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DeltaT13

Meteorologist
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Everything posted by DeltaT13

  1. Why because they got two snow events in April/May? I don’t think anyone in the entire northeast had any kind of noteworthy winter.
  2. Canada debt to gdp is 34% the USAs debt to gdp is somewhere near 105% This obviously shows we are straight hemorrhaging money and in a far worse place than Canada to be handing out stacks of free cash. Earning and bankruptcies are going to be an all time high the next quarter. Corporations will squirrel away any extra money. The consumers will get spooked and save money just like they did after 2008. The US is in for some massive pain. The oil market getting wrecked is icing on the cake for a huge portion of high pay blue collar jobs. We are getting very close to not being able to print our way out of a real mess when we can’t even afford interest payments.
  3. We don’t need links, it’s just the basic numbers from the past few years. Trade wars squeeze the consumer and we all saw the stories of literal mountains of soybeans sitting on the plains. We all saw the massive insane socialist bailout when tariffs rocked the agriculture section. It’s clear as crystal. You are also smarter than this. Most sides agree the trade war accomplished nothjng excepting ****ing us over.
  4. Trump raised consumer prices on Americans and decimated the farming industry. You’re smarter than this BW. Tariffs don’t work the way you or Trump think.
  5. Debt is important. There is no way to candy coat this. Spending outside your means whether a person or a country is never sustainable in the long term. I agree the house of cards is built on the US but that doesn’t mean we should encourage this shit. Good grief, I’m saying this as a die hard liberal. What in the world is happening.
  6. The Corporate income tax cuts already had us on course for the largest single year deficit before this disaster. That’s not bailing us out. Trump put the final nail in the coffin for this countries deficit issues.
  7. They are just greasing the wheels for inevitable universal income at this point. Fiscal conservatism is officially completely emphatically dead after this administration. Good lord.
  8. Quality is somewhat low but the content is pretty spot on. I’m just an Average joe but I was purchasing masks on January 23rd and considering supplies to stockpile. The info was there all there. The writing was on the wall. What was our government doing at that time? How did I magically know this would be a problem long before them?? The US response has been absolutely laughable at best. The rest of the globe hasn’t done much better but it’s ridiculous that the current admin is continually looking for someone else to blame. Just own it and start fixing it.
  9. Wow, the next few weeks are just a trainwreck for the Northeast. So cold, so wet. It would be nice if we could at least break a record for snowfall or something, at least get something out of it. I'm so tired of being cold all the time. Oops, i see there is a new thread.
  10. This is the third new coronavirus in the last 20 years. To think it would be 100 years until we deal with something like this again is pretty off base. Our intermingling as a species, efficient global transportation, and world food shortages (which create the necessity of wet markets) will certainly increase the likelihood of this becoming much more common going forward. Almost more importantly is how the value of life has changed as we evolve. Just imagine this virus a few hundred years ago. We wouldn’t even know it was new or what it is was. It may have never even spread or took hold. And the people that caught it would just get fevers and coughs and die like many other diseases. In other words, almost no reaction to it. There was no medical system to overwhelm and everyone just lived knowing you could die at anytime from any number or illnesses. (This mindset still exists in third world countries and almost everywhere until the early 20th century) In 2020 every life is treated with incredible value. We try to keep people alive at all costs all the time. The length of life is also a huge metric on overall wealth and stature in society as a whole. This in itself poses major social scruples during a pandemic. All that said, we have just painfully learned we don’t even need a truly deadly new disease to blow up the world as we know it, the fear itself does it because our economies are fragile. Just imagine if we end up with a virus that truly wipes out 10 percent of the population. The panic would be unreal and terrifying combined with an actual loss of people and important skills that would have tangible effects on all our lives. If this current virus ends up as bad as it seems in regard to length and economic destruction, we may have a whole new normal in a few years. I can imagine a global entity signed by nearly every country to continually live in a state where we can handle a pandemic without shutting down by creating a massive “moth balled” medical system that can be expanded to take on orders of magnitude more people at nearly anytime. The entire reason this pandemic exists is because the global health system simply has almost no extra overhead (which I understand from a business and cost perspective). The game may change after this all ends, could this bring global unity? Or will it hasten the next great world war?
  11. I’ll be the first to say that high winds during spring and summer don’t do much for me. I only really appreciate deep fall and winter wind storms.
  12. The high peaks of Vermont really are an amazing place. Mt Mansfield is still holding nearly 70 inches of snow heading into the first week of May. I would love to own a home high in those hills someday.
  13. The soaking rain/elevation snow storm for Sunday seems to really be trending south the last 18 hours. The lake plains are now on the verge of getting no rain which would be awesome. I really want the gardens to dry out so I can turn them. It's getting late!
  14. Wife and I made the decision a few years back to forgo having kids. It's a strange, big decision, but neither or us really had much interest and so far no regrets. Congrats on all the expectant parents in this group though!! Have 2 though, only children always seem sad they don't have siblings (this is easy for me to suggest as I don't think I could handle even having 1, haha)
  15. I agree, I think some jobs should have stayed online, mine included. I work in research and can easily avoid people if I schedule my day and work alone in my lab. But the blanket non-essential stamp just sent everyone home. Probably too extreme but half the population seems unable to follow directions so they had to just shut the whole thing down. The GIG economy is a tough one though, and thats where the big hurt has been. Restaurants, bars, ubers, its just hard to find a way around that one.
  16. Kind of apples to oranges in my opinion. Sweden is a cute little country with a very high standard or living and a very manageable population of 10 million people. The US has 33 times that amount. We have national basketball tournaments with millions of spectators, International Hockey leagues, the NBA, NFL, concerts, festivals, etc etc. All events that have massive congregations of people. We also have a general urban density in our largest cities that is orders of magnitude larger and more complex than Sweden. NY, LA, and Chicago account for almost 40 million people alone. We take in and sent out millions of international flights a year. The US is not an easy place to manage during a Pandemic.. Just the 3 week NCAA basketball tournament probably encompasses more people and more cross contact of individuals than any event ever in Sweden. If we didnt/don't shut things down, there were/are going to be some incredible hot spots where thousands of people catch this at a single event.
  17. After seeing all these protests I'm happy that we have so many eager canaries ready to fly into the coalmine. I'm going to maintain a lot of distance and shelter in place through mid to late May. If cases suddenly spike, I'll feel bad for the medical professionals, but hopefully I wont be one of the positive cases.
  18. The common cold is also the goldmine for the OTC industry. It's just bad enough to make you uncomfortable for days or even weeks yet rarely kills. The perfect virus to make a myriad or OTC medicine that simply relieve symptoms. I bet a lot of companies would go under if the common cold was ever eradicated.
  19. Well in that line of thought, we might never have a vaccine as they could never find one for the common cold, or maybe its just not important because the common cold is rarely deadly.
  20. Just guessing, but modifying an existing flu vaccine must be easier than creating an entirely new vaccine from scratch. They also probably have all the infrastructure and knowledge in place as they have been making influenza vaccines for decades.
  21. If there is one place I would feel is marginally safe it would be a beach. Between the high temps, high humidity, oppressive UV, and salt water it is the quintessential virus killer. There is no better combination of natural virus killers packaged neatly in one place. It's also very windy which quickly disperses any viral loads high enough to infect others. I think this is one reason we never saw much of an impact from the Spring Breakers who stormed the beaches in huge numbers last month.
  22. Do you think Trump should be encouraging people to take arms and rebel against their state government? Do you think encouraging states into Civil war is a good idea? The year is 2020, stop saying the word Obama.
  23. So you think trump should be tweeting things like that. Two wrongs make a right? Got it.
  24. What in the world is going on? Is he calling people to arms. Pretty reckless.
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