COVID-19 Pandemic (Coronavirus)

ColdSlither

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Elizabeth, NJ by way of East Orange
I w
With a negative net worth of $65 billion and an additional $140 billion in unfunded liabilities, the USPS originally expected to run out of liquidity by 2021 without intervention. That has accelerated rapidly because of COVID-19. Fewer people and businesses are sending mail because of the outbreak, which could hasten the decline of the Postal Service and close its doors as early as June, officials warned.

USPS warns it might have to shutter by June as $2 trillion coronavirus stimulus package provides no funding



This is in part due to the fukkery previous administrations pulled with the USPS. They've been getting fukked with for at least 20 years now. I know Republicans are happy.
 

eXodus

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I’m scared for my dad guys.

he do gas and electric type shyt, gas lines and all that

He wear n95s at work but it be tough to keep that shyt on all day.

white boy on his crew that he share a truck with, a younger cat probably around my age would joke on him when my dad was getting gloves and masks Tryna prepare for the pandemic and shyt cuz I would hip my dad to what was going on. White boy acting like it’s a game and shyt.

long story short, the white cat go to Florida earlier this month on some “fukk the Coronavirus” shyt. When he got back my dad is like “son, should I wear a mask around this nikka at all times, i ain’t Tryna offend him”

I’m like “fukk that keep it on when around him”

now today the little fukk got a sore throat and a little cough developing and CAME TO WORK! These stupid muthafukkas man. People keep taking shyt lightly and putting others at risk.
 

froggle

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link doesn't work
censors changed the shyt

While COVID-19 has targeted the elderly, there have been some success stories of older people making a full recovery from the virus.

The latest is from a 95-year-old World War II veteran who lives in Oregon. After Bill Kelly discovered that he tested positive for coronavirus on March 17, his health has improved, The Oregonian reports.


“Grandpa Bill’s pretty hardcore,” his granddaughter Rose Ayers-Etherington told the publication, adding that he lived through the Great Depression and was one of the first U.S. soldiers to arrive in the South Pacific during WWII.

Kelly started feeling sick and had a low-grade fever on March 15. Because his age deems him as high-risk, and because he has a few underlying medical conditions—such as kidney disease, a congenital heart condition, and high blood pressure—Kelly stayed in a hospital overnight.


He came home the next day when he felt better. But Kelly was ultimately tested for coronavirus after doctors found out that his granddaughter’s husband—who is a medical evacuation pilot—had come into contact with patients who were possibly exposed to the virus. Kelly’s test came back positive.

Ayers-Etherington's husband Isaac Etherington was the only other person in her family who was tested for COVID-19, which came back negative. Kelly lives in a home with his granddaughter, her mother, her husband, and their two kids, a 5-year-old and an 11-month-old.

No one else exhibited symptoms while Kelly isolated himself in a bedroom. Any surface that he touched was disinfected and he wore a mask when he left the bedroom. “But it was still nerve-wracking,” Ayers-Etherington told the newspaper. “We were just drinking hot tea all the time. Taking zinc. Washing our hands constantly.”

Her husband said Kelly was treated “like a leper” during the first week of quarantine. But the granddaughter said that Kelly is “tough as nails.” He said, “We’re doing just fine here. We’re toughing it out. I’ve got two great-grandsons to keep me busy. I’ve been very fortunate.”

In a Facebook post, Ayers-Etherington shared her grandfather’s diagnosis and said he was “kicking it in the butt” even though he was high-risk. “In his words, ‘I survived the foxholes of Guam, I can get through this Coronavirus bullshyt,'” she wrote. “He has strong mental resolve. He has seen tough times and knows how to get through them.”

She also wrote about the seriousness of coronavirus. “It’s real and it’s here and it needs to be respected,” she wrote. “Just hoping grandpa Bill’s story will encourage you and put a smile on your face. Also, the rest of us are healthy.”
 
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