Or else what? Seriously, or else what? What they exactly fear at this point?
All this lockdown garbage was a test and we have failed miserably. They clearly dont fear us anymore and with all these riots with the common men being too scared they will be punished for the crime of defending whats theirs, what else did you expect to happen at this point?
They said 2 weeks.
Almost a god damn year later and they still hadnt been punished for it. AT.ALL.
"They" fear that in steadily growing numbers, we no longer buy into the fear "they"'ve been shoving up our asses. We are not only not afraid, we just don't give a flying fuck what "they" say.
Like a good little BITCH, Fauci's trying to stoke that fear again. Not gonna work, you little sack of shit. Fuck you, fuck your masks. You have no credibility any more. Simply cannot and will not believe you. While we're at it, fuck CNN, too.
Added: The latest on the ChiCom Flu in the county where I live. The numbers will NEVER get down to Nazi Newsom's satisfaction. Recall that fuck.
WEEK'S CORONAVIRUS CASES SHOW 12 PERCENT DECLINE
• Salinas, Salinas Valley still keeping much of county's economy shut down
This week's countywide total of coronavirus cases declined 12 percent to 350, but the decrease, however modest, was a big improvement over last week's 26 percent increase.
The week's decrease moved Monterey County's 7-day average of new cases per 100,000 residents to 10.8 after the discouraging 12.2 average for the week ending Oct. 17. The county has to get a report card of 7.0 or lower from Gov. Gavin Newsom to be eligible to move in the next-lower tier, the
Red Tier, in the state's coronavirus shutdown scheme. Currently, our score is 8.3, based on the 314 cases we had during the week ending Oct. 10.
Once again, most of Monterey County's confirmed cases this week were in Salinas and the Salinas Valley. Of 350 new cases, Salinas and the Salinas Valley had 269. But the Monterey Peninsula's cases rose by an unusually large 60 this week, including 35 in Seaside, 11 in Marina, eight in Monterey, four in Big Sur, and one in Pacific Grove. There were no new cases in Carmel-by-the-Sea, Carmel area (93923), Carmel Valley or Pebble Beach. One case was added to the Peninsula’s “unspecified” total.
There were eight coronavirus-related fatalities during the week, according to the county health department, bringing the total to 91, which translates to a death rate of .0001959 or 195.9 per million residents. Seventeen additional people required hospitalization, and at the end of the week, CHOMP said it had two inpatients with the virus, while Natividad said it had six and SVMH reported 12.
To see the most up-to-date charts and tables from the health department, click
here. Below, you can also find the updated versions of our charts showing coronavirus infections countywide and in the Monterey Peninsula, along with the data for hospitalizations and our chart breaking down Monterey County's coronavirus cases and infection rates by zip code.