DeSantis for the win

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Tsing Tao, May 21, 2020.

  1. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Can you find a SINGLE example where DeSantis in the past has ever objected to the government funding of professional sports teams?

    Let me give you a hint -- there is no such example.

    If DeSantis had a principled position for opposing government funding of professional sports teams over a period of time then I would actually support him on this. Primarily because state & local communities tend to get a return on investment of funding local youth sports (with tournaments held in town, etc.) and lose money greatly on professional sports teams -- when looking from a tax, hotel, food, revenue perspective.
     
    #6821     Jun 6, 2022
  2. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    You tried playing this before.

    As I told you then, if you believe this is the exception to the rule, then you need to show where he has approved funding a professional sports team. Asking me to show you were something has never happened before, if it has never happened before, is impossible. The burden of proof rests on the person claiming it has. Which is you.

    So if you believe DeSantis is changing his position now, you should be able to show this.
     
    #6822     Jun 6, 2022
  3. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    So you agree that DeSantis NEVER in the past ever opposed government funding of professional sports teams. Not a single speech or comment opposing this funding in his entire political career. So please tell us why suddenly he is opposing the funding now. Has he magically suddenly seen the light.

    No, the reality is that DeSantis is merely taking out his revenge against a corporation that opposed his political narrative, just like he did with Disney.
     
    #6823     Jun 6, 2022
  4. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    I agree that he never has, because he was never given the opportunity. Had he, then he would have responded exactly the same then as he did today - because his position is that professional sports teams should not get tax payer dollars.

    It has nothing to do with some tweet like you claimed.

    You cannot show that he gave tax dollars before, but not now - which would be the only way your ridiculous assertion could be true.

     
    #6824     Jun 6, 2022
  5. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    #6825     Jun 6, 2022
  6. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading


    Well with this Tampa Bay Rays news.... I am sure DeSantis will eventually restore the funding. Remember if you kiss his rear then you get the money.


    Tampa Bay Rays pitchers may be seen as anti-gay as they refused to wear gay pride decoratives
    The five of them refused to wear them claiming they have different religious beliefs
    https://www.marca.com/en/mlb/tampa-bay-rays/2022/06/06/629d73d4e2704e75b78b461c.html
     
    #6826     Jun 6, 2022
  7. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    "Recent Peaks"

    upload_2022-6-6_8-47-26.png

    Remember kids, when you go from 10 cases to 20, you're up 100%!!

    Meanwhile, "Recent peaks" in California

    upload_2022-6-6_8-48-11.png

    Recent Peaks in North Carolina - Because DeSantis

    upload_2022-6-6_8-48-41.png

    And every other state.

    More lies and narrative from the king of both.
     
    #6827     Jun 6, 2022
  8. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    So cases in N.C. and California are declining from recent peaks while the cases in Florida continue to increase. Thanks for posting the charts to underline the point.

    Due to DeSantis attempting to ignore that Covid even exists -- Florida is a hotbed for infection and spread. Coupled with the lack of state support for even tracking variants or testing.


    Overlapping, highly contagious COVID subvariants are spreading fast in Florida
    https://www.seattletimes.com/seattl...id-subvariants-are-spreading-fast-in-florida/
    June 3, 2022

    Overlapping waves of omicron are sweeping through Florida, leading more people to get infected with COVID.

    The more transmissible BA.2.12.1 omicron subvariant became officially dominant in the U.S. last week, yet it already is being pushed out nationally by newcomers BA.4 and BA.5, both of which have arrived in Florida.


    While BA.2.12.1 has gained an advantage by being more contagious than the omicron subvariant BA.2 before it, the newcomers (4 and 5) are particularly good at evading antibodies and infecting those who are vaccinated or previously infected.

    Some epidemiologists are describing what’s happening as the “battle of omicron.”

    Helix, a private lab that identifies COVID strains circulating in states, found BA.4 and BA.5 crept into Florida in May, and represent about 5% of samples. The majority of cases in Florida — about 58% — are still BA.2.12.1.

    The omicron subvariant BA.4 was first identified in January in cases sequenced in South Africa, and BA.5 surfaced a month later. The omicron strain, BA.2.12.1, accounted for nearly all of South Africa’s daily cases at the end of February. By the end of April, however, BA.4 and BA.5 were found in 90% of all positive test samples analyzed in that nation, exemplifying the infectiousness of the newcomers.

    Health officials say evidence seems to point to increasingly rapid, overlapping waves of new variants, which likely means more infections in Florida in the summer months ahead.

    “My theory is we may see more variants, and they may be more contagious, but they will continue to get less problematic with fewer harmful outcomes,” said Dr. Mona Amin with Pediatric Associates in Fort Lauderdale.

    In Florida, much like other states, COVID reporting has become spotty with many learning of the diagnosis through at-home tests. So far, wastewater has proven useful in learning the prevalence of the virus.

    An analysis of wastewater in South Florida counties by Biobot Analytics, shows COVID cases are rising to levels last seen during the winter omicron wave in early 2022. Delta no longer is a factor in the state, Biobot’s analysis shows. The samples taken in Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties show omicron and its subvariants are circulating at increasingly high levels.

    With a seven-day daily average of more than 10,200 cases on Friday, Florida is a state classified by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as having a “high level” of transmission. Broward and Miami-Dade counties are reporting a test positivity rate of more than 20%. Palm Beach County’s positivity rate is 18.9%. Health officials consider transmission levels under control when the rate is less than 5%.

    Jason Salemi, an epidemiologist at the University of South Florida, points out, “We might actually (finally) be seeing some improvement in the Northeast, but in Florida — 3 in 4 people live in a high-risk county, based on the hospitalization-based measure.”

    On Friday, 2,834 people were in Florida hospitals with COVID, representing nearly 5% of all beds, according to U.S. Health and Human Services data. That’s a significant increase from about 1,000 COVID patients in early April, but nowhere near the more than 17,000 people hospitalized during the delta wave in August 2021.

    ======================

    And let's take a look at the positivity level in Florida...

    COVID-19 cases, positivity rates again on the rise in South Florida
    https://www.local10.com/news/local/...ity-rates-again-on-the-rise-in-south-florida/
    June 4, 2022

    Florida is once again seeing a rise in cases of COVID-19.

    The CDC is now classifying Florida as having a high level of transmission.

    That is due to the state reporting a seven-day average of more than 10,200 cases on Friday.

    Positivity rates have also been rising in South Florida.

    Miami-Dade County reported a positivity rate of 26.7 percent while Broward County has a positivity rate of 23.9 percent.
     
    #6828     Jun 6, 2022
  9. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao



    If you want to zoom in to get your narrative, you can do so to Florida, too. Yesterday lower than the day before! Peak!

    You're clown.
     
    #6829     Jun 6, 2022
  10. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Tell us about the 7 day average.

    Plus this - "An analysis of wastewater in South Florida counties by Biobot Analytics, shows COVID cases are rising to levels last seen during the winter omicron wave in early 2022."
     
    #6830     Jun 6, 2022