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HumDumpin
ReeeingRainbowXV
Old
81 - 05-28-2022, 12:39
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ArakAtak View Post
When being operated upon, do you wear a mask?
Typically a mask is how they introduce anesthesia, and something something mind control something something conspiracy to make me pay taxes. /strokelogic
 
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SeVeReD
VeteranXX
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Old
82 - 05-28-2022, 13:52
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The CCP gets Taiwan
Brian Kennedy: Chinese Mobilization in Preparation for War with Taiwan

Jeff Nyquist: Details from the CCP Meeting in Guangdong

plus a weak ass America (or destroyed)
Frank Gaffney: The Looming Threat of Conflict in the Pacific

You all sitting comfortably while they mash the fodder around? Kabuki Theater for real
 
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SeVeReD
VeteranXX
Contributor
Old
83 - 05-28-2022, 14:14
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In my San Diego elementary school
We had a fence and locked gates around the school area
A strong metal locked fence to access the halls
Strong solid wooden doors with ability to deadbolt
A window that could be shot out and gotten through more easily
(I thought of that in preparation, but maybe it was stronger than I think?)
Monthly Drills (I thought a bit excessive 'cause teaching time interrupted ... but the children were good at all 3)
(either fire (outside), earthquake (under desks), or active shooter (back office))
active shooter I would lock my door and leave a red tag if someone is out of the classroom and a green tag if we are all in
children were absolutely silent during the drills and lights were off

What was it?? 15 or more years ago we were instructed to keep classroom doors locked at all times ... as years went on I know that became more lax, but I kept locking the door (mainly to keep the ******* principal out...)

anyway
what's your prep level?

Map of Uvalde Shooting***8230; Why did a teacher prop open a locked school door before the massacre***8230;

How hard is it to compromise a clueless leftest teacher
 
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Last edited by SeVeReD; 05-28-2022 at 14:19..
blackpeople
REEEEEEEEEEEXV
Old
84 - 05-28-2022, 14:23
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who are u talkin to
 
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KittyCat
VeteranXX
Old
85 - 05-28-2022, 14:38
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Severed scuttled like a rat to Mexico on January 6th like the coward and traitor that he is.

True patriots stood their ground for maga.

It's not called make Mexico great again for a reason. He is the first one in line for the socialist handouts but the loudest maga talker online, typical socialist commie handout taker.

Sad!
 
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SeVeReD
VeteranXX
Contributor
Old
86 - 05-28-2022, 22:07
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We plan for these things to happen.

Uvalde Cops Had ˜Active Shooter" Training Just Weeks Before Elementary School Massacre
 
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T-Dawg
VeteranXX
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Old
87 - 05-28-2022, 22:39
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SeV, repeat after me

WE ARE NOT FRIGHTENED ENOUGH TO EAT TOFU
 
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SeVeReD
VeteranXX
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Old
88 - 05-28-2022, 22:59
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Mean
While
Daily Beast issues apology to laptop repairman amid lawsuit after claiming Hunter Biden's laptop was 'stolen'| Fox News

Remember when it was all Russian Disinfo?
but OMB

 
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Brasstax
VeteranXX
Contributor
Old
91 - 05-29-2022, 01:06
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Remember when some of us were drawing similarities between COVID and the flu? Rember how we were told NO! It's not like the flu!

Well, now the Atlantic is painting a different picture.
Go get them!
This is FAKENEWS, I say! The vax will protect us all!
We must ELIMINATE it entirely! Stay inside!
Track the carriers!
hur dur hur dur

Quote:
Two and a half years and billions of estimated infections into this pandemic, SARS-CoV-2’s visit has clearly turned into a permanent stay. Experts knew from early on that, for almost everyone, infection with this coronavirus would be inevitable. As James Hamblin memorably put it back in February 2020, “You’re Likely to Get the Coronavirus.” By this point, in fact, most Americans have. But now, as wave after wave continues to pummel the globe, a grimmer reality is playing out. You’re not just likely to get the coronavirus. You’re likely to get it again and again and again.

“I personally know several individuals who have had COVID in almost every wave,” says Salim Abdool Karim, a clinical infectious-diseases epidemiologist and the director of the Center for the AIDS Program of Research in South Africa, which has experienced five meticulously tracked surges, and where just one-third of the population is vaccinated. Experts doubt that clip of reinfection—several times a year—will continue over the long term, given the continued ratcheting up of immunity and potential slowdown of variant emergence. But a more sluggish rate would still lead to lots of comeback cases. Aubree Gordon, an epidemiologist at the University of Michigan, told me that her best guess for the future has the virus infiltrating each of us, on average, every three years or so. “Barring some intervention that really changes the landscape,” she said, “we will all get SARS-CoV-2 multiple times in our life.”

If Gordon is right about this thrice(ish)-per-decade pace, that would be on par with what we experience with flu viruses, which scientists estimate hit us about every two to five years, less often in adulthood. It also matches up well with the documented cadence of the four other coronaviruses that seasonally trouble humans, and cause common colds. Should SARS-CoV-2 joins this mix of microbes that irk us on an intermittent schedule, we might not have to worry much. The fact that colds, flus, and stomach bugs routinely reinfect hasn’t shredded the social fabric. “For large portions of the population, this is an inconvenience,” Paul Thomas, an immunologist at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, in Tennessee, told me. Perhaps, as several experts have posited since the pandemic’s early days, SARS-CoV-2 will just become the fifth cold-causing coronavirus.

Or maybe not. This virus seems capable of tangling into just about every tissue in the body, affecting organs such as the heart, brain, liver, kidneys, and gut; it has already claimed the lives of millions, while saddling countless others with symptoms that can linger for months or years. Experts think the typical SARS-CoV-2 infection is likely to get less dangerous, as population immunity builds and broadens. But considering our current baseline, “less dangerous” could still be terrible—and it’s not clear exactly where we’re headed. When it comes to reinfection, we “just don’t know enough,” says Emily Landon, an infectious-disease physician at the University of Chicago.

For now, every infection, and every subsequent reinfection, remains a toss of the dice. “Really, it’s a gamble,” says Ziyad Al-Aly, a clinical epidemiologist and long-COVID researcher at Washington University in St. Louis. Vaccination and infection-induced immunity may load the dice against landing on severe disease, but that danger will never go away completely, and scientists don’t yet know what happens to people who contract “mild” COVID over and over again. Bouts of illness may well be tempered over time, but multiple exposures could still re-up some of the same risks as before—or even synergize to exact a cumulative toll.

“Will reinfection be really bad, or not a big deal? I think you could fall down on either side,” says Vineet Menachery, a coronavirologist at the University of Texas Medical Branch. “There’s still a lot of gray.”

The majority of infections we witnessed in the pandemic’s early chapters were, of course, first ones. The virus was hitting a brand-new species, which had few defenses to block it. But people have been racking up vaccine doses and infections for years now; immunity is growing on a population scale. Most of us are “no longer starting from scratch,” says Talia Swartz, an infectious-disease physician, virologist, and immunologist at Mount Sinai’s Icahn School of Medicine. Bodies, wised up to the virus’s quirks, can now react more quickly, clobbering it with sharper and speedier strikes.

Future versions of SARS-CoV-2 could continue to shape-shift out of existing antibodies’ reach, as coronaviruses often do. But the body is flush with other fighters that are much tougher to bamboozle—among them, B cells and T cells that can quash a growing infection before it spirals out of control. Those protections tend to build iteratively, as people see pathogens or vaccines more often. People vaccinated three times over, for instance, seem especially well equipped to duke it out with all sorts of SARS-CoV-2 variants, including Omicron and its offshoots.

Gordon, who is tracking large groups of people to study the risk of reinfection, is already starting to document promising patterns: Second infections and post-vaccination infections “are significantly less severe,” she told me, sometimes to the point where people don’t notice them at all. A third or fourth bout might be more muted still; the burden of individual diseases may be headed toward an asymptote of mildness that holds for many years. Gordon and Swartz are both hopeful that the slow accumulation of immunity will also slash people’s chances of developing long COVID. An initial round of vaccine doses seems to at least modestly trim the likelihood of coming down with the condition, and the risk may dwindle further as defenses continue to amass. (“We do need more data on that,” Gordon said.)

Immunity, though, is neither binary nor permanent. Even if SARS-CoV-2’s assaults are blunted over time, there are no guarantees about the degree to which that happens, or how long it lasts. Maybe most future tussles with COVID will feel like nothing more than a shrimpy common cold. Or maybe they’ll end up like brutal flus. Wherever the average COVID case of the future lands, no two people’s experience of reinfection will be the same. Some may end up never getting sick again, at least not noticeably; others might find themselves falling ill much more frequently. A slew of factors could end up weighting the dice toward severe disease—among them, a person’s genetics, age, underlying medical conditions, health-care access, and frequency or magnitude of exposure to the virus. COVID redux could pose an especially big threat to people who are immunocompromised. And for everyone else, no amount of viral dampening can totally eliminate the chance, however small it may be, of getting very sick.

Long COVID, too, might remain a possibility with every discrete bout of illness. Or maybe the effects of a slow-but-steady trickle of minor, fast-resolving infections would sum together, and bring about the condition. Every time the body’s defenses are engaged, it “takes a lot of energy, and causes tissue damage,” Thomas told me. Should that become a near-constant barrage, “that’s probably not great for you.” But Swartz said she worries far more about that happening with viruses that chronically infect people, such as HIV. Bodies are resilient, especially when they’re offered time to rest, and she doubts that reinfection with a typically ephemeral virus such as SARS-CoV-2 would cause mounting damage. “The cumulative effect is more likely to be protective than detrimental,” she said, because of the immunity that’s laid down each time.

Al-Aly sees cause for worry either way. He is now running studies to track the long-term consequences of repeat encounters with the virus, and although the data are still emerging, he thinks that people who have caught the virus twice or thrice may be more likely to become long-haulers than those who have had it just once.

There’s still a lot about SARS-CoV-2, and the body’s response to it, that researchers don’t fully understand. Some other microbes, when they reinvade us, can fire up the immune system in unhelpful ways, driving bad bouts of inflammation that burn through the body, or duping certain defensive molecules into aiding, rather than blocking, the virus’s siege. Researchers don’t think SARS-CoV-2 will do the same. But this pathogen is “much more formidable than even someone working on coronaviruses would have expected,” Menachery told me. It could still reveal some new, insidious qualities down the line.

Studying reinfection isn’t easy: To home in on the phenomenon and its consequences, scientists have to monitor large groups of people over long periods of time, trying to catch as many viral invasions as possible, including asymptomatic ones that might not be picked up without very frequent testing. Seasonal encounters with pathogens other than SARS-CoV-2 don’t often worry us—but perhaps that’s because we’re still working to understand their toll. “Have we been underestimating long-term consequences from other repeat infections?” Thomas said. “The answer is probably, almost certainly, yes.”

Of the experts I spoke with for this story, several told me they hadn’t yet been knowingly infected by SARS-CoV-2; of those who had, none were eager for the sequel. Menachery is in the latter group. He was one of the first people in his community to catch the virus, back in March of 2020, when his entire family fell ill. That November, he discovered that he had lost most of his kidney function, a rapid deterioration that he and his doctors suspect, but cannot prove, was exacerbated by COVID. Menachery received a transplant three months ago, and has been taking immunosuppressive medications since—a major shift to his risk status, and his outlook on reinfection writ large. “So I wear my mask everywhere,” he told me, as do his wife and their three young kids. Should the virus return for him, it’s not totally clear what might happen next. “I’m nervous about reinfection,” he said. “I have reason to be.”

Almost no one can expect to avoid the virus altogether, but that doesn’t mean we can’t limit our exposures. It’s true that the body’s bulwarks against infection tend to erode rather rapidly; it’s true that this virus is very good at splintering into variants and subvariants that can hop over many of the antibodies we make. But the rhythm of reinfection isn’t just about the durability of immunity or the pace of viral evolution. It’s also about our actions and policies, and whether they allow the pathogen to transmit and evolve. Strategies to avoid infection—to make it as infrequent as possible, for as many people as possible—remain options, in the form of vaccination, masking, ventilation, paid sick leave, and more. “There are still very good reasons” to keep exposures few and far between, Landon, of the University of Chicago, told me. Putting off reinfection creates fewer opportunities for harm: The dice are less likely to land on severe disease (or chronic illness) when they’re rolled less often overall. It also buys us time to enhance our understanding of the virus, and improve our tools to fight it. “The more we know about COVID when we get COVID,” the better off we’ll be, she said.

SARS-CoV-2 may yet become another common-cold coronavirus, no more likely to screw with its hosts the fifth time it infects them than the first. But that’s no guarantee. The outlooks of the experts I spoke with spanned the range from optimism to pessimism, though all agreed that uncertainty loomed. Until we know more, none were keen to gamble with the virus—or with their own health. Any reinfection will likely still pose a threat, “even if it’s not the worst-case scenario,” Abdool Karim told me. “I wouldn’t want to put myself in that position.”
 
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ArakAtak
VeteranXX
Old
92 - 05-29-2022, 10:23
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wall
of
text

does it pretty much say

"Covid is like the flu, but better b/c it doesn't really kill kids, only the sick and the old."
 
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SeVeReD
VeteranXX
Contributor
Old
93 - 05-30-2022, 00:05
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brasstax View Post
Remember when some of us were drawing similarities between COVID and the flu? Rember how we were told NO! It's not like the flu!

Well, now the Atlantic is painting a different picture.
Go get them!
This is FAKENEWS, I say! The vax will protect us all!
We must ELIMINATE it entirely! Stay inside!
Track the carriers!
hur dur hur dur
They are digging the memory holes as deep and as fast as they can.
When they bring out the studies of vaxxed versus un-vaxxed...
Well, we'll know why they wanted to not have any control group to compare
Why Joe Biden should go all-in on vaccine mandates - CNNPolitics

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CzY2fVP_QFY
 
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Last edited by SeVeReD; 05-30-2022 at 00:08..
SeVeReD
VeteranXX
Contributor
Old
94 - 05-30-2022, 19:02
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China wants and expects Taiwan
They are not going in the front door
Immigration to Taiwan by CCP loyalists
They have to 'disarm' the USA...
oooooo looky all these weapons left in Affigan..that desert place
Another V release?
RussiaUkraineRussia
A compromised D.C. Overstate
No NRG
ByeDone is ours...

need I go on
are we really getting Taiwan's Back and being globalist fodder?
or will we listen to Nancy


when you get old like me
that's a sexy woman
 
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SeVeReD
VeteranXX
Contributor
Old
95 - 05-30-2022, 21:15
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This is what the headline should be:
CDC massaged data for discredited face diaper study…
 
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SeVeReD
VeteranXX
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Old
96 - 05-31-2022, 14:15
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Whether you think this is intentional or not...

Dear Friends, Sorry to Announce a Genocide

Quote:
...The truth is: I’ve been rendered almost speechless — or the literary equivalent of that — because recently I’ve had the unenviable task of trying to announce to the world that indeed, a genocide — or what I’ve called, clumsily but urgently, a “baby die-off” — is underway...
It is happening
 
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blackpeople
REEEEEEEEEEEXV
Old
97 - 05-31-2022, 14:19
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**** posting combo breaker
 
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SeVeReD
VeteranXX
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Old
98 - 05-31-2022, 15:04
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bp you're not a reader are you
kinda limited vocabulary there dude
so, really not sure what you're trying at
other to look like the idiot you are
 
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KittyCat
VeteranXX
Old
99 - 05-31-2022, 16:08
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severed mentally ill boomer and socialist traitor
 
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SeVeReD
VeteranXX
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Old
100 - 05-31-2022, 16:46
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Heya Kitty
We got some people passing through here in Mexico who are desperate to get to the United States
They want to be your neighbor bro
,,, well, that's what they call you
Why aren't they wanting to stay in Mexico with all our wonderful Socialism?
I kinda laughed as the Haitians were holding out their one hand while holding onto two children with the other... cause if you aren't washing my car window, you get nada

I told them they'd fit-in
in a place called Chicago
 
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