COVID-19 Pandemic (Coronavirus)

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But why does it sound like this is something you want to happen? To be honest, you (and others) sound like miserable people to be around :yeshrug:

Because I care about those close to me who are vulnerable. I don't like seeing so many people clamor for a return to normalcy at such a dangerously premature juncture. It's completely insensitive to the millions of people who are still at risk of dying until a cure is discovered, which isn't happening for at least another year. You think I enjoy fretting over whether or not loved ones are going to get infected? You think it's pleasurable to become obsessive about every little step I take when venturing outside?

I'm just tired of reading gibberish from simpleminded idiots incapable of grasping the scope of what we're dealing with. Sick of seeing dudes pine for trips to the beach, sessions at the gym, games on the basketball court, nights out at the clubs, and other meaningless activities while thousands of people are dying every day. It's fukking morbid and pathetic. If someone's life is so empty and bereft of substance that they can't chill for a year, so that lives can be saved in the midst of a global pandemic, I don't have any respect or patience for them.

:yeshrug:
 
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Just last week you were scared as hell now you acting like you want this to drag out
:hhh:

I'm looking at the impact on the black community. That's what's changed, as far as I'm concerned. Black people in America are being decimated by this, and we haven't even entered the apex. I'm sorry, but black people need to take this shyt a lot more seriously than they presently are. :francis:
 

old pig

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What in the hell on earth is this - they can’t make up their minds for shyt
:dwillhuh:
White House COVID-19 Coordinator: Don’t Go To Grocery Store Or Pharmacy Unless Essential
It’s come to this: The White House is now advising everyone not to head to the grocery store or pharmacy in the coming two weeks.

“The next two weeks are extraordinarily important,” White House coronavirus response coordinator Deborah Birx said Saturday at a press conference. “This is the moment to not be going to the grocery store, not going to the pharmacy, but doing everything you can to keep your family and your friends safe.”

The coronavirus is expected to peak over the next two weeks. Already, the U.S. has more than 312,000 confirmed cases – that’s confirmed, as in tested and certified – and an unknown number of asymptomatic people who have the virus. The U.S. now has more than 8,500 deaths.

fukk a white house...I’m glad I read a lot of posts in here that stated april would be the harshest month...cats in here was saying this days in advance...that’s why I ran all my errands and got this nut out my system on 4/1 (pardon my crassness)...I want no parts of outside these next 4 weeks
 

BmoreGorilla

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I'm looking at the impact on the black community. That's what's changed, as far as I'm concerned. Black people in America are being decimated by this, and we haven't even entered the apex. I'm sorry, but black people need to take this shyt a lot more seriously than they presently are. :francis:
I think all of us feel that way but you definitely just skated around what I said to you
:heh:
 

loyola llothta

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DR Congo 'prepared' to take part in vaccine testing: official
04/04/2020

The Democratic Republic of Congo is prepared to take part in testing of any future vaccine against the coronavirus, the head of the country's taskforce against the pandemic said on Friday.


"We've been chosen to conduct these tests," said the head of the national biological institute, Jean-Jacques Muyembe.

"The vaccine will be produced in the United States, or in Canada, or in China. We're candidates for doing the testing here," Muyembe told a news briefing in comments that sparked controversy in DR Congo amid charges the population was being used as guinea pigs.

Muyembe suggested that clinical trials could begin in July or August.

"At some point, COVID-19 will be uncontrollable," the virologist said.

"The only way to control it will be a vaccine, just like Ebola. It was a vaccine that helped us end the Ebola epidemic."

Muyembe's comments came as two leading French doctors came under a storm of criticism after discussing on a television programme the idea of testing a vaccine for coronavirus in Africa.

Camille Locht, head of research at the National Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM) in Lille, and Jean-Paul Mira, head of intensive care at the Cochin hospital in Paris, suggested that Africa offered better conditions for testing the vaccine.

Their remarks sparked furious criticism, with the French anti-racism NGO, SOS Racisme, saying, "No, Africans aren't guinea pigs".

Even former international and Ivory Coast football star Didier Drogba joined in.

"It is inconceivable that we continue to accept this. Africa is not a laboratory. I strongly denounce these very serious, racist and contemptuous words," the former Chelsea and Marseille striker wrote on his Facebook page and on Twitter.

"Help us save lives in Africa and stop the spread of the virus that is destabilising the whole world instead of seeing us as guinea pigs. It is absurd."

The tenth Ebola epidemic in DR Congo is set to be declared over on April 12, after it killed more than 2,200 people in the east of the country since its outbreak on August 1, 2018.

More than 320,000 people were given two different experimental vaccines to stop the spread.

Link:
DR Congo 'prepared' to take part in vaccine testing: official
 

satam55

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Cuba has mobilized its medical corps around the world to distribute a new "wonder drug" that officials there say is capable of treating the new coronavirus despite the United States' strict sanctions that continue to pressure the communist-run island.

The drug, called Interferon Alpha-2B Recombinant (IFNrec), is jointly developed by scientists from Cuba and China, where the coronavirus COVID-19 disease outbreak first emerged late last year. Already active in China since January, the Cuban Medical Brigades began deploying to dozens of nations, providing personnel and products such as its new anti-viral drug to battle the disease that has exceeded 400,000 confirmed cases across the globe. As of Tuesday, over 100,000 people have recovered from the infection and more than 18,000 have died.

Cuba first used advanced interferon techniques to treat dengue fever in the 1980s and later found success in using it to combat HIV, human papillomavirus, Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C and other diseases. The use of Interferon Alpha-2B Recombinant "prevents aggravation and complications in patients reaching that stage that ultimately can result in death," Cuban biotech expert Luis Herrera Martinez said, according to a recent Yale University Press Blog feature written by the University of Glasgow's Helen Yaffe. She called the treatment a potential "wonder drug" against the new coronavirus.

Yaffe, who recently authored a book on Cuba's post-Soviet economic experience entitled We Are Cuba!, told Newsweek that she knew of at least 15 countries that have contacted Cuba to request the drug, along with "local mayors and hospital directors who are anxious to get hold of the Cuban anti-viral to meet the crisis." Interferon Alpha-2B Recombinant has not been approved to treat COVID-19, but has been proven effective against viruses similar to it.

It has been selected along with 30 other drugs to treat COVID-19 by China's National Health Commission. The World Health Organization will be studying interferon-beta, along with three other drugs, to determine their effectiveness against the new coronavirus.

Cuba's ambitious anti-pandemic efforts are hindered, however, by decades-long U.S. sanctions that one Cuban official described to Newsweek as "the main obstacle not only to respond to major health crises like COVID-19, but the main obstacle to the country's development at any area."

"The lifting of the blockade against Cuba would have an extraordinarily positive impact on Cuba and mostly in the health sector, which has been one of the most damaged areas since the establishment of the blockade almost 60 years ago with more than 3 billion in economic losses," the official added.

The State Department has said it would offer assistance to sanctioned countries facing this new coronavirus, repeatedly mentioning Iran and North Korea but not Cuba in recent statements. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo did, however, single out the country along with several others earlier this month while discussing the annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices that targeted Cuba over its single-party system, imprisonment of political prisoners and other abuses reported by the U.S.

"The root of the U.S. sanctions is the reality that the Castro regime uses its financial resources to abuse the Cuban people and engage in malign influence around the region, especially in Venezuela. That basic reality needs to change before any scaling back of sanctions could be discussed," a State Department spokesperson told Newsweek.

"Furthermore, the U.S. State Department has documented indicators of human trafficking in Cuba's overseas medical missions each year since the 2010 Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report, including, most recently, those included in the 2019 TIP Report," the spokesperson added. "We urge host country governments to examine the practices surrounding these programs and proactively investigate the contractual agreements associated with Cuba's medical missions in their countries."

The Cuban Foreign Ministry regularly rejects such accusations, arguing that Washington's embargo was instead the true violation of international law and highlighting Havana's humanitarian contributions.

"Despite the blockade, Cuban doctors are working in 59 countries around the world, 37 of which have confirmed cases of COVID-19," the Cuban official told Newsweek.

These countries include Latin American and Caribbean countries such as Grenada, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Suriname and Venezuela but also Italy, which has witnessed the deadliest COVID-19 outbreak to date. The disease has no veritable vaccine or cure yet, but Havana hoped to demonstrate its ability to at least alleviate health crises on an international scale.

"In addition, the world can count on more than 29,000 doctors who graduated in Cuba and who, following their training at the Latin American School of Medicine and other Cuban faculties, will do everything in their power to combat COVID-19," the official said.

At home, Cuba's experience with COVID-19 has been relatively mild. The country of roughly 11.5 million people has so far registered 40 cases and a single death as of Tuesday, according to the Cuban Ministry of Public Health.

The Cuban health sector is highly developed, a priority of Fidel Castro's mid-20th century revolution that placed the island in the spotlight of Cold War geopolitics. "Health is an issue of utmost importance for Cuba, which is why we defend the right of all human beings to receive quality medical care," the Cuban Foreign Ministry said in a statement sent to Newsweek. "Therefore, solidarity is a principle defended by Cuba and our people during more than 60 years of Revolution."

Yaffe explained to Newsweek how "a small, Caribbean island, underdeveloped by centuries of colonialism and imperialism, and subject to punitive, extraterritorial sanctions by the United States for 60 years, have so much to offer the world."

"After the Revolution of 1959, Cuba's socialist state developed a free, universal healthcare system, attaining more doctors per person than any other country in the world. This has been facilitated by free, universal access to education at all levels," she said. "The benefits are distributed globally; some 400,000 Cuban medical professionals have worked overseas in six decades, mainly in poor countries, providing healthcare that is free at the point of delivery."

Before embarking abroad on what's known officially as "collaboration missions," 400 Cuban doctors and specialists are preparing for their missions by training at the Pedro Kouri National Institute of Tropical Medicine, according to the Cuban Foreign Ministry. The Havana-based institute has been designated a health center for treating confirmed COVID-19 cases, though there were few so far at home.

The U.S., on the other hand, is set to become the country most afflicted by the coronavirus. COVID-19 cases in New York State alone exceeded 20,000 on Tuesday, with new cases said to be doubling at a rate of every three days. The U.S. has reported 46,158 confirmed cases, 583 of whom died and 35 of whom have recovered as of Tuesday.

That same day, the Navy announced that a sailor tested positive for COVID-19 while stationed at Guantanamo Bay, the U.S. military base and prison facility maintained without permission on Cuban territory.

President Donald Trump's administration has sought help from the international community to battle the disease. State Department officials have reportedly called on foreign aid recipients to provide critical medical supplies, and the president himself appealed to his South Korean counterpart for ventilators, according to a readout of their 23-minute call released Tuesday by the Blue House.

Washington has previously rejected Havana's offers to assist during national emergencies such as Hurricane Katrina, which devastated the city of New Orleans and surrounding areas in 2005. The Cuban official told Newsweek that, as of Monday, "no official request for help has been received" from the U.S. amid the current crisis.

Nor were there any signs of sanctions relief despite urgent pleas Tuesday from top United Nations officials.

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres called for a global ceasefire as well as the removal of all international trade barriers and restrictions in order to jointly curb the rapid spread of COVID-19. U.N. Human Rights High Commissioner Michelle Bachelet called specifically for sanctions to be lifted against Cuba, North Korea, Zimbabwe and Venezuela.

"The majority of these states have frail or weak health systems. Progress in upholding human rights is essential to improve those systems—but obstacles to the import of vital medical supplies, including over-compliance with sanctions by banks, will create long-lasting harm to vulnerable communities," Bachelet's statement read. "The populations in these countries are in no way responsible for the policies being targeted by sanctions, and to varying degrees have already been living in a precarious situation for prolonged periods."

Following a burgeoning detente under the administration of former President Barack Obama in 2015, Trump has expanded economic restrictions against Cuba. Washington has long sought regime change in Havana but now struggled to oust another leftist, U.S.-blacklisted government in Caracas, where embattled Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro continues to receive support from Cuban officials in spite of Trump's tightening sanctions on both countries since 2017.

"In the months prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, Cubans were already experiencing shortages of oil and basic goods, like soaps and foodstuffs, because of the tightening of the U.S. blockade," Yaffe told Newsweek. "They were also suffering from scarcities of some of the inputs required for their world-leading biotech industry."

"This is despite the fact that almost every country in the world condemns the U.S. (unilateral and extra-territorial) blockade, evidenced by the U.N. General Assembly vote for 28 consecutive years," she added. "Now is the time to demand an end to sanctions that stop Cuba from getting access to the resources it needs to fight this deadly pandemic, both for their own population and for the global beneficiaries of Cuban medical internationalism."
 

DJ Paul's Arm

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LBWoB5c.gif


Fred.

Who is this and does she have any hardcore scenes?

Asking for a friend.
 

Dr. Acula

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Its a shame that we basically reversed all the progress with Cuba we were making when Trump came in and overturned everything related to Cuba that Obama pushed near the end of his time in office.

Watched a NOVA episode the other night where supposedly they got a vaccine for Lung Cancer in Cuba and how cancer patients in the United States had to break the laws just to get access to this medicine that is only manufactured in Cuba due to our trade embargo. This is another example in the same vein as this article.

The US will struggle to get this drug too if it is really proven effective due to our trade policy with Cuba.
 
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I think the numbers will start to drop, i went to 4 stores this morning to pick up some essentials and 70% of us all had on mask. The employees were constantly wiping down each basket when it was returned. All self checkout lanes were being cleaned after every use.


Just like I said, if the majority are wearing mask and everything is constantly being clean there’s no way it can continue to spread at a high rate


Dallas County sees drop in number of new COVID-19 coronavirus cases
FOX 44 hours ago
DALLAS - Dallas County reported just 43 new confirmed cases of COIVD-19 on Monday and no new deaths.

County health officials said that while there were some caveats to the low figure, there is hope that strict stay-at-home orders could be starting to pay off. The new case count comes just days after 100 new cases were reported on back-to-back days.

RELATED: Coronavirus coverage

“While today’s positive case count is encouraging, I caution about reading too much into this number as several private labs were closed on Sunday. Having said that, the hospital systems are seeing evidence that the Dallas County Safer at Home executive order enacted on March 22nd is working to #FlattenTheCurve,” said Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins. “Please continue adherence to the Safer at Home order to help save lives.

Dallas County now has a total of 1,155 confirmed coronavirus cases, one of the highest numbers in the state.
 
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