It is rural American cities that are running out of ICU beds not major cities.
ekolman
metricvu.aha.org
Can’t get into a healthcare dyck measuring contest without getting doxxed. Speaking of which has it occurred to you you making your political stance around this so obvious that those contacts aren’t giving you the whole story and are just placating you to enjoy visiting with you instead of getting into a political fight with you? Many decided it was best to shut up about it when protesters started going after healthcare officials and their families at the homes.
Longyac--
Sincerely-- I want you to read this and tell me what you think.
Remember as kids when we would see faces of missing kids on milk cartons?
(For you super young dudes, at school you'd get milk with your tray lunch. There would be different photos of kids printed on the carton that had been kidnapped)
Now, back then, it seemed like a lot of kids had been kidnapped. But today, it seems like WAY more are kidnapped. Why? Because the media scares the living sh!t out of us with it every time a kid goes missing.
The reality is, in 1984, and I'm quoting now-- "By 1984, it was between 459,000 and 751,000." <<<<----- in a year. Kids that had allegedly been kidnapped or reported kidnapped. Now, that is a lot.
But check this out--- "Fewer than 350 people under the age of 21 have been abducted by strangers in the United States per year between 2010–2017.
[5] " That's straight from the DOJ website.
So it seems like more kids are being kidnapped now because the media drowns you in it. Look around at the insane precautions parents take to protect their kids when in REALITY, 85% of the time a kid goes missing, it's a parent that does it.
Being kidnapped by a stranger is an outlier. Just like people being shipped to other hospitals because theirs is "full".
Does that make sense my man?