that infected four staff members and 13 attendees.
The CDC emphasized the importance of getting vaccinated against COVID-19, “especially those engaging in strenuous sports with limited ability to maintain physical distancing.” Data shows all available versions of the vaccine offer adequate protection against the delta variant and other variants of concern spreading in the U.S.
New national data released this week predicted the variant will make up about 52% of analyzed coronavirus cases in the country by the end of the two-week period ending July 3, officially overtaking the previously dominant alpha variant first found in the U.K. About a month ago, delta made up about 6%.
Because of reporting delays and multiple interfering variants, federal health officials say the latest estimates mirror case and hospitalization trends in different regions, particularly those with low vaccination rates.
About 99.5% of coronavirus deaths over the last six months have occurred in unvaccinated people, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said last week during a White House COVID-19 briefing. She called the current “suffering and loss ... entirely avoidable.”
An Associated Press review of government data from May also found that breakthrough infections, or those that occur in fully vaccinated people two or more weeks after receiving all their shots, made up less than 1,200 of the more than 107,000 COVID-19 hospitalizations — about 1.1%.
And of the more than 18,000 coronavirus deaths in May, only about 150 were fully vaccinated people, or about 0.8%.
The primary reason for wearing masks was to protect other people, by enhancing social distance. When there was widespread adherence to this practice, the spread of COVID was greatly reduced and we all benefited. The wearer of a typical mask, as we were told, receives little protection from airborne COVID. So, unless someone wears an N-95 mask, there is not much reason to wear a mask. I continue to stay away from other people as a reasonable distancing approach. But as more data comes out, the vaccines have been very effective in limiting the spread and/or impact of COVID -- really a triumph of modern medicine. It becomes more and more mind-boggling why people don't take advantage of the vaccine.ex-khobar Andy wrote: ↑Sat Jul 10, 2021 9:20 pm
I was at CVS this afternoon and of about 14 people in the store I was the only one wearing a mask.