Midnightmom Posted December 7, 2020 Share Posted December 7, 2020 2 hours ago, Dee said: I suppose there were parental permission slips but my mother had we 3 vaccinated for everything that came along. We were vaccinated for everything too. But that was back in the day when alternate treatments for cures were not available/known for some of these "childhood" diseases. AND, before they started developing vaccines from the cells of aborted babies! I know that the cell line that was used has been cultured, and re-cultured, and grown in labs ever since the original cells were used, but........................... And I don't think that the vaccines we took as kids had mercury and other the dangerous "preservatives" in it like the new ones do. 4 Link to comment
Littlesister Posted December 7, 2020 Share Posted December 7, 2020 It is true that Medicare is paying out 20% more for every patient they deem died of Corvid. Hoax, Yep. Something I read on The Olive Tree Ministry this morning: This is Biblical. Immunity passport that combines digital identity with vaccinations, block chain and nanotechology, on an ID 2020 patent, a quantum dot microneedle vaccine mark with data storage, digital certificates, artificial intelligence, global pestilences, global plagues, the destruction of Damascus (Isaiah 17) is set up like a compass pointing towards Ezekiel 38 and the rubber band is about to snap. You can read this and more on Jan Markell, As you see the day approaching. If we do not get this vaccine which I will not comply, we that will not comply will either be sent to camps or forced to stay in our homes after they take everything we have.. This includes our food, clothing, guns anything they want to take and leave us to die in our homes as we cannot buy or sell. This virus is a scare tactic to get you to comply with the coming world order. and hard for the rapture to come soon. As I think it will. 1 1 Link to comment
TheCG Posted December 7, 2020 Share Posted December 7, 2020 Currently watching this video from Ivor Cummins: 3 Link to comment
snapshotmiki Posted December 7, 2020 Share Posted December 7, 2020 (edited) https://covid19.elsevierpure.com/en/publications/admission-hyperglycaemia-as-a-predictor-of-mortality-in-patients-?fbclid=IwAR33P8asGTos1X04s-Pv3YyxsJeznLB4wBpm5rvYuN5-0qo1VQ108dlUcnE This may have already been posted. If so, please delete! Thanks Edited December 7, 2020 by snapshotmiki 1 2 Link to comment
Midnightmom Posted December 8, 2020 Share Posted December 8, 2020 (edited) 20 hours ago, snapshotmiki said: This may have already been posted. If so, please delete! Thanks This is the text from an article written about the study that is based on the report by Spanish researchers that snapshotmiki's link takes you to. Quote Blood Glucose on Admission Predicts COVID-19 Severity in All Hyperglycemia at hospital admission — regardless of diabetes status — is a key predictor of COVID-19-related death and severity among noncritical patients, new research from Spain finds. The observational study, the largest to date to investigate this association, was published online November 23 in Annals of Medicine by Francisco Javier Carrasco-Sánchez, MD, PhD, and colleagues. Among more than 11,000 patients with confirmed COVID-19 from March to May 2020 in a nationwide Spanish registry involving 109 hospitals, admission hyperglycemia independently predicted progression from noncritical to critical condition and death, regardless of prior diabetes history. Those with abnormally high glucose levels were more than twice as likely to die from the virus than those with normal readings (41.4% vs 15.7%). They also had an increased need for a ventilator and intensive care unit (ICU) admission. "These results provided a simple and practical way to stratify risk of death in hospitalized patients with COVID-19. Hence, admission hyperglycemia should not be overlooked, but rather detected and appropriately treated to improve the outcomes of COVID-19 patients with and without diabetes," Carrasco-Sánchez and colleagues write. The findings confirm those of previous retrospective observational studies, but the current study "has, by far, the biggest number of patients involved in this kind of study [to date]. All conclusions are consistent to other studies," Carrasco-Sánchez, of University Hospital Juan Ramón Jiménez, Huelva, Spain, told Medscape Medical News. However, a surprising finding, he said, "was how hyperglycemia works in the nondiabetic population and [that] glucose levels over 140 [mg/dL]...increase the risk of death." Pay Attention to Even Mild Hyperglycemia From Admission The study also differs from some of the prior observational ones in that it examines outcome by admission glycemia rather than during the hospital stay, therefore eliminating the effect of any inpatient treatment, such as dexamethasone, he noted. Although blood glucose measurement at admission is routine for all patients in Spain, as it is in the United States and elsewhere, a mildly elevated level in a person without a diagnosis of diabetes may not be recognized as important. (miki's link takes you to the "Abstract" page of the study - for those who are more interested in the details) Edited December 8, 2020 by Midnightmom 4 Link to comment
Jeepers Posted December 11, 2020 Share Posted December 11, 2020 Our governor just extended our curfew until January 2nd. Everyone has to be off the streets and closed up by 10:00 pm. Essentials like gas stations, fast food and medical places are exempt. Grocery stores are too but they all close up at 10:00 anyway. Wonder how the curfew will affect the New Years Eve revellers? With Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years party people Covid could still be going strong well into the new year. 3 Link to comment
Homesteader Posted December 11, 2020 Share Posted December 11, 2020 Honestly, I think covid will disappear as soon as the cold and flu viruses disappear. We think we have more control over nature and medicine than we actually do. 3 Link to comment
Littlesister Posted December 12, 2020 Share Posted December 12, 2020 Homesteader, I am hoping come spring this corvid mess will be done with. I for one am over it. I am going to try to get DH in car on the 18th to go to the Church for the panorama. It is a drive through with all the scenes of the birth of Jesus. Our church does it every year, but this year will be smaller due to the virus. We usually have 200 to 300 cars drive through it. No getting out of cars. They will be giving candy canes out as people come in to see it. I think it would be good for DH to get out of house and drive through there. If he does well, then maybe I can get him going back to church on Sundays as well. It is a 25 minute drive to church and then sitting in car for an hour for a service and a 25 minute drive back home. So will have to see how it goes. Will see first how the panorama goes. Jeepers our governor just extended our curfew as well. 10 pm to 5 am. Churches can now open but only outside service and in cars. I guess you can't catch corvid between the hours of 5 am till 10 pm. Seriously, I think this curfew mess is stupid. I can see keeping the mask on, limiting the number of people and keeping distance but really, a 10pm curfew for corvid will not stop the spread of corvid. 1 Link to comment
Daylily Posted December 12, 2020 Share Posted December 12, 2020 I thought he said 12:00 midnight to 5 am. Yeah, I don't understand the curfew and how it will help either. Link to comment
Mt_Rider Posted December 13, 2020 Share Posted December 13, 2020 (edited) I am assuming that for one thing, it should stop the late nite protestors?????????? .....unless they have an "exemption" of course. The second thing is that generally speaking, the later the party, the wilder.....less inhibited folks get. Less inhibited....more careless. Everyone getting right up in everyone else's face to talk, laugh, yell...... And obviously that would have more "exchange of spit" going on. OTOH.....it also is a great lead-in to lock-downs just for the sake of controlling 'the people'......getting folks used to being restricted for "the health of everyone" and continuing .......because they can! MtRider .....but ya didn't hear it from me.... Edited December 13, 2020 by Mt_Rider 2 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted December 13, 2020 Author Share Posted December 13, 2020 One of the two local hospitals isn't getting any kind of a bonus for COVID. The comptroller's office would love to know more about this, as they need all the help they can get. Please furnish specific details, such as USC paragraph number, so she can apply for this benefit. 2 1 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted December 13, 2020 Author Share Posted December 13, 2020 Well, that didn't work. Would someone please get rid of the big blank space? And for the curious, the charts are here: https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/data/new-cases SHARE: DAILY CONFIRMED NEW CASES (7-DAY MOVING AVERAGE)Outbreak evolution for the current 10 most affected countries Of course, it only shows test results, as opposed to actual case numbers, but those have a use so long as you remember that's what you're looking at. 3 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted December 13, 2020 Author Share Posted December 13, 2020 Alabama +4,066 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 172.7 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 42.6% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Alaska +522 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 1,292.5 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 6.3% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Arizona +8,077 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 391.3 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 21.9% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Arkansas +2,628 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 447.7 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 15.7% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK California +32,961 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 717.4 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 10.6% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Colorado +3,961 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 734.3 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 9.6% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Connecticut +0 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 1,093.9 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 7.0% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Delaware +1,058 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 868.7 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 9.8% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK District of Columbia +286 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 881.1 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 4.1% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Florida +10,577 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 502.2 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 8.7% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Georgia +6,447 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 310.1 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 12.9% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Hawaii +196 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 363.6 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 2.1% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Idaho +1,022 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 161.0 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 55.8% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Illinois +8,737 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 779.6 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 8.9% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Indiana +7,401 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 751.0 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 12.6% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Iowa +1,397 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 112.5 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 37.3% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Kansas +142 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 223.3 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 37.3% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Kentucky +3,540 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 454.5 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 15.9% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Louisiana +0 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 530.8 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 9.8% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Maine +414 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 621.2 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 4.3% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Maryland +3,538 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 786.5 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 5.9% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Massachusetts +5,289 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 1,236.3 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 5.7% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Michigan +4,813 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 539.2 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 10.2% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Minnesota +4,430 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 813.4 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 9.4% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Mississippi +2,665 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 280.3 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 24.8% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Missouri +6,976 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 326.6 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 17.1% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Montana +774 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 480.1 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 15.5% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Nebraska +811 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 765.3 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 10.2% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Nevada +2,639 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 441.6 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 19.2% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK New Hampshire +784 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 543.1 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 11.8% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK New Jersey +6,240 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 502.6 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 11.0% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK New Mexico +1,793 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 573.6 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 13.7% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK New York +11,129 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 1,004.7 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 5.0% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK North Carolina +6,153 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 531.2 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 10.6% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK North Dakota +376 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 711.0 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 8.9% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Ohio +11,252 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 517.6 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 20.3% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Oklahoma +3,983 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 439.5 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 16.5% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Oregon +1,419 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 417.5 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 7.8% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Pennsylvania +9,081 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 204.5 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 38.0% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Puerto Rico +721 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 27.7 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 100.0% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Rhode Island +0 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 1,181.0 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 7.8% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK South Carolina +3,572 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 420.1 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 12.9% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK South Dakota +735 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 191.3 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 43.1% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Tennessee +6,691 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 491.5 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 19.3% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Texas +11,819 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 355.8 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 13.8% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Utah +3,692 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 454.4 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 18.6% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Vermont +85 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 785.3 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 2.1% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Virginia +4,177 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 392.4 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 11.7% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Washington +4,181 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 311.0 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 12.8% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK West Virginia +1,514 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 749.9 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 9.1% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Wisconsin +4,624 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 553.2 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 12.5% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK Wyoming +122 new THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 559.4 tests per 100k THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 13.1% positive THIS WEEK LAST WEEK 2 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted December 13, 2020 Author Share Posted December 13, 2020 (edited) State/Territory Cases in Last 7 Days California 209,807 Ohio 86,029 Texas 80,828 Pennsylvania 69,634 Florida 65,789 Illinois 61,713 Tennessee 45,431 New York* 45,046 Indiana 44,517 Arizona 43,689 North Carolina 41,224 Georgia 38,669 Michigan 38,583 New Jersey 34,510 Massachusetts 32,085 Minnesota 30,117 Colorado 28,287 Wisconsin 28,073 Virginia 26,856 Alabama 25,252 New York City* 23,944 Washington 23,942 Missouri 23,925 Kentucky 22,595 Oklahoma 22,414 Maryland 19,620 South Carolina 19,563 Connecticut 19,046 Utah 18,977 Nevada 18,323 Louisiana 17,014 Kansas 16,999 Arkansas 14,870 Mississippi 14,516 Iowa 13,028 New Mexico 11,502 Idaho 10,927 Oregon 9,596 Nebraska 9,120 Rhode Island 8,681 West Virginia 8,579 New Hampshire 6,106 Delaware 5,780 Puerto Rico 5,760 Montana 5,575 South Dakota 5,103 North Dakota 4,890 Alaska 4,138 Wyoming 2,966 Maine 2,558 District of Columbia 1,771 Vermont 732 Hawaii 692 Virgin Islands 158 Guam 120 Northern Mariana Islands 7 Federated States of Micronesia 4 American Samoa 0 Palau 0 Republic of Marshall Islands 0 State/Territory Average Daily Cases per 100k in Last 7 Days Rhode Island 117.3 Ohio 105.1 Tennessee 95.9 Indiana 95 North Dakota 91.9 Idaho 89 Arizona 87 Nevada 86.3 Utah 85.8 Delaware 85.4 Kansas 83.4 South Dakota 82.6 Oklahoma 81.2 Alaska 80.2 New Mexico 78.4 Pennsylvania 77.7 Minnesota 76.7 Connecticut 76.2 California 75.8 Montana 75 Alabama 73.8 Wyoming 73.3 Kentucky 72.2 Colorado 71 Arkansas 70.5 Mississippi 69.4 Illinois 69.2 Wisconsin 69 West Virginia 67.9 Nebraska 67.5 Massachusetts 66.4 New Hampshire 64.3 Iowa 59 New York* 57.8 North Carolina 56.7 Missouri 55.8 New Jersey 55.3 Michigan 55.2 South Carolina 55 Georgia 52.5 Louisiana 52.2 Maryland 46.4 Washington 45.4 Virginia 45 Florida 44.1 New York City* 40.7 Texas 40.2 District of Columbia 36 Oregon 32.7 Maine 27.3 Puerto Rico 25.8 Virgin Islands 21.6 Vermont 16.7 Guam 10.3 Hawaii 7 Northern Mariana Islands 1.8 Federated States of Micronesia 0.6 State/Territory Deaths in Last 7 Days Texas 1,298 Illinois 1,215 Pennsylvania 1,174 California 1,056 Michigan 874 Florida 701 Indiana 551 Iowa 545 Ohio 531 Colorado 515 Tennessee 495 New York* 469 Minnesota 439 New Jersey 426 Arizona 397 Wisconsin 390 Massachusetts 342 Missouri 322 Arkansas 291 Kansas 286 Georgia 282 North Carolina 280 Maryland 271 Mississippi 238 Alabama 225 Louisiana 219 Nevada 219 Connecticut 217 Virginia 211 Oklahoma 178 New Mexico 175 Nebraska 171 South Carolina 168 South Dakota 152 New York City* 141 North Dakota 139 Idaho 137 West Virginia 137 Kentucky 130 Oregon 123 Washington 120 Utah 99 Rhode Island 96 Montana 82 Puerto Rico 81 Wyoming 64 New Hampshire 41 Alaska 33 Delaware 33 Maine 30 District of Columbia 18 Vermont 16 Hawaii 10 Guam 2 State/Territory Deaths in Last 7 Days per 100K North Dakota 2.6 Iowa 2.5 South Dakota 2.5 Wyoming 1.6 Arkansas 1.4 Illinois 1.4 Kansas 1.4 Colorado 1.3 Michigan 1.3 Nebraska 1.3 Pennsylvania 1.3 Rhode Island 1.3 Indiana 1.2 New Mexico 1.2 Idaho 1.1 Minnesota 1.1 Mississippi 1.1 Montana 1.1 West Virginia 1.1 Nevada 1 Tennessee 1 Wisconsin 1 Connecticut 0.9 Arizona 0.8 Missouri 0.8 Alabama 0.7 Louisiana 0.7 Massachusetts 0.7 New Jersey 0.7 Ohio 0.7 Texas 0.7 Alaska 0.6 Maryland 0.6 New York* 0.6 Oklahoma 0.6 Delaware 0.5 Florida 0.5 South Carolina 0.5 Utah 0.5 California 0.4 District of Columbia 0.4 Georgia 0.4 Kentucky 0.4 North Carolina 0.4 New Hampshire 0.4 Oregon 0.4 Puerto Rico 0.4 Virginia 0.4 Vermont 0.4 Maine 0.3 Guam 0.2 New York City* 0.2 Washington 0.2 Hawaii 0.1 Today's numbers, December 13, 2020. Edited December 13, 2020 by Ambergris 2 2 Link to comment
Jeepers Posted December 13, 2020 Share Posted December 13, 2020 She's baaack. Welcome back Ambergris! You have been sorely missed. I got rid of the blank one. P.S. Thanks for posting the stats. I REALLY missed them. Especially comparing Ohio to Indiana at a glance. 3 1 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted December 13, 2020 Author Share Posted December 13, 2020 Thank you! 2 Link to comment
Daylily Posted December 13, 2020 Share Posted December 13, 2020 I've missed you too! Now I hope Kappy comes back. 3 1 Link to comment
Mt_Rider Posted December 14, 2020 Share Posted December 14, 2020 (edited) Yesss! Ditto that. And....of course I'm happy to see Hawai'i still down at the bottom after they opened to tourists.. Hawai'i opened public schools between Thanksgiving and Christmas/New Year break. DD1 is not pleased. Dogmom.....how are you and schools going? Any idea what's up so far in Belgium? I think that's the color match for the line that's skyrocketing.... MtRider Edited December 14, 2020 by Mt_Rider 1 Link to comment
TheCG Posted December 14, 2020 Share Posted December 14, 2020 They opened up our schools this semester, and have done things like canceled Sunday evening for Monday morning due to COVID cases. So glad we had already arranged for the kids to be going through a virtual school this year. 4 Link to comment
euphrasyne Posted December 14, 2020 Share Posted December 14, 2020 (edited) Welcome back If anyone is needing help due to corona, the following links may be helpful in the US. COVID-19 Claims Reimbursement to Health Care Providers and Facilities for Testing, Treatment, and Vaccine Administration for the Uninsured | Official web site of the U.S. Health Resources & Services Administration (hrsa.gov) Government Response to Coronavirus, COVID-19 | USAGov Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19): Information for NIH Applicants and Recipients of NIH Funding | grants.nih.gov Coronavirus (COVID-19) Information | Official web site of the U.S. Health Resources & Services Administration (hrsa.gov) The last link has several places where health care providers can apply directly for assistance. Edited December 14, 2020 by euphrasyne 2 Link to comment
Ambergris Posted December 15, 2020 Author Share Posted December 15, 2020 One statistic stuck with me: a couple of weeks ago, they announced that one in every eight hundred North Dakotans had died of it. 1 Link to comment
Mt_Rider Posted December 15, 2020 Share Posted December 15, 2020 https://uspopulation2020.com/population-of-north-dakota-2020-population-growth-demography-and-facts.html QUOTE: North Dakota Population 2020 – 803,686.2 (Estimated) So approximately one thousand people have died in North Dakota. [is my math right?] Anyway, I wonder what the ratio is for other states? North Dakota is a poor state with likely inadequate medical care..... Distances to travel to get to medical centers. And as our Governor stated months ago when CO passed the one thousand mark: Every number has a name. MtRider .....TRYING to keep our four names off that list but folks keep going to the stores!!! Link to comment
TheCG Posted December 15, 2020 Share Posted December 15, 2020 Uh, guys? https://nypost.com/2020/12/14/bird-flu-spreads-to-10th-japanese-prefecture/ Link to comment
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