Coronavirus

the other idiocy with these kits:

they were buying & sending out 500 million - single use kits @ 4 per person
  • there are 300+ million citizens
  • at 500 million by 4 per person that 500 million will only make it to about 125 million people at best
  • most of those who ordered them probably won't get them
Who cares ,
Literally no one but you
 
so why did you order them - why not leave them for someone who intends to use them?
:rolleyes:
Cause I paid for them. Like the Obama phone and now the crack pipe. I won’t get it, I’m not black. WTF are they good for anyways. You going to walk around with one and show it to people?
Anyways if they do come, SMASH!!!
 
An interesting take
Before i post this I know its a waste of time as I'm already convinced many here will be too close minded to even stop for a moment to think about what's written here but what the hell...


We've officially hit peak Covid absurdism.

It's hard to remember that it hasn't even been two years since the pandemic -- and all that came with it -- befell us.

That's because it's been a singular, all-encompassing experience. Generations hence, they'll talk about us like we talked about the generation who lived through the Depression. "They lived through the pandemic" will be a shorthand to explain why we reflexively wear a mask on airplanes or ask about a restaurant's air filtration system before its menu.

But one aspect of the pandemic experience that can't simply be explained by the existence of an exceedingly transmissible, deadly virus spreading between us is the sheer absurdity that it brought with it. Whether boarding an airplane with underwear on your face to protest mask requirements, injecting yourself with horse dewormer instead of a safe and effective vaccine or swallowing household disinfectants because the President of the United States unironically suggested that it might help, the pandemic has amplified the frequency and tenor of ridiculous and sometimes alarming behavior.

Nothing typifies that absurdity quite like the trucker protests now gripping Canada.

In late January, a convoy of truckers in Canada headed cross-country, from British Columbia to the nation's capital in Ottawa, to protest a mandate, which requires truckers entering Canada to be vaccinated or else be subjected to testing and quarantine requirements.
The demonstration quickly grew, with thousands of people clogging traffic and obstructing the US-Canada border. A couple of weeks in to the protest, the demands of the loosely organized truckers still remain unclear. Some are calling this specific mandate "unconstitutional," while others have expanded to calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to end all Covid restrictions.

Canada's trucker protesters aren't who Americans might think

To appreciate just how strange this moment is, let's go way back to before Covid-19 was a word. Many of us would have expected that if a deadly virus began to spread among us, we, as a society, would look to doctors and scientists for answers. We'd demand public policy driven by their rational, evidence-based reasoning.

Sure, there'd be differences of opinion on a few key issues and the odd iconoclast or two who'd just never come along. But for the most part, we'd develop a collective approach to defeating the virus and do what needed to be done to get through the pandemic. And, let's be clear, that's exactly what a majority of people did.

Yet, from the jump, echoing the then-President who hid early evidence of how bad the public health crisis was becoming seemingly to protect stock prices, some began to argue that "the cure," meaning precautionary health measures, was "worse than the disease."

They pointed to the ways that lockdowns were hurting small businesses and school closures were robbing young children of the ability to go to learn at school, socialize with their classmates or receive the free school meals on which too many of our children rely. They argued that masks were just annoying. They resented the imposition on their lives.

And, to be sure, they weren't wrong about any of these things: Each of these was a real cost of Covid-19 restrictions. It's just that the cost of viral transmission -- which led to disease and death -- was profoundly and obviously greater.

But what began as fair disagreements started to mutate like the virus itself. Frustration with lockdowns inspired armed militiamen to storm the Michigan state Capitol and allegedly plot to harm elected officials. Around the country, the fight to keep schools open during later waves of Covid-19 exploded into massive protests against the very things that could keep kids in school safely -- masks and vaccines.

The frustration with having to wear masks in public spaces set off adult temper tantrums directed at retail employees and flight attendants.

And that's where the Canadian truckers come in. Their protests have spread to cities across Canada and beyond, effectively grinding to a standstill daily life in communities across the country. Now, they're impeding the Ambassador Bridge between Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, one of the most active arteries for transnational commerce.

Here's what's so absurd about it: The protest over Covid restrictions is now disrupting peoples' everyday lives -- which is what the protest was supposedly aimed at stopping. They've lost the plot.

But perhaps it was the plot the whole time. It's impossible to divorce this moment from the sociopolitical trends in that are also shrouded in absurdity -- the emergence of far-right movements around the world, the rash of proto-fascists and autocrats who've come to power, the salience of online conspiracy theories that spilled out of algorithms and into the real world in horrific ways.

In that context, perhaps the pandemic wasn't the substrate for the absurdity we're witnessing, but a catalyst that simply accelerated what had already been happening.

Either way, as the virus begins to ebb and we begin to imagine what post-pandemic life may hold for us, we must understand that the pandemic won't end when the virus recedes -- but when the absurdity that came with it does, too.
 
Kids find out their mask mandate has ended


yeah, like its real tough to get a bunch of kids to do that.
Tell them they all getting a lollipop... burst into cheers
Tell them they get to go outside and play.......burst into cheers

Yeah, its something to be excited about but not earth shattering news because of the kids reaction
 
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yeah, like its real tough to get a bunch of kids to do that.
Tell them they all getting a lollipop... burst into cheers
Tell them they get to go outside and play.......burst into cheers

Yeah, its something to be excited about but not earth shattering news
China - I have a 9 year old. and i can tell you, unequivocally, they would be jumping out of the seats the second its lifted in school.
For them, it's a big deal. They hate the masks! (probably not so much for you, but for the kids, yes. ) But there you go minimizing the reaction of little innocent kids. Real winner you are.

BTW....these kids have been playing club sports since spring 2021 without a fucking mask. And having f2f play dates inside with friends.

No one cares anymore. The narrative is done.
 
China - I have a 9 year old. and i can tell you, unequivocally, they would be jumping out of the seats the second its lifted in school.
For them, it's a big deal. They hate the masks! (probably not so much for you, but for the kids, yes. ) But there you go minimizing the reaction of little innocent kids. Real winner you are.

BTW....these kids have been playing club sports since spring 2021 without a fucking mask. And having f2f play dates inside with friends.

No one cares anymore. The narrative is done.
Yeah I AM a winner 8-)
If you interpret what i said as mocking kids, well no point in conversing with you
I'm just saying that the if the kid in the 3rd row of that class let out a big ass fart they would cheer just the same LOL
 
Yeah I AM a winner 8-)
If you interpret what i said as mocking kids, well no point in conversing with you
I'm just saying that the if the kid in the 3rd row of that class let out a big ass fart they would cheer just the same LOL
I know exactly what you said and what u meant. You minimized their positive reaction, cause it is against your twisted dead head ideology.
 
yeah, like its real tough to get a bunch of kids to do that.
Tell them they all getting a lollipop... burst into cheers
Tell them they get to go outside and play.......burst into cheers

Yeah, its something to be excited about but not earth shattering news because of the kids reaction
Hell I thought it was great forced to wear masks now they dont have too good for them
 
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