And I note - it took me a bit longer than it would take others since I asked the students to explain everything to me (since, well, most of them have been in my “covid mass testing course” where they work at this facility as part of the class)
Without that and stopping to talk to some of the people I know there it probably would have taken a minute from entrance to exit
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In 2019, some details of Bill Gates' interactions came out in a news story. His spokesperson offered a minimalistic "apology" of sorts for this. And even with the details know at the time, the "apology" was completely insufficient
According to @nytimes tracker, 604 people in USA died from #COVID19 yesterday. Yes, this is lower/day than it has been. But still, that would be ~220,000 deaths over a year. Don't get complacent. We still have work to do in the US. And lots more elsewhere. nytimes.com/interactive/20…
And I note, most analyses suggest the counts we get from trackers like this are undercounts npr.org/sections/coron…
And thus, if the numbers stay like this, #COVID19 would still be the third leading cause of death in the USA cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/l… . Certainly numbers are likely to keep going down, but they are still scarily high
I am with @kprather88 here. Really vexed by what @CDCDirector and @CDCgov have done here. I mean, I get the general idea of trying to return to normal and encourage vaccination. But here are some thoughts for why I am still a bit vexed.
1) The vaccines are not fully effective. Therefore, some people who are vaccinated can still get sick, and die. And for some of the vaccines, the percentage of people protected is not insanely high.
2) Some vaccinated people can also still carry and transmit the virus.