No I actually destroyed you with my answer and you know it cause everything I said is true. You been hornswaggled duck admit it.
I can dance better than most blacks and in my day could hold my own with blacks my size in basketball and football. The myth that blacks dance better than whites is just that a myth. They are in general better athletes for sure and I marvel at their running and jumping abilities. Other than that we are all equal.
We are going to Navarre first week of August. Shhhhhh ... we don’t want other people to find out about it. LOL
When I saw your question didnt even think about the answer just started typing it was that easy. You stepped into caca with that question duck. Read it again duck it's a thing of beauty. It was a thing of beauty duck. Say it with me duck. You know you loved it. FUCK FAUCI, BLM, ANTIFA AND ALL DEMOCRATS! Oh and buy Goya beans
Is this fake news? https://apple.news/A2jSntmwHSZON1YcEQjQlww Coronavirus hospitalizations in California are at an all-time high. Doctors and nurses at some hospitals say their long-feared nightmare has arrived. Statewide, the number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 has increased nearly 50% over the last two weeks and now sits at a record high. The earlier peak of 3,497 hospitalized patients in California on April 29 was surpassed June 20, and the number has continued to climb every day since then. On Saturday, 6,322 people were hospitalized with COVID-19 in California. Health officials have linked the surge to an increase in transmission of the coronavirus that began in late May, as some counties began reopening businesses, thousands gathered in large protests and some people, tired of staying home, met up with family and friends. The growth in hospitalizations has prompted a rollback of reopenings, but the benefits have yet to be seen in the case numbers. Dr. Stephanie Loe, an emergency room physician with the Riverside University Health System, flew to New York in the spring to help treat COVID-19 patients when the surge didn't materialize in California. At the time, only a few coronavirus patients were in her ER at Riverside, and the numbers of patients with traumas like gunshot wounds and injuries from car accidents were lower than usual, probably because of the stay-at-home orders. Many people also seemed to be avoiding the ER for treatment for strokes and heart attacks. Now, those usual ER patients are filing in again, as are large numbers of COVID-19 patients, pushing the hospital to its capacity, she said. Loe said ER doctors are accustomed to an extremely busy shift now and again, "but right now it's consistently bad." “Every day in the last two weeks has been, if not steady, consistently getting worse," she said. The increase in coronavirus cases in California has prompted hospital leaders to kick into high gear and prepare for a surge, said Carmela Coyle, head of the California Hospital Assn. They are drafting plans to shift patients between hospitals if needed, bolstering testing supplies, training staff to treat COVID-19 patients as well as "looking at every nook and cranny within California's hospitals to see if there is more space," Coyle said at a news conference last week. "California hospitals have been and continue to be ready to deal with the COVID crisis," she said. Many healthcare workers say that even if hospitals can find space to put beds, staffing remains a bottleneck, one that could become even more restrictive if nurses begin falling sick from the virus. Some nurses say they believe that will happen because of inadequate protective gear. Anne Caputo-Pearl, a nurse at California Hospital Medical Center in downtown Los Angeles, noted that before the pandemic, N95 masks were worn when a nurse entered a patient room, and then immediately disposed of. Now, staffers are wearing a single N95 mask per day, or even per week, she said. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sanctioned the shift in policy early in the pandemic amid a nationwide shortage of protective equipment. That has left many healthcare workers feeling unsafe at work, even if their gear technically meets federal standards. "Anyone who can read can look on the box and see these are all meant to be single-use items," Caputo-Pearl said. "Everybody knows what it means to be a nurse in the hospital, but nobody signed up to be sacrificed on the altar of this pandemic." Fear and panic within hospitals has subsided since March and given way to weariness, healthcare workers say. Briggs, the Bakersfield nurse, said the recent surge has forced ICU nurses who are typically assigned to one patient to watch over two. In a recent week, she worked five 12-hour shifts without a single break, she said. Briggs, who said this moment was unlike anything in her 30-year career, described the added toll of caring for patients who are so sick. She has recently seen people admitted to the ICU, including some in their 20s, suffering from COVID-19 and experiencing organ failure, with their kidneys, livers or hearts shutting down. Staff morale is low when it feels like few patients ever leave the ICU, she said. Plus, nurses serve as go-betweens for patients and their loved ones because visitors aren't allowed in hospitals due to the pandemic. “We’re the sole contact between families and the patients, and we’re trying to provide emotional support to both," Briggs said. "Who’s giving us the emotional support we need?" Many healthcare workers said they felt frustrated by seeing people leave their homes without masks and not taking the virus seriously. The dire consequences of their actions, they noted, are playing out on their hospital wards. At Desert Valley Hospital in Victorville, physicians are treating more COVID-19 patients than ever but are short on remdesivir, a medicine used to improve patient outcomes, said Dr. Imran Siddiqui. Many hospitals reported not having enough of the drug and being forced to ration it, choosing which patients receive it and which don't. Siddiqui said he has heard other hospitals don't have enough oxygen tanks or other machines for breathing treatments. Many are struggling with staffers falling ill, often not at the hospital but in their communities as case numbers soar, he said. "It's worse than the first time," he said. "It’s just spreading like wildfire and the hospitals are getting slammed." CALIFORNIA With coronavirus patients filling up Inland Empire hospitals, nurses are desperate for relief However, many healthcare workers reported that it seems that survival rates for patients are improving, though there is not yet clear data. Physicians have some medicines that can help and have learned that delaying when a patient goes on a ventilator can actually improve their chance of survival. Siddiqui said doctors have also realized that many patients were dying of blood clots, so they now are quickly prescribing blood thinners to COVID-19 patients. These improvements, in addition to a younger demographic falling sick, could contribute to death rates in California remaining relatively stable despite the recent surge in hospitalizations, he said. "At the same time, it's too early to tell," he said. "I think in two weeks we'll know." In Ventura County, the number of people hospitalized with the virus has quadrupled since early June. That surge has been felt at Los Robles Regional Medical Center in Thousand Oaks, though there remains ample capacity, said Dr. Gabriella Sherman, the hospital's chief medical officer. But she said she is watching the numbers carefully as conditions shift, often unpredictably. "It is something that we know would change overnight," she said.
Don't no if it's fake or not. What I do know is you are a fake American. You are on the wrong side and history will expose that you were when we look back at your actions. DEMOCRATS are not proud of America or even like America they are in fact the enemy of America and you are smack dab there with them.