Society's Child
With a purely statistical perspective, he has been playing close attention to the Covid-19 pandemic since January, when most of us were not even aware of it. He first spoke out in early February, when through analysing the numbers of cases and deaths in Hubei province he predicted with remarkable accuracy that the epidemic in that province would top out at around 3,250 deaths.
His observation is a simple one: that in outbreak after outbreak of this disease, a similar mathematical pattern is observable regardless of government interventions. After around a two week exponential growth of cases (and, subsequently, deaths) some kind of break kicks in, and growth starts slowing down. The curve quickly becomes "sub-exponential".
Simeone, 49, pleaded guilty to 30 felony charges for stealing $50,000 from a children's charity and paying kickbacks to lure patients into a drug treatment center he ran in West Palm Beach.
On Wednesday, this prior 'pillar of the community' stood before a judge and admitted to stealing tens of thousands of dollars from children in a charity he set up to get rich in the name of dead cops and veterans.
According to the Sun-Sentinel, in 2017, Simeone became one of the first individuals ensnared by State Attorney Dave Aronberg's Sober Homes Task Force. It's a law enforcement push against abuses in the area's drug-recovery industry. There have been more than 100 arrests in three years.
Comment: Too bad the author is falling into the anti-Chinese mindset calling the virus the WuFlu pandemic.
Gay swinger's club is essential.
But strangers servicing each other through holes in a basement wall in the state capitol is perfectly fine. I guess group sex is an "essential" activity in the Democrat-run state of Michigan. The underground private club, Club Tabu, has a website that describes what goes on there. (HT: Steve Gruber)
Tabu events are defined as "private party" lifestyle socials. There is no sexual activity permitted except in the privacy of your own accommodations.
The man, who has not yet been publicly named, is suspected of beating a 75-year-old veteran at the home after footage of the incident surfaced last week, but his family is horrified by his actions and said he has mental issues.
"He has issues and for them to put him in a facility like that, nothing good was going to happen," the suspect's father told 7 Action News on Friday.
Comment: See the report on the original incident: Suspect arrested after video surfaces showing violent beating of elderly nursing home patient
In the absence of a federal plan, some city and state health departments are already seeking to fill thousands of these positions. Experts estimate that between 100,000 and 300,000 contact tracers — who can earn up to $65,000 per year — will be needed nationwide based on state populations and projected COVID-19 infection rates.
"I do think that it's a fantastic job for people who have been furloughed, and it's something that people can be trained to do," said Roger Shapiro, a professor of medicine at the Harvard School of Public Health. "It takes some training, but it's not impossible to train almost anybody with reasonable social skills, who can work off a script, begin a conversation with people, convey a few key messages and collect data," he said.
Comment: One wonders if the Gestapo had similar advertising campaigns. Not to come down on those who need to take any job they can get in the current employment landscape, but in an ideal world, this lockdown never would have been instituted and this type of work would be completely unnecessary.
See also: "Contact Tracer" and "Disease Investigator" jobs spring up across the country
Prices Americans paid for eggs, meat, cereal and milk all went higher in April as people flocked to grocery stores to stock up on food amid government lockdowns designed to slow the spread of Covid-19, according to CNBC.
The largest increases were for meat and eggs. Consumers paid 4.3 percent more in April for meats, poultry, fish and eggs, 1.5 percent more for fruits and vegetables, and 2.9 percent more for cereals and bakery products, as well as nonalcoholic beverages, the Labor Department said, as The Washington Post reported.
Comment: See also:
- Poll: 37% of unemployed Americans ran out of food in past month
- Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Food price gouging, global hunger riots and real estate collapse
- UK: 250% rise in adults suffering food insecurity, over 15 million see income drop
- Food riots break out in Santiago, Chile, as government extends lockdown for third month and makes it even STRICTER
- Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Global food shortages masked by a lock down
- Geneva: 1,000+ Swiss line up for free food amid coronavirus lockdown
- Big Food Inc. - The collapse of the food supply chain next
- Why are farmers destroying food while grocery stores are empty?
One chilling example comes in the form of Facebook's fake "science fact checks." The social media company has improperly been censoring and flagging material as "false."
A recent example is a popular documentary by Epoch Times about the possible link between Covid-19 and a research lab in Wuhan, China.
Comment: See also:
- On Facebook, history can violate community standards
- Facebook further restricts PragerU's page, limits the reach of its posts after disputed fact-check
- Facebook censorship rolls on: PragerU demoted from normal public visibility amid claims of 'repeated sharing of false news'
- After Youtube and Facebook, Vimeo bans 'Sayed Hasan' channel & Nasrallah's videos
- 'They will not silence us': Michigan activists undeterred after Facebook removes anti-lockdown group with 380,000 members
- Facebook removes news outlets in latest Orwellian purge
- Top UK journalist Craig Murray blocked by Facebook after criticizing Israel
- The Unz Review suddenly banned by Facebook
Police have yet to comment on what prompted the violence, but several sources speculate that it was related to a conflict within the lucrative funeral business in the Russian capital.
Witnesses told reporters that it initially looked like a road rage incident. One car refused to let another pass on the narrow road, with the drivers and passengers getting out and starting to argue. The row then moved to the parking lot, where it escalated and shots were fired.
Lake County Common Pleas Judge Eugene Lucci ruled that Amy Acton, the director of the Ohio Department of Health, is prohibited from punishing nonessential businesses that defy Ohio's orders to stay closed in response to the Chinese coronavirus pandemic, Cleveland 19 News reported.
The report added that the Lake County General Health District, police officers, prosecutors, and the Ohio Attorney General are also prohibited from punishing so-called "nonessential" businesses, as the companies already operate in compliance with standard safety regulations.
Moreover, Lucci declared that Acton "has acted in an impermissibly arbitrary, unreasonable, and oppressive manner," reported the Columbus Dispatch.
This is a "pandemic within a pandemic," according to addiction expert Tim Ryan, who's watched the coronavirus outbreak exacerbate the preexistent opioid and mental health crises with devastating effect. Ryan, the star of A&E's 2017 "Dope Man" special, is the founder of "A Man In Recovery Foundation," which partners with Rehab.com. A former heroin addict, his mission is to assist others struggling with substance abuse.
In a Friday interview, Ryan explained how the stresses of isolation and financial trouble brought on by the pandemic are worsening addiction, both by pushing new users to abuse substances and making it more difficult for recovering addicts to stay sober. Rehab facilities are struggling to cope with the challenges of a viral outbreak, according to Ryan, who also said alcohol and fentanyl abuse seem to be especially prevalent as the nation stays home.
"What's happening is people need purpose, they need connection, they need fellowship," he told me. "Now they're all alone."
Ryan also shared compelling advice for concerned loved ones and anyone personally struggling to stay sober during this painful and unusual time. A transcript of our conversation, lightly edited for clarity, is below.















Comment: If the above story doesn't prove that following much of the ultra-liberal mindset - especially demonstrated by politicians - amounts to losing one's mind, nothing will.
But here are a few more anyway: