14
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
Builder
 
  4  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 03:49 am
@farmerman,
Quote:
You're experience with covid should NOT serve as example for others to follow.


And your grasp on the English language should not serve as an example for others to follow, either.

I'll share a little "secret" with you, though. Many people don't even know they've had this virus, which is why there's a push to get tested, even if you don't have symptoms of any kind.

My experience with the virus, while quite debilitating for ten days, initially, was never life threatening. The later heart palpitations, and shortness of breath, were more disconcerting, but after extensive testing in various forms, my recovery rate from the stress tests showed that I still have the constitution of one much younger than my years, and my blood pressure is perfect.

We're actually making our own quinine now, and dosing daily, and my partner makes us both fresh slow-pressed juices from various fruits and vegetables, and I've reverted to drinking tea, rather than espresso coffee, because who needs a stimulant, if your heart is already racing fast enough to wake you up in the wee small hours?

Our state of QLD still has just six deaths from covid, which is a fraction of the usual fare from influenza, and the only proviso for visiting my mother in aged care, is a temperature reading.

Despite the hype, paranoia is slowly abating here.

Here's hoping your nation is on the same track soon.


farmerman
 
  -1  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 04:45 am
@Builder,
a minor portion of those afflicted may experience no symptoms.(Weve known that quite early, nothing revealing). The term"SUPERSPREADER" was coined for just that reality.

Those whove been afflicted, symptom free, are often the most dangerous to other receptors.

You sound like your bro-mance partner DJ Plump. He was fond of telling us that "not a lotta people know that India is part of the Asian "land mass" or that Andrew Jackson was a presidnt.


A far as my skills in dishing out communication in verbal or written English, when youre published , we will talk. Till then youre jut another Moe with inane ideas
Builder
 
  5  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 04:57 am
@farmerman,
Sounds like you're still a sucker for Gates' propaganda.

Not much learning in your skill set.

Sad, though. You showed a little promise early on.
farmerman
 
  -2  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 05:12 am
@Builder,
my skill sets, unlike what I perceive in yours have changed as the science has become more robust and clear. You seemed, like many Creationists, to have just double-down dug in all your earliest wacko beliefs and are trying to pass em off as medical facts.

No thanks, If you call me ignorant of your science, then hallelujah for my side





hightor
 
  -1  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 05:22 am
Quote:
Sounds like you're still a sucker for Gates' propaganda.

Says the sucker who buys into the stupid "Globalist Gates Wants to Take Over the World" conspiracy.
Quote:
Not much learning in your skill set.

Says the guy with the empty tool box.
Quote:
You showed a little promise early on.

Says someone who's never shown any promise at all.
Builder
 
  4  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 05:31 am
@farmerman,
Quote:
then hallelujah for my side


That statement alone is more of a testament to your base than any amount of verbosity. Thanks for sharing.
Builder
 
  5  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 05:57 am
@hightor,
Quote:
Says someone who's never shown any promise at all.


I actually have an active management role, after semi-retirement from a career position, while you appear to be a response bot devoting your time to a dying old BB forum in an obscure location online. Go you.
hightor
 
  -1  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 06:10 am
@Builder,
Quote:

I actually have an active management role, after semi-retirement from a career position...

Yeah, sure — after the crackpot conspiracies he promotes here why should anyone find anything he says about himself believable?
Quote:
...while you appear to be a response bot devoting your time to a dying old BB forum in an obscure location online.

Says the guy devoting time to responding to comments on a dying old BB forum in an obscure location online. Priceless.
hightor
 
  -2  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 06:37 am
Quote:
Very interesting report by Tucker Carlson [aimed at confirming the conservative biases of his audience] last night on the news that showed that in most places where blacks are only a small percentage of the population, they commit the vast majority of violent crimes.


Did the report investigate the rate of poverty in the black community? Did it mention the low level of inherited wealth in typical black families? Did it look at the neighborhoods where these families live, where they're located, how close they are to public transportation, good schools, health services, well-stocked supermarkets with abundant fresh food? Did it look at rates of unemployment and the availability of decent job opportunities? Did it find indications of racial prejudice in the larger community?

Quote:
The leftist media never reports on this because it would deflate their fallacious narrative of the need for black activism instead of black morality, family values, and for blacks to take on personal responsibility for their behaviors and change for the better.


The two needs — for activism and for personal responsibility — aren't mutually exclusive. In fact they're very much interconnected.
0 Replies
 
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 06:50 am
@Builder,
Quote:
Thanks for sharing
De nada.
I try to help uninformed but nary in oubt members.

PS, ya really set yerself up for the "BB" lines that hightor served .
0 Replies
 
revelette3
 
  -3  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 11:18 am
Well, the senate is finally voting on the COVID relief bill after all the delaying tactics.
BillW
 
  -2  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 11:25 am
@revelette3,
revelette3 wrote:

Well, the senate is finally voting on the COVID relief bill after all the delaying tactics.

......and, it passes!
revelette3
 
  -1  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 12:54 pm
@BillW,
Yep, thanks to the democrats.

Senate Democrats Pass $1.9 Trillion Covid-19 Relief Plan

Now I just hope the progressive wing of the democratic party do not hold up the bill because the minimum wage wasn't part of it. I know we need a minimum wage hike, but it doesn't have to be on this COVID bill.
snood
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 02:10 pm
@revelette3,
I don’t want them to let the $15 minimum wage hike totally derail the bill. But I wouldn’t mind if they raise enough stink about it to delay it getting to Biden’s desk, if just for a couple of days.

The point needs to be made again and again that the minimum wage is starvation wage. And we have waited FAR TOO LONG for it to be raised. This country was built by slave labor, and it still sustains itself on the backs of poor working people, exploiting them by paying them as little as possible.
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 02:43 pm
@snood,
I think the min wag issue should be stuck onto a Bill regarding INFRASTRUCTURE. Its because Trump had been promising that as part of his platform nd he dropped it . 15$ /hr min wage does NOT belong on an emergency relief and covid killing bill.
hightor
 
  1  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 03:14 pm
@farmerman,
I don't think a uniform minimum wage is the most effective way to address poverty — it doesn't take into account the differences between the cost of living in various states and communities within states and can really hurt small businesses. I'd rather see the government provide subsidies to struggling businesses to boost wages and make similar payments to low income working families.
Builder
 
  3  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 04:44 pm
@hightor,
Quote:
Says the guy devoting time to responding to comments on a dying old BB forum in an obscure location online. Priceless.


Misery loves company, right? I drop in occasionally to spread some joy and cheer (and facts) among my fan base here.

You appear to be here every waking minute of your day, often forgetting what you said on one thread, and contradicting yourself on another, and that is priceless.
BillW
 
  -3  
Reply Sat 6 Mar, 2021 05:41 pm
@farmerman,
I suggest it becomes a part of the Defense bill!
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  -4  
Reply Sun 7 Mar, 2021 03:07 am
HCR wrote:
Today, after almost 24 hours of debate, the Senate passed the American Rescue Plan, designed to help America rebuild after the scorched-earth devastation of the coronavirus pandemic.

The vote was 50 to 49, with all the Democrats voting yes and all the Republicans voting no. Senator Dan Sullivan (R-AK) had to leave the vote to attend his father-in-law’s funeral (and, frankly, while I try not to editorialize here, more power to him for choosing his family at this moment), but would have voted no. That would have made Vice President Kamala Harris cast the deciding vote, but the bill was going to pass.

It is hard to overestimate the importance of this measure both for the present moment and as a sign of the direction in which the Democrats in charge of the United States hope to take the nation.

The relief measure is designed to address the dislocations of a pandemic that has, so far, taken more than a half a million American lives and thrown more than 10 million of us out of work.

America currently has a population of about 331 million people. By the end of 2020, more than 83 million Americans were having trouble meeting bills or buying food, and by January 2021, 30 to 40 million Americans were at risk of eviction because they could not make their rent payments. This crisis hit women and people of color the hardest because they tend to work in face-to-face jobs, which did not translate to remote work, and because the loss of childcare drove women out of the workforce. Thirty-nine percent of low-income households saw job losses early in the pandemic.

The American Rescue Plan addresses this crisis. It includes checks of $1400 for people who make less than $75,000, making up the difference between the $600 the last coronavirus relief measure provided and the $2000 the former president demanded. But that is just the tip of the iceberg. The bill provides federal unemployment benefits of $300 a week until Labor Day to supplement state benefits. It provides $350 billion for state, local, and tribal governments, which will prevent further job cuts and enable services to continue. It provides $130 billion for schools, as well as support for rent payments and food. With its expansion of child tax credits, subsidies for childcare, expansion of food assistance, lowering of costs under the Affordable Care Act, and rental assistance, the American Rescue Plan could cut child poverty in half by the end of this year.

Its benefits should begin helping low-income and moderate-income people immediately, injecting money into the economy to help us recover from the economic effects of the pandemic, even as we are starting to get vaccinated to emerge from the pandemic itself.

The bill is a statement about the role of the government. Rather than trying to free individuals from the burdens of supporting an active government by cutting taxes and services—as Republicans since Reagan have advocated-- this bill uses government power to support ordinary Americans. It is a return to the principles of the so-called liberal consensus that members of both parties embraced under the presidents from Democrat Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who took office in 1933, to Jimmy Carter, who left the White House in 1981. Carter was defeated by Ronald Reagan, who told Americans in his Inaugural Address that “government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.”

Since then, the focus of our lawmakers has been to cut government services, not build them.

And yet, those cuts have not created a more equal society in the United States; they have dramatically moved wealth upward. It is worth remembering that, while $1.9 trillion is an eye-popping sum of money, the 2017 Republican tax cut under former president Donald Trump cost at least $1.5 trillion and, if Congress makes the individual tax cuts permanent, will cost $2.3 trillion over the next ten years. (Unlike the individual tax cuts, the corporate tax cuts in the law do not expire.) The 2017 vote for yet another tax cut won no Democratic votes, just as this American Rescue Plan earned no Republican votes.

The change in the direction of government signaled by this bill could not be more dramatic.

The bill will now go back to the House, which will vote to accept the amendments. It will then to go to the Oval Office for President Biden’s signature.

substack
0 Replies
 
farmerman
 
  -3  
Reply Sun 7 Mar, 2021 03:33 am
@hightor,
Quote:

I don't think a uniform minimum wage is the most effective way to address poverty


Its a start. Without verification methods. I question the direct pay to businesses since in the first 1.9 Trillion (CARE) bill, it was discovered that not a few businesses didnt play fairly with the way their payouts were to be used. We do have a problem in our nation with SKILLS.
 

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