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I think we are seeing the evidence that TDS is not curable. Unlike a virus, once it gets into their bloodstream, it is there FOREVER! There are apparently no antibodies for TDS.
I think we are seeing the evidence that TDS is not curable. Unlike a virus, once it gets into their bloodstream, it is there FOREVER! There are apparently no antibodies for TDS.
TDS-2016 does have a expiry date. it will either expire on 2021 or 2025.
I think we are seeing the evidence that TDS is not curable. Unlike a virus, once it gets into their bloodstream, it is there FOREVER! There are apparently no antibodies for TDS.
There’s only one cure for TDS, that’s living thru the Orange fever and seeing the fat lying bastard squatting in the Oval Office evicted.
Hey smart ass, you want to bet your ECCIE membership. That fat lying bastard’s end is near.
Obsey, The CDC is recommending face coverings for people located in hotspots, if you find yourself in a hot zone...Pull your Panties over your head. You’ll be fine, no germ would dare land on you.
Virus-stricken aircraft carrier erupts in applause and cheers as ousted Navy captain departs
Videos that emerged on social media showed crew members of the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier cheering their captain in a walloping send-off, after the Navy removed him Thursday for speaking up in a leaked letter to his superiors about what he saw as insufficient measures to contain a coronavirus outbreak aboard the vessel.
Footage posted on Facebook and Twitter appears to show hundreds of service members crowding into a hangar around Capt. Brett Crozier as he makes his way off the vessel over a gangway to Guam, a backpack slung over his shoulder. The sailors chant “Captain Crozier!” over and over, clapping and cheering. In one of the videos, a voice in the background says: “And that’s how you send out one of the greatest captains you ever had!”
Trump has handled the coronavirus the way he handles everything: Like a toddler
In January, when Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar first tried to brief President Trump about the coronavirus threat, the president got distracted and wanted to talk about vaping instead. That same month, Trump told a CNBC reporter that he was not worried about a pandemic; by March, he was claiming, “I felt it was a pandemic long before it was called a pandemic.” After declaring a national emergency, Trump fumed about the images of empty airports and grounded planes on television. He has publicly compared his poll numbers with New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s. He has responded to anodyne questions from reporters by saying they are “nasty” and demanding that journalists “be nice.”
In other words, not even a crisis as massive as the novel coronavirus has stopped the president from behaving like a cranky toddler.
Trump’s toddler traits have significantly hampered America’s response to the pandemic. They aren’t new, either. In the first three years of his term, I’ve collected 1,300 instances when a Trump staffer, subordinate or ally — in other words, someone with a rooting interest in the success of Trump’s presidency — nonetheless described him the way most of us might describe a petulant 2-year-old. Trump offers the greatest example of pervasive developmental delay in American political history.