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Muh Muh Muh My Corona (virus)

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by Twirling Time, Jan 21, 2020.

  1. micropolitan guy

    micropolitan guy Well-Known Member

    Stupid is as stupid does. You can't fix it.
     
  2. Neutral Corner

    Neutral Corner Well-Known Member

    This. This a thousand times over. We get it here, not targeted but generalized. Twitter is insanely bad about this one. You'd think that your entire life fits in a shoebox and you can drive with it to somewhere you like better the way those people talk. We won't even talk about often I hear how my home should be allowed to secede or thrown out of the Union.
     
    Inky_Wretch likes this.
  3. Neutral Corner

    Neutral Corner Well-Known Member

    I got vaccinated at my Episcopal church. One of the members is a pharmacist, and she arranged for a couple of days of vaccine clinic on site at the church. It really isn't that difficult to do this.
     
  4. dixiehack

    dixiehack Well-Known Member

    We could have Pfizer approved to 12-15 year olds next week and for ages 2 and up by September. Sometime not long after that, a lot of people in cities and suburbs who are fretting about vaccine hesitation in the sticks are going to start shrugging their soldiers and deciding it is natural selection thinning the heard of violent lunatics.
     
    lakefront likes this.
  5. 2muchcoffeeman

    2muchcoffeeman Well-Known Member

    This should have happened earlier, although I don’t know if it would’ve prevented the Indian tragedy (or even ameliorated it).

    WASHINGTON—The U.S. said Wednesday it would support the temporary waiver of intellectual property provisions to allow developing nations to produce Covid-19 vaccines created by pharmaceutical companies, citing an urgent need to stem the pandemic.

    Overriding objections from the pharmaceutical industry, U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai said the U.S. would support a proposal working its way through the World Trade Organization. Such a policy would waive the IP rights of vaccine makers to potentially enable companies in developing countries and others to manufacture their own versions of Covid-19 vaccines. ​

    U.S. Backs Waiver of Intellectual Property Protection for Covid-19 Vaccines — The Wall Street Journal


     
  6. garrow

    garrow Well-Known Member

  7. WriteThinking

    WriteThinking Well-Known Member

    That fact needed to be known much more widely, long ago -- and it still does -- because it's legitimate, and, if you know it, it's certainly understandable. But so is people preferring to do something like these vaccinations with their doctors. It's something I've heard many people say, suggest, lament, etc. even where I am in an upper middle-class, pretty liberal, overpopulated area of California. And if people in much less provincial areas than those referenced in the NYT article have wondered about it, it's a good bet that that cloistered population knows and understands nothing of it.

    Perhaps urgent-care centers could have been drafted into the mission, similarly to the way the drug stores have been. At least, then, people might feel they're in an actual medical setting.
     
  8. doctorquant

    doctorquant Well-Known Member

    As an undergrad I fancied myself a future novelist* and therefore took a couple of creative writing classes from my univ's writer-in-residence. He wrote his "big" novel, as he told me, with the aim of depicting the reality that there can be objectively horrible people in your life whom you nevertheless love deeply.



    *My expense reports as a sportswriter are the pinnacle of my creative-writing oeuvre.
     
  9. Starman

    Starman Well-Known Member

    Mine were more in the genre of utopian science fiction.
     
    dixiehack and doctorquant like this.
  10. wicked

    wicked Well-Known Member

  11. doctorquant

    doctorquant Well-Known Member

    When I was working for a Knight-Ridder paper, the rule was you didn't need a receipt for any meal costing less than $25. Why nobody turned up an eyebrow at 27 straight meals costing between $23.85 and $24.68 was (and remains) beyond me.
     
    Baron Scicluna likes this.
  12. tapintoamerica

    tapintoamerica Well-Known Member

    While they may be creative, they almost certainly do not do justice to the extent of the fraud you had to tolerate when claiming '40 hours' in a week of ≥ 60 hours of actual work.
     
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