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JosephParticipant
Even a longtime opinion editor in the ultra-left wing propaganda outlet the New York Times today published much agreeing with what I’ve been saying in this thread:
“…We’re containing the virus, limiting the damage, preventing worst-case scenarios…”
“Our strategy is not the utter disaster, the national embarrassment, that some of my fellow scribes insist on seeing in our numbers. Our per capita death rate remains lower than France, Italy, Spain and Britain. Our slow-to-ramp-up testing regime is now testing at a rate comparable to Germany’s. Our death curve hasn’t bent as fast as the hardest-hit countries, but it is bending, and faster than in Canada…”
“States like Florida and Georgia, maligned by the commentariat, have escaped the predicted catastrophes so far, and the New York experience remains very much an epidemic unto itself. Indeed, you can argue that if Andrew Cuomo and Bill de Blasio had acted just a week earlier, America would look substantially better than its Western European peers…”
“So the United States in the age of the coronavirus is not, in fact, the “failed state” depicted in George Packer’s much-read Atlantic essay and similar polemics…”
JosephParticipantMilhouse, if someone asks you to meet them at 12 PM, you might show up to their house at midnight? In all the years I’ve never heard noon referred to as 12 AM.
I won’t argue about what’s technically/linguistically the correct terminology or usage, but as a practical/real-world usage 12 PM is unambiguously used to refer to the afternoon and 12 AM is used to refer to midnight. I’ve yet once to see it used in the reverse of that.
JosephParticipantTake a look at the States with the highest per capita death rates from COVID-19 and you’ll immediately notice that nine out of ten States and DC with the worst rates are all run by Democrat governors.
The sole exception is the deep red state of Massachusetts. (That’s a bit of sarcasm for N0M.)
JosephParticipantMake sure you saved the YWN WhatsApp number into your contacts.
JosephParticipantG: There’s a real issue of people upset that they have to go to work when they could stay home and collect more in unemployment than their wages. Also, there’s certainly a percentage of people deliberately staying out of work in order to collect the current historically high unemployment benefits. I don’t think anyone will dispute these two points.
JosephParticipant12 AM is universally understood to mean midnight and 12 PM is universally understood to mean noon. It is never used in the reverse of that.
There might be some ambiguity whether noon and midnight (and hence the following day of the week) technically begin at 12:00:00 or if they begin at 12:00:01. IOW, at 12 exactly or at one second after 12.
JosephParticipantWhich city, town or municipality did this occur in? How did the agency (whoever it is) know the identity of the complainer, assuming they accept anonymous complaints?
JosephParticipanthuju:
Does a correct reading of your sarcasm indicate that you believe that the “coincidental” fact that Blue States are by far the hardest hit whereas Red States comparatively have done much better is of no blame or fault towards the Democrat governors of those Blue States; while at the same time as you believe the aforementioned, you also blame President Donald Trump for the extent of the hit the United States overall took?
Momentarily we’ll put aside the fact that nationally (i.e. all fifty states) the United States has done far better per capita than many many other nations, both compared only to Western nations and compared to non-Western nations. And if you take the Blue States out of our national figures then the United States has done miraculously, by comparison. For now we’ll just focus on the previous paragraph.
May 11, 2020 2:33 pm at 2:33 pm in reply to: Dr. Scott Atlas of Stanford: Confining Young People to Makes No Sense. #1859588JosephParticipantYoung people have r’l passed away from COVID in a way they haven’t from the seasonal flu.
JosephParticipantYseribus: One of the threads? In the only other such thread, after your call for that, you yourself violated your own rule less than 24 hours after calling for it.
What got into your little keppele this time that made you all baleidigt regarding a simple back and forth clarifying the effectiveness of different types of medical masks?
JosephParticipantDMB: Certain conference phone numbers have a surcharge. It only applies to specific numbers, which are a tiny minority of calls.
JosephParticipantDak: Some unemployed folks are making more being unemployed with the current special unemployment insurance than they earned during their pre-pandemic employment.
JosephParticipantUbiq: When N95s were in short supply in medical facilities during the early part of the pandemic, if I’m not mistaken some medical professionals in hospitals and other medical facilities wore surgical masks rather than an N95. Didn’t they wear those surgical masks for their own protection?
JosephParticipantDon’t medical professionals wear a mask to protect themselves? If so, masks are effective at protecting the wearer, not just to protect other people in the vicinity of the wearer.
JosephParticipantYseribus: What did the school advise you about the issue with GV & T-M?
As I mentioned, Google Voice’s fee is 1 cent per minute. It’s doubtful anyone will go bankrupt from adding up those pennies.
JosephParticipantMilhouse: He’s been reading too much DailyKos and has internalized hard left politics as his normal.
JosephParticipantThose without employment can be earning, now, $1,313 every week they’re unemployed in NJ. $713 from the state plus another $600 from the feds. In NY the maximum is $1,104 ($504+$600) each week of unemployment.
Some people are making more on unemployment today than they earned on their last job. (The $600 additional unemployment each week from the federal government is that same amount regardless of what the person previously earned.)
JosephParticipantAs New York State chief judge Sol Wachtler famously said, “a grand jury would ‘indict a ham sandwich,’ if that’s what the prosecutor wanted.”
JosephParticipantDo not answer business calls during personal non-business time.
(Hopefully that rather simple idea will help.)
JosephParticipantHow is Google Voice clearer?
The issue with the free conference phone services is that they use telephone numbers in rural areas that, due to FCC regulations, have high per minute wholesale interconnection fees that your phone company (Verizon, AT&T or whoever) has to pay to the rural phone company in Iowa (or whatever rural area the phone number terminates in.) This is how those conferences services are free. They’re getting a kick-back on those per minute fees that small phone company they use charges your phone company. Which is why some cellular or landline companies block those numbers. Google Voice sometimes will charge you a 1¢ per minute fee, even though generally all other US and Canada calls are free with Google Voice.
JosephParticipantParnassa is the husband’s job. Wives are not intended to be our of the home and in the business world pursuing a career. That was never the Torah way and lhavdil it was never the way of the world. It is a severe breach of tznius to put a Jewish women surrounded by strange, even gentile, men.
May 10, 2020 11:29 am at 11:29 am in reply to: Zoom VS Teleconference, please rate your experience. #1859072JosephParticipantsariray: What “Zoom only device” did you switch to (or even exists)?
JosephParticipantAmong the most deadly of Andrew Cuomo’s murderous policies has been the New York state directive that requires nursing homes take on new patients infected with COVID-19 — which caused further spread of infection contributing to the deaths of over 5,300 people in New York’s nursing homes. And the toll has still been increasing by an average of 20 to 25 deaths a day for the past few weeks.
New York has faced intense criticism for a March 25 state health department directive requiring nursing homes to take recovering coronavirus patients. “A number of nursing homes have felt constrained by the order and admitted hospital discharged patients without knowing what their COVID status was,” said Chris Laxton, executive director of the Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine. “This order made an already difficult situation almost impossible.”
The order, similar to one in neighboring New Jersey, was intended to help free up hospital beds for the sickest patients as cases surged. But critics noted that nursing homes were already overwhelmed and a better solution would have been sending them to the virtually empty Jacob K. Javits Convention Center, which was retrofitted to treat COVID-19 patients under President Trump’s order, or an even less utilized Navy hospital that President Trump sent to New York.
As the virus was racing through his nursing home, the head of Brooklyn’s Cobble Hill Health Center frantically emailed state health officials April 9 asking just that. “Is there a way for us to send our suspected covid cases to the Javitz center or the ship?” Donny Tuchman wrote. Tuchman said he was denied permission. Eventually, more than 50 residents at his home would die. Added Democrat state Assemblyman Ron Kim: “We could have figured out how to isolate these folks. We failed to do that.”
“Throwing in new residents who may or may not have been stable at that point could not possibly have been to the benefit of any facility,” said Dr. Roy Goldberg, medical director of the Kings Harbor Multicare Center, a nursing home in the Bronx that has seen 56 deaths. “The way this has been handled by the state is totally irresponsible, negligent and stupid,” said Elaine Mazzotta, a nurse whose mother died last month of suspected COVID-19 at a Long Island nursing home. “They knew better. They shouldn’t have sent these people into nursing homes.”
When Cuomo faced criticism at a recent briefing, he said that providing masks and gowns to nursing homes is “not our job” because the homes are privately owned. “It was such an insensitive thing to say,” said state Assemblyman Ron Kim, a Queens Democrat who noted that it wasn’t until just this past week that New York and neighboring states announced a plan to combine forces to buy protective gear and medical supplies for nursing homes. “If we had focused on that early on,” he said, “we could have saved a lot of lives.”
One key criticism is that New York took weeks after the first known care home outbreaks to begin publicly reporting the number of deaths in individual homes — and still doesn’t report the number of cases. By the time New York began disclosing the deaths in the middle of last month, the state had several major outbreaks with at least 40 deaths each, most of which were a surprise to the surrounding communities and even some family members. “They should have announced to the public: ‘We have a problem in nursing homes. We’re going to help them, but you need to know where it is,’” said former New York Lt. Gov. Betsy McCaughey, who now heads the nonprofit Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths. “Instead, they took the opposite tack: They hid it.”
Further, there has been a lack of testing in several recent New York outbreaks, including one that killed 98 residents, many of whom died with COVID-19 symptoms without ever being tested. Unlike West Virginia, New York has not mandated testing in its more than 1,150 nursing homes and long-term care facilities. Nor has Cuomo followed the lead of such states as Maryland, Florida, Tennessee and Wisconsin in dispatching National Guard teams to homes to conduct testing, triage and some care.
May 10, 2020 9:16 am at 9:16 am in reply to: Lawsuit in NJ to force the state to allow worship service #1859054JosephParticipantAvi, why are you currently taking US law courses considering that you live outside the good ‘ole USA?
JosephParticipantThe Cuomo-de Blasio fight that delayed New York State’s stay-at-home orders (the Mayor wanted it earlier but the Governor refused) as well as de Blasio’s delay in closing New York City’s public schools, ostensibly since the poor wouldn’t be able to work or feed their children if there was no school, were the single most destructive acts causing countless additional infections and deaths by coronavirus in New York as well as around the country, as it is now known most of the spread of US coronavirus infections nationally originated in New York.
May 8, 2020 1:24 pm at 1:24 pm in reply to: Lawsuit in NJ to force the state to allow worship service #1858820JosephParticipantMilhouse, hypothetically, if the only way to stop a pandemic or other literally dire life-and-death emergency, the government could not suspend a constitutional right, say for example, the First Amendment right of the people peaceably to assemble?
JosephParticipantHi, ARWSF! Always nice to see you.
JosephParticipantDovid, if it becomes common it’ll officially be deemed proper usage by the language gestapo.
JosephParticipantNo, dear N0Mesorah, I am giving the Democrats a taste of their own medicine. I’m playing ball the way they do. I’m making light of their rhetoric.
If they think they can lie by blaming the President, lets point out the shutdown orders originated from the state governors. And the governors and state/local governments delay in shutting down until late in March, is the real blame for the early spread of the coronavirus.
JosephParticipantPresident-Elect transitional teams always are in contact with foreign governments.
Furthermore, incoming administration’s transitional team are paid for by the US government and are effectively government officials. And may so act.
JosephParticipantGeneral Flynn was exonerated today.
Congratulations.
It’s time to lock up the dirty cops.
JosephParticipantRedleg: I’ll accept that exhortation from you. Thank you
JosephParticipantReb YitzyMotcha: Rav Avigdor Miller zt’l is one of the Gedolei Rabbonim that have addressed Mother’s Day (non) place in Torah Judaism.
JosephParticipantMilhouse, no, the opposite of guys is gals; not girls.
And the reference to “girls” I referred to were not regarding any servants or maids.
May 7, 2020 3:37 pm at 3:37 pm in reply to: What is EY doing in fighting Covi-19 that NYC can learn from” #1858390JosephParticipantYY – if you think mass transit as a form of transmission during a pandemic is red herring, by that train of thought (no pun intended) you must also believe that attending a mass sporting event does little to transmit disease during a pandemic.
JosephParticipant“Not comfortable with that at all. ”
Syag, when posting comments, your comfort level reacting to truths I post are of no relevance in my consideration when sharing useful and beneficial information to the public. Even if some choose to bury their head in the sand and remain in absolute denial to what they believe as some kind of gospel. Having successfully seen through multiple generations of children and adults schooling, I am quite acquainted with the system both domestically and internationally.
May 7, 2020 12:09 pm at 12:09 pm in reply to: Zoom VS Teleconference, please rate your experience. #1858247JosephParticipantHow long have you had a T1 at home? Not too many years ago it cost a very pretty penny every month.
JosephParticipantThe average girl/most girls do not need to go overseas for seminary. They’d benefit from a domestic seminary just as well, if ruchniyus is the consideration.
Even if they miss the visits to the Dead Sea, Masada and Machne Yehuda.
JosephParticipantIf she rarely comes home before midnight, is a risk taker, isn’t a rule follower or you don’t usually know where she is at any given moment then she’s gone wrong well before seminary. Such a parent will have issues much bigger than where to send her to seminary.
JosephParticipantExcellent!
On a related note, the Congressional resolution leading to the proclamation of Mother’s Day was sponsored in Congress and initiated in the House by Klu Klux Klansman J. Thomas Heflin of Alabama, to (in his own words) protect against the “vile despoilers of our precious white women”. At one time the Congressman had shot and wounded a black man for “insulting” a white woman on a streetcar.
JosephParticipantThere’s a benefit of Limud Torah for many bochorim learning in Yeshiva in Eretz Yisroel. OTOH, seminary there is more of a vacation fun-filled excursion for girls compared to seminary locally.
JosephParticipantI missed the Titanic too. 😂
May 7, 2020 1:15 am at 1:15 am in reply to: What is EY doing in fighting Covi-19 that NYC can learn from” #1858100JosephParticipantM – Where’s Bernie Goetz when you need him?
P – Exactly my point. Just as you cannot compare Israel to Montana you similarly, for the same essential underlying reasons compare Israel to NYC. Where was you objection to the absurdity of the OP, for the many good reasons various posters have made above pointing out the fallacy of NYC to Israel. Much as you admitted regarding Montana to Israel.
Point made. Thank you!
JosephParticipantMilhouse – which statement? And why irrelevant? Who is greater בחכמה and why do you so believe?
JosephParticipantMilhouse: I don’t see how you can make that statement without even knowing how much he inherited; and that’s something that isn’t public information.
JosephParticipantIf you take the Blue States out of the count of the Wuhan coronavirus infections and deaths in the United States, the U.S. would have one of the best rates compared to the rest of the world.
May 6, 2020 11:03 pm at 11:03 pm in reply to: Zoom VS Teleconference, please rate your experience. #1857998JosephParticipantCTL: There are teleconferencing services (including some free ones) that do have the ability for the host to mute everyone and selectively unmute specific callers.
Regarding computer labs, the very heimish very in-town yeshiva I’m familiar with had a computer lab for the elementary school at least 40 years ago. (Probably even longer.)
Btw, the SAT and ACT are planning to offer at-home remote exams for the upcoming tests, due to social distancing restrictions possibly still being in effect.
T1 lines are ancient. Today’s FiOS and cable modems are faster than a T1.
May 6, 2020 9:15 pm at 9:15 pm in reply to: Zoom VS Teleconference, please rate your experience. #1857925JosephParticipantOffering video conferencing would introduce many children to the internet for the first time. For other children it would introduce them to computers for the first time. We all are very well aware of the dangers of these technologies. And once children are introduced to them they may never go back to not using them. And once they’re using them for benign activities, making the jump to more dangerous and/or inappropriate activities is not too far a jump. It may not happen immediately, but it certainly makes it more likely down the road.
JosephParticipantDMB: That’s terribly poor parenting if the children don’t have rules what they must do at home (and elsewhere). Not just what not to do, but what their responsibilities and obligations are.
JosephParticipantSyag, that’s fair. I’m not sure that should have automatically been assumed from the original comment.
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