DisneyJamieCA
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,054
Yes, except what these articles fail to mention is that CA is actually flat. CNN did it this morning. Fear mongering headline, first paragraph talks about CA’s numbers rising and then inbedded way down in the text is that “CA trends are holding steady”. Both CA and FL around 4% (4% FL, 4.3% CA), both well under the 5% from WHO. Even the WHO says both states are ok at maintaining the numbers.This is from the Daily Beast - it’s a site that is confusing to link to. A lot of ads and click bait. I’m using this because the WaPo source is behind a paywall.
As some U.S. states are tentatively reopening after their first waves of the novel coronavirus, others are only just at the start. Fourteen states recorded their highest-ever seven-day average of new virus cases at the start of June, according to The Washington Post. The badly hit states are Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Florida, Kentucky, New Mexico, North Carolina, Mississippi, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Utah—while Puerto Rico has also recorded its highest-ever weekly average. The virus now appears to be burning through rural areas, in contrast to the beginning of the U.S. outbreak, which saw cities hit hardest. As of Tuesday, the U.S. has reported over 1,960,000 cases of the coronavirus and more than 111,000 people have died.
The scope of the pandemic deaths goes way beyond, “because we’re testing more.”
And CA had one our lowest one day death totals this week, down to 24. Out of a population of 39.5 million, that isn’t terrible.



It was rhetorical - I knew you didn't. The early purposeful misinformation about masks was key and it clearly reaped a whirlwind. Better in my mind if legislation would have prohibited the sale of commercial/medical-grade PPE to the public than the misleading spin the WHO put on it's usefulness.
I feel the same way now. Legislate mask use or don't.