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Old 03-23-2020, 11:06 PM   #16
Tiny
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Originally Posted by BlisswithKriss View Post
Yep and your opinions aren’t even worth 2 cents.

FYI Trump has NO say in the immediate future of the country when it comes to getting back to normal.. that’s up to the Governors of each states.
They will decide.....not Trump.

It’s all about him, him, and him....he’s a selfish piece of work..but are we surprised. ?
Don’t look at his guy helping out and being a true leader.
He’s confirmed that already...coming out with all kinds of gobbledegook .

We are in the middle of one of the biggest crises this country has faced in decades.
People are going to DIE..
Trump should leave it to the health experts, and people who are qualified to tackle this pandemic...
Trump is out of touch with reality.....he’s totally clueless and irresponsible.
We haven’t even started to mass testing folks who may have the disease.
Sienna's hot, you're not. Hell, I'd pay hundreds of dollars for her opinions if presented naked and in person.

You make a couple of good points at the start of your post, when you say the governors (and mayors) have the real power, and the end when you point out the tragedy of our failure to have adequate testing. It's the middle I have some arguments with.

Trump's just a part of this. The CDC, FDA, hospitals, states, and localities are huge. I mainly fault Trump for not taking this seriously early on and using the presidential soap box and his powers of mobilization. As I mentioned elsewhere, look what he did in New York City when Ed Koch asked him to build an ice skating rink. He got it done way under budget and in record time. If he'd put the same energy into getting people tested and isolated and tracing their contracts we'd be far ahead of the game. We could still do that in a lot of the country, and wouldn't have to shut things down. We'd need to shut off a lot of the travel though to areas in the USA where the virus really takes hold, like NYC.

In NYC on the other hand we probably don't have a choice at this point. Unless you have some kind of a lockdown, their health care system most likely will become seriously overloaded, based on what's happened in Italy.

I haven't seen what Trump said today, but believe from what they're saying on cable news that he was proposing that America get back to business in areas that, unlike NYC, haven't been affected much yet. That makes sense, IF you combine it with a program like what South Korea, China and other shit hole countries (in the opinion of many of the posters here) have used to test, and to isolate people with the virus.
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Old 03-23-2020, 11:14 PM   #17
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It’s too soon and he should listen to the experts cash out this month and next two big stimulus
Take the hit now few months then get grinding back
There’s no economy if newyork and California and Florida are still huge issues
He’s gonna have to suck it up it’s bigger than him
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Old 03-23-2020, 11:44 PM   #18
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Originally Posted by BlisswithKriss View Post
Yep and your opinions aren’t even worth 2 cents.

FYI Trump has NO say in the immediate future of the country when it comes to getting back to normal.. that’s up to the Governors of each states.
They will decide.....not Trump.

It’s all about him, him, and him....he’s a selfish piece of work..but are we surprised. ?
Don’t look at his guy helping out and being a true leader.
He’s confirmed that already...coming out with all kinds of gobbledegook .

We are in the middle of one of the biggest crises this country has faced in decades.
People are going to DIE..
Trump should leave it to the health experts, and people who are qualified to tackle this pandemic...
Trump is out of touch with reality.....he’s totally clueless and irresponsible.
We haven’t even started to mass testing folks who may have the disease.
Leave it up to who? Health EXPERTS, lol. They aren't going to save your useless ass with a vaccine, they will kill you with it. If you aren't familiar with "Event 201" I suggest you look into it.
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Old 03-24-2020, 12:43 AM   #19
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He's either going to be criticized because people die or he's going to be criticized because businesses suffer so what do we want him to do?
He's only being criticized by Liberals and stupid Republicans. Fuck them they are part of the problem not the solution.
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Old 03-24-2020, 12:58 AM   #20
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He's only being criticized by Liberals and stupid Republicans. Fuck them they are part of the problem not the solution.
That would be 70% of your population.

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Old 03-24-2020, 01:28 AM   #21
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I don't feel like there's anything he can do at this point that's going to get positive feedback. no matter what he does there's going to be criticism on both sides

I for one am in much support of opening the economy back just my two cents

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/23/b...s-economy.html
Trump Considers Reopening Economy, Over Health Experts’ Objections

The president is questioning whether stay-at-home orders have gone too far. But relaxing them could significantly increase the death toll from the coronavirus, health officials warn.



By Jim Tankersley, Maggie Haberman and Roni Caryn Rabin


March 23, 2020

WASHINGTON — As the United States entered Week 2 of trying to contain the spread of the coronavirus by shuttering large swaths of the economy, President Trump, Wall Street executives and many conservative economists began questioning whether the government had gone too far and should instead lift restrictions that are already inflicting deep pain on workers and businesses.

Consensus continues to grow among government leaders and health officials that the best way to defeat the virus is to order nonessential businesses to close and residents to confine themselves at home. Britain, after initially resisting such measures, essentially locked down its economy on Monday, as did the governors of Virginia, Michigan and Oregon. More than 100 million Americans will soon be subject to stay-at-home orders.

Relaxing those restrictions could significantly increase the death toll from the virus, public health officials warn. Many economists say there is no positive trade-off — resuming normal activity prematurely would only strain hospitals and result in even more deaths, while exacerbating a recession that has most likely already arrived.

The economic shutdown is causing damage that is only beginning to appear in official data. Morgan Stanley researchers said on Monday that they now expected the economy to shrink by an annualized rate of 30 percent in the second quarter of this year, and the unemployment rate to jump to nearly 13 percent. Both would be records, in modern economic statistics.

Officials have said the federal government’s initial 15-day period for social distancing is vital to slowing the spread of the virus, which has already infected more than 40,000 people in the United States. But Mr. Trump and a chorus of conservative voices have begun to suggest that the shock to the economy could hurt the country more than deaths from the virus.

On Monday, Mr. Trump said his administration would reassess whether to keep the economy shuttered after the initial 15-day period ends next Monday, saying it could extend another week and that certain parts of the country could reopen sooner than others, depending on the extent of infections.

“Our country wasn’t built to be shut down,” Mr. Trump said during a briefing at the White House. “America will, again, and soon, be open for business. Very soon. A lot sooner than three or four months that somebody was suggesting. Lot sooner. We cannot let the cure be worse than the problem itself.”

Similar views are emanating from parts of corporate America, where companies are struggling with a shutdown that has emptied hotels, airplanes, malls and restaurants and sent the stock market tumbling so fast that automatic circuit breakers to halt trading have been tripped repeatedly. Stocks have collapsed about 34 percent since the coronavirus spread globally — the steepest plunge in decades — erasing three years of gains under Mr. Trump.

Lloyd Blankfein, the former chief executive of Goldman Sachs, wrote on Twitter that “crushing the economy” had downsides and suggested that “within a very few weeks let those with a lower risk to the disease return to work.”

Even Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York, whose state has emerged as the epicenter of the outbreak in the United States, has begun publicly floating the notion that, at some point, states will need to restart economic activity and debating how that should unfold.

“You can’t stop the economy forever,” Mr. Cuomo said in a news conference on Monday. “So we have to start to think about does everyone stay out of work? Should young people go back to work sooner? Can we test for those who had the virus, resolved, and are now immune and can they start to go back to work?”

Any push to loosen the new limits on commerce and movement would contradict the consensus advice of public health officials, risking a surge in infections and deaths from the virus. Many economists warn that abruptly reopening the economy could backfire, overwhelming an already stressed health care system, sowing uncertainty among consumers, and ultimately dealing deeper, longer-lasting damage to growth.

The recent rise of cases in Hong Kong, after there had been an easing of the spread of the virus, is something of an object lesson about how ending strict measures too soon can have dangerous consequences. Yet places like China, which took the idea of lockdown to the extreme, have managed to flatten the curve.

“You can’t call off the best weapon we have, which is social isolation, even out of economic desperation, unless you’re willing to be responsible for a mountain of deaths,” said Arthur Caplan, a professor of bioethics at NYU Langone Medical Center. “Thirty days makes more sense than 15 days. Can’t we try to put people’s lives first for at least a month?”

For the last four days, some White House officials, including those working for Vice President Mike Pence, who leads the coronavirus task force, have been raising questions about when the government should start easing restrictions.

Among the options being discussed are narrowing restrictions on economic activity to target specific age groups or locations, as well as increasing the numbers of people who can be together in groups, said one official, who cautioned that the discussions were preliminary.

Health officials inside the administration have mostly opposed that idea, including Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, an infectious diseases expert and a member of the White House coronavirus task force, who has said in interviews that he believes it will be “at least” several more weeks until people can start going about their lives in a more normal fashion.

Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, said the United States had learned from other countries like China and South Korea, which were able to control the spread of the virus through strict measures and widespread testing.

“Those were eight- to 10-week curves,” she said on Monday, adding that “each state and each hot spot in the United States is going to be its own curve because the seeds came in at different times.”

Dr. Birx added that the response “has to be very tailored geographically and it may have to be tailored by age group, really understanding who’s at the greatest risk and understanding how to protect them.”

Other advisers, including members of Mr. Trump’s economic team, have said repeatedly in recent months that the virus does not itself pose an extraordinary threat to Americans’ lives or the economy, likening it to a common flu season. Some advisers believe the White House overreacted to criticism of Mr. Trump’s muted actions to deal with the emerging pandemic and gave health experts too large a sway in policy making.

On Monday, Mr. Trump echoed those concerns, saying that things like the flu or car accidents posed as much of a threat to Americans as the coronavirus and that the response to those was far less draconian.

“We have a very active flu season, more active than most. It’s looking like it’s heading to 50,000 or more deaths,” he said, adding: “That’s a lot. And you look at automobile accidents, which are far greater than any numbers we’re talking about. That doesn’t mean we’re going to tell everybody no more driving of cars. So we have to do things to get our country open.”

Mr. Trump has watched as a record economic expansion and booming stock market that served as the basis of his re-election campaign evaporated in a matter of weeks. The president became engaged with the discussion on Sunday evening, after watching television reports and hearing from various business officials and outside advisers who were agitating for an end to the shutdown.

Casey Mulligan, a University of Chicago professor who served as chief economist for Mr. Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers, said on Monday that efforts to shut down economic activity to slow the virus would be more damaging than doing nothing at all. He suggested a middle ground, one that weighs the costs and benefits of saving additional lives.

“It’s a little bit like, when you discover sex can be dangerous, you don’t come out and say, there should be no more sex,” Mr. Mulligan said. “You should give people guidance on how to have sex less dangerously.”

Many other economists say the restrictions in activity now are helping the economy in the long run, by beginning to suppress the infection rate.

“The idea that there’s a trade-off between health and economics right now is likely badly mistaken,” said Jason Furman of Harvard University, a former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Barack Obama. “The thing damaging our economy is a virus. Everyone who is trying to stop that virus is working to limit the damage it does to our economy and help our eventual rebound. The choice may well be taking pretty extreme steps now or taking very extreme steps later.”

Mr. Furman and other economists have pushed Mr. Trump and Congress to ease the economic pain by offering trillions of dollars in government assistance to affected workers and businesses. As lawmakers tried to negotiate an agreement on such a bill Monday, an influential business lobbying group, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said it supported restrictions on the economy to slow the virus.

“Our view is, when it comes to how you contain the virus, you do everything the public health professionals say to contain the virus,” said Neil Bradley, the chamber’s executive vice president and chief policy officer.

The president’s suggestion that the response may be an overreaction plays into doubts already held by some Americans suffering the economic consequences. Among the self-quarantined, some have questioned the purpose of isolating themselves if the virus is already circulating widely. Students sent home from college have wondered whether they are more likely to infect higher-risk older adults at home.

Dan Patrick, Texas’ lieutenant governor, said Monday on Fox News that he was in the “high-risk pool” but would be willing to risk his life to preserve the country for his children and grandchildren.

“We are going to be in a total collapse, recession, depression, collapse in our society,” said Mr. Patrick, who turns 70 next week. “If this goes on another several months, there won’t be any jobs to come back to for many people.”

But public health officials stress that there would be consequences to ending the measures too quickly. In a tweet on Monday morning, Thomas P. Bossert, the former homeland security adviser who for weeks has been vocal about the need for the U.S. government to take stricter measures, said: “Sadly, the numbers now suggest the U.S. is poised to take the lead in #coronavirus cases. It’s reasonable to plan for the US to top the list of countries with the most cases in approximately 1 week. This does NOT make social intervention futile. It makes it imperative!”

Mr. Trump’s interest in potentially easing some of the restrictions met with pushback from one of his close allies, Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, who himself self-quarantined after a potential exposure. “President Trump’s best decision was stopping travel from China early on,” Mr. Graham tweeted on Monday. “I hope we will not undercut that decision by suggesting we back off aggressive containment policies within the United States.”

Health officials remain largely united in defense of sustaining the restrictions.

“There is a way to think through how and when to start reopening our economy and society, and it’s important to get this right,” said Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, a former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Dr. Tom Inglesby, the director of the Center for Health Security at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, pointed to the experience of countries like Italy, which did not institute aggressive measures to stop the spread of the virus and saw infection rates and deaths soar as a result.

The United States will need “a couple weeks” to see positive effects from its measures, Dr. Inglesby said, and abandoning them would mean “patients will get sick in extraordinary numbers all over the country, far beyond what the U.S. health care system will bear.”


Reporting was contributed by Carl Hulse, David E. Sanger, Amy Harmon and Eduardo Porter.

Jim Tankersley covers economic and tax policy. Over more than a decade covering politics and economics in Washington, he has written extensively about the stagnation of the American middle class and the decline of economic opportunity. @jimtankersley

Maggie Haberman is a White House correspondent. She joined The Times in 2015 as a campaign correspondent and was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2018 for reporting on President Trump’s advisers and their connections to Russia. @maggieNYT

A version of this article appears in print on March 24, 2020, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: To Some, Cost of Prolonged Isolation Is Too High.
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Old 03-24-2020, 02:51 AM   #22
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Trump has also talked about giving out two checks. The cost would be too high if a stimulus package is not passed that helps the workers that lost their job.
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Old 03-24-2020, 03:02 AM   #23
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I don't feel like there's anything he can do at this point that's going to get positive feedback. no matter what he does there's going to be criticism on both sides

I for one am in much support of opening the economy back just my two cents

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/23/b...s-economy.html
Biden will beat Trump. Why?

1. Biden does not have the baggage HRC had with Benghazi & emails

2. Biden only needs to flip three states that voted for Obama 2X

3. Biden can get back the votes of people who voted for Obama 2X but could not vote for HRC.

4. Penn, Mich and Wisc were won by combined total of 75,000 votes, Biden will be able to make this up. If he flips Penn, Mich and Wisc and gets the 230 electoral college votes of HRC that would give Biden the necessary 270 to win.
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Old 03-24-2020, 03:11 AM   #24
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Biden will beat Trump. Why?

1. Biden does not have the baggage HRC had with Benghazi & emails

2. Biden only needs to flip three states that voted for Obama 2X

3. Biden can get back the votes of people who voted for Obama 2X but could not vote for HRC.

4. Penn, Mich and Wisc were won by combined total of 75,000 votes, Biden will be able to make this up. If he flips Penn, Mich and Wisc and gets the 230 electoral college votes of HRC that would give Biden the necessary 270 to win.
The Biden who ran with Obama back in 2008 might have been able to. This is 2020, though, and once that national spotlight shines bright on him, with his gaffes (possibly due to a serious mental decline), his questionable dealings with Ukraine and how his son benefited from it, and, frankly, his missteps during the Coronavirus ordeal (criticizing Trump's move to close off travel), Trump is going to look like an elder statesman next to him. You don't find it strange that Former President Obama didn't endorse his former veep during the primaries, when he needed it the most?
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Old 03-24-2020, 08:15 AM   #25
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In regards to States having the power to choose what each one can do regarding the crisis.

If Trump chooses to proceed with opening the economy back up will these states get the federal funds if they choose not to let businesses thrive?

If the answer is no that I feel that in a way he will force the hand of states and the states rights will just be an illusion of choice

and if that is the case then what will happen is he won't look like the bad guy in the governor's will

This is a re-election year for him so he don't want any heat on his ass
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Old 03-24-2020, 08:35 AM   #26
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Biden will beat Trump. Why?

1. Biden does not have the baggage HRC had with Benghazi & emails

2. Biden only needs to flip three states that voted for Obama 2X

3. Biden can get back the votes of people who voted for Obama 2X but could not vote for HRC.

4. Penn, Mich and Wisc were won by combined total of 75,000 votes, Biden will be able to make this up. If he flips Penn, Mich and Wisc and gets the 230 electoral college votes of HRC that would give Biden the necessary 270 to win.
penn is flipped biden is from there and trump got killed with his party in the midterms there, pa is gone it will flip, he only beat clinton by less than one point there
i believe mich and wisconosin will flip too.
can trump flip a blue state? possible, gonna be close, obviously the economy tanks no matter the cause or reason, hes done put a fork in him.
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Old 03-24-2020, 08:36 AM   #27
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Just want people to give their opinions while being civil that's all
I totally agree with you. But getting one of these Trump hating tards on this thread just to brush their teeth and have nice breath is impossible.
So you know they will not act in an adult manner. JS.
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Old 03-24-2020, 08:36 AM   #28
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That would be 70% of your population.

!00% of yours, now fuck off fagot.
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Old 03-24-2020, 08:37 AM   #29
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The Biden who ran with Obama back in 2008 might have been able to. This is 2020, though, and once that national spotlight shines bright on him, with his gaffes (possibly due to a serious mental decline), his questionable dealings with Ukraine and how his son benefited from it, and, frankly, his missteps during the Coronavirus ordeal (criticizing Trump's move to close off travel), Trump is going to look like an elder statesman next to him. You don't find it strange that Former President Obama didn't endorse his former veep during the primaries, when he needed it the most?
its the economony not ukraine or russia or all that bs

obama will turn the black vote out big time and join biden the hate for trump is beyond big so dont count on it being an easy win

biden is not trump thats what he will r un on

the economy is gonna tell the story

it doesnt matter cause reasons , its all on the economy come november i have a feeling how the economy is going to be and i think hes done, but he has time, need a vaccine
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Old 03-24-2020, 08:39 AM   #30
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Trump has also talked about giving out two checks. The cost would be too high if a stimulus package is not passed that helps the workers that lost their job.
Bill fucking Gates needs to write those checks, not the Government.
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