Friday, March 12, 2021

POSTED ONE YEAR AGO - MARCH 12, 2020


Thursday, March 12, 2020

This suggests that anyone in a position of power or authority, instead of downplaying the dangers of the coronavirus, should ask people to stay away from public places, cancel big gatherings, and restrict most forms of nonessential travel.


Cancel Everything!



In an email to my children dated Monday February 24 - 5:24 PM

 My suggestion is that everyone should have at home a 2-4 week supply of non-perishable food. Matzo, water, all canned foods...keep it in the garage or basement. There are over 200 cases in EY, and known 36 cases in the US. There's a run on food in the Asian countries and starting in Europe. Costco/Amazon...Stuff that you would eat anyway. It will come here.

Love 


***********


DO NOT PAY ATTENTION TO THIS GROUP OF RABBIS ON THIS ISSUE - THE MEDICAL COMMUNITY IS THE ONLY SOURCE OF INFORMATION FOR HEALTH  RELATED MATTERS - THEY ARE TELLING EVERYONE TO KEEP YOUR CHILDREN AT HOME!




 Daily Jewish Community Novel CoronaVirus Updates as They Happen: 
 
CLICK: https://www.jta.org/2020/03/05/global/the-latest-jewish-coronavirus-updates-el-al-downsizes-services-move-online-and-more?utm_source=JTA_Maropost&utm_campaign=JTA_DB&utm_medium=email&mpweb=1161-17628-21723
 
 
We don’t yet know the full ramifications of the novel coronavirus. But three crucial facts have become clear in the first months of this extraordinary global event. And what they add up to is not an invocation to stay calm, as so many politicians around the globe are incessantly suggesting; it is, on the contrary, the case for changing our behavior in radical ways—right now.

The first fact is that, at least in the initial stages, documented cases of COVID-19 seem to increase in exponential fashion. On the 23rd of January, China’s Hubei province, which contains the city of Wuhan, had 444 confirmed COVID-19 cases. A week later, by the 30th of January, it had 4,903 cases. Another week later, by the 6th of February, it had 22,112.

The same story is now playing out in other countries around the world. Italy had 62 identified cases of COVID-19 on the 22nd of February. It had 888 cases by the 29th of February, and 4,636 by the 6th of March.

Because the United States has been extremely sluggish in testing patients for the coronavirus, the official tally of 604 likely represents a fraction of the real caseload. But even if we take this number at face value, it suggests that we should prepare to have up to 10 times as many cases a week from today, and up to 100 times as many cases two weeks from today.


The second fact is that this disease is deadlier than the flu, to which the honestly ill-informed and the wantonly irresponsible insist on comparing it. Early guesstimates, made before data were widely available, suggested that the fatality rate for the coronavirus might wind up being about 1 percent. If that guess proves true, the coronavirus is 10 times as deadly as the flu.

But there is reason to fear that the fatality rate could be much higher. According to the World Health Organization, the current case fatality rate—a common measure of what portion of confirmed patients die from a particular disease—stands at 3.4 percent. This figure could be an overstatement, because mild cases of the disease are less likely to be diagnosed. Or it could be an understatement, because many patients have already been diagnosed with the virus but have not yet recovered (and may still die).

When the coronavirus first spread to South Korea, many observers pointed to the comparatively low death rates in the country to justify undue optimism. In countries with highly developed medical systems, they claimed, a smaller portion of patients would die. But while more than half of all diagnosed patients in China have now been cured, most South Korean patients are still in the throes of the disease. Of the 7,478 confirmed cases, only 118 have recovered; the low death rate may yet rise.

Meanwhile, the news from Italy, another country with a highly developed medical system, has so far been shockingly bad. In the affluent region of Lombardy, for example, there have been 7,375 confirmed cases of the virus as of Sunday. Of these patients, 622 had recovered, 366 had died, and the majority were still sick. Even under the highly implausible assumption that all of the still-sick make a full recovery, this would suggest a case fatality rate of 5 percent—significantly higher, not lower, than in China.

The third fact is that so far only one measure has been effective against the coronavirus: extreme social distancing.

Before China canceled all public gatherings, asked most citizens to self-quarantine, and sealed off the most heavily affected region, the virus was spreading in exponential fashion. Once the government imposed social distancing, the number of new cases leveled off; now, at least according to official statistics, every day brings more news of existing patients who are healed than of patients who are newly infected.

A few other countries have taken energetic steps to increase social distancing before the epidemic reached devastating proportions. In Singapore, for example, the government quickly canceled public events and installed medical stations to measure the body temperature of passersby while private companies handed out free hand sanitizer. As a result, the number of cases has grown much more slowly than in nearby countries.


These three facts imply a simple conclusion. The coronavirus could spread with frightening rapidity, overburdening our health-care system and claiming lives, until we adopt serious forms of social distancing.

This suggests that anyone in a position of power or authority, instead of downplaying the dangers of the coronavirus, should ask people to stay away from public places, cancel big gatherings, and restrict most forms of nonessential travel.

Given that most forms of social distancing will be useless if sick people cannot get treated—or afford to stay away from work when they are sick—the federal government should also take some additional steps to improve public health. It should take on the costs of medical treatment for the coronavirus, grant paid sick leave to stricken workers, promise not to deport undocumented immigrants who seek medical help, and invest in a rapid expansion of ICU facilities.

The past days suggest that this administration is unlikely to do these things well or quickly (although the administration signaled on Monday that it will seek relief for hourly workers, among other measures). Hence, the responsibility for social distancing now falls on decision makers at every level of society.

Do you head a sports team? Play your games in front of an empty stadium.
Are you organizing a conference? Postpone it until the fall.
Do you run a business? Tell your employees to work from home.

Are you the principal of a school or the president of a university? Move classes online before your students get sick and infect their frail relatives.
 
All of these decisions have real costs. Shutting down public schools in New York City, for example, would deprive tens of thousands of kids of urgently needed school meals. But the job of institutions and authorities is to mitigate those costs as much as humanly possible, not to use them as an excuse to put the public at risk of a deadly communicable disease.

Finally, the most important responsibility falls on each of us. It’s hard to change our own behavior while the administration and the leaders of other important institutions send the social cue that we should go on as normal. But we must change our behavior anyway. If you feel even a little sick, for the love of your neighbor and everyone’s grandpa, do not go to work.

When the influenza epidemic of 1918 infected a quarter of the U.S. population, killing hundreds of thousands nationally and millions across the globe, seemingly small choices made the difference between life and death.

As the disease was spreading, Wilmer Krusen, Philadelphia’s health commissioner, allowed a huge parade to take place on September 28; some 200,000 people marched. In the following days and weeks, the bodies piled up in the city’s morgues. By the end of the season, 12,000 residents had died.


In St. Louis, a public-health commissioner named Max Starkloff decided to shut the city down.

Ignoring the objections of influential businessmen, he closed the city’s schools, bars, cinemas, and sporting events. Thanks to his bold and unpopular actions, the per capita fatality rate in St. Louis was half that of Philadelphia. (In total, roughly 1,700 people died from influenza in St Louis.)

In the coming days, thousands of people across the country will face the choice between becoming a Wilmer Krusen or a Max Starkloff.

In the moment, it will seem easier to follow Krusen’s example. For a few days, while none of your peers are taking the same steps, moving classes online or canceling campaign events will seem profoundly odd. People are going to get angry. You will be ridiculed as an extremist or an alarmist. But it is still the right thing to do.

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/03/coronavirus-cancel-everything/607675/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=atlantic-daily-newsletter&utm_content=20200311&silverid-ref=NTk0NjUwMDEzMDAyS0

 READ COMMENTS ON ORIGINAL POST:

https://theunorthodoxjew.blogspot.com/2020/03/this-suggests-that-anyone-in-position.html

27 comments:

  1. Defense Intelligence Agency11:13 AM, March 12, 2021

    The Fressers monitor this blog in real time.

    After you outed them, they assembled a line up of quack and/or corrupt doctors as proxies. Many of them in fields not related to covid.

    ReplyDelete
  2. You can run but you cant hide11:15 AM, March 12, 2021

    NYC Corrections updated the site to show they've parked Kranczer's derriere in Rikers.

    Why is that Flatbush Syrian scumbag Dibo Hafif not appearing on the website after his high profile arrest yesterday?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Kranczer, if you have any kashrus shaylos about fressing in Rikers, you can call Rabbi Gornish. He's a mumche after all the calls he got from me!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Chaim Dovid Zweibel11:58 AM, March 12, 2021

    Speaking of rhyming Homos, I got down on my hands & knees last night begging Cuomo to resign before UOJ blows things even more sky high than the current trajectory.

    But predictably I suppose, Margo reportedly got to Cuomo shortly thereafter to insist he not only shouldn't resign but that he should not be goress any accusers or detractors beyond dismissing them as "rejects".

    ReplyDelete
  5. Ezra Friedlander12:07 PM, March 12, 2021

    Any chance I can get signed on as Cuomo's damage control agent? I just wish my old pal Jerrold Nadler hadn't been one of the last ones to jump on the anti-Cuomo bandwagon this morning when he figured out which way the vind was blozzing

    A bee I can line my pockets with as much gelt as der "Dritter Mario Cuomo's a zeen" Joe Percocco, I don't care how many times Dus Iz Neas & Yudel Shain mock me as the "Kapo"

    ReplyDelete
  6. Bentzion Schiffenbauer12:09 PM, March 12, 2021

    Cuomo is innocent! Moreinu Horav Israel Belsky told me so!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Dr Tuvya Chaim Charles Bungalow Putz Neuhoff12:12 PM, March 12, 2021

    I am against Executive Mansion molestation of any kind ...

    ReplyDelete
  8. Just a reminder that if the Governor needs to launder any hush money, Willy Wiesner once gave him my cell #

    ReplyDelete
  9. Ershtens:

    This is an Albany problem

    Tzveitens:

    Are there kosher witnesses?

    ReplyDelete
  10. Cuomo is an honorable man.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Oh man! Wait until you hear the drosha I prepared for tomorrow. I'm going to trash Eli Greenwald & UOJ who are 'obviously' behind this gantze Cuomo conspiracy with that little zoyna Lindsay Boylan

    ReplyDelete
  12. Ohel CEO David Mandel12:21 PM, March 12, 2021

    Someone must really be desperate & crapping in their hoyzen that even the Tort Putz has been reactivated.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Pinchos Nisht Areingegangen12:21 PM, March 12, 2021

    Vus iz der gantze tzimmes?

    ReplyDelete
  14. Lippy, it's zicher Ben Hirsch is also involved. Lehoraaya, Assemblyman Eichenstein tells me someone's been hiding behind bushes up in Albany, that if not Ben, would have to be his identical twin.

    Gov. Cuomo will be fine when he gets back to the Mansion before Shabbos.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Well, they target different types of our clientele when they prowl around our waterpark, but incredibly, Kolko & Cuomo wear the same size Speedo!

    ReplyDelete
  16. The last two hypocrite machshayfos still running interference for Cuomo are VP Kamel Face Harris & Senator Gillibrand.

    Not that it makes the rest tzaddikim, who only caved for political gain.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Yankel Applegrad1:35 PM, March 12, 2021

    At NO TIME ...

    ReplyDelete
  18. https://www.timesofisrael.com/ngo-mk-call-to-revoke-yehuda-meshi-zahavs-israel-prize-over-sex-abuse-claims/

    ZAKA founder steps down, gives up Israel Prize as police probe sex abuse claims

    Yehuda Meshi-Zahav quits rescue group he heads, gives up award after NGO, lawmakers call to revoke it

    ReplyDelete
  19. Fresser Web of Lies11:37 AM, March 14, 2021

    The Fresser Pandemic Binge led by Shmuel Kaminetzky pushing all the mosdos to stay open Purim & until Doomsday - BLEW UP IN THEIR FACES - after they callously IGNORED public health warnings to shut down. The Fressers then revved up their propaganda machine to deny there were any warnings & also started pretending to be at the forefront of shmiras haguf in their written statements while their oracle in Philly kept quietly pushing his nunter to go along with his death wish

    This very blog this past year had detailed information expertly debunking the hastily & sloppily conceived Fresser cover up

    The Fressers aren't done covering up! They want to give their cover up a veneer of supposed credibility

    https://www.timesofisrael.com/study-on-samples-from-us-haredi-jews-casts-new-light-on-first-days-of-covid-19/

    They've gone azoy veit to have crafted a bogus "study" in the Journal of the American Medical Association to "back up" their baloney! They falsely posture there were no warnings before the pandemic hit. Someone should take the proofs cited on UOJ to have the editors remove the "study"

    Lead author of the "study" is Brooklyn's Dr. Sruly Zyskind

    https://issuu.com/theagudah/docs/agudathisrael_pdf_version

    Check out the last name on page 13 of this Fresser journal: Sruly Zyskind is on the Vaad Hahanhala of Agudas Fressers of America!

    ReplyDelete
  20. Fresser Web of Lies11:38 AM, March 14, 2021

    Excerpts, edited for clarity:

    A paper published in the Journal of the AMA Network Open, peer-reviewed & open to the public, concludes the virus spread widely in Orthodox communities cross country around Purim — before public health warnings were given about danger of assemblies

    “There should be specific recommendations for each religious / ethnic community,” said Dr. Israel Zyskind, Brooklyn pediatrician & study author. “They should be culturally sensitive, which isn't what we see with the pandemic”

    “The mask mandate, national lockdown & announcement of COVID as a pandemic followed Purim”
    It's the 1st publication to come of research by Orthodox doctors. In their project “Multi-InstituTional study analyZing anti-CoV-2 Antibodies” — MITZVA cohort — they collected specimens used in labs for virology studies in addition to their paper

    For the originators of MITZVA, the findings are a corrective to negative press Orthodox communities receive for violating public health guidelines

    The most important finding, as per the authors, is how the timing of Purim & lack of public health guidance allowed the disease to spread in Orthodox communities

    Published before Passover, it’s argument for public health guidance tailored religiously is still relevant. With millions vaccinated, many hope to gather for Seders following a year of Jewish holidays in isolation
    “Pesach's coming & there’s an urge a year in to let things down”

    The paper suggests Orthodox infection rates were higher than other communities, due to the highly social nature of the Orthodox. But while many Orthodox believe they're herd immune, many returning to normal life with few new infections, the study shows it unlikely

    NJ had highest % of positive antibody tests in the study: 32.5% positive

    ReplyDelete
  21. Fresser Web of Lies11:39 AM, March 14, 2021

    Part 3

    No value in the paper approaches herd immunity. In fact, the study helped correct misconceptions some had about immunity

    “We learned many report symptoms but don’t have serologic COVID,” meaning they thought they had had it & unlikely to contract it again, hadn't actually had COVID. The study also discovered antibodies in people with no symptoms, pointing to asymptomatic cases

    Zyskind, answering questions from shuls-yeshivas, got in touch with Dr. Jonathan Silverberg, dermatologist-epidemiologist at George Washington U, also a college classmate

    They applied to the Institutional Review Board to conduct a study & collect specimens. With Lakewood Bikur Cholim they collected samples from 6,665 Orthodox in 5 states

    Each participant filled out a detailed questionnaire on onset of symptoms (English dates for Purim-Passover referenced), severity & how long. They took vials of blood from participants for antibody testing & for the paper
    Other vials & 2,000 saliva samples of same participants, were sent to labs for virology studies on COVID
    They're excited to publish their research a year later

    “It’s a credit to Fressers coming out & helping put this all together”

    ReplyDelete
  22. You would think Gabe Bodenheimer would have an extra paper bag to spare for Gershon Kranczer to mask his face with during the perp walk

    ReplyDelete
  23. https://nypost.com/2021/03/13/cuomo-staffers-have-stopped-showing-up-to-work-sources-say/

    Disillusioned staffers are abandoning embattled Gov. Cuomo, sources said.

    “I hear that most people aren’t even coming into work, and the offices at the Capitol are empty,” said one well-placed insider in touch with staffers in recent days.

    “He’ll fight and fight and fight, but the staffers I’ve talked to are ready for him to hang up the gloves. Everyone feels like there is an inevitable conclusion — I mean at some point will Biden call on him to step down? They [staffers] just want this torture to stop.”

    Rebellion in the ranks deepened as Cuomo on Friday defiantly refused to step aside and blamed “cancel culture” for his downfall.

    “I feel a level of rage toward this fake tough guy,” seethed a second source, an ex-aide. “The guy thinks he’s the toughest, the hardest working, he’s the smartest. The truth is, he’s anything but. He’s the weakest, he’s the dumbest, and he’s the most shallow of them all. He is genuinely a very small man who pretends to be big.”

    The former aide said many staffers are not coming into the executive offices, but choosing to work remotely or at vaccine sites instead. They are increasingly worried their careers are in jeopardy, just as they were beginning to see light at the end of the tunnel after working around the clock for months during the pandemic.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Even if it's just a tiny consolation, at least UOJ will be inconvenienced to find a new high ranking shvantz for his infamous manilla envelope drops.

    ReplyDelete
  25. A NY county official will file an ethics complaint after a powerful consigliere to Gov Cuomo called executives recently to gauge their loyalty to the gov amid sexual harassment & misconduct scandals, a report says.

    Larry Schwartz, past influential secretary to the gov, now both MTA Board member & overseeing NY’s covid vaccine rollout, undertook the phone campaign in the past weeks as several women come forward to accuse Cuomo of inappropriate behavior.

    “At best, it's inappropriate,” the executive told The Washington Post on condition of anonymity, of concern their county’s vaccine access may hinge on the response to Schwartz. “At worst, clearly unethical.”

    That official alerted the public integrity unit of the NY attorney general they intend to file a complaint over the call.

    “It's an impossible position where I must choose between weird political loyalty to a gov who controls with an iron fist, not just vaccines, and known to be vindictive & on the other hand, doses of lifesaving vaccine for my residents who're literally desperate for them,” the executive told The Washington Post.

    In several statements to the paper, Schwartz admits he made the calls, but insists he did so solely as a longtime Cuomo friend, completely independent of State responsibilies.

    “I did nothing wrong,” Schwartz told The Washington Post, describing the conversations as “friendly.”

    “They heard from me who knowns the Gov for 30 years.”

    Schwartz stressed no one indicated to him they were uncomfortable.

    “NOBODY indicated they were uncomfortable discussing with me or thought it inappropriate.”

    Asked by The Washington Post if he took the required ethics oath for NY public officers, Schwartz suddenly dodged to take cover behind an attorney, who did not respond.

    Other county officials receiving the calls told the paper Schwartz knows better.

    “Larry probably wasn’t the best person to make a call like that,” said another county executive, deadpanning on condition of anonymity.

    Added an official from yet another county, also declined to be IDed, “As far as correlation between the answer & vaccine supply, I see how someone gets that impression.”

    Schwartz insists he made the calls of his own volition, with no urging from Cuomo.

    “Any assertion / implication it's a failing on the part of Larry Schwartz is simply false,” Beth Garvey, special counsel to Cuomo, told The Washington Post.

    Garvey added, because Schwartz technically volunteers as vaccination czar, he's not required to take the ethics oath, under a Cuomo executive order to facilitate people pitching in amid the pandemic.

    The AG’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Leopold Margulies7:28 PM, March 14, 2021

    Srrruly @ 6:04 pm, I vas just tinking da same damn ting!

    ReplyDelete
  27. What's the baaya? The chamora could have used even more slapping up so that she know's Andrew is the boss!

    This is an important fact of life that I once heard from Torah Vadaat askan Blumenfrucht

    https://nypost.com/2021/03/13/kerry-kennedy-slept-in-bathroom-to-avoid-gov-cuomos-abuse-biographer/

    Near the end of her marriage to Andrew Cuomo, Kerry Kennedy slept in a locked bathroom to protect herself, according to a biographer of Gov Cuomo.

    Abusive bullying ended the marriage between Cuomo, now 63 & Kennedy, 7th child of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, author Michael Shnayerson said. They were married 1990 to 2005 & have 3 daughters.

    The accusations fit a pattern of brutal bullying & demeaning of women raised in recent weeks that have Cuomo facing widespread calls to resign & possible impeachment.

    Shnayerson says Kennedy wanted out of the marriage by 2001, when Cuomo’s role as HUD Secretary under President Clinton was winding down.

    “Her problems with her husband were strictly personal,” Shnayerson wrote in Vanity Fair. Part of her complaints revolved around not visiting their daughters’ schools & reading up on parenting, but there were also harsher accusations.

    “Kerry was done being ridiculed & belittled,” Shnayerson quotes a source close to the couple. “Either Andrew would work on the marriage or he wouldn’t, and the 2 would divorce.”

    Cuomo mounted an unsuccessful bid for gov in 2002, but didn’t make it past the state convention. Kennedy demanded a divorce as soon as he dropped out of the race.

    Shnayerson wrote that for 6 months, Cuomo refused to leave their house or respond to her lawyers.

    “More than one night during that period, Kerry slept in a locked bathroom, according to a source close to the family, who recounts physical abuse. ‘I’m a human rights activist & for women with abusive husbands,’ Kerry told a friend, ‘& here I am enduring this abuse’,” Schnayerson recalls.

    The bullying continued multiple ways, like being difficult to plan holidays for their daughters, he wrote, quoting a source: “There are a million ways for a single parent to make the other parent’s life miserable. He played that game.”

    ReplyDelete