no one cared who I was until I put on the mask
Your a big guy

How are you doing, mac?
Pretty good. Work is going really well. Staying busy. Thanks for asking. How are you?

'livin the dream'
You guys are recreating every conversation I have at work.
How are those TPS reports coming?

this was me (in my head) yesterday https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N9wsjroVlu8
Right on cue, just now I heard:
person1: "Hey how's it going"
person2: "It's almost friday"
p1: "One more day, hang in there"
Pretty sure I live in the worlds most boring sitcom
person1: "Hey how's it going"
person2: "It's almost friday"
p1: "One more day, hang in there"
Pretty sure I live in the worlds most boring sitcom
Happy Friday

Have a good weekend

Article by medical student:
It's Time for the Scientific Community to Admit We Were Wrong About COVID and It Cost Lives | Opinion
https://www.newsweek.com/its-time-scien … on-1776630
Manages to say very little in a lot of text. Sweeping blame against "the experts" for alienating people, dismissing valid complaints (whatever those are, it doesn't specify) and pushing the Common Man towards conspiracy theories. Neglects to dig into the whats, whys, and whens.
I think a lot could be written along these lines, that better effort could have been put into inclusivity, accessibility. I'd agree that the blame of an unvaccinated blue collar man dying of covid can be partially laid on failures in communication strategy, but I don't accept that people were forced to get their medical opinion on covid vaccines from social media and sketchy blogs (things that more directly cost lives, taking advantage of the fact that people like to be told they're right and smart).
It's Time for the Scientific Community to Admit We Were Wrong About COVID and It Cost Lives | Opinion
https://www.newsweek.com/its-time-scien … on-1776630
Manages to say very little in a lot of text. Sweeping blame against "the experts" for alienating people, dismissing valid complaints (whatever those are, it doesn't specify) and pushing the Common Man towards conspiracy theories. Neglects to dig into the whats, whys, and whens.
I think a lot could be written along these lines, that better effort could have been put into inclusivity, accessibility. I'd agree that the blame of an unvaccinated blue collar man dying of covid can be partially laid on failures in communication strategy, but I don't accept that people were forced to get their medical opinion on covid vaccines from social media and sketchy blogs (things that more directly cost lives, taking advantage of the fact that people like to be told they're right and smart).
Survivorship and Recency bias.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Article by medical student:
It's Time for the Scientific Community to Admit We Were Wrong About COVID and It Cost Lives | Opinion
https://www.newsweek.com/its-time-scien … on-1776630
Manages to say very little in a lot of text. Sweeping blame against "the experts" for alienating people, dismissing valid complaints (whatever those are, it doesn't specify) and pushing the Common Man towards conspiracy theories. Neglects to dig into the whats, whys, and whens.
I think a lot could be written along these lines, that better effort could have been put into inclusivity, accessibility. I'd agree that the blame of an unvaccinated blue collar man dying of covid can be partially laid on failures in communication strategy, but I don't accept that people were forced to get their medical opinion on covid vaccines from social media and sketchy blogs (things that more directly cost lives, taking advantage of the fact that people like to be told they're right and smart).
Since COVID is now just a flu in the sense you get a shot for it once a year and you will be fine...people survivors are looking back on the whole thing as not a big deal. I will never forget this dude who is younger than me getting smoked by COVID.
His lungs can't be any worse than mine. 420 blaze it.


Русский военный корабль, иди на хуй!