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Medicine United States

US COVID Cases More Than Triple in Two Weeks (axios.com) 403

The number of new COVID cases more than tripled over the past two weeks, shattering records all across the U.S. From a report: The Omicron variant appears to be significantly milder than its predecessors, and it's not leading to as much serious illness. But sky-high case counts are still a warning sign, especially in areas whose health care systems are already stretched thin. The U.S. is now averaging nearly 550,000 new cases per day -- a 225% increase over the past two weeks, and by far the highest levels of the entire pandemic. That's likely an undercount, as many people are testing themselves at home. In previous waves, a sharp increase in cases would translate into a similar increase in hospitalizations, and then deaths. Omicron, however, appears to cause severe illness at a much lower rate.
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US COVID Cases More Than Triple in Two Weeks

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  • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @01:12PM (#62149137) Homepage Journal
    ...I'm vaxxed, boosted and all...

    I believe pretty much everyone is going to catch this at some point or other in the near future and I'm kinda getting to the mindset of "ok, let's get it and get it over with".

    I'd not really worn a mask since I got my 2nd shot last April and really no one around here does.

    Restaurants are full, no checks, etc....life had gone back to normal.

    Omicron hit...here, still mostly the same.

    I did fly over the Xmas holidays and that was really the first time I wore a mask since April like I said.

    I had N95 for one leg and KN95 on another. But it was crowded, I got cancelled on a few flights and spent time in bars/restaurants at airport for those many hours so I could take mask off, I can't wear THAT long, I get claustrophobic.

    Anyway...home now, and I guess I'll see if I catch it or even know if I catch it.

    At this point, I've done all I can to protect myself and I'm kinda at the point of "Ok let's just catch it and get it over with once and for all".

    • by chill ( 34294 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @01:24PM (#62149169) Journal

      Yep. Was down in Florida throughout December and it was sporadic masking, but beyond that everything was packed for the holidays.

      I'm fully vaccinated and boosted (Moderna) and ended up testing positive on December 20th. Like bad cold symptoms for me, with bad headache, congested, and cough for a week. I treated it w/Dayquil for the most part. My wife (vaxxed, not boosted) tested positive on the 21st. For her it was a mild cold, mostly sneezing and headache for 3 days. My youngest son (13, vaxxed) never showed symptoms so we never had him tested.

      My wife's aunt and uncle (60 & 61) caught it the same day, though up in Ohio. Unvaxxed. She spent a week in the hospital before going home, he never made it home -- died in the hospital.

      People made their choices, and they can now live or die with them. Welcome to the new normal.

      • by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @01:38PM (#62149229)
        None of these stories are surprising, This article [elpais.com] explains how omicron spreads roughly 20x faster than measles, which is one of the fastest spreading viruses known. It’s about 3x more than delta, which was significantly worse than the original strain, which spread very quickly. Thank goodness the hospitalization and fatality rate seems 25-40% lower than delta and vaccines are still effective if taken because we are approaching dystopian ending of the world level spread numbers. It’s normal to need a long course of vaccination, polio takes four to be optimal.
      • by dfghjk ( 711126 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @01:44PM (#62149249)

        "People made their choices, and they can now live or die with them."

        If only that consequences were limited to those who make poor choices. They are not.

        This is the same argument that is used against requiring motorcycle helmets. Society pays a significant cost for stupid people's "freedoms".

        • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @01:56PM (#62149309) Homepage Journal

          This is the same argument that is used against requiring motorcycle helmets. Society pays a significant cost for stupid people's "freedoms".

          I used to ride without a helmet, but as you grow older you come to know you aren't quite as bulletproof.

          What's the extra meaningful cost to society?

          If you're worried about money, well, charge them more insurance money those that ride w/o helmets.

          Hell, tons of people regularly do risky behaviors...mountain climbing, sky diving, running with the bulls....boating, etc.

          Are we doing to start prohibiting all risky behavior?

          This will turn into a dull world quite quickly.

          When exactly as a society did we start all turning into pussies and become so scared of anything that might be risky?

          We're supposed to be the champion of the individual...what happened to the US in the past decade or so?

          I didn't grow up that way.

          • Simple, we realized we couldn't just foist the costs onto groups who couldn't fight back and just had to lie down and take it. When you grew up, people made poor choices, and others simply had to suffer the consequences and the original person was blissfully unaware, normally shielded by money, race, politics, and any number of other factors.

            Covid is the first thing in a LONG time that mows people down regardless of any of the above. It doesn't care about any social bullshit that people used to isolate them

            • Re: (Score:2, Redundant)

              by cayenne8 ( 626475 )

              boating has safety regs, and plenty of places where you go boating have strict rules, you fuck around, you get banned from that location

              LOL...I'm sorry, but you really caught me with this one.

              Where do you live where they monitor and would ban you from a boating location?!?!

              I'm serious, I mean yes, I've seen the cops in boats, mostly on holiday weekends looking for drunks, but very seldom does anyone get pulled over otherwise.

              I mean, aside from maybe harbors and boat slips....lakes, rivers and the ocean

          • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

            What's the extra meaningful cost to society?

            People's lives change when people they care about die, even if that person died because they did something stupid. It affects them, and if it affects them negatively (which I don't think is controversial to say is the case most of the time) it can put *them* in positions to contribute less to society.

            One way is the emotional cost, whereby people are more likely to make poor or risky decisions (one common example is people turning to substance abuse to cope with an

          • by chill ( 34294 )

            Honestly, the simple reality is the rules are different when your actions can impact others. The activities you all describe -- mountain climbing, sky diving, running with the bulls (done that, BTW), motorcycle no helmet -- the consequences fall on you. None of the above actions are contagious and can, at worst, only indirectly impact others who depend on you, assuming you die or become a cripple. (Try not to land on people if you skydive.)

            At this point, in the United States, the vaccine and boosters have b

          • by eth1 ( 94901 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @04:20PM (#62150007)

            I used to ride without a helmet, but as you grow older you come to know you aren't quite as bulletproof.

            What's the extra meaningful cost to society?

            If you're worried about money, well, charge them more insurance money those that ride w/o helmets.

            The cost to society is literally killing people that had nothing to do with your behavior by filling up hospitals so that they can't handle your heart attack or accidental trauma.

            The only exceptions to mandatory vaccination should be a valid medical reason. "Freedom" or religion is BS - society doesn't let me go to church and shoot a rifle in the air just because my religion says I have to, because it endangers others. There's no difference with not getting vaccinated.

        • by Marxist Hacker 42 ( 638312 ) * <seebert42@gmail.com> on Thursday January 06, 2022 @03:33PM (#62149791) Homepage Journal

          If you wear your mask you are safe. Of course, that's assuming that you actually *followed the science* and are wearing a .3micron filter on a rubber frame with a tight seal and safety goggles.

          What, you believed what the government was telling you and you only wear a cloth mask or one of those paper surgical masks? Well, then that puts you in the same "stupid people get consequences" as those avoiding masks and going to parties and jet setting to foreign nations.

      • Basically get vaxxed or greatly increase you chance if serious complications. It'll put a real dent in the GOP voter base.

        • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @01:59PM (#62149327) Homepage Journal

          Basically get vaxxed or greatly increase you chance if serious complications. It'll put a real dent in the GOP voter base.

          I dunno if I'd cackle too loudly about that one.

          From what I read minorities are STILL some of the most UN-vaccinated populations out there in the US. Blacks and Hispanics are topping the charts on vaccine hesitancy.

          Yes, the republicans in past couple of elections have made large headways of gathering more of these minorities as supporters of the party, but the overwhelming majority of these minority communities are still depended upon by the democrats as a major part of their base.

          • by DamnOregonian ( 963763 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @02:15PM (#62149435)

            From what I read minorities are STILL some of the most UN-vaccinated populations out there in the US. Blacks and Hispanics are topping the charts on vaccine hesitancy.

            That's a fact.

            Yes, the republicans in past couple of elections have made large headways of gathering more of these minorities as supporters of the party, but the overwhelming majority of these minority communities are still depended upon by the democrats as a major part of their base.

            Also a fact.

            However, some basic math eludes you.
            While minorities may be more likely to be vaccine hesitant, they are regardless a small fraction of the total people who are vaccine hesitant.
            You can look at the death rates by state. The political faction most affected by this is quite clear.

            Not that I think that's a good thing by any means. It's fucking tragic. Political victory by mass death of the opposing team isn't a victory of any particular ideology, other than whether or not you believed fucking morons while they spread misinformation regarding a pathogen.

          • Whataboutism at it’s finest. Pull up pictures of anti vaxx rallies and you’ll see the crowd is 99.99% white. I have yet to see a combination BLM/anti vaxx rally.

      • by Archangel_Azazel ( 707030 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @02:58PM (#62149637) Homepage Journal

        Now if only one stupid person couldn't then spread it to untold numbers of people who DIDN'T make that same choice, huh?
        It's almost like this virus doesn't check to see what politics you follow, or of you believe in science or not. I'm sorry for your loss, btw. Nobody deserves to die from this even though it is going to happen :(

      • by narcc ( 412956 )

        People made their choices, and they can now live or die with them. Welcome to the new normal.

        I have an infant at home. I'm not quite ready to give the anti-vaxxers a pass and leave them to the natural consequences of their actions. Babies don't have the option to get vaccinated. Our only hope is that he got some protection from his vaxxed and boosted mother before he was born.

      • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @07:30PM (#62150537) Journal

        All true.... and meaning absolutely no disrespect to your wife's aunt or uncle here. But do you know which variant they got? It seems to me that's a pretty big factor that's being downplayed in the media, except to say, "OMG! Omicron is popping up everywhere!"

        An old friend of mine contracted the Alpha strain of COVID19 early in 2021, and he felt like he had the flu for a few days, and got over it. Then, last summer, his wife went on a business trip out of state and caught the Delta variant of COVID19. She wound up infecting him with it, and he eventually went to a hospital because it was bad enough. They turned him away, and he died at home a couple days later. She survived after a stay in the hospital herself. Neither of them ever got vaccinated. But days before he died? He still insisted it should be a person's own personal medical decision to get the shot or not, and he said he would still tell most people to consider avoiding it. So .... a man of principles, at least, even if many would say he was misguided.

        But I guess my point is - it sure seems like the Delta variant was the real "whammy", with its ability to attack the lungs like it did. It pretty quickly superseded Alpha, to the point where basically nobody was even contracting the original variant anymore. And now, we're seeing Omicron pushing Delta out that same way. But it's far more infectious while far less deadly. (This is a trend predicted by some microbiologists for this virus for quite some time. It will mutate itself into irrelevance -- becoming another pesky flu type virus that people catch easily but get over in most cases. Like any flu, of course, SOME will have more problems or even die of it.)

        All this fear over catching Omicron variant may be pointless and misplaced, really. I think the only remaining concern is probably catching Delta, before it's completely superseded by Omicron. (Last I heard, Omicron was 70% or more of all new reported COVID cases.)

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by fermion ( 181285 )
      I donâ(TM)t think we are where we were a year ago. I donâ(TM)t know that infections are going to be a critical leading indicator. I have traveled a fair but. I am vaccinated. I have regularly tested negative before leaving and entering the country. Deaths in the US seemed to have stabilized to less than 1500 a day, Half of the peak a year ago. These are mostly unvaccinated people.

      We will have to see if people start dying or if hospitals start filling up with vaccinated people. At this point th

      • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

        "Hopefully by summer we will be in a world where infection does not mean serious concern."

        Hopefully, but how is this "reality is winning over superstition"? The reality is that the virus mutates, so "by summer" we may "be in a world where infection" means serious likelihood of death.

        "Deaths in the US seemed to have stabilized to less than 1500 a day, Half of the peak a year ago. These are mostly unvaccinated people."

        Your takeaway here is disturbing. Fukem, I got mine.

        • That is not an accurate summary. An honest interpretation would be "they refuse to listen, so they cannot be helped".

          People have a right to be willful idiots, and we have a right to let them.

          I have tried a whole lot to talk people into vaccination with no perceptible results. I tried, but they want to die. So THEREFORE fuckem. Their willful ignorance is endangering lives, so the sooner they die frankly the better. If they want to stop doing that then I will stop deploring them. It isn't because I don't like

      • Summer won't have infections. You mean by next winter infection won't be a concern.

        Covid will be endemic and for a decade worst than the flu. The flu was rather shitty for me the last time I got it which I certainly don't want again anytime soon. Oddly enough, many of the people in my current locale seem to have never had the flu, and this baffles me...

    • It seems like everybody is going to be exposed soon, and I don't think it will land me in the hospital, being vaxxed and all - but I think it's worth avoiding exposure and masking, even if only to put it off by a week or two. I am hearing horror stories about people with endless waits in the emergency room, even for totally unrelated medical reasons. The system is getting overloaded and I don't want to be thrown into it during the worst of it. (Just another way of saying, "flatten the curve.")
    • by dfghjk ( 711126 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @01:42PM (#62149247)

      "At this point, I've done all I can to protect myself and I'm kinda at the point of "Ok let's just catch it and get it over with once and for all"."

      Masks, isolations and vaccines are not just about protecting you, they are about protecting others and preventing overload of the medical system. Claiming that you've "done all" you can is an outright lie by your own admission, as you use vaccination as an excuse to do nothing else.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by skam240 ( 789197 )

        To be fair at this point it looks like we probably wont be able to get rid of this disease even if we get each and every single person vaccinated who can be safely vaccinated.

        Furthermore at this point we've vaccinated everyone who is willing and there's no way a mandatory vaccine mandate will pass our current supreme court (I also strongly doubt they'll allow Biden's mandate on large companies).

        At some point people need to get back to living normal lives and with this new less deadly variant becoming domina

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by cayenne8 ( 626475 )

        Masks, isolations and vaccines are not just about protecting you, they are about protecting others and preventing overload of the medical system. Claiming that you've "done all" you can is an outright lie by your own admission, as you use vaccination as an excuse to do nothing else.

        These are the same tiring excuses given since the beginning.

        Right now...both vaccinated and un-vaccinated can catch and transmit Covid.

        The system in some areas has been stretched and overloaded for short bursts of time, and ea

    • by know-nothing cunt ( 6546228 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @01:48PM (#62149261)

      I had N95 for one leg and KN95 on another

      Double-masking may be a good idea, but they're supposed to go on your face!

    • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @01:52PM (#62149289)

      I got Omicron on a flight, wearing two masks (one n95), fully vaccinated...

      Like you said, none of what we have are doing matters for Omicron, it's time to move on and just accept the newer strains of Covid will be around for a long time - but that's OK since they are extremely mild compared to the original.

      I'm actually pretty happy I finally got it since after that I really don't care about exposure to others in any way, and I know for sure I can't be giving them Covid either since I quarantined for the old extended 10 day period and felt totally fine five days in. I'm still not going to be going out anywhere if I feel sick at all since I don't want to give people traditional colds or flu, but it really is better just to have had it and move on from thinking about protection levels while you are out.

    • by dirk ( 87083 ) <dirk@one.net> on Thursday January 06, 2022 @01:55PM (#62149305) Homepage

      You say this as if getting it once means you can't get it again. Just because you had it once, doesn't mean you can't get it again. There are many cases of people getting it twice (or even 3 times), sometimes even the same variant. The thought process you have is a big part of why things are so bad. People are just "over it" and don't want to bother. The US has been operating as if the pandemic was done for like 9 months now. No masks, no social distancing, huge gatherings, etc. (and of course people still refusing to get vaccinated). And that put us exactly where we are now, with hospitals still crowded and now overfilled with people. If we had kept simple safeguards in place like masks and distancing, we would have been a lot better off. Instead, we removed everything and just let things go back to normal like it was over, even when everyone knew it wasn't. And because 'merica, we won't put restrictions back in place, so we are just screwed.

    • Quote: "ok, let's get it and get it over with"

      That's the worst sentence you could have written.

      Are you sure you are OK with passing ALL variants. Because you can get infected with all of them (more than one at the same time even).

      If so, sooner or later your inmune system will fall apart and you with it.

    • It's looking very unlikely that there will be any getting it over with. At least not if "it" is COVID itself. At this point it's looking like a near guarantee that it's going to be endemic, which means we'll all be catching it over and over (and over) again since it seems like neither vaccine nor natural immunity lasts very long.

      On the other hand I'm a big fan of "getting over it" and resuming life as normal. At this point everyone who wants to has been vaccinated (in the US at least), except for very yo

      • > And on the even darker side, having COVID continuously sweeping around the world is going to mean new variants keep emerging at a fast pace, and some of those are likely to be quite deadly, and potentially bypass immunity to previous versions. So, we may need to get used to losing millions of people to fast-spreading pandemics far more often than the once a century or so we've gotten comfortable with. That's exactly what the black death was, it came in waves, most people only think of it as a singular
    • Even if you're vaxxed and boosted you can still get Long Covid.

      So sure you won't die, but your life will be kinda shit.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      I think it's pretty clear that everyone's going to get COVID sooner or later, but *rate* at which this happens is still important. Even though omicron has a lower complication rate than ancestral COVID, omicron appears to be still producing enough hospitalizations [ourworldindata.org] to stress health care systems around the country. Sure, it's less virulent than ancestral COVID, but sheer volume is making up the difference when it comes to rates of admissions and ICU burden [ourworldindata.org].

      Mask mandates have returned in my area, but it's not

    • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

      ...I'm vaxxed, boosted and all...
      I believe pretty much everyone is going to catch this at some point or other in the near future and I'm kinda getting to the mindset of "ok, let's get it and get it over with".

      I agree that most everyone will catch it at some point. But in the coming half year or so, it's people like me who continue to practice more care, which saves healthcare capacity from being overstretched by the people like you who practice less care, or rather the small fraction within your group who will need hospitalization because of covid.

      I'll adopt your lower level of care once hospital bed capacity no longer has a significant covid-related shortfall (either because enough people have it, or a new str

    • I'd rethink that. I was starting to get worn down until I read this.

      https://www.reuters.com/busine... [reuters.com]

      177 / 177 infected healthcare workers were left with autoantibodies in their blood. It's starting to look like there's no such thing as surviving this monstrosity without suffering permanent damage, the only question is how severe the lasting symptoms will be.
    • by narcc ( 412956 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @03:11PM (#62149703) Journal

      I'm kinda at the point of "Ok let's just catch it and get it over with once and for all".

      You know that doesn't grant you immunity, right?

      Or is your "once and for all" far more ominous?

  • It takes weeks for the reported death rate to catch up to the reported infection rate, which makes sense since it takes people a while to die. Also, we just got out of the holiday season, when reporting takes a nosedive. There have definitely been individual days with higher than recent average deaths reported. I think we're quite likely to reach a point in about 3 weeks where the daily average hits something like 2000-3000 people dead per day up from the ~1200 we've had recently.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      Yep. There has been a sharp increase in hospitalizations ( https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-da... [cdc.gov] ), including record per-capita admissions for people under 40. Deaths are already trending up, but the spike should come in the next couple of weeks. There is also some lag in reporting since deaths get reported slower than infections.
    • by dfghjk ( 711126 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @02:02PM (#62149353)

      Possibly, and that might happen DESPITE the population being substantially more resistant to the disease due to vaccination, among other things.

      The conclusion that the new strain is less severe is premature and dangerous. It also serves no purpose other than a political one. People need to do everything they can to protect themselves and others, we will have time to conclude the severity later, after the threat subsides.

      • The conclusion that the new strain is less severe is premature and dangerous.

        No it isn't. We have plenty of data at this point, spanning multiple regions and analyses, and it shows a consensus that Omicron produces significantly less mortality.

        It also serves no purpose other than a political one.

        While I disagree that having accurate epidemiological understanding of the pandemic virus serves only a political purpose, I am not sure what your comment is even about if it is not in relation to public health policy?

        People need to do everything they can to protect themselves and others, we will have time to conclude the severity later, after the threat subsides.

        That's absurd. The first part of responding to any threat is assessing it. How does "Police should just shoot all their susp

  • I'm vaxxed with J&J and Moderna on top. Endemic means learning to live with it, and learning to live with it means not particularly caring if you get it, as it's on it's way to being nothing more than a cold for vaxxed folks. I have no fear of this particular variant, unlike the past ones. The faster we get to this place as a society, the better.

    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      Then you are part of the problem. That has likely always been the case.

      If only people took it seriously, our outcome might have been better.

      "Endemic means learning to live with it..."

      Who says it will ever reach that point? Your political party?

  • Subject (Score:4, Insightful)

    by MBGMorden ( 803437 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @01:28PM (#62149183)

    I'm well past the point of not caring anymore. While COVID isn't the flu, I've felt for a long time that we'll be settling into a flu-like pattern with it, and that seems to be happening.

    It's a potentially deadly virus but not on the scale of "Bring out your dead!". It doesn't impart permanent immunity after infection and recovery. Vaccines seem to lessen symptoms/severity but don't' seem to be making much of a dent in actual cases.

    It's quite clear that we are never ever never going to eradicate this virus from the population. Even if everyone is vaccinated. Even if everyone wore masks. It will peak and dip in waves just like all other seasonal viruses forever unless we get better vaccines than what we have now.

    At this point go ahead and get your shot (or don't - I don't think anyone should be forced to but I think its the smart choice). If you're sick, stay home. If you're not sick: live your life. We may have a new problem to deal with but the choices are to cower in fear for eternity or just accept that it's just an unfortunate aspect of reality.

  • So has Omicron turned into the flu? How do the death and hospitalization numbers compare?

    • So has Omicron turned into the flu? How do the death and hospitalization numbers compare?

      Every time someone stupid, such as yourself, wants to see comparative deaths and hospitalizations between the flu and covid, it's clear they're being stupid for the sake of being stupid.

      A simple search would show covid orders of magnitude more deadly than the flu. But you knew that when you asked your stupid question because you like being stupid. It fills you with glee to post stupid comments because being stupid is what you do. Just like this stupid [yahoo.com] who is now six feet under.

      The nice thing about stupid

    • by mrclevesque ( 1413593 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @02:09PM (#62149395)

      >So has Omicron turned into the flu?

      No. The numbers of hospitalizations and ICUs is overloading our system, it's as bad has the first and second wave.

      > How do the death and hospitalization numbers compare?

      Deaths are lower. this wave is about 1/3 of the second wave which was about 1/3 of the first wave.

      Numbers taken from here https://www.inspq.qc.ca/covid-... [inspq.qc.ca]

      If the comparison with the US holds they (the US) could be in a similar situation in coming weeks.

      Looking at South Africa, when they do our numbers (for Quebec) should drop pretty fast.

  • Just look at Florida [worldometers.info] alone - cases way, way up - but the death rate has plunged, currently around 5 a day.

    The data tells us something important, that the Covid going around now is simply not as dangerous, that the level of vaccines and treatments we have is enough now to where it doesn't matter Covid is still spreading.

    Time for us all to move on, to drop the masks (which have done zilch as both masked and unmasked states have the same rise in cases). Time to live like humans again.

    • Be careful, deaths are a trailing number. So it takes a few weeks for the full impact to show up in the death rate.

  • by Dixie_Flatline ( 5077 ) <vincent@jan@goh.gmail@com> on Thursday January 06, 2022 @02:09PM (#62149393) Homepage

    I just read a twitter thread reminding everyone that COVID is a vascular disease, and long-term side effects can occur even when the case is mild (no hospital visit needed) or asymptomatic. It really isn't clear to what extent Omicron carries these risks as well; it replicates less well in the lower lungs, so you're less likely to get pneumonia from all the blood clots COVID causes, but it still spreads throughout your body. It's not the sort of thing I want to play chicken with.

    I'm really looking forward to my booster.

  • I doubt this will left alone.

    Moving on and accepting covid, is a political and personal bitter pill for way too many.
    This would suggest that some were wrong.
  • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Thursday January 06, 2022 @03:15PM (#62149711)

    "In previous waves, a sharp increase in cases would translate into a similar increase in hospitalizations, and then deaths. Omicron, however, appears to cause severe illness at a much lower rate."

    If the latter is undeniably true at this point, then why in the hell would you even imply the former, suggesting that a "similar" increase in hospitalizations and deaths, would occur here when you already know damn well it won't, even with a 200% case increase?

    This is exactly the Hype and Bullshit that has infected mass media to continue the delusion that COVID continues to be dangerous. If the latest variant is any indication, COVID is dying off far faster than Greed wants it to. And to Greed, I say tough shit. You've caused enough death. Fuck off, along with everyone else supporting a nonsensical hype train for profits sake.

    TL; DR - PROVE we have a reason to be alarmed about this virus, or shut the fuck up about it already. NO ONE, is standing on a street corner right now ranting about flu and cold deaths, mandating those vaccines. And yet that is exactly where the fatality rate has fallen to, if not lower.

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