Since he asked, here's Texas per capita cases/deaths overlaid on top of Michigan:
FWIW, I just overlaid Florida as well. Interestingly, FL & TX have tracked pretty closely.
Here's California added as well. They're performing slightly better than FL or TX. If I add too many states it starts becoming unreadable, as my weekly 50-state graphs show...
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1. MILLIONS WHO DIDN'T QUALIFY FOR FINANCIAL HELP BEFORE DO NOW...AND IT COULD SAVE YOU *THOUSANDS* OF DOLLARS!
(and those who already qualified now qualify for *more* help!)
This table shows the financial help sliding scale under the #ACA (which cuts off help for middle-class enrollees)...and under the #AmRescuePlan, which covers 100% of the premiums for millions of people & caps them at no more than 8.5% *EVEN FOR MIDDLE-CLASS AMERICANS*:
📣 For what it's worth: During the 2019-2020 cycle, it took me until 11/19/19 (over a year in) before I broke $100,000 raised for Dems....before going on to raise nearly $6 million total.
Counties w/highest cumul. per capita cases: 1. Crowley County, CO (35.3% of pop) 2. Chattahoochee County, GA 3. Bent County, CO 4. Dewey County, SD 5. Lincoln County, AR 6. Lake County, TN 7. Norton County, KS 8. Bon Homme County, SD 9. Trousdale County, TN 10. Buffalo County, SD
Counties w/highest cumul. per capita deaths: 1. Foard County, TX (0.87% of the population) 2. Jerauld County, SD 3. Galax, VA 4. Emporia, VA 5. Gove County, KS 6. Gregory County, SD 7. Hancock County, GA 8. Iron County, WI 9. McMullen County, TX 10. Molley County, TX
My son is on spring break and convinced me to watch "The Phantom Menace" with him. He loves Star Wars but has never seen the prequels before (by design). He knew they'd be bad but wanted to watch them anyway just to see how bad they are.
This is the first time I'd watched Phantom Menace since it first came out. I was hoping that with the benefit of hindsight, perspective, etc. that it might turn out to be better than I remembered. It's actually worse.
Aside from the more obvious stuff--Jar Jar is like fingernails on a chalkboard; Jake Lloyd is terrible as young Anakin (nothing personal...I'm sure he's a nice person in real life); the overused CGI--there's also a bunch of other stuff I'd forgotten about.
EXAMPLE 1: A single 26-yr old living by themselves will save up to $123/mo on avg...and if they earn less than $19K/yr, they're eligible for a FREE #SecretPlatinum plan (technically it's Silver, but w/generous cost-sharing subsidies making it the equivalent of Platinum).
EXAMPLE 2: A single 40-yr old will again save up to $1,480/yr on avg., and again, can get a #SecretPlatinum plan either for FREE (if they earn up to $19K/yr) or for as little as $43/mo if they earn up to $25.5k/yr:
I've deleted a hastily-posted, kneejerk response tweet which I shouldn't have posted. I'm just pissed as hell at GOP legislators in states like WY & MO who either rejected Medicaid expansion or are flat-out overriding their own voters on it (as well as FL & TX, of course).
Just yesterday, a 5-member Wyoming Senate committee rejected expanding Medicaid to 25,000 of their lowest-income residents *again* in a 3-2 vote, even though it would cost the state NOTHING for the first 3 years or so & only 10% of the cost after that. acasignups.net/21/03/31/3-wyo…
And this came just a week after Missouri Republicans defied their own voters & state constitution by blocking *funding* of their share of Medicaid expansion *even though they won't have to pay a dime for up to the first 4-5 years*, jeopardizing the program acasignups.net/21/03/26/misso…