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Nzoner's Game Room>***NON-POLITICAL COVID-19 Discussion Thread***
JakeF 10:28 PM 02-26-2020
A couple of reminders...

Originally Posted by Bwana:
Once again, don't come in this thread with some kind of political agenda, or you will be shown the door. If you want to go that route, there is a thread about this in DC.
Originally Posted by Dartgod:
People, there is a lot of good information in this thread, let's try to keep the petty bickering to a minimum.

We all have varying opinions about the impact of this, the numbers, etc. We will all never agree with each other. But we can all keep it civil.

Thanks!

Click here for the original OP:

Spoiler!

[Reply]
ChiliConCarnage 06:47 AM 11-19-2020
:-)


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bigdaddychieffan 06:56 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by BigRedChief:
makes sense. Why not. The one vaccine that just needs normal medical refrigeration would do well in those offices. They already know how to store drugs properly.
This is the vaccine that I see being the prevalent one once out. The Pfizer one that requires extremely low temperatures is not gonna be universally used.
[Reply]
loochy 07:00 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by jdubya:
Just got off the phone with a friend of mine who lives in Strasbourg France and he says although they are back in lockdown, kids remain in school as that is considered "essential".

That makes sense. Schools should be among the very last things to close.



I don't know why Americans are so deadset on closing schools. You're setting these kids back a good year with this nonsense.
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Kidd Lex 07:53 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by loochy:
That makes sense. Schools should be among the very last things to close.



I don't know why Americans are so deadset on closing schools. You're setting these kids back a good year with this nonsense.
Shortage of teachers, staff, and subs. Then you close schools and you put pressure on health care workers who have kids in the school system. If you compensate (money: respect) teachers properly you fix the problem from the foundation but we do things like no child left behind and take educational pillars for granted so now we will have a generation of feral children with limited social skills and chaotic educations. Winning.
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BigRedChief 08:32 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by ChiliConCarnage:
The Lancet had an update on the Oxford phase 2 results. It seems promising. We should get early phase 3 results before the years end. This will be much easier to mass distribute if it's effective. Takes two shots and time
If its at a 95% effective rate like the others and there is a choice, why would anyone in Britain or America chose a vaccine that takes two shots over the one and done vaccine?
[Reply]
Fish 08:34 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by Kidd Lex:
Shortage of teachers, staff, and subs. Then you close schools and you put pressure on health care workers who have kids in the health care system. If you compensate (money: respect) teachers properly you fix the problem from the foundation but we do things like no child left behind and take educational pillars for granted so now we will have a generation of feral children with limited social skills and chaotic educations. Winning.
Yeah, we as a country are not paying teachers enough to deal with what it takes, along with ensuring that we'll keep them from catching it. They're just gonna throw their hands up and walk away. It's easy to say "These kids have to be in school." But if we cannot do it in a manner safe enough to keep faculty, staff, and support from getting sick it doesn't matter. Sure the kids will catch it and have a sniffle and be fine. The adults in the school aren't going to fair so well. That's why many schools are going back to online. Because of the adult staff. Not the kids.
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Kidd Lex 08:43 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by Fish:
Yeah, we as a country are not paying teachers enough to deal with what it takes, along with ensuring that we'll keep them from catching it. They're just gonna throw their hands up and walk away. It's easy to say "These kids have to be in school." But if we cannot do it in a manner safe enough to keep faculty, staff, and support from getting sick it doesn't matter. Sure the kids will catch it and have a sniffle and be fine. The adults in the school aren't going to fair so well. That's why many schools are going back to online. Because of the adult staff. Not the kids.
That’s the unfortunate truth, and the pandemic has exposed our flawed education system. We need to rethink how we invest and compensate in education and educators as a whole after this is over, but we probably won’t.
[Reply]
BigRedChief 08:43 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by Fish:
Yeah, we as a country are not paying teachers enough to deal with what it takes, along with ensuring that we'll keep them from catching it. They're just gonna throw their hands up and walk away. It's easy to say "These kids have to be in school." But if we cannot do it in a manner safe enough to keep faculty, staff, and support from getting sick it doesn't matter. Sure the kids will catch it and have a sniffle and be fine. The adults in the school aren't going to fair so well. That's why many schools are going back to online. Because of the adult staff. Not the kids.
My wife is teaching remotely. Only 2 teachers are teaching remotely out of 35 in her school. Right now its a parents choice to stay online or in the classroom.

She was told they were expecting the Florida governor to ban remote learning soon. Threaten school districts with a loss of funds. Remote is cheaper and the parents are choosing that option. It's just politics.


She has 30 years of experience. She's still doing it out of a love of teaching. It's who she is. She will be forced to quit if they ban online learning.
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stevieray 08:56 AM 11-19-2020
Closing schools for a 99 percent survival rate? :-)

Thank God WWII isn't on the horizon.
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Kidd Lex 09:00 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by stevieray:
Closing schools for a 99 percent survival rate? :-)

Thank God WWII isn't on the horizon.
It’s a staffing problem in my school district. There having immense trouble finding enough people to cover the classrooms. They have yard signs out for subs.
[Reply]
arrowheadnation 09:12 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by stevieray:
Closing schools for a 99 percent survival rate? :-)

Thank God WWII isn't on the horizon.
There it is again. That stupid 99% argument. The focal point is not the kids. We know that they generally tolerate the virus well. It's the high risk people that they can take it home to as well as the high risk teachers that are expected to be in the classrooms with them everyday...it's those people that decisions like these are made for.
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stevieray 09:16 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by arrowheadnation:
There it is again. That stupid 99% argument.
:-)

Truth hurt?

have fun presuming negatives.
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BigRedChief 09:16 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by Kidd Lex:
It’s a staffing problem in my school district. There having immense trouble finding enough people to cover the classrooms. They have yard signs out for subs.
Thats what people need to understand. This country has a finite amount of healthcare workers and teachers, You just cant produce more people in those fields in a year.

Schools were not built with a pandemic in mind. They could be upgraded, retrofitted to improve ventilation, spread the kids out, keep physical distance, lessen class sizes but no school district has any extra money.

If they want to force schools to learn in person, the federal government and state government need to pony up the money to do it safely. Or your going to lose your best teachers, How does that help anyone's kids?
[Reply]
stevieray 09:18 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by BigRedChief:

Schools were not built with a pandemic in mind.
Nor should they be.
[Reply]
BigBeauford 09:20 AM 11-19-2020
Originally Posted by stevieray:
Closing schools for a 99 percent survival rate? :-)

Thank God WWII isn't on the horizon.
Yeah, thank God. People like you wouldn't have done the bare minimum of sacrifices to keep this country going. Speaking of war, we are basically in the last month of a deployment knowing that vaccines are on the horizon. Every COVID death is a tragedy knowing that a solution to normalcy is right around the corner.
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