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The official COVID-19/Coronavirus Discussion Thread...aka I hope I don't get the Rona

So my employer has begun opening some plants and labs. Each location has a safety audit that has to be conducted among other criteria for reopening. The office locations are still closed and remain closed until June. I've gotten so used to regular work from home over the years, I don't ever care to go back in

Travel has been suspended likely for the rest of the year with some exceptions. And on that, I say fuck what they talmbout I ain't gettin on no more planes for their ass this year.

Dumbass 45 is making me kinda miss Germany right now tho
 
What does far more and better testing mean or translate to? All I've seen at work is temp checks n that doesn't mean shit.

We are not the most effective country in mitigating so that's false.

Left wing media will shoot down anything that's true. Same way fox news will praise everything.
Left wing media lmao there is no such thing
 
Shit, if they had to do that to me, they might as well jus kill me. Fuck that

Theres a longer version of the video where another nurse/doctor performs the same test on the other dude and it didn't look nearly as bad.

Still looked uncomfortable as fuck tho
 

Coronavirus Has Now Killed More Americans Than Vietnam War



In not even three months since the first knownU.S. deaths from COVID-19, more lives have now been lost to the coronavirus pandemic on U.S. soil than the 58,220 Americans who died over nearly two decades in Vietnam.

Early Tuesday evening ET, the U.S. death toll reached 58,365, according to Johns Hopkins University.

While the sum of lives lost in the U.S. during the pandemic and those claimed by that war is roughly the same now, the actual death rate from the coronavirus in America is considerably higher. It now stands at about 17.6 deaths per 100,000 inhabitants.

During 1968, the deadliest year for the U.S. in Vietnam, the death toll of 16,899 occurred at about half the pandemic's rate — 8.5 troops were killed for every 100,000 U.S. residents.

The pandemic has also been marked by nationwide death tolls surpassing 2,000 on six days this month. The highest daily toll for Americans fighting in the Vietnam War was on Jan. 31, 1968, when 246 U.S. personnel were killed during the Tet Offensive.



During 1968, the deadliest year for the U.S. in Vietnam, the death toll of 16,899 occurred at about half the pandemic's rate — 8.5 troops were killed for every 100,000 U.S. residents
 
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