Yeah, Cook County's numbers are quite obnoxious, I hope we start to see a dip given some more encouraging vaxx numbers. My work has set up some committees to discuss "return" protocols, so I'm guessing things aren't quite imminent. However, been getting conflicting information about what it will look like in my department. One superior said some sort of hybrid remote thing would be encouraged, but another gave a dispiriting "butts in seats, every day, soon" type conversation last week that was hard to hear.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 5 May 2021 18:36 (five years ago)
I ate a full meal indoors for the first time last weekend, in Manhattan. It was a week after my second dose so not fully immunized but felt close enough, and rates are low here. Pretty full restaurant. I'd reconsider if a variant that the Pfizer vaccine wasn't good at handling was gaining ground locally, but for now it felt fine.
― Alba, Wednesday, 5 May 2021 18:38 (five years ago)
I don't want to link directly to the absolute eyesore of the NBC 5 website, but this could be interesting if they continue to target neighborhoods with high rates of hesitancy:
Chicago is launching a new concert series exclusively for residents who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19, the city announced Tuesday.The Protect Chicago Music Series will be a monthly series of events across the city as an "incentive and benefit" for Chicagoans who receive the COVID-19 vaccine, Mayor Lori Lightfoot's office said in a statement announcing the program.Attendees must have received their second of two doses or their single-dose shot at least two weeks prior to be eligible to attend that event, according to the city.Events will be ticketed and attendees must bring their Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccination card as proof of vaccination, as well as a matching photo ID, officials said.The first event will be held on May 22 in the city's Hyde Park neighborhood, with DJ Ron Trent and Duane Powell performing, officials said. Based on that date, anyone who receives their final dose of the vaccine by May 8 will be eligible to attend.Tickets can be found on Eventbrite, at vaccination sites and at will call. The city said for the first event, tickets will be made available first to people who attend a vaccination event at Apostolic Faith Church, located at 3823 S. Indiana Ave., between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. on May 8. Residents can register for a vaccination appointment here, though walk-ins will also be accepted.
The Protect Chicago Music Series will be a monthly series of events across the city as an "incentive and benefit" for Chicagoans who receive the COVID-19 vaccine, Mayor Lori Lightfoot's office said in a statement announcing the program.
Attendees must have received their second of two doses or their single-dose shot at least two weeks prior to be eligible to attend that event, according to the city.
Events will be ticketed and attendees must bring their Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccination card as proof of vaccination, as well as a matching photo ID, officials said.
The first event will be held on May 22 in the city's Hyde Park neighborhood, with DJ Ron Trent and Duane Powell performing, officials said. Based on that date, anyone who receives their final dose of the vaccine by May 8 will be eligible to attend.
Tickets can be found on Eventbrite, at vaccination sites and at will call. The city said for the first event, tickets will be made available first to people who attend a vaccination event at Apostolic Faith Church, located at 3823 S. Indiana Ave., between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. on May 8. Residents can register for a vaccination appointment here, though walk-ins will also be accepted.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 5 May 2021 19:43 (five years ago)
I generally won't go to places that don't enforce masks or mush everyone together without distancing because I assume they are terrible people and that the people going there probably didn't get vaccinated.
This is the thing. I've sat outside or in street tents with vaxxed or part-vaxxed friends a couple of times (and once in a "window" where the entire wall was absent), but seeing crowded, maskless bar patios or full restaurants is just a signal to avoid those places and people for the rest of the year.
(Outside of the city, seeing IF YOU ENTER WTHOUT A MASK WE WILL ASSUME YOU HAVE A MEDICAL CONDITION AND SHALL SAY NOTHING ABOUT IT signs on bars and restaurants without open windows, let alone outdoor seating, makes my heart ache for the sensible people who happen to live in those towns.)
― bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Wednesday, 5 May 2021 19:56 (five years ago)
my god that's a thing?
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 5 May 2021 19:57 (five years ago)
Yes indeed, saw a differently worded version of such when I stopped at a Casey's for gas last time I drove out to see my mom. Thankfully I had no reason/need to enter.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 5 May 2021 19:59 (five years ago)
on the plus side: it looks like Michigan's cases are finally leveling off.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 5 May 2021 20:00 (five years ago)
Yeah, that's been good to see.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 5 May 2021 20:04 (five years ago)
Pfizer, Biontech, Novavax, Moderna shares plunge to session lows after U.S. backs waiving patent protections on Covid vaccines https://t.co/Wq9i3OsP1j pic.twitter.com/gEPwFw4yOg— CNBC Now (@CNBCnow) May 5, 2021
You hate to see it lol
― Joe Bombin (milo z), Wednesday, 5 May 2021 20:06 (five years ago)
xpost Florida's have also declined more than 30% (!!!) in the past two weeks, despite all efforts to fuck things up indefinitely by DeSantis. It's not him, though, that deserves credit - we are doing better than the rest of the South at vaccinating (though really more around average nationally), and some counties (Seminole/Orange/etc) were upholding their own mask mandates since last summer. DeSantis just defanged their ability to do that, though, which worries me a lot, as it leaves it up to the store owners. but most of the people here in Seminole just do it anyway.
― Filibuster Poindexter (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 5 May 2021 20:12 (five years ago)
Miami-Dade and Broward business leaders, as per stories in the last couple days, have said they're keeping their mask mandates, including the big box stores.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 5 May 2021 20:17 (five years ago)
So! Several good friends, all Dems, have reverted to normal since getting jabbed between February and late March, i.e. eating indoors at restaurants. None, some of whom with serious chronic conditions pre-COVID, have gotten sick. Yet here I am starting to quietly boil in the heat of outdoor Florida restaurant seating areas because I'm scared. Aren't vaccines supposed to handle the worst-case scenarios? I mean, if you get new brakes for your car, you won't test them driving to the corner Publix: you test them on the interstate going 65 mph, then brake suddenly when you see stopped cars in front of you. Obv you avoid dangerous scenarios, but, again, that's what they're for.
I suppose this is a long-ish justification for wanting to try indoor dining soon.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, May 5, 2021 1:23 PM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
Alfred, I definitely feel you. Our friends' band is playing indoors at a local cafe owned by other friends - the first such real event since this all started. When I saw it announced, I got real pangs to go because it would be an amazing scene to see everyone.
― keto keto bonito v industry plant-based diet (PBKR), Thursday, 6 May 2021 11:33 (five years ago)
I feel like we're living an OK compromise here. Vaccine is there for anyone that wants it. Masks still mandated inside for most (all?) places, but just anecdotally some of the fear and stress seems to have dissipated (though it hasn't been particularly discernible for months, tbh). We're going to a ticketed museum entry this weekend (mask required inside). We're going to the soft reopening of a friend's restaurant next week (masks required when not dining). Stuff closed or canceled for a year (movie theaters, conventions, concerts) is creeping back in the coming months. One kid is, as of yesterday, back in school full time for the remainder of the year, the other alternates two days in-person, two days home.
I'm not particularly worried about safety or rising cases. I think we're at the stage (here, at least) where number of cases doesn't mean too much, because vaccine is there if you want it, and vaccine prevents serious illness and death (which are the scary metrics imo). I feel safe, my family and friends (all vaxxed) feel safe, and there's no reason to believe otherwise. Either the vaccines work (and there's every reason to believe and trust that they do), or they don't (and there's no reason to believe that they don't).
At this stage, I'm not even worried about the Great Unvaxxed. If they want to blow it off, that's their problem. So far, any place I've seen that's been packed with mask-free people is not a place I'd want to be, anyway; crowds and places packed with people were unpleasant well before they could get you killed. Even proof of vaccination wouldn't get me into a theatre for a sold out 7pm screening of whatever, because people are rude, gross, loud and inconsiderate in the best of circumstances. That goes for bars and the like, too. If that's really what people desperately missed, well, good for them, I guess.
Ultimately, re: restaurants, the real test of normalcy will be when everyone is comfortable enough to have the *servers* mask free. Who knows when that day will come.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 6 May 2021 12:54 (five years ago)
the real test of normalcy will be when everyone is comfortable enough to have the *servers* mask free.
*chills*
Either the vaccines work (and there's every reason to believe and trust that they do), or they don't (and there's no reason to believe that they don't).
I'm coming around to this position.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 6 May 2021 13:17 (five years ago)
Seemingly every Pret employee in London appears to have an 'exception' to the requirement to mask.
― One Of The Bad Guys (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 6 May 2021 13:48 (five years ago)
Anecdotal tales from the drive-through vaccine clinic front: they've cut down the number of days from about three a week to just two, and the daily schedules have been a little lighter as well. However, I'm still seeing people who have been eligible for a long time now (elderly, front line workers like fireman) coming in, and while granted, today was a second shot day, that still means people at the front of the line are only just now just getting to the finish line. Which implies there may be a hunk of more recently eligible people still waiting their turn, or at least just ... waiting.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 6 May 2021 17:47 (five years ago)
My wife and I are both fully vaccinated but we won’t be ready to even start going back to a more normal life until our young daughter is able to get the vaccine.
― epistantophus, Thursday, 6 May 2021 18:03 (five years ago)
^^ Agreed. It's a tremendous relief to have both of us with both doses and about a week from being fully vaxxed, but other than feeling less stress when we shop or around other people, our routines aren't going to change all that much until cases drop significantly further, or our son gets vaccinated.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 6 May 2021 18:12 (five years ago)
I’ve eaten inside a couple of restaurants but it’s going to be a while before I feel comfortable inside a bar I think. No physical fear, just learning how to be around strangers in tight confines again.
― Joe Bombin (milo z), Thursday, 6 May 2021 18:15 (five years ago)
I feel like my body doesn't fit in my body anymore.
― mark e. smith-moon (f. hazel), Thursday, 6 May 2021 18:21 (five years ago)
I've sat at a restaurant bar if it's outside (in Miami there are plenty) or, last week, at a restaurant whose bar is by open doors and windows and uncrowded at lunch. I'm not ready to go to a free-standing bar yet. Just last night a careful friend posted photos from inside a newly opened gay bar on the beach; the combination of masked and unmasked patrons in a tight space mingling gave me the willies.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 6 May 2021 18:21 (five years ago)
I went to a bar last night to play music. Even outside and mostly masked, it felt weird. I'm fully vaccinated (and so are my bandmates) but it's still odd.
So much of this seems to be about modeling and courtesy. A vaccinated person who still wears one or two masks - even when outside - is simply signaling care, and willingness to be inconvenienced for the safety of, others.
― Triumph of the Willa Cather (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 6 May 2021 18:24 (five years ago)
I double mask and have gotten bemused "Why? You're fully jabbed" from relatives.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 6 May 2021 18:25 (five years ago)
Ha, I was going to ask if those of you that were fully vaccinated are still double masking. For the near future, I plan to still do it when I am in a shop or store.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 6 May 2021 18:31 (five years ago)
Lots of people on the right are screeching about how Biden still double-masks even outdoors.
I see it as "if I can do it, so can you" and "I'm not exempt."
― Triumph of the Willa Cather (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 6 May 2021 18:34 (five years ago)
i still wear mine, but it's habit by now. I barely notice
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Thursday, 6 May 2021 18:36 (five years ago)
Lots of caveats, of course, but:
Public health experts remain cautious, but said that while they still expect significant local and regional surges in the coming weeks, they do not think they will be as widespread or reach past peaks.
“We’re clearly turning the corner,” said Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.
Across the country, the outlook for the pandemic has indeed improved, putting the United States in its best position against the virus yet. The nation is recording about 49,000 new cases a day, the lowest number since early October, and hospitalizations have plateaued at around 40,000, a similar level as the early fall. Nationwide, deaths are hovering around 700 a day, down from a peak of more than 3,000 in January.
In the past, lulls in the pandemic were short-lived, giving way to the surge across the Sun Belt last summer, and the painful outbreak that stretched across the United States this winter.
But now, there is one crucial difference: More than half of American adults — 148 million people — have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, perhaps the biggest reason experts are optimistic that the improved outlook may last. Cases, hospitalizations and deaths have also fallen at a time when the weather is getting warmer, which, in many places, will allow people to spend more time outdoors, where the virus spreads less easily.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 6 May 2021 18:38 (five years ago)
the good thing is that when cases did go up for about a month, after the 'burn-in' month or so (since it's a trailing statistic), deaths didn't increase in tandem. i'm hoping this means they'll decrease in about 2-3 weeks .
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Thursday, 6 May 2021 19:08 (five years ago)
My wife has a half-vaxxed co-worker whose father was refusing to get vaccinated, so the co-worker flew down to Florida to try and convince him. She not only failed but caught covid on the trip.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 6 May 2021 23:37 (five years ago)
Oops
― Clara Lemlich stan account (silby), Thursday, 6 May 2021 23:40 (five years ago)
The nation is recording about 49,000 new cases a day
I guess? this is good, or better.. but it still sounds bad
― Andy the Grasshopper, Thursday, 6 May 2021 23:44 (five years ago)
It IS too high to be comfortable, but was 71,000 a day three weeks ago. Decreases are usually a gradual thing, but a decrease like this is promising, as we were going the other way not that long ago and suggests the vaccinating is starting to bend things a little.
Governors saying COOL, NO MORE NEED TO WEAR MASKS was the wrong response entirely.
Vaccination is definitely slowing but we just hit 45% of the population with at least 1 shot. 50% nearby.
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Thursday, 6 May 2021 23:55 (five years ago)
Also looks like the number of cases is going to drop more this week, as the 49,000 average included last Thursday and Friday which both had nearly 60,000 cases, and today, we're finishing somewhat around 45,000.
I pay way too much attention to this shit lately
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Friday, 7 May 2021 00:00 (five years ago)
https://thenib.com/pandemic-archive/
http://thenib.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/A-Chapin-1200x1461.jpg
― Draymond is "Mr Dumpy" (forksclovetofu), Friday, 7 May 2021 14:23 (five years ago)
Fascinated that the artist felt necessary to write in “voices from above” with an arrow to make this cartoon legible to the audience
― Clara Lemlich stan account (silby), Friday, 7 May 2021 16:11 (five years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L7fLvmi1hFs
― Draymond is "Mr Dumpy" (forksclovetofu), Friday, 7 May 2021 19:34 (five years ago)
We're all gonna fuckin' die.
*Grumbles in Lizardman* pic.twitter.com/tjvfHr6Kkn— Tie Crimes (@TieCrimes) May 8, 2021
― but also fuck you (unperson), Saturday, 8 May 2021 22:10 (five years ago)
Welp, that's a wholly irrational covid fear, so this must be the thread for it. Nice bizzaro-world touch there about 'the genetic material being shed from you', because that's almost the whole of what the real virus is. You know, the one that kills people.
― sharpening the contraindications (Aimless), Saturday, 8 May 2021 23:09 (five years ago)
Honestly, they are doing us all a service
― Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Saturday, 8 May 2021 23:41 (five years ago)
If I have a friend with that note on their door, two hours later I have a friend with a house on fire
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Sunday, 9 May 2021 00:23 (five years ago)
Can you break down those 2hrs schedule wise?
― Clara Lemlich stan account (silby), Sunday, 9 May 2021 00:24 (five years ago)
― Clara Lemlich stan account (silby), Sunday, May 9, 2021 10:24 AM (two hours ago)
brace yrselves folks
― bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Sunday, 9 May 2021 02:45 (five years ago)
00:00 - find gasoline canister00:15 - find matches00:30 - just do it and be a legend, man00:45 - ask neighbor if he feels 'protected' from the vaccinated now?
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Sunday, 9 May 2021 03:31 (five years ago)
Ahead of schedule, nice work.
― Clara Lemlich stan account (silby), Sunday, 9 May 2021 04:01 (five years ago)
Just heard about someone else quaking in terror from the vaccine shedding thing, so I guess it's a new conspiracy theory whirling around the idiotnet.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaccine_shedding
Vaccine shedding is a term used for the release of virus following administration of a live-virus vaccine. Shedding is a popular anti-vaccination trope,[1][2][3] but, with the exception of the oral polio vaccine (OPV) in the 1950s, there have been few documented cases of vaccine-strain virus infecting contacts of a vaccinated person.[4] Viral shedding is part of the normal mechanism of virus transmission.[5]Shedding is impossible with killed vaccines, RNA vaccines or those made using only isolated proteins (most vaccines fall into one of these two classes), but a small number of vaccines contain live attenuated virus which can theoretically infect others. Not all pathogens are shed; shedding does not equal transmission; and transmission does not always cause disease.
Shedding is impossible with killed vaccines, RNA vaccines or those made using only isolated proteins (most vaccines fall into one of these two classes), but a small number of vaccines contain live attenuated virus which can theoretically infect others. Not all pathogens are shed; shedding does not equal transmission; and transmission does not always cause disease.
― I'm not eating that foreign muck *pulls face* (Matt #2), Sunday, 9 May 2021 09:01 (five years ago)
weren't there some cases of something being picked up by parents changing the nappies of their recently injected children? i think that was polio as well.
(yeah, Ireland in 2001 and others)
― koogs, Sunday, 9 May 2021 10:22 (five years ago)
Got another text yesterday asking if i wanted a first shot jab . Came from the same medical centre taht rang me at the start of the week to see if I wanted to take an unused jab appointment and who I told I'd had the jab a month earlier.So what is happening with th edatabase. Surely they would want to keep a tab on who they had already given a jab to or at least who had already had one.
Looks like they have expanded on who is giving jabs now. I think they're not all being done out in a place that one needs public transport to get to from town which seems like a dodgy idea in the first place. & people are now getting jabs in their dr's surgery. My ex has said she is on hold for one so needs to hang around near the dr's office next week on a couple of days.
Had somebody else saying they had heard taht teh 12 week interval wasn't actually necessary but had to do with how much of a supply the country had. Everything I've seen refers to this 12 week interval between jabs. So do wonder if I have missed hearing different. & the 2 jab ofers since do seem to rely on it being a first jab.JUst would hope that they had better organisation of who had and hadn't been vaccinated. Would have thought that was something necessary for this being fully effective or is the reaction of anti maskers and anti vaccers so built into the system that they know there are inevitably going to be gaps. Still doesn't seem like the best way to keep tabs on the situation.
― Stevolende, Sunday, 9 May 2021 11:31 (five years ago)
I thought the vaccine shedding conspiracy theory was related to the menstrual cycle disruption conspiracy theory? I suppose in the end if someone really doesn't want the vaccine they can make up any number of stupid reasons. I did see someone make a joke, following the bust of the that North Carolina bar selling fake vaccine cards, at the expense of those willing to pay for a forgery when the real thing is essentially free. That kind of sums things up pretty neatly.
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 9 May 2021 12:13 (five years ago)
I had a surprisingly strong anxiety attack over the weekend, when I was unexpectedly stuck inside a restaurant to pick up dinner. I'm only a few days away (now) from being fully vaxxed up, but I guess I'm not ready for crowded situations just yet.
Short version, was supposed to do curbside pickup for a Mother's Day meal requested by my wife, but the place got absolutely slammed and there were over thirty cars waiting for pick-up. Called a few times and got hung up on every time, so I double-masked and went inside to grab the food. They were clearly unprepared for everything - there was a line of like 15-20 waiting for pick up and a separate line of more than 30-35 for walk-in orders, plus they had 6 or 7 tables with people indoor dining. Our food ended up being over half an hour late, I was stuck inside waiting for more than 20 minutes. They were behind on everything, so they just kept shunting all the people waiting to the same area and it was impossible to distance. You had to stay inside to hear your name called for pick up, they weren't willing to call on the phone due to how busy they were. Maybe 35-40% of the people were unmasked, either indoor diners not wearing them at all or dicknosers and chinstrappers waiting for their food. It was just the most uncomfortable I've been inside throughout basically all of the pandemic.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 10 May 2021 15:57 (five years ago)
That's going to be more and more of a phenomenon. I've reached the point of thinking, "Well, if I'm stuck in a situation like this, that's why we got jabbed."
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 10 May 2021 16:00 (five years ago)