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  • The ZOG/Chinky Flu Cums to SouthWest Missery

    The ZOG/Chinky Flu Cums to SouthWest Missery


    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0788#post20788
    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...0788#post20788
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0788#post20788


    You just know that Kung-Flu will cum to the O-zarks, cum-cum, cum-cum!!!




    _________________________
    http://www.pastorlindstedt.org/lindstedt
    http://www.whitenationalist.org/forum

  • #2
    Parson: Declaring state of emergency is next appropriate step to protect public health

    Parson: Declaring state of emergency is next appropriate step to protect public health

    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1073#post21073
    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...1073#post21073
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1074#post21074


    (From Gov. Mike Parson)

    Today, Governor Mike Parson signed Executive Order 20-02 declaring a state of emergency in Missouri in response to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19).

    Governor Parson announced the emergency declaration in a press conference today. The following individuals were also present at the press conference:

    -Dr. Randall Williams, Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) Director

    -Bill Whitmar, President-Elect of the State Public Health Laboratories

    -Dr. Carolyn Henry, Dean of the University of Missouri College of Veterinary Medicine

    -Bob Hughes, President and CEO of the Missouri Foundation for Health

    -Jim Remillard, Acting Director of the Missouri State Emergency Management Agency

    “As Governor, I have no greater responsibility than to keep all Missourians healthy and safe,” Governor Parson said. “After further consideration, we have decided that declaring a state of emergency is the next appropriate step to protect public health.”

    The Executive Order was not made because the current healthcare system is overwhelmed or unprepared, and it is not intended to close public schools. Schools administrators should seek the guidance of local health officials when thinking about closing their schools.

    Rather, the purpose of Executive Order 20-02 is to allow more flexibility in utilizing resources and deploying them around the state where they are most appropriate. By signing this Executive Order, Governor Parson invoked the Missouri State Emergency Operations Plan.

    Executive Order 20-02 will enable Governor Parson to waive certain state laws and regulations where necessary and direct state agencies to report any unfair market practices. Declaring the state of emergency will also provide access up to a combined total of approximately $7 million in state funds beyond the federal funds Missouri expects to receive.

    “Governor Parson’s actions taken today support our public health preparations here in Missouri that we have been working on daily since January 27,” said DHSS Director Dr. Randall Williams. “This gives us a different set of resources that we will use to further our response at both the state and local level.”

    In addition to the Executive Order, the state is also taking steps to expand COVID-19 testing capabilities through coordination with the University of Missouri and Washington University laboratories.

    The Missouri State Public Health Lab has shared a positive COVID-19 sample with Washington University, which will allow its lab to create a control and conduct testing in the near future. The state is currently in the process of doing the same with the University of Missouri.

    This should increase testing capabilities in Missouri by thousands. Additionally, the Missouri State Public Health Lab will soon be receiving more tests from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), pushing its capacity to 1,600 patient tests.

    The state is also working to address concerns regarding the availability of personal protective equipment (PPE) for responders outside of healthcare. The Governor’s Office has been in communication with the Missouri Foundation for Health and will be working jointly with the organization to help identify funding gaps in services and equipment for vulnerable Missouri populations and communities.

    In addition to these efforts, the state is also in the process of reviewing federal guidance allowing for additional flexibility in health insurance coverage and unemployment benefits.

    Finally, Governor Parson believes Missouri will have the capability to deploy temporary structures in coordination with the Missouri State Emergency Management Agency and the Missouri National Guard should the need arise.

    “My administration will continue to monitor the situation and all options available to provide the necessary resources,” Governor Parson said.

    As of today, two more individuals have tested presumptive positive for COVID-19 in Missouri. One of these individuals is a St. Louis County resident. It is a domestic travel-related case, and the patient is 50-60 years of age. Additional details on the second case will be shared with the public as soon as all notifications have been made.

    The Missouri State Public Health Lab has tested a total of 94 individuals to date. These tests have resulted in 90 negatives, three presumptive positives, and one confirmed positive.

    For more information on COVID-19, visit the CDC’s website at www.cdc.gov/coronavirus and the DHSS website at www.health.mo.gov/coronavirus. You may also call the DHSS hotline at 877-435-8411 for questions regarding COVID-19 in Missouri.

    To view Executive Order 20-02, click here.






    ___666___666___666___



    The Turner Diaries RULES, The Turner Report drools

    Comment


    • #3
      Will the Current East Newton School Board Close the School on Tuesday because of the Corvid-19 “Boomer Removal” Virus?

      Will the Current East Newton School Board Close the School on Tuesday because of the Corvid-19 “Boomer Removal” Virus?


      http://www.granby-mo.xyz/blog/will-t...removal-virus/
      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...1077#post21077
      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1077#post21077


      Whenever this Corvid PLA/CIA “Boomer Removal” Virus hits like in the case of the Seattle nursing home outbreak they find out that it was dormant for a month to six weeks. So likely it is already in Granby. There won’t be classes Monday because the district can’t afford a five-day week partly because the funding is wasted on a TIF fund which is used as a slush fund for the Granby City Council.


      Tuesday starts “Spring Break” in most locations. I’m running dead last for Skrule Bored but I predict the following:


      The governor declared a state of emergency Friday March 13th but gave the option of local school boards having the option to close. The Missouri Department of Aging closed to visitation all the nursing homes unless it is a dying time for those resident. This virus will kill at least half of them when it infects the residents, but then again the average stay in a nursing home is six months or less under normal circumstances.


      The colleges and universities are closing and going on-line. So are most of the sporting events. Did anyone see the madhouse at Walmart Friday? Had more cars than Black Friday. Reminds me of the panic I seen on 9-11 at the Fast-Trip and Six-Ten as people figured out that the government wasn’t going to save them back nearly 20 years ago. Anyways,


      Now the school-age children have adequate lung capacity per body weight, and are in the best health that they will ever be in. They are what you call “a-symptomatic carriers” like Typhoid Mary. They can come down with it and be sick a little bit or be totally a-symptomatic. They will of course carry the virus home with them and kill off their grandparents and some single-mom parents. All of this is understood but the governor, a weak and corrupt man decided to shove the decision onto the local Skrule Boreds. (A former Polk County sheriff Parsons listened but never did weigh in when I instigated a debate between two candidates for Newton County Sheriff back in 2016 as to whether it was better to taser or just go ahead and shoot handcuffed prisoners. Such is the professionalism of Missouri “law enforcement”.)


      So, Monday is “No Skrule” at what I call “The Whigger Factory” in which children are turned into consuming producing animals because the East Newton Skrule Bored hasn’t the money to go five daze a weak. They let the Granby TIF district take out the funding so that the Granby City Council can have a slush fund to suppliment the ailing general fund and to buy the Styrons a new metal building to rent the Dollar General Store and to sell the old store for a “new” police station and have the natural gas users pay for it. Greater love hath no Granbyites that they will believe this crap about taxing their way to prosperity so they gave up $500,000 in taxes for the love of connected insiders, says so in the Bible or somethang like that.


      So Tuesday cums and that raises the question of what next? I predict that they will have Spring Break because they will be told that if Junior goes to skrule he will take the “Boomer Removal Virus” to Granny and Gramps & they’ll be Raptured to Cloud 666 or to that Big Walmart in the Sky (or Underneath). By the time Spring Break arrives the “Boomer Removal” Virus will have an “Oafishul Outbreak” in Granby, the stock market will be down to 12000 (or less), Senile Joe Biben will croak after naming Michelle Obama as his running [pri]mate and Granby might consider roadblocks to traffic coming in on US 60 and E & B highways. Just saying.

      ( I did ask Jacob Kelley what the governor told him along with Jim Channel and the She-Mayoress the City Clerk, but have had no response as yet and expect none.)

      The smarter solution will be to keep the teachers teaching by having them come to the school and divide the students into quarters with them having furnished computers or tablets with an wi-fi hotspot to do their lessons with. As always the smarter students will learn regardless of inputs while the idiots will learn nothing useful. The public school system is a failure and with increased poverty shall come decreased funding to pay for these failures.


      The public school system has largely been a failure because it costs so much and does so little insofar as raising a responsible younger generation. Most of the local property taxes go to the school, it doesn’t really teach most of the younger generation much of anything worth learning but in fact is used as a sort of day-care for forcing their parents to have to both work in order to live a poor life style. As this virus — which will not go away — runs its course the limitations of the current educational system shall become obvious in that those who don’t work hard while confined at home until the older weaker generation dies off won’t work hard to learn anything while at home or bussed to school. So if the level of ignorance remains the same whether the kids go to school or not, then what reason to keep on paying high taxes to maintain a failed system? Teacher’s pensions which failed during the financial collapse as their 401(k) plans becum 101(k)s then None-Oh-One k’s?


      A bunch of the old and sick will die off because of this bio-warred virus but the question is whether the schools will reopen. Probably, at least for a little while.


      I am of course running for skrule bored but cannot get an interview since telling the lie-paper that my solution if elected would be to mandate weekly head-lice and green-card inspections. That and I freaked them out at a candidates meeting a few years ago. However given that there is a current crisis as things are falling apart you need to vote for a candidate that thinks outside the box and break the glass and pull out the fire axe.


      Pastor Martin Lindstedt CJCC/AN
      Candidate for East Newton R-6 School Board

      .


      Pastor Lindstedt's Web Page
      Pastor Lindstedt's Archive Page & Christian Nationalist Forum

      Comment


      • #4
        First case of COVID-19 virus hits Jasper County

        First case of COVID-19 virus hits Jasper County

        By DEBBY WOODIN and JOE HADSALL
        news@joplinglobe.com


        https://www.joplinglobe.com/news/loc...a3a0c7e45.html
        http://christian-identity.net/forum/...0746#post20746
        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0747#post20747


        The first case of COVID-19 virus in Jasper County has surfaced.

        Tony Moehr, the Jasper County Health Department director, said his office received notice at 4:30 p.m. Friday that an international traveler had tested positive for the virus.

        Although he could not disclose the identity of the person, he said the person is in his or her 20s and lives in northern Jasper County.

        That person traveled to Europe, though Moehr did not know where in Europe. "Luckily, when that individual traveled overseas and then got back to the area, the person self-quarantined so they weren't out in public."

        The traveler returned on Monday and started having symptoms on Wednesday "and has remained isolated," Moehr said, notifying health authorities so that a test could be done. State health officials conducted the test.

        Though the person has experienced symptoms, he or she was not sick enough to be hospitalized.

        The person has had contact only with others in the household and those people also have quarantined themselves, the health director said. The contacts will be quarantined for 14 days.

        "The individual will remain in isolation a minimum of seven days, or three days after symptoms subside," Moehr said.

        "It appears with this particular case that they did things right," he said. "They knew they were potentially at risk and did self-isolate. It appears things were done correctly so that we should not have a big problem with community spread from that individual.

        Health officials will continue to monitor the individual and that person's contacts through the quarantine periods.

        Test kits on way

        Area residents have expressed concerns on social media about a lack of local testing for the virus.

        But more people will soon be tested because Joplin area private laboratories are receiving test kits, and drive-through testing will start next week, said local health care providers on Friday.

        "We have plans that will go into effect Monday for our COVID calling center and our off-site testing facility," said Paula Baker, president and CEO of Freeman Health System. She said details of those efforts will be made available on Monday.

        Local health officials will explain how people can access the calling center and the drive-thru test.

        There have been 10 people who met the criteria for testing at Freeman, Baker said. Three of those tests have been negative and the test results have not come back yet on the other seven. There were 12 people screened who did not meet the criteria to have a test, she said.

        At Mercy Hospital Joplin, about 15 people have been tested and results are still out on about a half-dozen of those, spokesman Jordan Larimore said.

        There have been no positive results so far in Joplin from the tests that have been processed, said Baker and Ryan Talken, the assistant director of the Joplin Health Department.

        Frustration

        But still there is upset in the area.

        Among the frustrated was Amanda Schwarzenberger, of Carthage, who might have been kept from getting a COVID-19 test because of a broken thermometer.

        "They said that when I get a fever of 100.4, call again," Schwarzenberger said. "Then I would go through the questionnaire again."

        Schwarzenberger said she is concerned about the number of tests available and the stringency of requirements to get one.

        Currently getting either a public or private test starts with a doctor's order, said Dan Pekarek, director of the Joplin Health Department. The tests are limited to those with coughing, shortness of breath and a fever of at least 100.4 degrees.

        But before receiving a COVID-19 test, patients must first be tested for influenza A and B.

        Recent health issues, and her husband's proximity to someone who has been traveling, have put her on alert, Schwarzenberger said. Between September and November she dealt with a number of lung issues that led to two surgeries and two biopsies. Her husband has a job in Kansas City, where he stays with his brother — who travels internationally for his job. Lately, Schwarzenberger has been working as a personal shopper for an app-based service, sending her to many stores across the region.

        At the beginning of this week, she began feeling symptomatic. She said she felt feverish, but was unable to take a reading, because her thermometer was broken. Still, she set up an appointment with her doctor.

        While a fever wasn't detected on Thursday during her appointment, the doctor completed the first step: Schwarzenberger tested negative for both flu types. That's when her doctor said she should be tested for COVID-19.

        She was given a phone number to call, but she was unable to get through. After multiple calls, she said got an answer, and was asked to answer questions required by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. One of those questions: "What is your temperature?"

        Because of the broken thermometer, however, she was unable to confirm a fever of more than 100.4. She was rejected.

        Thermometers have been tough to find in town, but her husband found one in Kansas City and is bringing it home, Schwarzenberger said.

        She has no issues with the health workers, who are doing their job, she said. But she wishes more tests were available and that a priority was given to those who had orders from their doctor.

        "Considering my history of lung issues, my doctor wanted to see me," Schwarzenberger said. "If a doctor says they want you tested, you should be tested. I wish more tests were available."

        Testing so far

        Testing has been done only in cases that met a set of criteria issued by the CDC because the test kits for the disease were not widely available the last few weeks. When they did become available, the federal government provided a limited number to the states, which distributed them to cities and counties.

        But the Joplin Health Department received only five official test kits.

        Last week, Joplin's health director, Dan Pekarek, said a set of criteria had to be met for a test to be done.

        “The protocols for testing using the state kit are fairly involved,” he said when the tests were first received. “Generally you have to have fever and signs of lower respiratory illness such as cough and/or shortness of breath. If you have traveled to one of the areas of high concern, that’s going to be a factor in the consideration. And also if you have been around someone hospitalized with respiratory illness and they don’t know why, that could qualify for one of those test kits.”

        That criteria also was established to prioritize who was tested because there was a limited supply of tests.

        "The criteria was built around capacity," Talken said. "It's anticipated that as testing availability increases the criteria will be reduced.

        "At first there was a testing issue as far as available labs. Now there is a bottleneck on the supply side for the testing kits. They are working to correct that. We have more testing than we did at the beginning and they anticipate as the supply side gets corrected, it will increase."

        Dr. Robert McNab, a board certified internal medicine physician at Freeman who is the hospital's vice president of medical education, was asked if there could be people contaminated with the virus who are as yet unknown because of the low number of test kits available so far.

        "Right now, we are having to balance out some needs,and the pinch point for us is the number of tests available," McNab said. "We have a finite supply, and we know that supply is going to increase over the weeks. It's a known issue. There are a number of companies and government resources that are going to be able to provide us with a much larger number of tests. So that supply is going to go up.

        "But that does not really help us today when the question is, what can you do with a finite amount of testing? When you only have a limited amount of tests, the right strategy is to only test the highest risk people. If I had an infinite number of tests, I would test everybody, but I don't, and so we can't. So we really need to be very careful who we test so we have those tests for people who are at the very highest risk."

        "Not having a test does not change the outcome as far as treatment goes," he said. "Not everybody needs a test. A test is still recommended for people who have the more severe type of symptoms."

        McNab said a good way to prevent becoming ill from it is to pay extra attention to hygiene.

        "When you have this virus, it gets out of your body from secretions when you sneeze, cough and to a limited extent in urine and stool."

        Another way to transmit the virus is to pick up and eat food with hands contaminated by the virus.


        All the shit unfit to print

        http://www.joplinglobe.com

        Comment


        • #5
          Newton County Sheriff addresses COVID-19 rumors

          Newton County Sheriff addresses COVID-19 rumors


          https://rturner229.blogspot.com/2020...ses-covid.html
          http://christian-identity.net/forum/...1119#post21119
          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1119#post21119


          (From the Newton County Sheriff's Office)

          I know that there are a lot of rumors and misinformation going around about the current state of affairs so I will attempt to put out new factual information as I receive it.

          Yesterday, I participated in a statewide conference call with Governor Parson. He is having these on a regular basis in order to keep everyone informed. The number of positive cases of the COVID-19 does continue to grow, including one now in Newton County.

          However only about 30 cases so far have required ICU hospitalization. The Governor’s staff is working daily to see what state regulations can be relaxed to help with the emergency.

          Please continue to follow social distancing guidelines as I believe it is helping. So far over 4 million sets of PPE (Personal Protection Equipment) has been ordered and hopefully will begin arriving soon.

          Watch for scams. There have been a lot of reports of people receiving calls offering Virus Test kits. Neither the Federal Government, nor the Missouri State Government will contact anyone asking for money.

          Unfortunately the world is full of unscrupulous people that will try to make a profit on the misery or fears of others. If you receive such a call ignore it or feel free to contact the Sheriff’s Office for guidance.

          I have received several messages requesting information about the rumor of a two-week quarantine utilizing the National Guard. This issue was addressed by both the National Sheriff’s Association and the Missouri Sheriff’s Association. The following information was put out by the MSA:

          There is a false, debunked rumor that President Trump is calling for a two-week quarantine utilizing the National Guard. This rumor is false.

          President Trump already used the Stafford Act to declare a national emergency on March 13. The Stafford Act does not allow the Federal Government to impose mandatory quarantines. T

          he Federal Government is using the Guard for trauma and response purposes. Among many opportunities the President’s national emergency declaration opens up is the ability under Article 10, to activate the National Guard at state levels.

          State level activation remains under the control of state Governors. As a last resort, President Trump could initiate a full “National” activation of the Guard under Title 32.

          If that were to happen, I am told the Guard mostly remains under control of state governors with the President retaining control to move them from state to state.

          Please feel free to contact myself or my office if you have questions or concerns.”

          -Sheriff Chris Jennings

          Posted by Randy at 5:19 PM 25 March 2020




          ___666___666___666___



          The Turner Diaries RULES, The Turner Report drools

          Comment


          • #6
            Emery questions overkill in government response to COVID-19- Only five percent of people threatened

            Emery questions overkill in government response to COVID-19- Only five percent of people threatened



            https://rturner229.blogspot.com/2020...overnment.html
            http://christian-identity.net/forum/...1124#post21124
            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1124#post21124


            (From Sen. Ed Emery, R-Lamar)

            With daily press briefings and updated COVID-19 case numbers, it seems little else has occupied the press.

            I trust all of us are paying special attention to the details of hygiene and are being particularly mindful to protect the elderly and those with health conditions from the virus.

            Nevertheless, with some saying that those of us most threatened make up possibly 5 percent of the population, I believe it is hard to deny that a more targeted response might have stalled the virus without the same devastating impact on families and businesses.

            Maybe we could have avoided a $2 trillion bailout that may turn out worse than FDR’s. At least his plan involved work. Maybe we could have opted for targeted directives instead of broad orders, many of which either seem to be a violation of jurisdiction or possibly unconstitutional.

            One thing I have long questioned is the cost/benefit of HIPPA protections, and I wonder if HIPPA has contributed significantly to the spread of the virus.

            Accurate Information is critical to limiting the spread of disease, but prohibitions on releasing medical information have worsened the opioid crisis, and are making it harder to be sure that those exposed to the coronavirus can be timely informed.

            Once again, it seems a government “solution” is producing visible and possibly damaging side effects.

            From my perspective, the general population is afraid – either afraid of catching the virus, or of infecting others. The unknown is what is most frightening, and while some may suggest we know very little about the virus, in fact, we are fairly well informed on how the virus acts and who most is at risk of infection.

            One problem with fear is that it can stimulate irrational behavior. That is why in crises, we are often told “don’t panic.” The principle behind one of Benjamin Franklin’s quotes applies: “Those who would give up essential liberty, to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.” With social distancing, limited gatherings to no more than 10 and forced business closings under government threat, it seems as if governments have moved from informing to ordering.

            In my opinion, there are two paths our society can take as we navigate these trying times: Either we realize how dependent we have become on government and reject having government direct our lives at the expense of our liberty, or we think ourselves more helpless than ever without government and submit to even more collectivist central planning.

            I hope we will chose the former path and opt for more effective, rather than more expansive government. It is for times like these that the Constitution and our adherence to it are most important.

            God doesn’t give us the spirit of fear, but of love and character, and a sound mind. We can look for those more fearful than ourselves and offer help.

            For example, we can deliver necessities to those who feel the need to stay home due to age or medical condition. We can pray for our families and communities and for those infected by the virus. We can be mindful to keep ourselves in a way that will minimize health risks to ourselves and others. We can motivate, not out of fear, but out of purpose.

            One of Ronald Reagan’s most used quotes was spoken when he was inaugurated as governor: “Freedom is a fragile thing and is never more than one generation away from extinction. It is not ours by inheritance; it must be fought for and defended constantly by each generation, for it comes only once to a people. Those who have known freedom and then lost it have never known it again.”

            Finally, Missouri’s attorney general has received calls about scams and price gouging. He has established a Consumer Protection Hotline to report such incidents directly to his office: 1-800-392-8222. You can also report incidents online at www.ago.mo.gov.



            ___666___666___666___



            The Turner Diaries RULES, The Turner Report drools

            Comment


            • #8
              Gov. Parson orders Missouri schools closed for remainder of academic year

              Gov. Parson orders Missouri schools closed for remainder of academic year


              https://www.joplinglobe.com/coronavi...nt=read%20more
              http://christian-identity.net/forum/showthread.php?p=20788#post20788[/URL]
              http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0788#post20788
              ENT]


              COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri Gov. Mike Parson has ordered all public and charter schools to remain closed through the rest of the academic year.

              Exceptions to the closure are nutrition services and child care, as previously outlined as exemptions in prior executive orders, he said.

              The order is being made in collaboration with the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education and several school superintendents from across the state, Parson said in a statement on Facebook.

              Schools should continue remote learning for their students until the end date previously set on their academic calendars, he said.

              Across the state, an additional 91,000 Missouri residents applied for unemployment last week as the economic toll from the coronavirus grew.

              The number of new unemployment claims for the week that ended Tuesday is more than eight times higher than in all of April 2019, when close to 10,700 claims were filed, according to data from the state’s labor department.

              The previous week, more than 104,000 new claims were filed.

              The state has been overwhelmed with calls about filing for unemployment and is encouraging people to file claims online.

              Nearly 238,000 people filed new unemployment benefit claims in Missouri in the first three weeks after the coronavirus crisis began hitting the economy. That’s more than 1 in 12 eligible workers.

              The state’s social services agency says food banks will start handing out 25-pound food packages this week at mobile and drive-thru sites.

              The Republican governor added during his daily briefing that he doesn’t support changing state law to allow widespread mail-in and early voting to prevent crowding at polls. He discouraged making “drastic changes out of fear.” Missouri has already held its presidential primary, but municipal elections are scheduled for June and a primary for other offices is set for August.

              Johns Hopkins University on Thursday said the state had 3,432 cases and 93 deaths. State health officials reported 3,539 cases of COVID-19 and 77 deaths as of Thursday afternoon. Missouri’s health director says the state takes time to vet each reported death before adding it to its official count.

              Dr. Frederick Echols, head of the St. Louis Health Department, issued a plea Thursday to African Americans to take precautions against the disease.

              Echols said in an editorial published in the St. Louis American, a newspaper that covers the city’s black community, that all 12 victims in St. Louis as of Wednesday were black. Blacks make up about 46% of the city’s population, according to census figures.

              For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. But Echols noted black people are already disproportionately affected by some preexisting conditions that make the coronavirus more dangerous, such as heart conditions and diabetes.

              St. Louis has not published a racial breakdown of those who have tested positive for the virus, but city officials plan to release more data this week, said mayoral spokesman Jacob Long.

              Missouri hadn’t previously released racial data about patients who become ill or die from the coronavirus because about 40% of medical providers were not reporting that information, the state health director said Wednesday.

              Data released Thursday showed about 33% of reported Missouri coronavirus patients were white, 25% were black, and the race was unknown in 36% of cases. About 47% of patients who have died were white, 18% were black and race was unknown in 31% of cases. Missouri’s population was about 83% white and 12% black based on 2010 census data.

              An AP analysis of U.S. data found that about 42% of the victims whose demographic information was publicly shared by officials were black. African Americans made up roughly 21% of the total population in the areas covered the analysis.



              [/INDENT]
              All the shit unfit to print

              http://www.joplinglobe.com

              Comment


              • #9
                UPDATED: Parson extends stay-home order to May 3, then 'back to work'

                UPDATED: Parson extends stay-home order to May 3, then 'back to work'

                By JIM SALTER | Associated Press 5 hrs ago



                https://www.joplinglobe.com/coronavi...2UJUDAGUMcaQjw
                http://christian-identity.net/forum/...1212#post21212
                http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1212#post21212


                ALLON, Mo. (AP) — Missouri Gov. Mike Parson on Thursday extended Missouri’s statewide stay-at-home order through May 3, but pledged that the next day “people are going to go back to work” so the state’s economy can begin to recover from the coronavirus shutdown.

                But most businesses won’t be reopening anytime soon in Missouri’s two urban areas. Democratic leaders of Kansas City, Jackson County, St. Louis and St. Louis County all announced Thursday that they were extending stay-at-home orders through at least mid-May.

                Parson, a Republican, said it is imperative to get businesses back in operation and Missourians working again after weeks of forced closure aimed at stemming the spread of COVID-19, the illness caused by the new coronavirus.

                “People are going to go back to work on May the fourth,” Parson said.

                Parson was among the last governors to issue a stay-at-home order. Missouri’s order began April 6 and was set to expire April 24. St. Louis and Kansas City and their suburbs, along with several other counties, initiated their own shelter-in-place orders several days before that.

                The extended orders announced by St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson and St. Louis County Executive Sam Page have no end date, but both said they’ll re-evaluate in mid-May. Orders by Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas and Jackson County Executive Frank White Jr. require residents to stay at home, with exceptions for things such as grocery and supply trips or medical visits, through May 15.

                Across the country, social isolation aimed at slowing the coronavirus has devastated the economy. Nearly 22 million Americans have sought unemployment benefits in the past month, by far the worst stretch of U.S. job losses on record. Backlash against restrictions has begun, including a protest in Michigan on Wednesday. A similar protest is planned in Jefferson City for next week.

                Parson said the stay-at-home order has been difficult, but the effort has worked: Projections now call for fewer cases and deaths than were originally feared. He said his program, which he called the “Show-Me Strong Recovery Plan,” acknowledges that work remains, including expanding testing capacity and coming up with more personal protective equipment.

                “Our re-opening efforts will be careful," Parson said. "They will be deliberate and done in phases. The timing may not look the same in every community. Our hardest hit areas like St. Louis Kansas City may take longer to fully recover. But we must be ready for a slow and steady recovery, with some sort of social distancing continued, even as we begin to reopen the economy.”

                But Krewson said during her own news conference that removing shelter-in-place restrictions runs the risk of creating a new wave of illnesses.

                “It is important for all of us right now to stay the course — continue to stay at home as much as possible,” Krewson said.

                The virus has killed 154 Missourians and the state has seen 5,142 confirmed cases, according to data from Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering, which has been tracking cases worldwide. The case tally rose by 358, or 7.5%, from Wednesday.

                More than half of the confirmed cases in Missouri, and 86 of the deaths, have occurred in St. Louis city and county.

                Most infected people develop mild or moderate coronavirus symptoms, such as fever and cough, that clear up within three weeks. But older adults and people with existing health problems are particularly susceptible to more severe illness, including pneumonia, and death.

                Officials announced the deaths of three more nursing home residents. Franklin County Presiding Commissioner Tim Brinker said two women in their 90s died after contracting the illness at Grandview Healthcare in Washington, bringing the number of victims from that nursing home to six.

                St. Charles County officials said a man in his 80s from Frontier Health & Rehabilitation has become the seventh victim from the St. Charles facility.


                .

                All the shit unfit to print

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                • #10
                  The ZOG/Chinky Flu Cums to SouthWest Missery


                  http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0788#post20788
                  http://christian-identity.net/forum/...0788#post20788
                  http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...0788#post20788


                  You just know that Kung-Flu will cum to the O-zarks, cum-cum, cum-cum!!!




                  [/QUOTE]

                  ___666___666___666___



                  The Turner Diaries RULES, The Turner Report drools

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                  • #11
                    National Guard to be brought in to help clean Grove Nursing Center

                    National Guard to be brought in to help clean Grove Nursing Center

                    13 deaths, 78 positives for COVID-19 linked to nursing home

                    By Kaylea M. Hutson-Miller news@joplinglobe.com 3 May 2020



                    https://www.joplinglobe.com/news/loc...6f1a877b6.html
                    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...1289#post21289
                    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1289#post21289


                    GROVE, Okla. — A team of specially trained Oklahoma National Guard members will help officials at a Grove nursing home where 13 people have died disinfect and deep clean the building.

                    On Thursday, members of the 10-person team will arrive at Grove Nursing Center. The long-term care and rehabilitation center has been the epicenter of coronavirus cases in Delaware County.

                    As of May 1, the center’s numbers totaled 78 cases, 50 of which were residents and 28 of which were employees.

                    Thirteen residents have died, most in the highest risk category of 65 years and older.

                    Delaware County has reported a total of 13 deaths and 90 cases. Delaware ranks sixth among Oklahoma counties in number of COVID-19 deaths, and eighth in numbers of cases, although it is not part of any of the metropolitan areas.

                    James Thompson, health planning coordinator for District 4 within the Oklahoma Department of Health, said National Guardsmen began their cleaning efforts by targeting long-term care homes with a high number of positive cases.

                    Thompson said the unit uses a spray designed to limit the spread of the virus for up to six months.

                    Eisen Shelton, Grove Nursing Home administrator, compares the cleaning process to ones completed in Georgia nursing homes. He said the National Guard unit will use deep sanitizing practices specifically in the common areas.

                    “They are helping out and just being awesome,” Shelton said. “They are doing the work like our housekeepers do but on a larger scale.”

                    Shelton said that as of Friday, the center has 29 active COVID-19 cases. While those cases are treated as positive, Shelton said not every resident or staff member is sick.

                    He also said it takes two negative tests before a person is considered a nonactive case. A retesting process is underway, which Shelton said should be completed in the next week.

                    He called the pandemic “uncharted waters” for the center, adding that his staff is working hard to combat the virus.

                    The first positive case at the center was registered in early April. A large number of the positive cases came during Easter weekend, after all staff and residents were tested on April 10.

                    Statewide testing

                    In another effort to get accurate COVID-19 information regarding long-term care and nursing homes, officials with the Oklahoma State Department of Health are beginning to test every long-term care resident and staff member in the state. The goal is to have everyone tested by the end of May using a saliva-based test.

                    As of now, Grove Nursing Center, like other long-term care/nursing homes in Oklahoma, remains closed to the public. Thompson said the closures will remain in effect as the state goes through the various phases of reopening.

                    Thompson said he hopes people will “not throw caution to the wind” and remember to limit contact, uphold social distancing and follow guidelines recommended by the centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

                    “If you aren’t doing it for yourself, do it for those who are at risk,” Thompson said, adding a caution about the upcoming Mother’s Day weekend. “Mothers can be at higher risk because of their age or health conditions/factors.”

                    Mother's Day is Sunday, May 10.

                    .


                    All the shit unfit to print

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                    • #12
                      Study says: Joplin now nation’s number one hotspot for COVID-19

                      Study says: Joplin now nation’s number one hotspot for COVID-19

                      Steve Smith



                      https://newstalkkzrg.com/2020/06/21/...KDbexsWEtRCZIE
                      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...1463#post21463
                      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1463#post21463


                      Most of the time, it’s good to hold the top position. But not always.

                      Joplin is now the nation’s number one hotspot for COVID-19 according to the Dartmouth Atlas of Healthcare Project.

                      Joplin took the top position this weekend because it ranked first for the daily growth rate of COVID cases over the last seven days.

                      The Dartmouth Atlas of Healthcare Project bases its analysis on “natural markets where residents of the United States receive their care,” and breaks the country into 306 hospital referral regions.

                      That means county case and death rates are aggregated to each of those regions. The project incorporates rates of reported COVID-19 cases (based on population), rates of reported deaths from COVID-19 (also based on population) and average growth rates in reported cases over the prior week.

                      The area under consideration, defined as the “Joplin referral area,” extends into southeast Kansas, northeast Oklahoma and as far south as the Arkansas state line.




                      ____________________________
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                      • #13
                        Tyson Foods releases results of COVID testing at Noel facility

                        Tyson Foods releases results of COVID testing at Noel facility

                        Posted: June 26, 2020 4:45 PM
                        by Chris Warner


                        https://www.koamnewsnow.com/tyson-fo...noel-facility/
                        http://christian-identity.net/forum/...1487#post21487
                        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1487#post21487


                        NOEL, Mo. – Tyson Foods has released the results of recent COVID testing at it’s Noel plant. According to the release, 1,142 team members were tested for COVID-19 between June 17th and June 19th. Of those, 291 tested positive, with 249 of those not showing any symptoms at all and without testing, would not have otherwise been identified.

                        The 291 is in addition to 80 positive cases identified by the Missouri Department of Health & Senior Services or by the their own health care providers.

                        The full release from Tyson Foods is below.

                        .

                        SPRINGDALE, Ark. – June 26, 2020 – Tyson Foods, Inc. (NYSE:TSN) today announced the results of facility-wide testing for COVID-19 at its poultry facility in Noel, Missouri, one of more than 40 U.S. locations where the company’s extensive program of prevention and testing for the coronavirus is helping to contain the risk of community spread.

                        Of the 1,142 team members who were tested onsite at the Noel facility from June 17 to June 19, 291 tested positive, of whom 249 – or more than 85% – did not show any symptoms and otherwise would not have been identified. This is in addition to 80 positive cases identified among individuals who work at the facility by the Missouri Department of Health & Senior Services or when seeking care through their own health care providers. Team members who test positive receive paid leave during the quarantine period and may return to work only when they have met the criteria established by both the CDC and Tyson.

                        Tyson believes that large-scale testing protects its team members, helps prevent the spread of COVID-19 in local communities and helps maintain a reliable food supply chain. The company is also using sophisticated predictive tools to monitor areas of the country where hotspots could emerge.

                        To date, Tyson has conducted almost 40,000 tests throughout the country, covering more than one-third of its U.S.-based team members, in one of the largest corporate-sponsored testing programs in the United States. Testing at the Noel facility was done in partnership with MATRIX MEDICAL, a leading medical clinical services company.

                        “We are pleased that Tyson was able to effectively use the ‘box-in’ strategy by conducting facility-wide testing of their Noel team members,” said Dr. Randall Williams, Director of Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services. “This approach will help protect the health of the Tyson team members and also the community at large.”

                        “Our priority and focus have been the protection of our team members and their communities. That starts with large-scale testing, but our holistic approach goes much further,” said Tom Brower, Senior Vice President of Health and Safety for Tyson Foods. “We believe it’s imperative that we share our experience addressing this pandemic because safety is not a point of competitive advantage. For example, we continue to explore additional enhancements in Personal Protective Equipment, airflow enhancements in our facilities, and improving healthcare options for our team members in the communities where we do business.”

                        Protective measures put in place at Tyson production facilities include symptom screenings for all team members before every shift, providing mandatory protective face masks to all team members, as well as a range of social distancing measures, including physical barriers between workstations and in breakrooms. Tyson has also designated more than 500 team members as social distance monitors in all its facilities and is working with team members to provide training and education, in several languages on how best to follow CDC guidelines both at work and home.

                        “Our team members do essential work, and their health and safety come first,” said Nathan McKay, Complex Manager for Tyson in Noel. “It is our job to protect our team members, and by disclosing our results we not only take the necessary precautions for our facility, but also provide the wider Noel community with the information it needs to stop the spread of the virus.”

                        About Tyson Foods

                        Tyson Foods, Inc. is one of the world’s largest food companies and a recognized leader in protein. Founded in 1935 by John W. Tyson and grown under three generations of family leadership, the company has a broad portfolio of products and brands like Tyson®, Jimmy Dean®, Hillshire Farm®, Ball Park®, Wright®, Aidells®, ibp® and State Fair®. Tyson Foods innovates continually to make protein more sustainable, tailor food for everywhere it’s available and raise the world’s expectations for how much good food can do. Headquartered in Springdale, Arkansas, the company has 141,000 team members. Through its Core Values, Tyson Foods strives to operate with integrity, create value for its shareholders, customers, communities and team members and serve as a steward of the animals, land and environment entrusted to it. Visit TYSONFOODS.COM.

                        .

                        Comment


                        • #14
                          A small Missouri city thought it had dodged the coronavirus. Now, it’s hitting home.

                          A small Missouri city thought it had dodged the coronavirus. Now, it’s hitting home.

                          By Griff Witte
                          July 4, 2020 at 5:00 a.m. CDT


                          https://www.washingtonpost.com/natio...5PRhXjtKnIii1I
                          http://christian-identity.net/forum/...1509#post21509
                          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1509#post21509


                          It seemed this spring that the pandemic sweeping America had passed Joplin by.

                          The meticulously prepared coronavirus unit at the hospital was all but deserted. The health department dutifully reported each day it had nothing new to report. The novel coronavirus was terrorizing the coasts and larger inland hubs, killing people by the thousands. But in the modest southwest Missouri city where Bonnie and Clyde once hid out from the law, it was more rumor than reality.

                          “We’re dead center in the middle of the nation,” said Joplin Mayor Ryan Stanley. “It took so long to get to us.”

                          Now that it has arrived following a rapid statewide reopening, however, it’s hitting the region with a vengeance. After starting June with no active cases in the city, Joplin entered July at the heart of one of the country’s fastest growing coronavirus hot spots. And like many places that skipped the springtime surge only to be walloped this summer, it’s fighting back with a much-diminished arsenal.

                          Missouri’s stay-at-home order is gone and unlikely to return. Tests are in short supply. The hospital is bumping against capacity as coronavirus cases pile up and doctors work their way through a backlog of non-emergency procedures.

                          Meanwhile, the one measure that medical experts say could turn the coronavirus tide — widespread use of masks — has become mired in politics. Joplin’s city council spent nearly five hours debating whether to require them last week, only to reject the proposal by a single vote.

                          In a deeply conservative region where Donald Trump won nearly 80 percent of 2016’s presidential ballots, any attempt to force people to mask up was likely to backfire, Stanley concluded. Most residents who had spoken at the meeting argued against the measure, citing infringement of their personal freedom.

                          “I’m surprised it’s as divisive as it is,” said the mayor, who personally wears masks and advocates that others do the same, but who cast the deciding vote against mandating them. “If we’re having this crazy spike in the area, don’t you think we’d want to err on the side of caution?”

                          Joplin’s struggles to contain its outbreak reflect just how difficult it may be for places that are only now experiencing the virus for the first time to reclaim control. Collectively, they have the benefit of having watched other areas to see what works and what doesn’t.

                          But they are also reckoning with a population that long ago grew weary of making sacrifices to confront an enemy that seemed to exist only in theory.

                          “There’s a little bit of the boy who cried wolf,” said Toby Teeter, president of the Joplin Chamber of Commerce. “This town shut down when there were 18 cases total. Now, there are 100 a day [in the region]. People are almost numb to it.”

                          With many of the new national outbreaks concentrated in relatively rural and conservative areas, many people are also less trusting of medical advice.

                          “Eighty percent of people here are watching one channel and it’s downplaying the epidemic,” Teeter said, referring to Fox News. “So there’s a lot of confusion.”

                          Teeter has spearheaded efforts to increase mask use among business owners and their customers. Early in the epidemic, when masks were in short supply, he helped bring 32,000 to the city and distributed them to essential businesses, such as nursing homes, where they were badly needed.

                          Lately, he’s been working on a public education campaign to raise awareness about just how effective masks can be in containing the spread of the coronavirus.

                          But he said he has encountered stiff resistance. President Trump has famously refused to wear a mask in public, and has mocked those who do. The president’s example has had a pronounced impact in Joplin, Teeter said.

                          “You go to Walmart and you might see a couple hundred people shopping and only a dozen wearing masks,” he said. “This is not Washington and it’s not New York. It’s an uphill battle to get people to mask up.”

                          For a time this spring, watching from afar as case numbers exploded in big American cities was just about the only evidence that Joplin residents had that coronavirus was real.

                          The former mining hub, home to 50,000 people and bisected by Route 66, is tucked into the corner of southwest Missouri, near the borders of Arkansas, Oklahoma and Kansas. The surrounding region is marked by thick forests, picturesque waterfalls and few people.

                          There had been a handful of early spring cases in Joplin. But rather than take off, infection rates petered out. Hospitals that had braced for an onslaught — setting aside entire areas for patients sick with coronavirus and canceling elective care — were sleepy, not swarmed.

                          “There was a month where I was thinking of mothballing the isolation unit,” said Rob McNab, the physician who directs coronavirus care at Joplin’s Freeman Hospital, one of two medical centers in town. “It seemed like the wave was gone. It had passed us by.”

                          As was true across America, much of life had come to a halt in Joplin in mid-March, with schools shut down and gatherings forbidden. So when Missouri Gov. Mike Parson (R) announced plans for a sweeping reopening of businesses as of May 4, the city was more than ready.

                          Joplin came alive. Hair salons reopened. Restaurants filled up. Kids returned to ballfields.

                          The hum of normal activity had returned. But the virus wasn’t gone.

                          The area, McNab said, had been a victim of its own success. With little evidence of a real threat, the reaction to shut everything down had seemed excessive — even if it was actually effective in warding off a first wave.

                          “The reason there was nobody in that isolation unit was because these things worked,” McNab said. But instead of appreciation, “there was a sense of complacency. People were asking: Is it just like the flu? Is it overhyped by the media? People tend to find the answers that suit their desires.”

                          The effects of people acting on those desires were soon on display in the numbers posted by local health departments. They had had little to report for months. But that changed after Memorial Day as dozens of new cases were added daily.

                          “We went from 60 cases to 1,200 in 27 days,” said Stanley, using figures that include surrounding counties.

                          Some of the biggest regional outbreaks have come at chicken processing plants outside the city. At a Tyson Foods facility in McDonald County, less than an hour’s drive from Joplin, nearly 400 workers tested positive for the coronavirus late last month.

                          The majority were asymptomatic. But the cases have contributed to the viral spread that has also hit a Joplin nursing home and is circulating in the general population even as testing kits run low. Last week, the city recorded its first two coronavirus deaths. This week, it recorded five more.

                          Meanwhile, Freeman Hospital has been filling up as patients come from within Joplin — and far beyond. McNab has had to triple the size of the coronavirus unit in recent weeks, and he knows he can’t continue to expand indefinitely with the hospital already taking on its full load of non-coronavirus patients.

                          “How far can we take this before we have to transfer patients elsewhere?” he said. “That’s a scary conversation. We’ve never been in a situation where we can’t meet the needs of the community.”

                          There are few obvious tools to beat back the surge. Parson, the governor, has given no indication that he plans to reinstate the state’s stay-at-home order. Stanley, the mayor, said the city may have to consider rolling back the reopening locally, but acknowledged that would be difficult.

                          Schools, meanwhile, are slated to reopen next month.

                          Anthony Monteleone thought that requiring masks might be a relatively low-cost way to bend the curve. Late last month, the city council member in his second term proposed an ordinance modeled on those passed in other cities, including nearby Fayetteville, Ark. He was cautiously optimistic that it would pass.

                          Instead, it went down to defeat last week following a contentious debate. Those who spoke out against it said they were exasperated by the way the virus had affected their lives and would not tolerate the government introducing more disruptions — even one as minor as a cloth facial covering when out in public.

                          “Our civil rights are being trampled,” 69-year-old Dixie Hogan told the council. “We just want to return to normal.”

                          Monteleone was stunned. Wearing a mask seemed a small price to pay given the scale of the coronavirus threat. What will happen if the numbers keep growing, and larger sacrifices are required?

                          “It’s shocking when something so simple to save lives becomes so polarized,” he said. “As a nation, I just don’t know where we went wrong.”



                          All the shit unfit to print

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                          • #15


                            http://christian-identity.net/forum/...1509#post21509
                            http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1519#post21519

                            ___666___666___666___



                            The Turner Diaries RULES, The Turner Report drools

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