First, I’m surprised that anyone (without an agenda) can look at this national map and essentially say “You know what? Some parts of this country are going to be alright.”
I mean, it looks like a scene from the “Floor Is Lava”
Second, many counties in the states he mentioned ***DO*** fall in the danger zones or are moving in that direction.
The eastern half of New Jersey, Suffolk County, Mass (home to Boston) and Milwaukee County, Wisc. are either under substantial or high risk.
Then you have Philadelphia; Hennepin, Minnesota (Minneapolis); Wayne County, Michigan (Detroit) and Franklin County, Ohio are either on the verge of being at substantial risk or moving in that direction.
Even Chittenden County, Vermont is trending in the wrong direction with 61% fully vaxxed.
That’s because 61% coverage isn’t enough against delta, despite being among the highest in country.
The U.S. had a shot to squash COVID this spring through vaccination, and we missed.
Meanwhile, Leonhardt fans (Leonhearts?) keep chirping nonsense at me about…
…how NYC isn’t in a danger zone (it is)
…or about how their kids shouldn’t need to wear masks because flu is worse than Covid (they should and that’s a sh*t take).
I know that @nytopinion tends to publish whatever lands in their inbox/can drive traffic, but maybe it’s time to fact check your dude?
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Omicron now makes up 92% of sequenced cases in the New York and New Jersey region, based on the latest data from the CDC. That's up from the 13% reported last week.
1. I mentioned to @Steronious on @WNYC this weekend that we might eventually learn that omicron arrived here well before its first detection, based on evidence from overseas... wnyc.org/story/gov-hoch…
I am now wondering if this increase is partially due to increased efforts to find omicron cases. The variant is undoubtedly spreading 2-3x faster than delta...but damn, what a jump!
No matter what is ultimately revealed, we need more resources for genomic surveillance.
Indeed, the U.S. COVID outbreak could be transitioning into an endemic — where the coronavirus would continue to thrive in perpetuity, but vaccinated people would be largely spared the worst outcomes. gothamist.com/news/ny-breaks…
A COVID endemic would mean riding this rollercoaster of infection waves every few months or perhaps just every winter, and it could be brutal for unvaccinated people.
“Some consistent patterns have emerged: Two doses of an mRNA vaccine produce more antibodies, and more reliably, than an infection with the coronavirus does.”
“Only 85 percent to 90 percent of people who test positive for the virus and recover have detectable antibodies to begin with. The strength and durability of the response is variable.” nytimes.com/2021/10/12/hea…
NYC Officials Say School Windows Can Always Offer Solid Ventilation. Independent Scientists Disagree gothamist.com/news/nyc-offic…
And as a fun exercise in science media literacy, let's break down the Mayor's response...
Two weeks ago, Brian Lehrer asked @NYCMayor/@BilldeBlasio whether he had heard that the air purifiers @NYCSchools had purchased for every classroom in the city lacked HEPA filters, an industry standard.