President Donald J Trump has exceeded my expectations in response to the CronoVirus. No one knew what was immediately going on. Once the seriousness of the virus was understood President Donald J Trump has taken immediate action. He is now waiting and waiting for the Democratic controlled Congress to do something. I appreciate that The President is giving the States the power to decide what is best for them. The best strategy for North Dakota is not the same as the best strategy for New York. Joe Robinette (not making this up) Biden Jr. has been in politics a long, long, time - 30+ years. Can anyone name one thing that he has done while in public office that a man would be proud of? Joe Biden has never had an original idea in his life. If elected he would be president in name only. George Bush Jr. was pretty bad but "Old Black Joe" would take the charade of being president to a whole nother level. If Joe Biden was president now he would probably be testing positive for the virus. Positive is good right?
Somehow I think neither Obiden nor Bama have a problem with any of this. Nor does Killary. Just fuck the dining workers at Harvard.
What are you talking about “no one knew” the seriousness of the situation? If that isn’t the most Baghdad Bob thing ever written on this forum I don’t know what is. Trump had a don’t test don’t tell policy. He removed the top infectious disease doctor from the briefings after she said we need to take immediate action in February. Things like PPE, testing, ventilators and hospital beds should have already been figured out. Trump was messaging to the American people that Covid was a Democrat hoax and it would be no worse than the flu. He said it would disappear like magic. The only question is if this has been the worst crisis response in the modern history.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...dnt-have-happened-if-hillary-clinton-had-won/ This wouldn’t have happened if Hillary Clinton had won Bezos troll game on point: The coronavirus is the most foreseeable disaster in history — and so is President Trump’s inability to rise to the occasion. There were scattered warnings before Pearl Harbor and 9/11 of what was to come. But nothing like this. My Post colleagues report that throughout January and February, the U.S. intelligence community was warning Trump that the pandemic was going to hit America. “The system was blinking red,” one official said. But Trump wasn’t paying attention. “It will all work out well,” he blithely tweeted on Jan. 24 while credulously thanking Chinese President Xi Jinping for “working very hard to contain the Coronavirus.” (A British study suggests China could have eliminated 95 percent of its cases if it had acted three weeks earlier, when a doctor first called attention to the epidemic in Wuhan.)
Hey, Trump gets this, he really does. His Uncle taught at MIT for a record number (?) of years. He was not just a genius, he was a “super genius”. If only Trump wasn’t so busy he could’ve popped in the lab and whipped up a cure with a beaker, two test tubes and a Bunsen burner.
Monday Morning Quarterbacks. All of you. Had any of you called this correctly you would have made Big Bank. Most on here probably lost money - lots. Why? Because stuff like this usually does not happen. Now there is the socialist crowd that wants national policies implemented so they can hide the fact that their governance has been a disaster in every case - California, New York, Detroit.
LOL, all of them patting themselves on the back. The only difference is they get lucky, that tens of thousands of West Africans weren't flying into our country. These fools think did some great intervention and Trump isn't. A harsh look back at the reality. The West African Ebola outbreak in 2014 caught most of the world by surprise. Although the first cases were identified as far back as March 2014,5,6 the initial response to these early cases was slow and inadequate, and over the summer and fall of 2014 case numbers rose dramatically in the three most affected countries of Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. By the summer of 2014 the region was experiencing devastating rates of transmission, as high as a thousand new cases every week.6,7 Since that time, transmission of the disease has been almost entirely interrupted. Overall, there have been over 28,000 cases and 11,000 deaths in this outbreak, making it by far the deadliest Ebola outbreak ever.6 As case numbers began to rise in West Africa last year, the United States response was initially delayed and slow to ramp up, but by August 2014 the U.S. government had begun to mount what has become the largest effort by a single donor government to respond to Ebola, a response that has included marshalling financial resources, personnel, and technical expertise. Notably, this included an emergency funding request by the Obama Administration in November 2014 for $6.2 billion.8 Eventually Congress appropriated $5.4 billion in emergency Ebola funding in December 2014, most of which was to be directed to international activities.1 This was significantly larger than previous emergency response funding provided by Congress to address an emerging disease outbreak such as SARS and avian influenza.2