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Msg ID: 2721179 I can see after this alledged shut down, nothing has changed +3/-0     
Author:observer II
2/23/2022 8:27:15 AM

I can see the liberals are still fixated on Trump.

Which kinda makes sense because they can't focus on Biden's accomplishments. Because there aren't any that have made this country better.

So let's review this dumpster fire we've been living through.

  • Border crisis - more illegals crossing into this country than ever before. Most of which are being helped and transported by the Biden administration to all parts of our nation. Unvacccinated BTW
  • Inflation is over 7 1/2% which is the highest inmany many decades
  • Crime is through the roof which is a funny topic. Liberals defunded police. Now cities like Seattle & Portland can't find anyone to fill those positions. Crime is through the roof, Congrats for those who voted for an idiot.
  • Energy crisis continues to get worse. Gas is absolutely absurd which of course is 100% Biden's fault. And let's not forget about home energy costs.
  • Worker shortage, I laugh when I hear about overcrowded hospitals not being able to handle all the deadly covid cases. Well gee, maybe you shouldn't have fired all those healthcare workers, huh? And what's truly brilliant is they fired these experienced people only to hire unvacinnated workers at twice the cost. Liberal brilliance...............................idiots!!!!!!!!!!!
  • Vaccine mandate has cuased an uproar in this country. Myself included. I dodged the bullet and remain poison free.These spikes we are seeing are becuase of the vaccine. Biden lied to the people when he said the unvaccinated have caused this. But sheeple buy into the lie.
  • Supply chain crisis - well gosh golly guys, never in our lifetime have we seen anything like this. Prices are beyond absurd, shelves are empty. And now we havee truckers revolting.

So let's talk about the truckers. Vaccine mandates are about as ignorant as we could possibly get. I mean, no one spreads covid like a trucker sitting ALONE in his truck driving across state lines. Talk about a super spreader, lol. But we 'll conveniently forget about the thousands of unvaccinated illegals Biden is flying all over the country to infect and spread this deadly virus.

 

I see hypocrisy is alive and well here amongst the sheep.

 

Have a great day boys.



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Msg ID: 2721188 the changes have not come yet Obsy ... +1/-1     
Author:bladeslap
2/23/2022 9:12:50 AM

Reply to: 2721179

They may very well involve keeping conspiracy theorists off this site as it is repurposed with teh new software.

We may not want Trumplicans like yourself on who are part of the cult. Time will tell what our final decision is.

We want rational people who actually look at facts, can reason unemotionally. 

I've said it before and I'll say it again...

Inflation and energy costs are through the roof in every major developed country, and even moreso in countries that are not developed.

Your mind cannot get out of hatred mode, so you have this need to blame Biden for everything

At the same time, no word about all the things Trump has been up to including Praising Putin in a time that he's about to invade Ukraine.

Get your priorites straight.



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Msg ID: 2721192 LMAO, then your forum will be empty +1/-1     
Author:observer II
2/23/2022 9:20:06 AM

Reply to: 2721188

I guess you better make your forum for liberal sheep only then.

That's the only way you will achieve your utopia.

But this is extremely funny to anyone with a brain.

You shut down for new software that will ensure your string of lies here will be supported.

And it's convenient this is happening when you are at a crossroads. And that road being the road where you can no longer defend this incompetence that you clearly see.

You have lost this fight bladeslap. You knnow it, and I know it. Which explains the extreme change you are implying.

Our views and beliefs will never change, no matter what software you incorporate. I always thought that's what made America great. But you seem to want to be some self imposed dictator.

Removing conservatives here only reinforces everything I've been saying for the past decade here.

Your forum, your choice. My life will go on as it always has. I will always believe in our constitution, and our laws. Can you say the same?

One last thing before  Isign off. Can you pass my info to shark, zombie, and old guy



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Msg ID: 2721197 LMAO, then your forum will be empty +1/-1     
Author:bladeslap
2/23/2022 9:27:28 AM

Reply to: 2721192

You're the only one who wants a "fight" Obsy

You are a highly emotioanl person with a lot of built up anger who fails to take the time to take an honest look at yourself and what you beleive in.

Then when you spew your hatred, you project and accuse others of exactly what you are doing. 

Obsy, you don't realize it, but people see your hatred and understand who and what you are. It's crystal clear...So you just wind up wasting your time and everybody's time with your rants.

 



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Msg ID: 2721229 more illegals crossing into this country than ever.... Unvacccinated BTW" +0/-0     
Author:TheCrow
2/23/2022 12:13:17 PM

Reply to: 2721179

"Border crisis - more illegals crossing into this country than ever before. Most of which are being helped and transported by the Biden administration to all parts of our nation. Unvacccinated BTW"


Jett, you are not looking at the complete picture:

Author: TheCrow Date: 8/31/2021 9:11:12 AM +2/-0 Show Orig. Msg (this window) Or In New Window

"There are (sic) packed up sent all over the states spreading COVID." They are tested for covid.

On a seperate issue "Over 20% of them have the virus..." An even stronger argument for Americans to us social distancing, the mask and the jab.

 

 

"Border crisis - more illegals crossing into this country than ever before." 

Uh, no. The highest in 21, 22 years. 

AUGUST 13, 2021

Migrant encounters at U.S.-Mexico border are at a 21-year high

The U.S. Border Patrol reported nearly 200,000 encounters with migrants along the U.S.-Mexico border in July, the highest monthly total in more than two decades.

Put on some dry panties.

 

" Unvacccinated  BTW" 

Now you are for mandatory vaccination?



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Msg ID: 2721232 observer, nice review (NT) +0/-0     
Author:Old Guy
2/23/2022 12:24:59 PM

Reply to: 2721179


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Msg ID: 2721237 I can see after this alledged shut down, nothing has changed +0/-0     
Author:TheCrow
2/23/2022 12:46:52 PM

Reply to: 2721179

"Crime is through the roof which is a funny topic. Liberals defunded police. Now cities like Seattle & Portland can't find anyone to fill those positions. Crime is through the roof, Congrats for those who voted for an idiot."

You so funny. Look at the jump in murders during Trump's administration, reversing previous declines, especially 2020:


 

 

 

 

"Energy crisis continues to get worse. Gas is absolutely absurd which of course is 100% Biden's fault. And let's not forget about home energy costs."

You so funny? Deluded, irrational, but funny. Yes, there is a WORLD energy crisis of sorts- which you blame on Biden?

Like all economic sectors, unless there is a crisis like the Covid Pandemic, it takes years to see changes. Trump's ill-formed, ill-advised administration had 4 years to direct the energy sector. The result (linked article excerpted):

 


</div>
 

Trying to bounce back from Covid, the world has run headlong into an energy crisis. The last spike of this magnitude popped the 2008 bubble.

Crude oil is up 65% this year to $83 per barrel. Gasoline, above $3 per gallon in most of the country, is more costly than any time since 2014, with inventories at the lowest level in five years. 

Meanwhile natural gas, which provides more than 30% of all U.S. electricity and a lot of wintertime heating, has more than doubled this year to $5 per million Btu. 

Even coal is exploding, with China and India mining as fast as possible. The price of U.S. coal is up 400% this year to $270 per ton. 

....

 

 

 

&nbsp;

"Vaccine mandate has cuased an uproar in this country. Myself included. I dodged the bullet and remain poison free.These spikes we are seeing are becuase of the vaccine. Biden lied to the people when he said the unvaccinated have caused this. But sheeple buy into the lie."

 Good luck surviving unvaccinated. Covid is going to be with us forever.

Vaccines Work: 97% Of COVID Deaths, 95% Of Hospitalizations And 94% Of Cases Are Among Unvaccinated Pennsylvanians

09/14/2021

Lancaster, PA - The Pennsylvania Department of Health's report on COVID-19 post-vaccination cases, commonly known as “breakthrough cases,” shows the overwhelming majority of cases, hospitalizations and deaths in the state are among the unvaccinated. 

“With nearly seven million Pennsylvanians fully vaccinated, the data makes it clear: the vaccines are safe and effective at preventing severe illness from COVID-19,” Acting Secretary of Health Alison Beam said today during a news conference at Penn Medicine Lancaster General Hospital’s Suburban Pavilion. 

“The overwhelming majority of the COVID-19 related cases, hospitalizations and deaths in Pennsylvania occurred in people who were not vaccinated,” she said. “In fact, the data shows that compared to unvaccinated people, fully vaccinated Pennsylvanians are seven times less likely to get COVID-19, and eight times less likely to die from COVID-19.” 

Penn Medicine Lancaster General Hospital’s Chief Clinical Officer Dr. Michael Ripchinski agrees. “While masking and social distancing will help to reduce the risk of becoming infected and transmitting COVID-19, vaccines are the most effective way to protect those who are vulnerable, including the immunocompromised, and our children who are too young to get the vaccine.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention defines post-vaccination cases as individuals who are fully vaccinated and tested positive for COVID-19 more than 14 days after they completed their full one-dose or two-dose vaccination series. They are also referred to as vaccine breakthrough cases. 

Today’s online report shows that since January 2021:

·         97 percent of COVID-19-related deaths were in unvaccinated or not fully vaccinated people. Among a total of 6,472 COVID-19-related deaths identified in Pennsylvania in 2021, the latest data shows 213, or three percent, post-vaccination deaths identified. Cumulative death incidence among the unvaccinated and not fully vaccinated was 7.9 times as high as the death incidence among the fully vaccinated.

·        &nbsp;95 percent of reported hospitalizations with COVID-19 as the primary diagnosis/cause of admission were in unvaccinated or not fully vaccinated people. Among a total of 34,468 hospitalizations with COVID-19 as the primary diagnosis/cause of admission reported in Pennsylvania, 1,820 were reported to have occurred in fully vaccinated people. These figures account for data from 55 percent of all hospitals and 69 percent of acute care hospitals in Pennsylvania, representing approximately 80 percent of acute care beds in the state.

·         94 percent of reported COVID-19 cases were in unvaccinated or not fully vaccinated people. Among a total of 639,729 positive cases, there have been 35,389, or six percent, identified post-vaccination cases. Cumulative case incidence among the unvaccinated and not fully vaccinated was 7.1 times as high as the case incidence among the fully vaccinated.

“That means that 97 percent of deaths reported through the beginning of September were in unvaccinated or not fully-vaccinated people,” Beam said. 

“This data is further proof that the vaccines are our best tool to protect ourselves against the virus, keep our children learning in schools, keep our workforce in-person, and foster social and economic recovery,” she said. “Every person who chooses to get vaccinated brings us a step closer to moving past the pandemic.”

As the number of COVID-19 cases in Pennsylvania is surging to more than 3,000 per day, doctors at numerous hospitals across the state recently began publicly discussing the number of patients in their facilities. 

Penn State Health reports that 92 people are hospitalized with COVID-19 today; 27 are in the ICU.  “Penn State Health is seeing some breakthrough COVID-19 cases but they are typically patients hospitalized for something else who test positive when they come in for treatment,” said Dr. Fahad Khalid, chief of hospital medicine at Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center. “Vaccinated patients typically don’t develop severe COVID-19 or need intensive care. However, about half of the unvaccinated COVID-19 patients here need intensive care, compared to less than one-quarter during earlier surges.”  

UPMC also reports an increase in patients hospitalized with COVID-19, with nearly 440 patients across the system on Monday. 

“Over the past several weeks, we have seen as much as 19 times more non-vaccinated patients ages 50 and younger admitted to UPMC hospitals compared to vaccinated patients,” said Dr. Donald Yealy, chief medical officer at UPMC. “Vaccination is crucial at this time. Our urgent plea is for everyone eligible for a vaccine to get one.”

In addition to the influx of COVID-19 patients, Dr. John Williams, chief of the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, recently reported at a UPMC press briefing, “We are seeing an increase in outpatient pediatric COVID-19 cases in clinics and emergency departments and an increase of children needing hospitalization because of COVID-19. These young children are at a higher risk for becoming infected now than any other time during the pandemic.” He noted that, “In states where vaccinations are low, hospitalizations of children are four times higher than in states where vaccination of children is high. Fortunately, we know how to keep kids safe: masking, vaccination of everyone over 12, and testing.”

“I truly hope that this data encourages everyone who has not yet been vaccinated to speak to their doctor about getting the vaccine as soon as possible to protect themselves and people around them,” Beam said.

Post-vaccination data is now posted online at: PA Post-Vaccination Data.

MEDIA CONTACT: Mark O'Neill - ra-dhpressoffice@pa.gov

 

 

 

<p>"So let's talk about the truckers. Vaccine mandates are about as ignorant as we could possibly get. I mean, no one spreads covid like a trucker sitting ALONE in his truck driving across state lines. Talk about a super spreader, lol. But we 'll conveniently forget about the thousands of unvaccinated illegals Biden is flying all over the country to infect and spread this deadly virus. 

First, the migrants being relocated are vaccinated.

Next, Mary Mallon a/k/a 'Typhoid Mary". Why is she famous? Because she infected people who infected people who infected people....



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Msg ID: 2721238 Worker shortage, I laugh when I hear about overcrowded hospitals not being  +0/-0     
Author:TheCrow
2/23/2022 12:56:33 PM

Reply to: 2721179

"Worker shortage, I laugh when I hear about overcrowded hospitals not being able to handle all the deadly covid cases. Well gee, maybe you shouldn't have fired all those healthcare workers, huh? And what's truly brilliant is they fired these experienced people only to hire unvacinnated workers at twice the cost. Liberal brilliance...............................idiots!!!!!!!!!!!"

Who fired the healthcare workers? Administrators, managers. What makes you think they are examples of "Liberal brilliance"? Most management people I know are anything but "liberals"- they just want to be left alone to do their jobs. That's a conservative attitude.

A shortage of workers has been anticipated for years. Trump's Covid Recession caused record unemployment, but surprised America after that recession when workers weren't eager to return to the pre-recession jobs.

 

 

Workers are in the driver's seat in the labor market, and that doesn't look likely to change anytime soon. It's also starting to alter the competitive landscape across the business world.

Driving the news: The terms of competition are shifting, especially in labor-intensive industries. Companies that have some distinct advantage in their ability to attract the best workers are likely to fare better.

Why it matters: It's not enough to have a great product. Companies need to find a way to attract the employees they need to fulfill demand — and in the super-tight labor market of 2022, that requires a new level of creativity and flexibility.

  • In effect, for much of the last few decades, employers could hang out a "Help Wanted" sign, whether literal or virtual, and count on people lining up looking for a job. That has been turned on its head.

The big picture: In some companies' financial results in recent months, labor shortages have acted as a brake on earnings. Others in the same industry, not so much.

Consider FedEx and UPS. In the fiscal quarter ended in November, FedEx, which relies on armies of independent contractors, reported that labor shortages cost it $470 million.

  • UPS, with a unionized workforce and higher pay, has reaped an advantage from loyal, long-term employees on its payroll.
  • Its on-time delivery rates were higher than FedEx's in the run-up to Christmas (97.1% vs. 91.2%, according to ShipMatrix). Its stock price is up 31% over the last year, versus 1.5% for FedEx.

In retail, even amid widespread labor shortages, Walmart hired 150,000 employees this past holiday season. The company says its average hourly wage for store employees has risen $16.40, more than double the federal minimum wage, and that 400,000 employees have taken advantage of company-paid training programs in the last year alone.

What they're saying: For companies that develop their own pipelines of talent by being willing to invest in worker training and other creative strategies, "it's a big source of competitive advantage," says Byron Auguste, CEO of Opportunity@Work, a nonprofit focused on employment.

  • "I think companies are realizing that now, and the question is how they get there, from where they are," he says.

Companies need to give workers a reason to want to work for them beyond a paycheck. Here's what Chris Floyd, a recruiter for the restaurant industry in the Washington, D.C., area, tells Axios:

  • Bigger companies are definitely at an advantage because they have the budget capacity to absorb higher salaries and wages.
  • But restaurants are competing for workers on grounds other than salary. Floyd recommends those smaller-revenue restaurant compete by offering workers better quality of life, such as by closing two days a week and guaranteeing employees a break from the grind.
  • "If you treat people with respect and compassion and see them as whole people, they feel that and tend to be more loyal even if they could be making more elsewhere," Floyd says. "Some employees did stick with their employers throughout the pandemic because they believed the employers had their backs."

The bottom line: The demographic trends suggest this shift in power dynamics between workers and employers will not be a short-term phenomenon.

Go deeperAmerica's labor shortage is bigger than the pandemic

 


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