Corona Virus Outbreak from Turd

Especially with the quantum numbered sock puppetseeing mind games abiding in playfully delightful ways that boundaries are jerked around.!

Why doesen’r anybody listen to experts?

‘American medical experts are urging political leaders to shut down the United States to contain the pandemic after the country surpassed 4 million Covid-19 cases.’

Isn’t the handwriting already on the wall to stop all the whitewash?

Just saying…

Because there are are experts saying the experts are wrong, and everybody is an expert, as well.

Lol…

On the brighter side, this:

“Dr Anthony Fauci said a coronavirus vaccine could be developed by October but more likely by November. The infectious disease expert’s comments came as the National Institutes of Health and Moderna started a large Phase 3 trial for its vaccine candidate.”

I agree that the amount of lies incorporated into the outcomes of this pandemic have been over the top. Now how do all the lies tie into businesses not being able to order coins to make change? The grocery store manager told me that she cannot order coins to make change on purchases so I’ll need to pay on credit card/atm or pay with exact change. What’s causing a coin shortage? Could it be the first major test run where people won’t be able to expect change returned ushering in the omittance of coin usage? No coins, then no paper money so everyone may end up using bitcoins or some such nonsense where the oligarchs can immediately cut off your access to finances. The pandemic lead to the end of coin and paper currency, how convenient.

@WendyDarling That hasn’t happened here, so a US-only/elsewhere thing?

It is probably a way of getting money laundering and mass fraud under control, which would allow more money to go back into circulation.

I don’t trust the “long plan” of elites.

I think Wendy is the most accurate. Insightful.

Posted in error…

A current story on Zerohedge.com. Why is there a coin shortage, I ask again? I read your answer Mags but didn’t understand what pennies, nickels, and quarters have to do with fraud.

For years there’s been political talk of getting rid of pennies, then nickels, and so on and so forth until coins are no longer in circulation, then the elimination tactics will move onto the paper currency. It’s hard to have a one world government and totally fucking control every iota of value if many foreign, non-cyber currencies exist. Guess we’ll see if this coin crisis goes global.

An answer can be arrived at by the powers of deduction.

During the lockdown period, all notes were replaced with brand-spanking-new shiny ones, so removing any old and fraudulent notes out of circulation… I heard that the problem was very rife here.

Just asking for a friend…

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Ready for some more nasty news? A new strain of the virus is evolving:

COVID-19 mutation may be evolving to bypass mask-wearing, hand-washing
By Jackie Salo

September 24, 2020 | 2:23pm

A new COVID-19 mutation appears to be even more contagious, according to a study — and experts say it could be a response by the virus to defeat masks and other social-distancing efforts.

Scientists in a paper published Wednesday identified a new strain of the virus, which accounted for 99.9 percent of cases during the second wave in the Houston, Texas, area, the Washington Post reported.

The paper, which has not been peer-reviewed, said people with the strain, known as the D614G mutation, had higher loads of virus — suggesting it is more contagious.

Though the strain isn’t more deadly, researchers said it appeared to have adapted better to spread among humans.

David Morens, a virologist at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said the findings suggest that the virus may become more contagious and that this “may have implications for our ability to control it.”

He said it’s possible that the virus had evolved to resist efforts such as hand-washing and social distancing.

“Wearing masks, washing our hands, all those things are barriers to transmissibility, or contagion, but as the virus becomes more contagious, it statistically is better at getting around those barriers,” Morens told the newspaper.

FILED UNDER CORONAVIRUS , RESEARCH , 9/24/20

© 2020 NYP Holdings, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Good news from Pfizer: Already plans made to distribute vaccine:

"LOGISTICS REPORT

Pfizer Sets Up Its ‘Biggest Ever’ Vaccination Distribution Campaign

The U.S. pharmaceutical giant is preparing to ship billions of Covid-19 vaccines using frozen boxes, cargo planes and trucks in a mega logistics operation

Updated Oct. 21, 2020 6:13 am ET

In Kalamazoo, Mich., a stretch of land the size of a football field has been turned into a staging ground outfitted with 350 large freezers, ready to take delivery of millions of doses of Covid-19 vaccine before they can be shipped around the world.

The facility is a hub in the sprawling supply chain Pfizer Inc. has built to handle the delivery of a vaccine widely awaited as a possible relief from the coronavirus pandemic. The U.S. pharmaceutical giant says it wants to deliver up to 100 million doses this year and another 1.3 billion in 2021.

The Logistics Report

Top news and in-depth analysis on the world of logistics, from supply chain to transport and technology.

Like other drugmakers testing potential vaccines, Pfizer is urgently laying the groundwork with its logistics partners so it can move quickly if its vaccine gets the go-ahead from the Food and Drug Administration and other regulators around the world.

“It’s the biggest-ever vaccination campaign,” said Tanya Alcorn, Pfizer’s supply-chain vice president. “If we get the FDA approval, we will be able to ship the vaccines very shortly after.”

The New York-based drugmaker is working with Germany’s BioNTech SE on one of several experimental Covid-19 vaccines in late-stage testing. Pfizer says it may know whether its vaccine works by the end of October and that it could be ready to apply for emergency-use authorization of its Covid-19 vaccine by late November.

The company’s effort to deliver relief to pandemic-weary populations will revolve around refrigerated storage sites at two of the company’s final assembly centers—the Kalamazoo facility and another in Puurs, Belgium—and rely on dozens of cargo-jet flights and hundreds of truck trips every day. Distribution centers in Pleasant Prairie, Wis., and in Karlsruhe, Germany, have been outfitted for extra storage capacity.

Pfizer so far has spent about $2 billion on developing the vaccine and setting up the distribution network.

The U.S. government placed an initial order for 100 million doses, with the option to purchase 500 million additional doses. The EU ordered 200 million doses with an option for another 100 million. Japan ordered 120 million doses and the U.K. 30 million. Countries in South America and in the Asia-Pacific region also have placed significant orders.

In a typical vaccination campaign, pharmaceutical companies would wait until their product is approved before buying raw materials, establishing manufacturing lines and setting up supply chains to ship a vaccine.

Pfizer Chief Executive Albert Bourla said that the company began setting the groundwork for its supply chain in March, when it kicked off its vaccine development.

“Ensuring over a billion people globally have access to our potential vaccine is as critical as developing the vaccine itself,” he said.

Pfizer says it is preparing for distribution in case the vaccine wins authorization, with hundreds of thousands of doses already in the company’s warehouses in the U.S. and Europe.

To keep the vaccines safe in transit and to move them fast, Pfizer designed a new reusable container that can keep the vaccine at ultracold temperatures for up to 10 days and hold between 1,000 and 5,000 doses. The suitcase-sized boxes, which are packed with dry ice and tracked by GPS, will enable Pfizer to avoid the larger, temperature-controlling containers used in transportation, giving it more flexibility to ship the vaccines faster since planes and trucks won’t have to wait for the standard refrigerated metal boxes.

Pfizer expects to load those boxes on a combined 24 trucks a day from Kalamazoo and Puurs that will move roughly 7.6 million doses daily to airports.

The company plans to take cargo space on an average of 20 flights a day on planes operated by FedEx Corp. , United Parcel Service Inc. and DHL International GmbH to fly the vaccines as close as possible to vaccination centers, ranging from big medical facilities to far-flung hospitals. The air carriers are also in line to handle the next leg of the vaccine’s journey, trucking the doses to sites close to where they will be administered.

Total delivery time, from distribution center to point of use, is expected to be an average of three days, the company said.

Cargo airlines are scrambling to arrange scores of extra flights to move the vaccines. They could hit distribution channels at the height of the peak season for shipping goods ahead of the year-end holidays, squeezing expedited shipping capacity.

Unlike traditional vaccine rollouts, Pfizer plans to bypass distribution wholesalers, including McKesson Corp. , which has been tapped by the U.S. government to distribute Covid-19 vaccines through the federal Operation Warp Speed program.

“For the most part, we are not going to be building inventory,” Ms. Alcorn said. Going through wholesalers, she said, “adds time that we don’t have, and adds a touch point to a sensitive frozen product, taking it off and on trucks.”

Governments around the world are debating the timeline for offering Covid-19 vaccines to the public, as drugmakers speed up development. WSJ’s Daniela Hernandez explains the potential health risks linked to fast-tracking vaccines. Photo: Siphiwe Sibeko/AP

Julie Swann, a North Carolina State University professor of industrial and systems engineering, and a health-care supply-chain expert who advised the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on the H1N1 virus response, said the biggest complications in distribution likely would come closer to the final point of delivery rather than the first stages of shipping.

“Transportation from the manufacturer into a state is only the first step of what needs to be done,” she said. “The real challenges that concern me have to do with the ultralow cold storage. That is where we are in a space that is completely new for our systems in the U.S. for large-scale and wide geographic distribution.”

Shipments may have to be unpacked and moved in smaller lots, for instance, beyond the initial delivery point, increasing the chance that temperature controls could break down, Dr. Swann said.

“As logistics become more complicated around the secondary distribution, that’s going to take a little bit longer,” said Dr. Swann.

©2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

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Londoners, in West End’s Soho, crying about not being able to drink
out past 10pm, ergo… and forever-now-known as ‘The London Covid Riots Of 2020’. :laughing:

#about last Friday / wasn’t there, didn’t do that:

I think it is a way of removing money from Your control just like they do with everything else.

Thus removing money from the hands of money launderers, no?

That means drug money, sex-trafficking money, the prostitution-racket money, protection-racket money… so illegal money.

Take a look at Belarus and Sweden.
Both have a population of about 10 million.
Assuming testing is accurate for the sake of argument, only about 900 have died with (not necessarily of) Covid in Belarus and 6000 in Sweden (see my thread Covid Hoax here in Current Events for why the words assuming and with are boldened).
That’s a crude mortality rate of 0.009% and 0.06% respectively.
Neither country locked down and Covid restrictions were minimal.

Where’s the plague?

They were telling us this was going to be the next Spanish flu, that if we didn’t lock down and impose draconian restrictions, about 1-5% of the pop were gong to die.
Not only did they miss the mark, but they missed it wildly, by 100s of times.
Come up with any excuses you want, but I can point to any country or region in the world and show you a crude motility rate dramatically less than 1%.
You can’t show me a crude mortality rate even close to 1%.
One of the highest is the US, about 200 thousand supposedly died with Covid.
That’s still less than 0.1% of the population and for comparison if I remember correctly influenza killed 80 thousand in 6 months alone last year.

So there you have it, never mind their models, the year is almost over, the data is now in, their own data, putting scrutinization of their methodology aside, proves the threat was exaggerated, deliberately or indeliberately.
That the MSM and politicians refuse to acknowledge the implications of their own data, even a little, proves it’s a hoax.
This is all really about the Chinafication of the world.
The Chinafication won’t happen overnight, they know if they’re to be successful, it’ll take many more years if not decades.
Noncompliance is part of how we resist.

_
:laughing:

I might go for INTJ blue or INTP green… :-k

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Have you considered that different races and cultures require different methods for handling different diseases?

Is Sweden’s number at 6000 supposed to be seen as lower than most?