Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep, no stopping it now. We failed as a country.
Many more people will die. It will mutate some time soon. College football games major super spreaders, because the Delta doesn't care.
Thank you Trumpers this is all on you. We will never forget your selfishness.
Really? So you're saying the masses of kids at football games - at all universities - are "Trumpers"? No, sorry. Get a clue.
You get a clue.
This did not have to be.
This is the Trumpers fault. No masks really?? Non invasive. No vaccines but take Horse and cow meds. Really?
In 2020 we could have controlled this, but no Trumpers and their "freedoms".
Trumpers are destroying our country. Trumpers are complete sub humans.
Anonymous wrote:This is happening at all colleges and no one is getting tested because they don’t want to miss class and fail out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of these kids are vaccinated by now. Delta is going to infect some, no matter what. They'll be sick and get over it. Life goes on, OP.
Some will die, some will have shortened lives, some will have chronic conditions and some will not be able to have families or hold a job. In the end, a lot of family lines will die off and human population will be significantly culled. It will be great for the Earth.
highly unlikely. Maybe if they had some other health issues going on.
Last school year 2 kids from my kid's college killed themselves by jumping off a tall building (two separte incidents, several weeks apart.) ZERO died of Covid. I'm far more concerned about the mental health of our young adults than Covid.
Can you acknowledge, somewhere in the echoing chamber of your skull, that contagious airborne diseases are a community risk, and we must team up to protect our most vulnerable? This includes vaccinated people who have waning immunity, the elderly who cannot mount a sufficient immune response despite multiple shots, the medically fragile, those who are allergic to a component of the vaccine and those who cannot yet receive a shot because they are in chemo. It also includes some children.
And when hospitals are overwhelmed, the increased mortality risk reaches EVERYONE, EVEN YOU. People die from easily-treated injuries or illnesses that would in normal times not have sealed their fate! This is happening all over the high-Covid states, in places where there are no ICU beds, or personnel is so beaten down they end up making mistakes.
It's one thing to declare that you are not a team player and you prefer having half a million excess American deaths every year from Covid for the foreseeable future, just so you can lead a normal life (flu kllls 30-50K a year).
It's quite another to say and do silly things without realizing exactly what the consequences are to your community and your country.
+1,000 to the bold. But you and I are lone voices on threads like this one. There are so many people who don't know and do not care how disease transmission works, nor do they care about community risk, and their response to the vulnerable is to tell them to stay home forever. They also seem to insist that covid is pretty much like the flu now, endemic and not that big a deal. They say people like you and me are "hysterical" and should "go live the basement" etc. They are the reason the pandemic has gone on and on, and the reason more will die or suffer long covid. But PP in the bold -- you ARE right.
Wrong. This pandemic isn't ending until we reach herd immunity. Period. Everyone who has been willing to get vaccinated has done so. We need the rest to acquire natural immunity. Of course, we don't want hospitals to be overwhelmed, so we need to track that and respond accordingly. The sooner we reach herd immunity, the better for everyone - especially the vulnerable. So why prolong it? I'm hoping that once the vaccine is approved for under 12, we will stop fretting about cases, especially among the vaccinated.
Anonymous wrote:Just thought it would be good to update on this somewhat fear mongering post. My kids are at UVA and everyone is sick, and kids have by and large been good about going to the doc to get tested. They are by and large coming negative which is supported by their now 1.18% positivity rate which is QUITE low I think we can all agree. After an initial spike around week 2-3 of school, it seems to have fallen off quite a bit, as was predicted.
My DD has been sick for three weeks, and now is diagnosed with a sinus infection. Ugh, it would sure be nice to be healthy at school but at least it's not Covid!
Anonymous wrote:This is a concern for UVA parents:
"So far this year, there have been more than 250 shots fired incidents in the city. It is possible that this year will post double the number of shots fired incidents that were reported in all of 2020."
https://www.cbs19news.com/story/44773608/uva-parents-terrified-over-rise-in-shootings-near-grounds
Anonymous wrote:Just thought it would be good to update on this somewhat fear mongering post. My kids are at UVA and everyone is sick, and kids have by and large been good about going to the doc to get tested. They are by and large coming negative which is supported by their now 1.18% positivity rate which is QUITE low I think we can all agree. After an initial spike around week 2-3 of school, it seems to have fallen off quite a bit, as was predicted.
My DD has been sick for three weeks, and now is diagnosed with a sinus infection. Ugh, it would sure be nice to be healthy at school but at least it's not Covid!
Anonymous wrote:PP who said, "Everyone who has been willing to get vaccinated has done so," is just plain wrong.
On August 24, it was announced that:
<<On average, about 450,000 Americans a day are getting their first jab, up from 260,000 a little more than a month ago, Jeff Zients, the White House Covid-19 Response Team coordinator.>>
He was probably extrapolating from his little bubble (or trusting his biased brain instead of data).
The rates have continued to rise in September....but just under 50% of college-aged kids are vaccinated.
College mandates and well informed parents who raised children to care about the greater good could make a huge dent in that.
Anonymous wrote:PP used that statistic in relation to "college-aged kids" (not UVA students).
Look it up, Mr. Reading Comprehension.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She just said, only half are vaccinated.
They could also avoid large indoor parties, when they have the option of socializing outdoors. Common sense stuff.
Not "soul crushing."
Half the students are vaccinated? How is that possible?
I am assuming they mean 50% of college students all around the country. At UVA the percentage is upwards of 97%
Sounds like the OP and some others are just trolls or people mad that college football is being allowed.
Most of us have told our college kids to wear masks inside, avoid large indoor crowds, and get tested if symptomatic. Beyond that, complaining about the behavior of others and starting rumors about "superspreader events" without evidence is neither productive nor healthy. If OP's DD feels unsafe, perhaps she have her DD head home or write to UVA leadership instead of complaining in this forum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She just said, only half are vaccinated.
They could also avoid large indoor parties, when they have the option of socializing outdoors. Common sense stuff.
Not "soul crushing."
Half the students are vaccined? How is that possible?
https://usafacts.org/visualizations/covid-vaccine-tracker-states/
You need to get outside your bubble more.