Showing posts with label 2020. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2020. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 26, 2022

Lawsuit filed over Wyoming's abortion restriction law. . . and a cautionary tale.

Lex Anteinternet: The Governor Certifies the Trigger Law on Abortion.:  We ran this, this morning: Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, July 21, 2022. The AG reports on Dobbs : Today In Wyoming's History: July 21 :  ...

And the lawsuit, as we predicted, was filed.

This is a cautionary tale, if ever there was one.

Back during the Obama Administration, in a fit of right wing upsettedness and paranoia, Wyoming amended its constitution as follows.

Artice 1, Section 38.

Right of health care access  

(a) Each competent adult shall have the right to make his or her own health care decisions. The parent, guardian or legal representative of any other natural person shall have the right to make health care decisions for that person.  

(b) Any person may pay, and a health care provider may accept, direct payment for health care without imposition of penalties or fines for doing so.  

(c) The legislature may determine reasonable and necessary restrictions on the rights granted under this section to protect the health and general welfare of the people or to accomplish the other purposes set forth in the Wyoming Constitution.  

(d) The state of Wyoming shall act to preserve these rights from undue governmental infringement.

You'll recall, of course, when "Obamacare" was new, and before Americans had acclimated themselves so much to it that it could not be repealed, the Republican Party was full of stories about how government panels were going to make your health care decisions for you, like it or not. This inspired early Tea Party type movements to address this, this being one of them.

Of course, the amendment goes largely unused and in spite of quite a bit of debate on masks and quarantines during the height of the pandemic, the amendment has sat dormant until now, when it was predictably noticed.  

So now this is on a trip to the Wyoming Supreme Court. Some judge is going to be asked to stay the new law until the Supreme Court can rule on it, a nightmare for whomever is tasked with this, and this isn't going to be pleasant for the Wyoming Supreme Court either.  As a hot button issue in really polarized times, no matter what they do will make somebody really angry.

In my view, abortion isn't "health care" per se, and so this amendment ought not to apply.  That will really upset people who place it in the health care category, but it really isn't.  I hold the same view, fwiw, of cosmetic surgery for "beauty" purposes.  Not to compare the two, but by example getting bigger boobs isn't a health care decision.  Abortion for avoidance of a natural biologic process isn't either, at least until you get into the topic of the physical life of the mother.

I can't help but note, however, how this right wing constitutional amendment has now swung around as a leftward one.  So now the article is being used by the left against the right. And there are other ways the same article could be.  If a legislature, for example, determines to address transgender surgery or treatment with pharmaceuticals, which I'd guess some legislators would like to do, can they?

Friday, July 1, 2022

The 2022 Election Part IX. And they're officially out of the gate.


The Candidates, that is.

Registration to run closed yesterday, May 27, at 5:00.  So who is running?

Let's take a look

  • House of Representatives
The race that everyone has their eyes on, of course, because of Liz Cheney's principled stand on the insurrection.  That angered those who feel that she should have been more loyal to Donald Trump than the Constitution, and created an opportunistic effort by her fellow Republicans to replace her, aided by a national party that has remained freakishly in the former President's grip. . . so far.

Republicans for the House:

This race will likely decide who will occupy this seat, with it going pretty obviously to either Cheney or Hageman.

Liz Cheney.  The embattled incumbent.

Harrient Hageman.  Hageman, former Cheney supporter and Trump opponent who has switched on both in what Cheney has proclaimed as "tragic opportunism".   By and large Hageman's and Cheney's politics, to the extent that we can tell what Hageman's are, are identical, but for loyalty to Trump.

Robyn Belinsky:  Belinsky is a businesswoman from Sheridan who is billing herself as Wyoming's Marjorie Taylor Greene.  Why she's still running at this point is really a mystery as she has no chance whatsoever and what few hard right populist diehards who won't adopt Hageman are left will vote for Bouchard.

Anthony Bouchard:  Bouchard is a member of the legislature from Goshen County who has been in a lot of local political spats and who is a far right firebrand in the legislature and who is still running in spite of having no hope of getting past the primary.  He will still draw some votes, however, from those who are very much in this camp and have been his acolytes all along.

Bryan Eugene Keller:  He's a resident of Laramie County who has registered, but I don't know anything else about him.

Denton Knapp:  Knapp is a retired U.S. Army Colonel and a current Brig. Gen. in the California National Guard who is still, surprisingly, running.  His campaign at this point borders on being delusional.  He must be hoping that Hageman and Cheney will destroy each other, and then the electorate in the GOP will go for a moderate.  In other words, this campaign is delusional.

I can't predict this race anymore.  At one time I thought for certain that it would go to Cheney, but to my surprise the Trump loyalty thing matters to a lot more people than I would have guessed for reasons that tend to escape me, save for a fair number of people have really bought into hard corp populist thought. The ironic thing is that Cheney's top opponent isn't a populist, something that must be driving Bouchard nuts.

Democrats for the House:

At long last, perhaps waiting for the Republicans to destroy each other before registering, some Democratic contenders have appeared. They are:

Lynette GreyBull: GreyBull was the Democratic contender last time and, in spite of her defeat, did better against Cheney that probably would have been expected.  If Hageman is the contender, she'll do even better yet.

GreyBull, depending on who the Republicans choose in their primary, and how much they destroy themselves in the process, may actually have a chance.

Meghan R. Jensen:  Jensen is a young candidate from Rock Springs.  So far that's about all that I can say about her.

Steve Helling:  Helling is a long time lawyer in Casper and who also practiced in Colorado.  He's well known as a lawyer.

My prediction in this race is that GreyBull will win the Democratic primary again, to face off against whomever the Republicans chose.

Independent

Casey Hardison. This is a gadfly campaign as it is based on drug legalization.  Indeed, he has a case on appeal to the Wyoming Supreme Court right now for felony marijuana delivery.

It seems like we get these campaigns every election now.

  • Governor's Race.

This seat is now safe for Gordon, although former President D. Trump took a verbal swing at him the other day when being interviewed by KTWO radio.

Republicans for the Governor's Office.

Mark Gordon:  Gordon is the incumbent.  He's going to get the nomination, and he's going to win the General Election.

Harold Bjork.  Who Bjork isn't really clear, but he's started a Facebook and internet campaign for Governor.

Brent Bien:  

Rex Rammell:  Rammell is a perennial and unelectable candidate who ran last time and will again.  His views can be characterized as being on the fringe right/libertarian side.

Democrats for the Governor's Office.

Rex Wilde: Wilde previously ran for the Senate as a Democrat and has no chance.

Theresa Livingston:  Livingston previously ran for the State Senate and stands no chance.

  • Secretary of State

This race took an unexpected late turn when the current Secretary of State Buchanan, who had announced he was running, pulled out after putting in, for a second time, for an open seat on the bench.  Since his withdrawal, a host of Republicans have now filed for the office.  

Republicans for Secretary of State.

As noted, Buchanan's withdrawal has opened up the contest for Secretary of State.

Dan Dockstader.  He's a longstanding member of the Legislature who stands a good chance due to that service.

Tara Nethercott:  Also a member of the Legislature.  Nethercott has not been in the legislature long, but she was the subject of misogynistic attacks last session, which she weathered well. She also stands a good chance.

Chuck Gray:  Also a member of the legislature who has been frequently in the news due to his far right populist positions.  Gray clearly has his sights set on higher office and probably views this as a stepping stone.  His earlier attempt to replace Cheney drew little support.

Mark Armstrong:  Former candidate for the U.S. Senate.  His run for Senate drew very little support and his run for Secretary of State will fail.

Democrats for Secretary of State

Pathetically, none.

State Auditor

Kriti Racines. She's the incumbent and the only one running.  She's effectively won the race at this point, absent something bizarre occuring.

  • Superintendent of Public Instruction
Republicans for Superintendent of Public Instruction.

This race is also newsworthy as the incumbent, Brian Schroeder, is generally regarded as the least bad of the three names that were submitted to Governor Gordon when the prior occupant stood down.

Brian Schroeder. Schroeder is the presumptive nominee.

Megan Degenfelder.  She has an education background but who has been working in the petroleum industry, announced for Superintendent of Public Education.

She was once employed as the department's Chief Policy Officer.

Thomas Kelly:  Kelly was one of the three finalists who was not chosen for this office by Governor Gordon.

Jennifer Zerba:  Zerba announced late. She's from Casper and is an education professional, which is all I know about her.

Robert J. White.  White is from Rock Springs, which is all I know about him.

Democrats for Superintendent of Public Instruction.

Sergio Maldonado:  Maldonado is a longtime figure in Fremont County politics and is, I believe, also an enrolled member of one of the Wind River tribes.

  • Other interesting races
We'd often stop our tracking of races here, but there are some interesting races going on around the state, simply because these are interesting times politically.  

Nearly ever race in the state is overshadowed, by some degree, by the split in the GOP between arch populists, who have largely bought into the Trump "election stolen" myth, and traditionalist, who have not.  Ironically, the one candidate out there who is an establishment candidate for whom this figures the most is Harriet Hageman, who was a right wing establishment figure whose migrated to the Trump camp to take on a person she formally supported, that being Liz Cheney.  In that migration she reflects what could be regarded as the cynical choice some other well established national figures, like Ted Cruz, have made, or indeed even local ones, like Cynthia Lummis.  And as already noted, Lummis apparently figures in Trump's endorsement of Hageman, which might reflect ongoing animosity between Lummis and Cheney over Cheney's late decision in 2020 to run again for  the House as it appeared for a while that she would run for the Senate.

Anyhow, around the state, we see the following interesting races.
  • House District 57
Abandoned now by Chuck Gray, now features two Republicans running for the office and one Democrat. The Republicans are:

Republicans

Jeanette Ward:  Ward has lived in Wyoming for less than a year and was apparently recruited to his race by Gray. Gray is not a Wyoming native either, but Ward is most recently from Chicago, where she was a controversial school board member.  It would appear that she was recruited by Gray due to holding similar views to Gray.

Thomas Myler:  Myler is the marketing coordinator for Casper College and is on the School Board of Natrona County School District No. 1.

Democrats

Robert Johnson.
  • Natrona County Assessor
This race has been of much local interest as property matters have made the sitting assessor controversial.

Matt Keating:  Incumbent

Tammy Saulsbury:  Saulsbury formerly worked in the Assessor's office and ran against Keating last time. She's back to try again.

Tim Haid:  Haid is a new entry that I don't know anything about.

May 30, 2022

This past Saturday, Donald Trump appeared at a rally in Casper in support of Harriet Hageman.  He delivered a predictable speech there, according to press reports.

Perhaps the most notable thing about the rally was that it was opened by Frank Eathorne, head of the Wyoming GOP, which means that the party's head is openly taking a position in favor of one primary candidate against all the others. This is clearly improper.

Hageman spoke and according to press retirements gave a speech about Wyomingites being "fed up" with various things.  Paradoxically, one of those things was high gas prices, which Wyoming's energy sector depends on.  Consumers are tired of that, but oddly people in the state seem to feel that they should have a vibrant oil and gas economy and low prices simultaneously, which is impossible.  

High fertilizer prices for farmers was another thing that Wyomingites were reportedly fed up with, according to Hageman, but most Wyomingites know nothing about that whatsoever.  That would in part be due to a lack of regulation in agricultural land ownership contrary to some states like Iowa, which would require a distributist economic platform in this area that neither the Republicans or the Democrats are likely to endorse.

Hageman had a gaff in her speech which might symbolize the Freudian slip:

I am that person who will represent you, your fallacies

What this is really about, in some ways, was ironically summarized by Trump, when he said:

The entire Republican Party is united behind Harriet, she is endorsed by practically everyone, and most importantly, perhaps, she’s endorsed by me.

Trump's endorsement more important than the party's?

No doubt, to many, that's true. 

Of interest, contrary to expectations and fears, the event was hardly noticed in Casper outside of the Ford Center itself.

June 3, 2022

The Cheney campaign released its first television commercial.


June 4, 2022

The news has now broken that Bob Ide, who is running for a seat in the state Senate now occupied by State Senator Drew Perkins, was at the Capitol with Frank Eathorne on January 6. That doesn't mean that he was in eyesight of the riot like Eathorne was, but that topic is now being debated with a group maintaining that he was.

Ide takes the position that Wyoming should claim Federal lands within Wyoming, something the state disclaimed permanently at the time of statehood, and is otherwise in the far right.

Dr. Oz won his primary in Pennsylvania, which presumably means that the Democrat has an excellent chance of prevailing.

June 7, 2022

In a real contrast to a lot of what we've seen on the political scene this year, Liz Cheney received the endorsement of Northern Arapaho Business Council member Lee Spoonhunter and Lynette Grey Bull, a resident of the Reservation who is running for the Democratic nomination for a second time, was extremely gracious about it, praising Mr. Spoonhunter in the process.



June 13, 2022

So, as a result of the January 6 Commission, we now know that Hageman campaign advisor Bill Stephien did not support the "election stolen" myth when he was Trump's last advisor, and pretty clearly didn't think the election was stolen.  Indeed, his testimony was damning in regard to Trump.

Which raises two questions.

How does he reconcile his current work for Hageman with his conscience, in that light, and secondly, how does Hageman feel about having an advisor who was on "Team Normal", as he put it, as he wouldn't endorse the fantasy?

Hageman has stated that she thinks there's "honest questions" about what happened in the November 2020 election.  Stephien pretty clearly doesn't.  His testimony stated today that; “I didn’t believe that what was happening was honest or professional”.

Stephien was to have testified live, but his wife went into labor.  From a Wyoming prospective, you have to wonder what have occurred if he did.  Hageman has "honest questions", Stephien felt the whole stolen election scene wasn't "honest".

Frankly, I very much doubt that Hageman has any doubts whatsoever about who won the 2020 election, but took that position as it's the only thing that really distinguishes her from Cheney, politically.  The distinction is growing huge, however, ethically, given how clear it is that the stolen election story is a dog that doesn't hunt, and her own campaign manager doesn't believe it.

June 15, 2022

The Club For Growth has endorsed Harriet Hageman.  The PAC could be regarded as an economic libertarian oriented organization, particularly focused on reducing taxes.  The organization has apparently been unhappy with Cheney since well prior to the current election, but it's tapping into Trumpism in advertisements it intends to run in Wyoming.

June 16, 2022

While it took a few days, problems for Hageman have now developed in that her campaign manager, Bill Stephien, clearly never thought the Trump election was stolen and she's on record claiming she doesn't know who won the election.

In the Tribune today, a spokesman for Stephien made it clear that he stands by his views.  A Hageman spokesman came out and claimed that she stands by her "doesn't know" position.  Some in her camp are accusing Cheney of calling Stephien as a witness purposely to embarrass Hageman, the irony of that being that it concedes that she should be embarrassed.

June 18, 2022

The Natrona County GOP is apparently sick of things, based upon recent comments coming out of its higher levels.  Sidelined by the State committee, along with Laramie County, the second most populous county in the state is beginning to fight back.  It'll be interesting to see if Laramie County, the most populous state, joins them.

It's no secret to observers that Laramie County and Natrona County are far less Trump Territory than the rest of the state. Cheney signs are up everywhere in Natrona County, even though the county's Ford Center recently hosted the Trump loyalist.

News broke yesterday that the county GOP may seek to remove the state head, Frank Eathorne.

The draft, and it's only a draft, of a resolution they may consider next week reads as follows.

A resolution of the Natrona County Republican Party State Central Committee calling for the immediate resignation of Frank Eathorne as Chairman of the Wyoming Republican Party. 

Whereas it is the  stated goal of the Wyoming Republican Party to represent the values and vision of Republicans all over the State and to support Republican candidates to win and retain political office in Wyoming,

Whereas the current Chairman, Frank Eathorne has consistently failed to represent the values of the vast majority of Wyomingites and during his tenure has divided the Party and failed in his duty to support all elected Republicans,

Whereas it has come to light that Frank Eathorne consistently violated the sacred vow of marriage, engaging in indiscretions while on the job and in his personal life,

Whereas Frank Eathorne, while intoxicated allegedly threatened a woman while her 2-year old daughter was in the adjoining room - later dismissing his behavior as “gentleman-like”.  Eathorne then allowed the City of Worland to pay for the legal settlement even though he espouses personal responsibility and condemns government support of any kind,

Whereas Frank Eathorne later accepted over $100,000.00 in Government subsidies for his ranching operation and untold Federal mineral royalties and trespass fees while denouncing anyone else that may need support from the government,

Whereas Frank Eathorne has openly advocated for Wyoming to secede from the Union,

Whereas Frank Eathorne is a member of the “Oath Keepers” – an openly extremist group calling for a revolutionary war in the United States and partially responsible for the January 6th riot,

Whereas Frank Eathorne, during his tenure, has overseen the divide of the Party, the elimination of Natrona County delegates and the last minute unseating of Laramie County delegates while turning a blind eye to the transgressions of other Counties.

Whereas Frank Eathorne has repeatedly lied to the people of Wyoming as well as members of this Central Committee.   When asked about his involvement in the January 6th, 2021 insurrection, he repeatedly said that he went to the rally, walked down the street and retired to his hotel before any violence or destruction of property started.   Not only was he a member of the “mob”, he has done nothing to condemn the insurrection – an attempt to overthrow the election.

For these reasons, we, the members of the Natrona County Republican Party call for the immediate resignation of Frank Eathorne as Chairman of the Wyoming Republican Party and his replacement by the normal action of the bylaws of the State Central Committee.

The draft is as blistering critique of Eathorne, who has presided over a massive lurch to the far right of the Republican Party in Wyoming and whose has overseen the party's silencing of its largest county organizations and who has made the local party completely complicit in the effort to toss out incumbent Liz Cheney.

The fact that it was leaked suggests that some in the upper elements of the county party are trying to sideline it before it gets to a vote, probably by mustering howls of far right opposition to it.  There are some far right politicians in the GOP in the county itself, so this rise of the traditional party is not without opposition, no doubt.

Should the resolution pass, it will be a brave thing for the county committee to do.  Still, it's time that some in the GOP show that they're not in the stolen election myth camp and aren't participating in the destruction of democratic principals inside of the party itself.

On the current race, it's interesting to note that a lot of the hard right "stolen election" rhetoric has suddenly gone silent.  The January 6 committee hearings seem to be having an impact, most notably in the Hageman camp whose race is based solely on loyalty to Trump and therefore ipso facto to the concept that he didn't do anything wrong on January 6.  It's now clear that he acted either at least immorally on January 6, and perhaps seditiously.  Indeed, most likely seditiously.  And Hageman's own campaign advisor isn't having the story that the election was stolen, in contrast to Hageman, who claims not to know who won the election.

If the election wasn't stolen, and it wasn't, and if Trump acted seditiously, which it appears he did, Hageman actually has nothing to run on.  Her views don't vary from Cheney's at all on anything else.

Indeed, it'll be interesting to see if this makes long shot Democratic candidate Lynette Grey Bull viable, assuming she secures the Democratic nomination, which seems likely.  Grey Bull would lose again against Cheney, which she no doubt knows, but she has a chance against Hageman.

In 2020 Cheney took 68.56% of the vote in the general election, meaning of course that the people who now claim she's really a Democrat are just being silly.  Grey Bull took 24.58%.  Libertarian Richard Brubaker, who made it clear that he was really a Republican, took 3.75%.  Constitution Party candidate Jeff Haggit, with the Constitution Party being a far right party, took 2.92%.  If Hageman wins, it's certain that many middle of the road Republicans will reassess voting for their party in the fall. Grey Bull was a long ways from victory in 2020, but the GOP wasn't the mess then that it is now.

June 22, 2022

The Natrona County GOP Central Committee passed the resolution noted above, 48 to 35.

June 23, 2022

Wyoming's appointed Superintendent of Public Education Brian Schroeder is urging the state to cut its ties with Federal funding for school lunches based on a Federal directive requiring states to include discrimination based on gender orientation and identity as matters requiring investigation.

June 24, 2022

In a move that's likely to prove to be a mistake, the Cheney campaign is specifically advertising on how Democrats can switch to Republicans in order to vote for her in the primary.

This will reinforce the otherwise absurd claim that she's a "RINO".  Moreover, there are so few registered Democrats in Wyoming, the race would have to be neck and neck, with upset fence sitting Republicans switching over to Hageman or perhaps one of the other candidates on their own.

This would suggest that Cheney knows she's on the downside in the race right now, but that she figures she's pretty close to Hageman, and that the risk is worth it.

June 27, 2022

A debate of House candidates will occur this Thursday on PBS.

Out of safety concerns, its closed to the public and other media.

June 30, 2022

Wyoming Republican House Debate:


A fairly well done synopsis of things:



Last Prior Edition:


Recent Related Threads:


Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Frank Eathorne on January 6.

Frank Eathorne on January 6.

Well worth looking at.

This pretty much conclusively proves that Eathorne was present during the insurrection, contrary to his earlier denials.  And yet he found a reason to deny being there.

Not breaking in, mind you, but present while things were going on.

My predications are that it will make no difference whatsoever to his position in the local GOP.  And that may be the biggest story in relation to this that there is.

And so, Laramie and Natrona Counties, the two most populous ones in the state, have had their representation in the state's largest party reduced to rump status.  Contrary to at least tradition, the head of the party is taking sides on behalf of a primary challenger over a party incumbent.  The same individual has indicated that the state party doesn't necessarily feature a big tent anymore.  One longstanding conservative has been censured by his county organization.

This definitely isn't your father's GOP.  Or Reagan's.  Or Buckley's.

Update:

This story is now in the Trib, on the front page.

Saturday, March 12, 2022

Saturday, February 26, 2022

Ukraine is crying out for help and has been for some time. . .

 Forces With History #150

Biden Nominates Kentaji Brown Jackson to the United States Supreme Court

 

Jackson with Justice Breyer, whom she is nominated to replace.

She's no doubt qualified and is a sitting DC Circuit Federal Appeals Court Judge, but I'll admit I'm disappointed.  Jackson is a Harvard Law graduate, making the Ivy League grip on the court seemingly irreversible.  She's also married to another Harvard graduate, a surgeon, who is of the Boston Brahmin class.

I was hoping for a less Ivy League nominee.

She's likely to pass, however, the Senate Judiciary Committee and receive enough votes to be seated, an important consideration for any nominee is this highly polarized era.

Friday, December 31, 2021

December 31, 1921 Changing Times.


It was a dry New Years Eve. . . at least officially for Americans and most Canadians who, if they were following the law, had to ring in the arrival of 1922 with some non-besotted beverage.  I'm sure many did.

Miss Texanna Loomis, December 31, 1921.  She was a radio engineer.

And there was a lot to celebrate that year.  For Americans, the Great War had officially ended, although the fighting had obviously stopped quite some time prior.  For the many Americans with Irish ancestry, it appeared that Irish independence was about to become a de jure, rather than a de facto, matter.  Americans were moving definitively past World War One, and in a lot of ways definitively past a prior, much more rural, era and country.

Not all was well, however, as the economy was doing quite poorly.  There was hope that would soon change, with that hope being expressed in a regional fashion on the cover of the Casper Daily Tribune.


Also, on the cover of the paper was the news that the County had taken over ownership of the hospital.  It'd run the hospital until 2020, when Banner Health took over it, converting it back into a private hospital after almost a century of public ownership.

Saturday, October 30, 2021

Pandemic Part 6. The Delta Surge


 July 30, 2021

Ready or not, and probably not, the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 has entered the state and infections are rapidly rising, concentrated among those who have not received a vaccination.

The state health officer has asked for Wyomingites to mask back up indoors in areas of  moderate to high transmission, which includes Laramie and Natrona Counties.

In Colorado, certain counties have been pointed out as areas of rapidly rising infections as well, including Denver County, where the recent Major League Baseball game and a concert are now regarded as superspreader events.

As a background to all of this, it's very clear that the global population is nowhere near the "herd immunity" level which is necessary to render COVID 19 extinct.  Perhaps this isn't too surprising, given the monumental nature of the effort necessary to achieve it, but what is surprising is that the developed world hasn't achieved it and the United States is clearly lagging far behind. This, too, comes at a point in time at which it nearly looked as if success had been achieved.

In the US a strong feature of the ongoing pandemic is a refusal of a certain part of the population to receive the vaccination that prevents it, this making the disease cross over from one which lurks ready to strike anyone to one which at this point is a preventable disease. Preventable disease itself has become the hallmark of modern American medical situations, in that most of the diseases that are real killers in the US are actually ones that are preventable.

Future historians and sociologist will study this in depth to attempt to determine what happened here.  We'll leave that for the time being, but what we would note is that the culture of the pandemic has really changed.  For the vaccinated the refusal to get the vaccine is absolutely baffling.  Many of those not vaccinated cite personal freedom as the basis of their views, but personal freedoms have always yielded in the United States to public emergencies with examples simply too numerous to mention.  Given this, at this point, many public entities are simply done with allowing for personal choice and have determined to make life difficult for those not getting vaccinated, up to and including firing those who refuse to receive vaccines.  The Federal Government is an all out effort to vaccinate its servants who remain unvaccinated, and President Biden is about to order the military to be fully vaccinated, something it amazingly has not implemented yet.

While it's a grim prognostication, in my view it's too late.  Whatever the hesitancy is caused by, we're going to be in for a third wave of the pandemic.  Many of the victims this time, indeed most of them, will be vaccination hold outs.  If the US achieves herd immunity, which is unlikely, it'll be through the rapid spread of the Delta variant of the disease among that population, which would be a tragic and lethal way to achieve it.  Having said that, and seemingly unnoticed by the unvaccinated, a growing bitter resentment against them by the vaccinated is really building with the distinct view that the unvaccinated are being lethally selfish.  With that being the case, there are now open comments in some quarters about simply letting the unvaccinated go ahead and risk death without sympathy from anyone else.  There is also building support for private employers to require vaccinations of employees.

The great added problem all of this is creating is that there is now a very real risk that the disease will evolve a vaccine resistant strain, setting everything back.  If that occurs, and my guess is that this is now inevitable, all the progress to date will be lost, and we'll return to the strict restrictions, and stricter, that were only recently lifted.  There will be enormous resistance to doing so, but a disease that's now killed 600,000 Americans will be in the gate to double that death toll, potentially, and the next public health crisis that results will be at least as severe as the current one.  My guess is we're mere weeks away from such a strain emerging somewhere.

In terms of the "somewhere", there are still vast reaches of the globe were very few are vaccinated and wish to be.  This is also a massive problem. Whereas in the United States the disease is circulating among those who, for the most part, could avoid it if they wished to, in the Third World it's circulating at a largely unknown rate among those who would avoid it if they could, but can't.

As noted, this will be a source for a great amount of study in the future.  How did a country which was a scientific and medical leader in the mid 20th Century end up one in which medicine was so disregarded?  Reading about it will be fascinating for future students of human behavior and history.  Living it, however, and seeing those dying in it, is quite a bit different.

August 1, 2021

The producers of a Clifford The Big Red Dog movie have pulled its release due to the Delta variant surge.

August 2, 2021

Dr. Fauci warned of more pain and suffering ahead, but didn't foresee shutdowns on the basis that there were sufficient numbers of vaccinated people to avoid them.

Senator Barrasso argued the CDC should be sued and found liable for malpractice, and urged people to get vaccinated.

August 3, 2021

And here we have a current, sobering, look at how the globe is doing in terms of vaccination progress.

Senator Lindsay Graham reports he has a break through case of COVID 19.

As can be seen, the US, in spite of vaccine resistance, is doing pretty well. It needs to do better.  Canada, which was having problems with vaccination rates for a while, has pulled head of the pack in terms of major nations.  Not noted on this chart, some small countries and ones with very unified governmental structures have achieved 100% vaccination.  The US, given the amount of vaccine it has, could rank right up there with Canada, but the curious political season, etc., has frustrated that.  Nonetheless, the US just hit 70% initial vaccination, so it's getting there, and the recent outbreak of the Delta variant has seemed to spark an increase in first time vaccinations.

In the Third World, however, vaccination rates are a disaster due to lack of vaccine. And given that, new variants of the disease are undoubtedly evolving.

August 4, 2021

As posted on another thread, the CDC has reimposed the moratorium on evictions.

August 5, 2021

Governor Gordon announced that he will not impose a mask requirement on schools this upcoming school year, leaving any such move to local districts.

Outside perhaps of Teton County, there is no political will for such a requirement, and therefore it will not occur.

Local hospitalizations have climbed back to the rate they were at this past January.

Japan is expanding its Covid restrictions.  China is reimposing its Draconian closures on some areas within its borders.

August 11, 2021

The University of Wyoming has reinstated a mask mandate.

Hawaii has reinstated restrictions.  Oregon is imposing indoor mask requirements.

August 17, 2021

Governor Gordon has indicated Wyoming will not being intervening in COVID in any fashion in spite of the increased numbers.

While not put this way, the politics of events are such that the state simply isn't going to act no matter how bad the spread of the Delta variant becomes.  While there's a chance one or two counties might, it's only a chance.

The Governor's office itself was shut down recently due to a COVID  infection.  The question does remain on whether some agencies with a high degree of independence might act on their own, but so far there is no hint that they shall.

In contrast, a single case has sent New Zealand back into a lockdown.

August 18, 2021

Wyoming's COVID death rate returned to the level it was in February.

New Mexico has put a mask mandate in place.

Pope Francis urged the unvaccinated to get vaccinations.  This came in the form of an advertisement for the US Ad Council backing vaccines.

Given this, perhaps it should be noted that Cardinal Raymond Burke, a highly respected and conservative Catholic Bishop, has been hospitalized for COVID 19. Cardinal Burke has been a critic of the vaccination efforts for various reasons and has somewhat gone from a respected critic of Pope Francis to a slightly sidelined critic whose views on some things bordered on becoming extreme.

August 21, 2021

Vaccination rates in Wyoming are now dramatically rising. So are infections, but this seems to have gotten the message through to a lot of people on vaccination.

August 28, 2021

Teton County has imposed a mask mandate.

September 1, 2021

Hot Springs County's schools are going virtual for thirteen days due to a COVID spike.

The National Guard is assisting clinics in Billings, Montana, due to a spike there.  The Idaho National Guard has been called out in that state for the same purpose.

Anti-vaxxers shut down a mobile vaccination clinic in Georgia.

September 2, 2021

Governor Gordon indicated Wyoming will not impose a mask mandate.

As a practical matter, there simply exists no political will to do this in the state at this point in time.

On a personal note, I now know one (unvaccinated) individual who has died of the Delta variant and another (unvaccinated) person who is going to, ages 60 and 40 respectively.

September 3, 2021

30% of the patients at Casper's Wyoming Medical Center are in the hospital due to COVID 19.  Most are under 65.

The school district will require individuals out of work due to COVID to take the time from their sick leave.

September 5, 2021

The hospital in Sweetwater County opened an additional wing to handle the influx of COVID 19 patients.

September 9, 2021

President Biden has asked OSHA to mandate that employers with over 100 employees be mandated to require those employees to have COVID 19 vaccinations.  He's also signed an executive order which will require Federal contractors to have COVID 19 vaccinations.

Over 100,000,000 Americans will be covered by the orders.

Governor Gordon, probably sensing more the wind where he lives than giving expression to his own opinions, or at least I suspect, noted the following:

Governor Gordon Statement Opposing Biden Administration's Vaccine Mandates

 

CHEYENNE, Wyo. – Governor Mark Gordon has issued the following statement in response to today's announcement by the Biden Administration mandating COVID-19 vaccinations

“The Biden Administration’s announcement to mandate COVID-19 vaccinations or weekly testing for private businesses is an egregious example of big government overreach.

Our Constitution was written and fought for to protect our liberties as American citizens. This administration’s latest pronouncement demonstrates its complete disregard for the rule of law and the freedoms individuals and private companies enjoy under our Constitution. In Wyoming, we believe that government must be held in check.

I have asked the Attorney General to stand prepared to take all actions to oppose this administration’s unconstitutional overreach of executive power. It has no place in America. Not now, and not ever.”

This puts Attorney General Bridget Hill in the position of filing doomed litigation, or litgation that will be moot by the time it is taken up, but as a posturing matter, this no doubt really doesn't matter.

The Northern Arapaho Tribe, taking the opposite approach, is mandating that its employees be vaccinated.

Los Angeles' school district, the second largest in the nation, is requiring vaccinations for indivdiuals age 12 and up.

September 10, 2021

Laramie County's school district has mandated that students wear masks indoors.

September 11, 2021

France has banned unvaccinated U.S. tourists from entering the country.

The CDC released a study that the unvaccinated were 4.5 times more likely to get COVID 19 and 11 times more likely to die.

September 15, 2021

The legislature is apparently considering a special session to consider the Administration's COVID 19 mandates.

This would really be an odd exercise as the one that the legislature would be likely to be the most upset about, the OSHA entry into vaccination requirements, hasn't come into effect yet and is extremely likely to be tested in court before it does. Anything the legislature does will come up against the Supremecy Clause of the U.S. Constitution and therefore be ineffective, if it goes into effect, and put the state into a fight with the Administration where it can't win, but where it can end up spending money that it doesn't have.  It'll also serve to really fire up polarization in an area, and era, in which everything is already extremely polarized.

September 17, 2021

The University of Wyoming is extending its mask mandate through the fall.

The 2021 Wyoming Special Legislative Session.

September 21, 2021

The Pfizer accounted that its vaccination is safe for children 5 through 11 years of age.

The number of Americans who have died of COVID 19 has supassed the number who died from the 1918 Influenza, a number which must be tempered i consideration if we take into account that the country had about 1/3d of its current population at the time, meaning that the 1918 flu was still far more devestating, at least so far.

The school nurse in the Pine Bluffs school district resigned after that district's board determined to continue to allow children exposed to COVID 19 to attend school, as long as they wore masks. Citing the act and its impact on her professionally and personally, she resigned.

September 22, 2021

Governor Activates Wyoming National Guard to Provide Hospital Assistance

September 21, 2021

CHEYENNE, Wyo. – Wyoming’s hospitals have sought additional support to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic and the surge in hospitalized patients. There are approximately 200 people with COVID-19 in Wyoming hospitals today, which is near the peak number the state has seen during the pandemic. Governor Mark Gordon has activated guardsmen who have stepped forward to provide temporary assistance to hospitals throughout the state.

Governor Gordon has called approximately 95 Soldiers and Airmen to State Active Duty orders, assigned to hospital locations at 24 different sites within 17 Wyoming cities. They will serve to augment current hospital and Wyoming Department of Health staff to help ease workloads imposed upon them due to large numbers of COVID-19 hospitalizations.

“I am grateful to the members of our Wyoming National Guard for once again answering the call to provide assistance in our hospitals during this surge,” Governor Gordon said. “Our Guard members truly are Wyoming’s sword and shield, and their commitment to our state is something for which every Wyoming citizen can be thankful.”

Guard members’ responsibilities will include: assisting in environmental cleanup in hospital facilities; food and nutrition service; COVID-19 screening; managing personal protective equipment (PPE) supplies; and other support tasks. Some will also be trained to administer COVID-19 tests.

“The Delta variant has overwhelmed the medical institutions of states across this country. Our state is no different with most hospitals at or near capacity,” said Col. David Pritchett, director of the joint staff for the Wyoming National Guard. “The Soldiers and Airmen of the Wyoming National Guard are proud to jump back in to provide much needed assistance to our communities as we continue to battle the effects of COVID-19.”

The orders for guardsmen will be 14-30 day rotations, with the potential to extend beyond that, up until Dec. 31. The numbers and locations of guardsmen may change based on hospital needs.

--END--

September 24, 2021

In the reverse of the seeming norm, a lawsuit has been filed in Montana seeking to overturn a law there which probhibits employers from mandating vaccinations and masks.

October 8, 2021

120 American children have lost at least one parent due to a COVID 19 death.

October 9, 2021

Casper's ICU is full.

More Americans have died in 2021 of COVID 19 than in 2021 at this point.

A female student in Laramie was suspended for refusing to wear a mask and then arrested as she refused to leave school grounds.

News anchor Cheryl Hackett was terminated from KCWY for refusing to adhere to her employer, Gray Media's, vaccine mandate.  She is the second person in a Wyoming Gray Media outlet to be terminated for this reason in a week.

October 13, 2021



October 13, 2021

Governor Gordon Further Prepares Legal Challenge of Federal Overreach on Vaccine Mandates

 

CHEYENNE, Wyo. – Governor Mark Gordon is taking action to oppose President Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine mandates. The Governor and the Attorney General continue to prepare the State’s legal challenge to the threat of the Biden Administration’s proposed vaccine mandates, when they are finalized. It should be noted that the Biden Administration has yet to issue any specific policies that can be challenged in court.

“Four weeks ago, when the President issued his announcement regarding vaccine mandates, I immediately instructed Attorney General Hill to prepare for legal action to oppose this unconstitutional overreach,” Governor Gordon said. “Attorney General Hill has begun that mission and is continuing to strengthen alliances, improve potential arguments, and consider appropriate strategies.”

Governor Gordon noted that a joint letter from 24 attorneys general explained that the President’s edict is broad, inexact, and utilizes a rarely-used provision in Federal law that allows it to be effective immediately.

“This coalition of Attorneys General is well-prepared to fight the Biden Administration in courts when the time is right, and I am committed to using every tool available to us to oppose federal rules, regulations, and standards whenever they overreach. We are prepared to act promptly once these mandates are finally issued,” the Governor said. “Wyoming will not stand idly by to see any erosion of the constitutional rights afforded our citizens and their industries.” 

As the state prepares for its legal battle with the federal government, Governor Gordon stressed that as a conservative Republican, he continues to stand for smaller government that is closest to the people. Governor Gordon reiterated, “Government must resist the temptation to intrude in private sector interests.”

“It is neither conservative nor Republican to replace one form of tyranny with another,” he added. “Doing so is antithetical to our American form of government, even if it is for something we like. I will stand firm against unconstrained governmental overreach regardless of where or when it occurs.”

-END-

Politically Governor Gordon has nearly no choice but to take this approach, and of course he's faced with a special session of the legislature as well, something he may be trying to avoid. But the legal prospects for such a suit are small.

October 22, 2021

Russia is experiencing a record COVID surge.

More Wyomingites are presently hospitalized due to COVID 19 than at any prior point in the pandemic.  Deaths have also hit an all time weekly high. Almost all of the new victims are unvaccinated.

One in five of the prisoners in the Wyoming State Prison presently are infected with the disease.

October 24, 2021

The unvaccinated can expect to get COVID 19 every sixteen months, according to a recent study.

October 30, 2021

Wyoming has joined ten other states in a doomed effort to litigate the question of whether the Federal Government can require employees of its contractors to be vaccinated.

The rule hasn't gone into effect  It will in December.  It's unlikely this issue will be resolved by December, but when it is, it'll be resolved in favor of the Federal government.

Prior Threads:

Pandemic Part 6.









Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Casualties of the COVID Recession Part II

November 7, 2020

We start this entry off with some good news.  The unemployment rate has fallen to 6.9%

For years, 7% was regarded as statistical full employment.  So, in spite of some parts of the country reeling under the Coronavirus pandemic spiking in their region, unemployment is going down.

The ironies and oddities of this story are almost too thick to cut.  President Trump just went down in defeat in the General Election in part due to his handling of the pandemic.  While pollsters lost a lot of credit this election, it's generally been the case that going into the election it was felt that the strong economy, pre pandemic, would have carried him through the fall.  Assuming that's true, the economy did prove to be remarkably sound, as he maintained in the campaign, as it rebounded quickly, but just too late to aid him, maybe.

Additionally, part of the rebound is undoubtedly due to pandemic fatigue and that local Governors, who have been in control of individual state responses, do not have the political wills to shut anything back down.  Trump never wanted to.  That may have had a really pronounced human cost, however.

Anyhow, the economy appears to be recovering.

November 15, 2020

Guitar Center, a national musical instrument retailer, is filing for bankruptcy.

The company's debt problems have been long term and, therefore, this can't be directly tied to the pandemic.  Indeed, I'd have thought that the sale of musical instruments might have increased while people have been stuck at home.

November 17, 2020

Governor Gordon announced $500,000,000 in budget cuts. The move still leave the state in a deficit spending situation.

While almost all departments, including the University of Wyoming, received cuts, there were things that notable did not, including the Governor's clean coal program and the lawsuit regarding coal access to ports. These were probably left intact in hopes that they'd pay off in the future.

The remaining $300,000,000 deficit is attributable to K-12 education costs, which are constitutionally protected.

This deserves a separate thread, which will be posted later.

December 10, 2020

Not really directly related, but something that's related to something getting a lot use in the current era, the Federal Government launched anti trust litigation against Facebook.  48 states are also parties with the Federal Government in the action.

December 13, 2020

UCLA economists predict a gloomy economic winter followed by a roaring post vaccine spring in which the economy will go from bad to good, and remain good, for a period of years.

January 6, 2021

The price of oil hit an eleven year high following a Saudi Arabian agreement to cut their production of oil.

European stock markets climbed yesterday where as American ones fell following early indications that the Republicans had probably lost the Senate.

January 20, 2021

FedEx is cutting 6,300 jobs in Europe. The jobs are being lost as FedEx consolidates its purchase of a competitor, TNT.

January 30, 2021

Toys R US closed its last two stores in the United States.

July 22, 2021

We probably ought to start a new one of these, as we aren't in a recession anymore, but as this was the last general economic thread, we'll start here.

Ford has ceased production of its new Bronco line of 4x4s due to material shortages.

General Motors has ceased production of trucks for the same reasons.

Across the nation, at the same time, small employers of certain types are reporting that employees laid off during the pandemic are not returning to work.

July 27, 2021

Airlines are concerned about a lack of aviation fuel.  This has been caused by supply chain issues and an increased demand due to fire fighting requirements.

August 4, 2021

The CDC has reimposed a moratorium on evictions due to the pandemic.

The prior moratorium was statutorily imposed.  It's quite questionable whether or not the CDC  has the authority to unilaterally impose a moratorium.

Prior and related threads:

Subsidiarity Economics. The times more or less locally.


Casualties of the COVID Recession






Thursday, July 29, 2021

Pandemic Part 6.

 


May 13, 2021.

The best possible news, in a really existential sense:

The fully vaccinated may quit wearing masks indoors and outdoors according to the  CDC.

May 25, 2021

A Year in a Pandemic: COVID-19 in Wyoming

May 27, 2021

In surprising news, the Biden Administration is now opening up the investigation on the source of SARS-CoV-2.

Claims that the source was a Chinese lab have been there all along, but they've tended to be concentrated in certain demographics that hosted a variety of other extreme claims about the disease and were largely discounted early on.  Now, however, the Administration is joining other governments from around the world to demand greater Chinese accountability on what occurred and there's some renewed scientific suspicion that the disease source may in fact have been a Chinese laboratory.  That suspicion was heightened this past week with it was revealed that workers at the lab sought medical attention in November 2019, well before the first reported outbreaks of the disease.

The Administration actually used Anthony Fauci to first break this story prior to the CDC doing son. That was an interesting approach, and it's likely because Fauci is widely respected.  It then went more public with it shortly thereafter.  By taking this approach it's fueling the conspiracy theory fire, which it has to know, and so it no doubt has to be careful.

A few things about this.

The Administration isn't saying it is from a Chinese lab.  It's saying it doesn't know the source, and this is a potential one. That's a change in position, but it isn't an endorsement of that view.   The disease, the government is stating, may have a natural origin, we just don't know what the origin is.

If it does come from a Chinese government lab, the next question is why on earth would they be doing that?  The only logical conclusion is that they were working on a weaponized variant of the SARS virus, but if so its an atypical biological weapon, so that isn't really very clear.  No other logical explanation is immediately available, which also doesn't mean that there isn't one.

If they were working on a weaponized SARS virus, as noted, it'd be a weird weapon.  Most work on biological weapons is on diseases like Anthrax.  The reason is that the thought is that you can infect an enemy group extremely rapidly, and they die very quickly, and then the area is safe to go into.  You don't want anything that's even somewhat slow spreading as your own troops will get it and the entire thing will last for months.  Ideally, you want your enemies dead in a few hours and the spread over even quicker than that.

That's for the typical battlefield application, however.  If you are looking at a different type of weapon, a more economic or impairing one, the considerations may be different.  I.e., if you want to cripple a nations economy, or simple cripple a nation, including its fighting men, a slower rolling disease would be better.  In that scenario, you get the infection rolling just a little before you go to war.  Just long enough to get an epidemic rolling, then you strike.

That such a disease can impair an economy was proven by this pandemic, to be sure.  This wasn't during wartime, however, and that's significant as the next nearest example, the 1917 Influenza, didn't shut down anyone's war economy.  It may have played a role, however, in frustrating the 1917 German spring offensive, and it definitely took the Australian army in Europe out of the war for its last final months.

That you could do this is pretty clear.  The U.S. Navy had a huge problem with SARS-CoV-2.  And the US economy was really impacted, although frankly not as much as thought, and largely due to the obviously peacetime efforts to contain the disease, the latter factor which wouldn't exist in time of war.

That China is preparing for war with the United States isn't a secret, it's well known. That doesn't mean it will occur, although there are plenty of defense analysist that believe it's a certainty.  The reason is that the US is all that stands between China forcibly reincorporating Taiwan, which is a declared Chinese goal.  The US, moreover, also interferes with Chinese nearby marine aspirations, including ones that involve the Philippines, Japan and Vietnam.  And the US operates against Chinese interests around the globe.  China sees itself as a great power, but in the late 19th Century, early 20th Century mold, and is behaving accordingly.  It has a definite near time goal of incorporating Taiwan into itself, and hasn't ruled out military force to do it.  Indeed, it figures its necessary.  And it figures it needs to be done soon, lest Taiwan outright declare its independence while it can still be assured of US assistance should things go badly wrong.

In that scenario, a biological agent spread through unfortunate and unknowing human hosts would be an effective means of messing with an enemy.  It wouldn't defeat them, but it would distract them.  And if you can even impair one aircraft carrier sufficiently, that may be a battle winning strategy in and of itself.

Was the lab working on this?  Who the heck knows.  They may very well not have been, and odds are they were not. We just don't know. And they may have been trying to synthesize the disease in order to be able to better know it, and hence be better situated to combat all SARS variants in the future.  Communist China is simply so secretive, you can't really tell what's going on, and that's the problem.

May 29, 2021

Two Denver County Sheriff's deputies, one of whom worked in their jail, died of COVID-19 within ten days of each other.

One of the two was a die hard opponent of vaccinations, and it seems likely neither were vaccinated.  As noted, one frequently made comments in opposition to the vaccine.

June 4, 2021

Over 600,000 Americans have officially died of SARS-CoV-2 at this point.

The US is donating 25,000,000 vaccines to the US lead COVAX program that seeks to vaccinate internationally.

June 11, 2021

A bill that would prohibit businesses from requiring proof of vaccinations for the most part passed committee with only Cathy Connolly voting against it.

June 28, 2021

A new variant of the disease that surfaced first in India is rapidly advancing globally and will soon be the dominant variant.  

Sydney Australia is on hard lockdown.

July 7, 2021

The Delta variant of the disease is causing heightened concern across the country and has put the disease back in the local headlines.

The good news is that the vaccinations are effective against it, and they now are known to last much longer than at first supposed. The bad is that the new variant transmits easier, a typical evolution event for a virus, but atypically it also is deadlier. With increased summer mobility, officials in low vaccination rate states are concerned. Additionally, as part of this, low vaccination rate Wyoming has the highest death rate per capita due to COVID-19 than any state in the country.

The Delta variant has been causing havoc globally and appears set to in the United States.  South Korea, which had handled its initial outbreak very efficiently, is now experiencing a new surge.

July 12, 2021

Israel has approved a third dose of the Pfizer vaccine, and Pfizer is working on approval of a third dose in the U.S.

In new that probably ought to get more circulation, given human nature, it's now been shown that erectile dysfunction is associated with having had Covid.  Not only that, having had the disease impacts the production of sex hormones in males and females, leaving some women with symptoms of menopause and some men with much reduced testosterone.

There's been a huge amount of resistance to the vaccine in some quarters, with some people simply refusing to consider it.  We now know that up to 1/3d of those who come down with the disease are left with psychological or neurological problems, and we now also know that it contains the risk of effectively making somebody more or less biologically neutered.  A person has to wonder if getting the news out would impact vaccination rates.

July 20, 2021

Casper's Banner Medical Center (the hospital) will be making vaccination for COVID 19 a condition of employment starting in October.

July 22, 2021

The staff of the local hospital issued a distressed message that hospitalizations are reaching early pandemic infection rates once again, and urged people to get vaccinated.  Officials in Cheyenne issued statement that on the eve of Frontier Days they were concerned about the same thing.  The new infections are concentrated in the Delta variant.

July 24, 2021

The Delta variant is now the dominant variant in the state.  Infections are the highest they've been since January, when the pandemic plateaued in the U.S. The majority of those infected have not been vaccinated.

Republicans in Congress have been attempting to boost vaccination rates, but it appears the effort is having little impact.  Indeed, a statement by Mitch McConnell, if Facebook is any guide, simply resulted in the usual counters to vaccination which would suggest at this point people have stopped listening to the debate.

Assuming that the lack of vaccination does not cause a vaccine resistant strain to develop in the unvaccinated population, which is a real risk, this will ultimately have a peculiar demographic effect.  Hospitalization rates and death rates are rising, but its among a distinct demographic.  Some have poked a bit of fun at this, claiming its "Darwin at work", but there is an element of self selection at work that actually is, at this point, killing those who were convinced early on that the vaccines were a bad idea due to what really were politically motivated strains of thought.

July 29, 2021

The CDC has issued a mask rcommendation for vaccinated individuals who go into places with high transmission rates.

Prior threads:

Worried.


Pandemic, Part 5


Pandemic, Part 4