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guest 12.09.2020 12:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The Soup Nazi
It's hard for me to do the precise math from here, given that I can't only consider the, let's say, "cheque" each Australian is getting as a relief from this disaster; elements like tax exemptions, if there are any, have to be factored in as well, and there's also the matter that we're talking about a federal country and not all regions may be implementing the same measures. What I can say with a degree of certainty, inasmuch as it's been published by several credible media outlets, is that the federal government passed legislation for a $1,500 per fortnight wage subsidy for eligible employers; fine print exists everywhere, though.

In any case, I bet my collection of Go-Between albums that the fucking pandemonium circumstances are considerably better for the average Australian than for the average Unitedstatesean. Or for the average mook in my own country, for that matter.

yeah just backing this up I was supported by this from March to September and it equated to $1500/fortnight (less tax), but started getting wound back thereafter (tightened eligibilities, reduced rates etc.) ironically as things truly started to hit the fucking fan down in melbourne. it was a good initiative that was targeted terribly and was ripe for exploitation by businesses, and was in certain instances used as a means of raising tax revenues on people in the form of picking up and being balanced against arrears. also was inherently ideological in nature – arts orgs exempt, as were local government councils and universities (the presiding government loathes all of the above), and also played into some bizarre conceptions as to what constituted 'valuable' work. government were forced into it because they had no choice, but on a federal level they've resisted undertaking any meaningful action on anything and have tried to undo any goodwill engendered by ripping away support just as the country begins to crumble, masquerading as if the pandemic is over.

Robert Schunk 12.09.2020 04:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by guest
yeah just backing this up I was supported by this from March to September and it equated to $1500/fortnight (less tax), but started getting wound back thereafter (tightened eligibilities, reduced rates etc.) ironically as things truly started to hit the fucking fan down in melbourne. it was a good initiative that was targeted terribly and was ripe for exploitation by businesses, and was in certain instances used as a means of raising tax revenues on people in the form of picking up and being balanced against arrears. also was inherently ideological in nature – arts orgs exempt, as were local government councils and universities (the presiding government loathes all of the above), and also played into some bizarre conceptions as to what constituted 'valuable' work. government were forced into it because they had no choice, but on a federal level they've resisted undertaking any meaningful action on anything and have tried to undo any goodwill engendered by ripping away support just as the country begins to crumble, masquerading as if the pandemic is over.


I definitely hear you, particularly concerning the class bias of the exemptions (bourgeois bastions such as arts organizations and universities), yet the whole idea of "woke" ideology is the support of the bourgeoisie and lumpenproletariate at the expense of workers and farmers, just as, in my country, President Elect (?) Biden promises forgiveness of Federal student loans, which will certainly provide a massive subsidy to the petite bourgeoisie at the expense of workers and farmers!

***

Some clarification, though. When you say "the presiding government loathes all of the above" do you mean the State of Victoria, or the Federal government? And could you expand on your statement: "but on a federal level they've resisted undertaking any meaningful action on anything and have tried to undo any goodwill engendered by ripping away support just as the country begins to crumble, masquerading as if the pandemic is over."? Are you saying that the federal government is ceasing financial support while the epidemic is worsening?

!@#$%! 12.09.2020 06:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The Soup Nazi
 

haaahaaahaaaa
first time i see that one

choc e-Claire 12.09.2020 07:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Robert Schunk
Are you saying that the federal government is ceasing financial support while the epidemic is worsening?

Yes. It's not worsening, but it's exactly what they're doing.

_tunic_ 12.09.2020 07:58 AM

Over here we have an increase in infections again, possibly because everybody went to the shops for Black Friday last week. It was so crowded in the big city centers that shops were ordered to close early.
Stupid American traditions. We inherit them all except for the pardoning of the turkeys. :)

tesla69 12.09.2020 08:52 AM

it appears you’ve convinced the public (or at least the vast majority of the public) that they are being attacked by an apocalyptic plague that causes mild to moderate flu-like symptoms (or, more commonly, no symptoms at all) in 95% of those infected and that over 99.7% survive, and thus we have to cancel constitutional rights, let government officials rule by decree, devastate the economy (or at least small businesses), have global corporations censor all dissent, force everyone to wear medical-looking masks, put whole societies under house arrest, psychologically terrorize children, and otherwise transform the planet into one big paranoid, totalitarian theme park.

h8kurdt 12.09.2020 09:19 AM

Quote:

According to the latest immunological studies, the overall infection fatality rate (IFR) of covid-19 in the general population is about 0.1% to 0.5% in most countries, which is comparable to the medium influenza pandemics of 1957 and 1968.

The estimated number of deaths for the 1968 epidemic was 1 million worldwide and about 100,000 in the United States. It was 116,000 deaths in the United States for the 1957 epidemic.

So far America is on 287,000 deaths during this current pandemic and it's just gonna keep going up.along with that the long term effects of getting it are also only beginning to show themselves. But hey, that's nothing, right? Here's hoping your family dies from it so you can wake up yourself. May sound harsh but the reason there are so many deaths is because of idiots like you.

Antagon 12.10.2020 01:20 PM

Took part in the mass-screening today and did the human blockhead. I was tested negative.


People out there are still behaving like idiots. The numbers have gone back a good bit since mid-November, but they're still pretty damn bad. 2686 new infections today.

!@#$%! 12.10.2020 02:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Antagon
Took part in the mass-screening today and did the human blockhead. I was tested negative.


People out there are still behaving like idiots. The numbers have gone back a good bit since mid-November, but they're still pretty damn bad. 2686 new infections today.

we had 3000 dead yesterday alone

Antagon 12.10.2020 02:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by !@#$%!
we had 3000 dead yesterday alone



Yeah, what's happening in the states is an absolute fucking tragedy. The sooner that orange buffoon is out, the better.


We're at about 4000 since the beginning of the pandemic now. There's an enormous gap indeed. But it's still far too much around here. Especially considering the whole country only has about the population of NYC. And apart from Vienna (which sits at a cool 2 mill), none of the other larger cities even have a population of half a million (Graz coming closest at 443.066). And lots of stretches of land are rather sparsely populated. Given that fact, Austria even overtook the states in terms of new infections relative to the overall population about a month ago. Fortunately, that wasn't the case for the death toll as well (might have something to do with the healthcare system), but it still skyrocketed in the last few months. No contest, really. Just saying, things aren't exactly great here, either. Close to 3000 infected per day is still far too many for a country with a population shy of 9 Million.

tw2113 12.10.2020 04:44 PM

I'm not wholly convinced Orange Cheeto officially exiting will have much effect. There are some who are going to refuse to follow guidelines and mandates regardless of who orders or doesn't order them.

Antagon 12.10.2020 04:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tw2113
I'm not wholly convinced Orange Cheeto officially exiting will have much effect. There are some who are going to refuse to follow guidelines and mandates regardless of who orders or doesn't order them.



The damage has been done. It will be a long way. But I'd imagine someone not actively hindering progress in the fight against Covid just might have some effect. The situation would have been dire even without Cheeto in Chief, but he actively exacerbated things and fanned the flames of a culture of ignorance and disinformation. So the steps that will have to be taken after he leaves office can't be a cure-all. But in order to progress somehow, you gotta take baby steps sometimes. Trump on the other hand is an ill-tempered baby that steps on any attempt at a serious conversation and made things so much worse than they would've already been. Yes, many will still not adhere to the mandates. But on a policy level,one would hope, there will certainly be a few changes. It's not going to be an overnight thing, that's for certain. It's all about keeping the next worst-case-scenario at bay now.

The Soup Nazi 12.10.2020 07:07 PM

I must spread some Reputation around before giving it to h8kurdt again.

The Soup Nazi 12.10.2020 07:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tw2113
I'm not wholly convinced Orange Cheeto officially exiting will have much effect. There are some who are going to refuse to follow guidelines and mandates regardless of who orders or doesn't order them.


You're in SD, right? From The Washington Post:

Covid-19 becomes personal in a South Dakota town as neighbors die and the town debates a mask mandate

A city council member in Mitchell, S.D., tried to introduce a mask mandate and was ridiculed. Since then, the town has been inundated with the coronavirus, with the hospital bursting to capacity and a 38 percent positivity rate. Now the town council is trying again.

tw2113 12.10.2020 09:58 PM



yup, we're not the smartest people

tw2113 12.10.2020 10:03 PM

i'm still waiting for someone to point out the in-writing rights that masks infringe on, and i may have a better time talking to a wall with fresh wet paint on it.

The Soup Nazi 12.11.2020 01:16 PM

Some fucked up shit from The Washington Post:

Quote:

See exactly how airborne coronavirus spreads, using infrared footage

To visually illustrate the risk of airborne transmission in real time, The Post used an infrared camera capable of detecting exhaled breath.

As winter approaches, the United States is grappling with a jaw-dropping surge in the number of novel coronavirus infections. More than 288,000 Americans have been killed by a virus that public health officials now say can be spread through airborne transmission.

The virus spreads most commonly through close contact, scientists say. But under certain conditions, people farther than six feet apart can become infected by exposure to tiny droplets and particles exhaled by an infected person, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in October. Those droplets and particles can linger in the air for minutes to hours.

To visually illustrate the risk of airborne transmission in real time, The Washington Post used a military-grade infrared camera capable of detecting exhaled breath. Numerous experts — epidemiologists, virologists and engineers — supported the notion of using exhalation as a conservative proxy to show potential transmission risk in various settings.

“The images are very, very telling,” said Rajat Mittal, a professor of mechanical engineering in Johns Hopkins University’s medical and engineering schools and an expert on virus transmission. “Getting two people and actually visualizing what’s happening between them, that’s very invaluable.”

The highly sensitive camera system detects variations in infrared radiation that are not visible to the naked eye. The technology is more typically used in military and industrial settings, such as detecting methane gas leaks in pipelines. In 2013, it was deployed by law enforcement during the 20-hour manhunt for the Boston Marathon bombers.

But fitted with a filter that specifically targets the infrared signature of carbon dioxide, the camera can be used to map in real time the partial path of the nearly invisible particles we exhale.

According to experts, the footage underrepresents the potential risk of exposure from airborne particles. Those particles may spread farther or linger longer than the visible exhalation plume, which dissipates quickly to a level of concentration the camera can no longer detect.

Environmental factors such as airflow in a space, wind and sunlight can reduce the chances of spread, as can such behavioral factors as mask-wearing and social distancing. The risk of exposure increases when people are not wearing masks and are close together in an enclosed space or in an area with poor ventilation.

Many of those circumstances will become more common as Americans increasingly spend time indoors in the coming months. Watch the video at the top of the page to see footage from various settings.

_tunic_ 12.14.2020 10:18 AM

Hurrah again! Next to Germany and probably some other European countries, the Netherlands is going into lockdown until 19 January

The Soup Nazi 12.15.2020 01:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tw2113
i'm still waiting for someone to point out the in-writing rights that masks infringe on


Precisely because no such bullshit exists, this is a leadership problem. "Mask debate" is the dumbest fucking thing I've heard in my life. MANDATORY USE OF FACE MASKS EVERYWHERE, NOW. Oh, you don't like it? Meanie masky too itchy for yer lil' freedumb? You're gonna go whine to SCOTUS, arentcha? THIS IS NOT ABOUT YOU, you selfish prick, it's about the people you're gonna kill with your pestilent breath. If you wanna die as well, down some Johnnie Walker, grab a handgun and put a bullet in your retarded brain - it'll be faster and we'll all be better off.

 


 


 


 

The Soup Nazi 12.15.2020 01:11 AM

 


 


 


 

The Soup Nazi 12.15.2020 01:11 AM

 


 


 

The Soup Nazi 12.15.2020 01:14 AM

In other news:

 

The Soup Nazi 12.15.2020 01:17 AM

 

The Soup Nazi 12.16.2020 12:01 AM

A more optimistic (for the most part...) take via Zakaria's newsletter:

Quote:

The Year Science Won

As vaccines make their way into the public’s willing arms, The Atlantic’s Ed Yong writes that science has pulled off the nearly unthinkable, by producing a Covid-19 vaccine less than a year after the virus’s genome was sequenced. In achieving this feat, the scientific community has passed through a sort of crucible.

“In fall of 2019, exactly zero scientists were studying COVID‑19, because no one knew the disease existed,” Yong writes. “But by the end of March 2020, it had spread to more than 170 countries, sickened more than 750,000 people, and triggered the biggest pivot in the history of modern science. Thousands of researchers dropped whatever intellectual puzzles had previously consumed their curiosity and began working on the pandemic instead. In mere months, science became thoroughly COVID-ized.”

It was a triumph of collective intelligence, with papers flooding into academic journals and preprint servers by the thousands—more voluminously, by a large factor, than ever before in history—and new disciplines came to bear on public health. Work that had already gone into mRNA technology, which amounts to a “platform” for developing different kinds of vaccines for different diseases, proved prescient.

The story was not so purely positive: Experts in other fields rushed to publish some questionable work for what Yong describes as questionable motives, and 2020 has seen science’s gender divide deepen. Along with its triumph, and the fear and trembling at humanity’s brush with the virus, Yong writes that science can draw important lessons. “Warped incentives, wasteful practices, overconfidence, inequality, a biomedical bias—COVID‑19 has exposed them all,” Yong writes. “And in doing so, it offers the world of science a chance to practice one of its most important qualities: self-correction.”

The Soup Nazi 12.16.2020 09:50 PM

From The Washington Post:

America’s biggest companies are flourishing during the pandemic and putting thousands of people out of work

A Post analysis found 45 of the 50 biggest U.S. companies turned a profit since March. The majority of firms cut staff and gave the bulk of profits to shareholders.


This is absolutely brutal, and at the same time exactly what you'd expect from savage unregulated fuck-you capitalism. Too many graphics to post here, so please click on the link.

Bytor Peltor 12.18.2020 01:45 AM

Nurse passes out on LIVE TV just after taking C19 vaccine

h8kurdt 12.18.2020 04:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bytor Peltor


"I have to add for context, she did say later she faints when there is pain. So take that as you will."

Sit down, you crank.

Bytor Peltor 12.18.2020 05:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
"I have to add for context, she did say later she faints when there is pain. So take that as you will."

Sit down, you crank.


YES - I linked the tweet so everyone can read the replies!

Diesel 12.18.2020 06:01 AM

The comments are typical twitter toxicity.

'They want to kill us. We will all react differently. How fucking sad. Over my dead body.

I’ve been sick for over 20 years from a "safe and effective" flu shot.

They can keep that crap to themselves....'

etc etc. fanx for the laffs from a pure rancid platform, brav

tw2113 12.18.2020 07:14 PM

 

The Soup Nazi 12.18.2020 09:29 PM

My mother (76) gets a shot against influenza every year. Some years she's under the weather for a coupla days after getting the vaccine, has to spend a day in bed, shit like that. But guess what: SHE DOESN'T GET THE FUCKING INFLUENZA, even though she spends a lot of time in crowded places, including clinics and hospitals (well, she used to before the pandemonium), because she still has to work given that her pension covers, what, one trip to the supermarket per month. Anyway, vaccines WORK; they do sometimes have side effects, the vast majority of which is bullcrap you just have to suck up and then you're good as new unless you're part of the 0.5% of the population who gets anaphylactic shocks from eating shellfish or whatever the fuck. SO TAKE THE GODDAMN VACCINE. Good Lawd people are stupid.

The Soup Nazi 12.19.2020 09:30 PM

Trump's legacy:

A death every 33 seconds

Every time you listen to Bing Crosby’s “White Christmas,” about five people have died of the virus between the beginning and the end of the song.


"But he didn't create the virus" - yes, we know, dipshits; the point is it did not have to be this way. :mad:

Skuj 12.19.2020 09:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by h8kurdt
"I have to add for context, she did say later she faints when there is pain. So take that as you will."

Sit down, you crank.


Wait....is Bytor an anti-vaccer?

If so, I'm shocked!! SHOCKED, I tell you!!!

demonrail666 12.20.2020 04:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tw2113
 







Pfizer behind the vaccine is the mother of all christmas gifts for memers

Bytor Peltor 12.20.2020 05:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skuj
Wait....is Bytor an anti-vaccer?

If so, I'm shocked!! SHOCKED, I tell you!!!


I realize that we are probably just 8-10 years away from someone such as Mario Lopez doing commercials that say: “if you took the COVID-19 vaccine in 2020-2021, you may be entitled to cash compensation.”

The above being said, I’m not an anti-vaccer......but I nor my immediate family have any desire to take it. Either we are extremely lucky or what we’ve been doing since this craziness began has been working. I’m not going to criticize anyone for taking the vaccine, but from what I’ve seen, it’s not for me.

My wife and daughters went to Nashville back in August, this weekend they were in Fredericksburg, Texas, staying in a rented home, shopping and doing tastings at West Texas wineries. I’ve gone on two 4-6 day golf trips since the pandemic started. We had a nice size family gathering at Thanksgiving and we plan on multiple gatherings this Christmas weekend.

No reason to be Anti anything......stay safe and take care of you!

tesla69 12.20.2020 05:25 PM

its not a vaccine. its a genetic therapy.



Of course now in the UK they have a new "killer" strain and apparently are fleeing London to spread the new strain far and wide.


Isn't Unrestricted Warfare a joy? To take liberties with a phrase from the late industrial archeologist Ed Reutsch: "when they have warehouse of genetically engineered viral biowarfare weapons they tend to want to use them".


Let's do some math. When the death rate is .02%, what is a 40% increase? Real scary. Burroughs had it right with the Immortality Racket.

Bytor Peltor 12.20.2020 05:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tesla69
its not a vaccine. its a genetic therapy.



Of course now in the UK they have a new "killer" strain and apparently are fleeing London to spread the new strain far and wide.


Isn't Unrestricted Warfare a joy? To take liberties with a phrase from the late industrial archeologist Ed Reutsch: "when they have warehouse of genetically engineered viral biowarfare weapons they tend to want to use them".


Let's do some math. When the death rate is .02%, what is a 40% increase? Real scary. Burroughs had it right with the Immortality Racket.



Another example is California/New York vs. Texas/Florida.

California/New York shut everything down and they are right back where they started. Texas/Florida allowed many things to remain open with reasonable accommodations and each are thriving, well, thriving compared to California/NY.

Perfect example today, the Dallas Cowboys played a home game with 20k fans in the stands. Their opponent, the San Francisco 49ers, came from Arizona because this is where they’ve been living/playing “home games” because they are unable to do so in California.

Just yesterday it was announced that the Rose Bowl, traditionally played at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, will be played in Dallas due to the State of California not allowing spectators in the stands.

Let me add something my mother-in-law pointed out. When she flew to Cleveland, Ohio last month, she was served a meal during the flight. Once in Cleveland, she found restaurants were closed, even to outdoor seating. Why is it permissible/safe to eat on an airplane and not at a restaurant?

Does the airline industry have better lobbyist?

choc e-Claire 12.20.2020 06:02 PM

Google search: Australia coronavirus cases

Google search: United States coronavirus cases

!@#$%! 12.20.2020 06:53 PM

here's to the willing morons catching it but not spreading it to others!

 

tw2113 12.20.2020 07:52 PM

I'm hoping alcoholism accidentally helps avoid


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