And it'll come back around in China once they're back up and running at 100% and back to normal.
It's a months long ordeal.
It's a months long ordeal.
unless all hell breaks loose, looks like the under is a lock. I don't believe the numbers released are legit. I think there has been some breakdown in the testing and reporting that we are not hearing about, but probably not bad enough to hit the over.Milwaukees Best Light said:
499.5 people with at least presumptive positive by Friday at close of business in the greater Houston area. Over/Under. What you got?
aTm2004 said:
Ok, that's funny.
Not a fan of the man, but I did give him props for how Harvey was handled leading up to and mostly during....the aftermath is a different story.TXTransplant said:aTm2004 said:
Ok, that's funny.
I don't live in CoH, so I try to keep my distance from those politics. But from observation, it seems to be the smartest thing the man has ever said.
IrishTxAggie said:Not a fan of the man, but I did give him props for how Harvey was handled leading up to and mostly during....the aftermath is a different story.TXTransplant said:aTm2004 said:
Ok, that's funny.
I don't live in CoH, so I try to keep my distance from those politics. But from observation, it seems to be the smartest thing the man has ever said.
There's been a massive, unprecedented breakdown in testing. We have no idea how many people in the US are infected but it's much higher than the official numbers. We don't have enough tests and we don't have enough lab materials to run and process them. Here are just a sample of articles explaining why. We genuinely have no idea how many people might have the virus. CDC red tape tied up the ability of private labs to create their own tests for weeks. They are working on it now but we've had way too long for the virus to move around the country.Milwaukees Best Light said:unless all hell breaks loose, looks like the under is a lock. I don't believe the numbers released are legit. I think there has been some breakdown in the testing and reporting that we are not hearing about, but probably not bad enough to hit the over.Milwaukees Best Light said:
499.5 people with at least presumptive positive by Friday at close of business in the greater Houston area. Over/Under. What you got?
jenn96 said:There's been a massive, unprecedented breakdown in testing. We have no idea how many people in the US are infected but it's much higher than the official numbers. We don't have enough tests and we don't have enough lab materials to run and process them. Here are just a sample of articles explaining why. We genuinely have no idea how many people might have the virus. CDC red tape tied up the ability of private labs to create their own tests for weeks. They are working on it now but we've had way too long for the virus to move around the country.Milwaukees Best Light said:unless all hell breaks loose, looks like the under is a lock. I don't believe the numbers released are legit. I think there has been some breakdown in the testing and reporting that we are not hearing about, but probably not bad enough to hit the over.Milwaukees Best Light said:
499.5 people with at least presumptive positive by Friday at close of business in the greater Houston area. Over/Under. What you got?
- https://www.businessinsider.com/us-coronavirus-testing-problems-timeline-2020-3
- https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/02/united-states-badly-bungled-coronavirus-testing-things-may-soon-improve
- https://www.foxnews.com/us/coronavirus-testing-becoming-a-growing-concern-for-states-as-caseloads-climb
- https://www.pbs.org/newshour/health/the-reason-u-s-covid-19-numbers-arent-higher-not-enough-tests
- https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/03/11/814189027/no-guarantee-youll-get-tested-for-covid-19-even-if-your-doctor-requests-it
- https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-51860529
- https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-11/coronavirus-testing-kits-lack-key-ingredient-causing-confusion
(ETA - Milwaukees Best Light, didn't mean to come across belligerently. But the testing breakdown is scary to me because we can't allocate resources without accurate data.)
IrishTxAggie said:Not a fan of the man, but I did give him props for how Harvey was handled leading up to and mostly during....the aftermath is a different story.TXTransplant said:aTm2004 said:
Ok, that's funny.
I don't live in CoH, so I try to keep my distance from those politics. But from observation, it seems to be the smartest thing the man has ever said.
This just seems tone deaf. If you cancel the largest event in Houston without any guidance people expect to be shut in their homes for 2 weeks without leaving. So they buy things they can't live without for 2 weeks.TXTransplant said:
Milwaukees Best Light said:unless all hell breaks loose, looks like the under is a lock. I don't believe the numbers released are legit. I think there has been some breakdown in the testing and reporting that we are not hearing about, but probably not bad enough to hit the over.Milwaukees Best Light said:
499.5 people with at least presumptive positive by Friday at close of business in the greater Houston area. Over/Under. What you got?
Bondag said:This just seems tone deaf. If you cancel the largest event in Houston without any guidance people expect to be shut in their homes for 2 weeks without leaving. So they buy things they can't live without for 2 weeks.TXTransplant said:
I still have my Harvey stash that is now expired, but would get me through 2 weeks and buy normal groceries as well.
sts7049 said:
maybe she just wanted to bake a cheesecake?
where have they said to bunker in place, they have said minimize contact.Bondag said:This just seems tone deaf. If you cancel the largest event in Houston without any guidance people expect to be shut in their homes for 2 weeks without leaving. So they buy things they can't live without for 2 weeks.TXTransplant said:
I still have my Harvey stash that is now expired, but would get me through 2 weeks and buy normal groceries as well.
k2aggie07 said:
Total backward justification. Testing is important to prevent or delay imported cases from starting community spread epidemics. It also gives local officials the information they need to scale up closures.
Like you said, since we have no information right now about the spread, you have to shut everything down. That could be productive. That could be a huge cost, with absolutely no benefit. And then what - in a month when a real local epidemic happens, you shut down again? That's how you get fatigue and reduce compliance.
The rationalization right now about testing coming from officials is ridiculous. Total failure by the bureaucracy. And what's worse they even actively intervened to stop local labs and universities from bailing them out.
Bondag said:
Like I said. He is tone deaf. Tell people we are not shutting the city down just large events. Don't make fun of people buying TP. Tell them what to do as the leader of this city.
Who has said anything about bottled water expiring after 2 weeks?BQ_90 said:where have they said to bunker in place, they have said minimize contact.Bondag said:This just seems tone deaf. If you cancel the largest event in Houston without any guidance people expect to be shut in their homes for 2 weeks without leaving. So they buy things they can't live without for 2 weeks.TXTransplant said:
I still have my Harvey stash that is now expired, but would get me through 2 weeks and buy normal groceries as well.
Also how does bottled water expire after 2 weeks.
My wife and I are in the same boat...starting to worry a bit about the fact we haven't bought more than normal groceries just because there potentially will only be **** food left in a week or twoTXTransplant said:Bondag said:
Like I said. He is tone deaf. Tell people we are not shutting the city down just large events. Don't make fun of people buying TP. Tell them what to do as the leader of this city.
Good luck with that. I had a conference call with a colleague in Great Britain earlier this week. They are hoarding toilet paper over there, too. Said there isn't a roll to be found anywhere in Europe.
It's human nature gone amok. And once the chain reaction starts, people who don't want to panic end up doing irrational things just so they aren't left out in the cold.
I made a concerted effort when I was out shopping yesterday to not buy anything I didn't truly want to use/consume (so no canned goods, because I hate canned food). And I didn't buy more than two of any one item (except for sweet potatoes).
Maybe I made the wrong call, and we are going to be begging our neighbors for food in a couple of weeks, but I feel good about my decision.
I'm fully prepared to tell my son to use rags or hop in the shower (which is conveniently right next to his toilet).
my mistake, i thought he said his stash had expired from the water leak. I was paying more attention to the tweet.htxag09 said:Who has said anything about bottled water expiring after 2 weeks?BQ_90 said:where have they said to bunker in place, they have said minimize contact.Bondag said:This just seems tone deaf. If you cancel the largest event in Houston without any guidance people expect to be shut in their homes for 2 weeks without leaving. So they buy things they can't live without for 2 weeks.TXTransplant said:
I still have my Harvey stash that is now expired, but would get me through 2 weeks and buy normal groceries as well.
Also how does bottled water expire after 2 weeks.
I set the line that high thinking the private labs would be doing testing onsite. Turns out they are doing the same thing just as slowly and poorly as the government was. I don't think the bet was ever will we have over 500 people with it, it was whether they could get testing confirmation. Well, they can't.wessimo said:Milwaukees Best Light said:unless all hell breaks loose, looks like the under is a lock. I don't believe the numbers released are legit. I think there has been some breakdown in the testing and reporting that we are not hearing about, but probably not bad enough to hit the over.Milwaukees Best Light said:
499.5 people with at least presumptive positive by Friday at close of business in the greater Houston area. Over/Under. What you got?
Under was always going to be a lock due to lack of testing capacity. In reality there are probably way more than 500 cases out there.
The wife went Wednesday night to go grocery shopping because we haven't done our big monthly grocery shopping yet, so she knocked it out and got a bit more than normal to re-stock the shelves and freezer. Wasn't too bad but wasn't like it normally was at night either. We did go to Costco last night to get a shelf for the garage that we're going to get organized this weekend, and there were some things that were just picked over while other stuff had tons left (no bread but tons of pasta sauces, frozen meats, etc). We decided to grab some diapers as well since little dude would be needing some within the week, and they had plenty of those, so if you need diapers and your usual spot is picked clean, go to Costco and see.gougler08 said:My wife and I are in the same boat...starting to worry a bit about the fact we haven't bought more than normal groceries just because there potentially will only be **** food left in a week or twoTXTransplant said:Bondag said:
Like I said. He is tone deaf. Tell people we are not shutting the city down just large events. Don't make fun of people buying TP. Tell them what to do as the leader of this city.
Good luck with that. I had a conference call with a colleague in Great Britain earlier this week. They are hoarding toilet paper over there, too. Said there isn't a roll to be found anywhere in Europe.
It's human nature gone amok. And once the chain reaction starts, people who don't want to panic end up doing irrational things just so they aren't left out in the cold.
I made a concerted effort when I was out shopping yesterday to not buy anything I didn't truly want to use/consume (so no canned goods, because I hate canned food). And I didn't buy more than two of any one item (except for sweet potatoes).
Maybe I made the wrong call, and we are going to be begging our neighbors for food in a couple of weeks, but I feel good about my decision.
I'm fully prepared to tell my son to use rags or hop in the shower (which is conveniently right next to his toilet).
Milwaukees Best Light said:
Hows the supply at Specs holding out?