The Gallup poll surveyed 1,016 U.S. adults by telephone from April 14-28. It has a margin of error of 4 percentage points.
Date has been told
The Gallup poll surveyed 1,016 U.S. adults by telephone from April 14-28. It has a margin of error of 4 percentage points.
Date has been told
The Gallup poll surveyed 1,016 U.S. adults by telephone from April 14-28. It has a margin of error of 4 percentage points.
MOE is stated
The Gallup poll surveyed 1,016 U.S. adults by telephone from April 14-28. It has a margin of error of 4 percentage points.
1016 doesn't accurately represent all of America being that's only a handful of people.
President Trump's job approval soared to 49 percent in a new Gallup poll released Thursday, making up a 6-point loss from a similar survey released just two weeks ago.
49% doesn't represent all Americans
Forty-three percent of Americans surveyed over the past few weeks hold mostly or very favorable views of Trump--down about six percent from the 49 percent high he received in mid-March
Doesn't apply to all Americans
has been hit considerably among one key demographic: white evangelical Christians--according to polling data released Thursday by the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI).
Only one demographic was surveyed
he said, adding that he shares in President Trump's desire to reopen the economy and get citizens back to work.
So this is clear that he doesn't have any concern for his citizens, and this is all about money.
Georgia's public health emergency doesn't end until May 13, and during Monday's briefing Kemp encouraged the elderly and medically vulnerable to continue sheltering-in-place until then.
April 24th is extremely early to reopen if this is still in place.
Kemp urged Georgians to continue limiting travel, limiting who travels with you, practicing social distancing, and continuing to wear masks.
So why reopen so soon?
On Friday, the governor said he favors uniform steps toward normalcy in Georgia to avoid a “hodgepodge” of varying approaches between cities and counties.
Is this decision more from an economical standpoint or because you actually care about your citizens?
Kemp had tweeted over the weekend that he participated in a conference call with other southern governors to discuss approaches to reopening their states’ economies.
No other southern state has reopened other than Florida
"Today's announcement is a small step forward," Kemp said, asking Georgians to keep helping "us continue to fight the coronavirus."
This is hurting, not helping.
In-person church services are allowed to resume immediately, although Kemp says worshipers are required to practice social distancing. He encouraged places of worship to continue holding call-in, online, and drive-in services instead.
So why include them in the reopening?
Kemp announced that gyms, barbershops, nail salons, body art shops, hair salons, bowling alleys, and massage parlors can reopen Friday, April 24.
Stay in place order expires on the 30th
Jordan also discusses how pre-title criticism that he was a great individual player but not a winner "ate at me."
A sneaky metaphor to describe how it made him feel.
I remember jumping this fence like I was Superman or something.
Superman is a figurative character with super powers.
Facebook is relying on Instagram to fuel its next wave of growth, especially as its main social network faces a slowdown.
Recent studies and my knowledge of social media is also showing Instagram is slowing down, as well.
A lack of revenue sharing was one of the main reasons top digital stars stayed away from the IGTV format, which is separate from the main Instagram feed. Within the main app, ads that look like regular posts already generate about $20 billion annually in revenue, accounting for more than a quarter of sales at owner Facebook Inc., people familiar with the matter have said.
If the ad's and IGTV shows up as regular posts, why is the revenue not the same?
Instagram plans to sell advertisements in IGTV, its home for longer videos, a bid to compete with YouTube for a larger share of the booming market for online video.
How will Instagram monetizing videos compete with youtube being that youtube is more diverse?
In addition to paid sick leave, the petition demanded hazard pay of 150% of the usual rate, child care pay and subsidies, as well as free testing for the virus.
These demands aren't unreasonable at all.
demanding the company shut the affected warehouses down for two weeks because social distancing there “is almost impossible.”
That is very true.
workers were told to stay only three feet apart — half of what the CDC recommends — as recently as March 24.
Wow.
“When I look at the operations leadership team who are making $100,000 to $150,000 a year, and they get to go home without worrying about if they’re going to get paid, that bugs me,” the Eastvale warehouse worker said. “Because we’re still here and if we go home, we don’t get paid.”
A very good and interesting point.
The Times reviewed confirmed that while Amazon is not paying workers for the missed shifts, the company is allowing them to take time off without penalty if they feel uncomfortable coming in to work.
Why not pay them for missed shifts?
A spokesperson for Kemp told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the order would allow popular beaches in Georgia, such as Tybee Island, to reopen after they had closed because of local measures aimed at limiting the community spread of COVID-19.
How is reopening a large area where alot of people like to go, an attempt at "flattening the curve"
Tybee Island Mayor Shirley Sessions previously ordered beaches in the area to be closed and was alerted to the new ordinance Friday.
The mayor did the right thing.
"This Executive Order thus lifted any local ordinances or orders that had closed or restricted access to Georgia beaches
A complete contradiction to the social distancing order
Some Georgia beaches will reopen this weekend following an executive order issued by Gov. Brian Kemp (R) that overrode local shelter-in-place mandates from a number of cities.
He mentioned order on Wednesday during press conference, officially announced on Thursday.
"How is denying medication for a chronically ill, immunocompromised patient during a pandemic improving my health?"
immunocompromised people are the main ones prone to catching COVID-19 so why not try to keep them healthy?
“For many people with lupus there are no alternatives to these medications,” the Lupus Foundation of America said in a statement on Monday, warning of shortages. “Hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine are the only methods of preventing inflammation and disease activity that can lead to pain, disability, organ damage, and other serious illness.”
Why take it away from the people who literally need it the most.
However, experts on drug testing have been skeptical of the evidence for its benefits. A frequently cited French study of 20 patients saw several drop out of the trial to instead go into intensive care.
So why is the drug being used then?
Despite thin evidence for the drug’s effectiveness against coronavirus infections, shortages of chloroquine have erupted since Trump called it a “game changer” at a White House news conference late last week.
So if the drug isn't effective like you think it is, why immediately cut the source for the people you know it works for.
"Extensive experience and research show that hydroxychloroquine builds up in the body and continues to work for an average of 40 days even after the last dose is taken. By then, we expect the drug manufacturers to have ramped up production to meet the increased demand. Until then, we are no longer refilling routine prescriptions to ensure we have adequate supply to care for our sickest patients," Gin said.
Is lupus not an illness? Does it not vary from person to person of the level of sickness?
"As we face the real possibility of running out of the drug for everybody if we don’t take steps to mitigate the shortage, Kaiser Permanente, like other health care organizations across the country, has had to take steps to control the outflow of the medication to ensure access to severely sick patients, including both COVID-19 and those with acute lupus,"
You're a multi-million dollar company, you have the resources to produce more.
"Please do not contact your physician about an exception process to get a refill, as prescriptions will not be filled even if written by your physician. Hydroxychloroquine does build up a level in the system that stays in the body for an average of 40 days even after the last dose is taken. If you do run out of medication and feel your condition is significantly worsening, please contact your doctor to discuss alternative treatments."
So if she were to die, or if her lupus pushed her to the point where she was on her death bed, would be she be able to get it then? Would it stand up to COVID-19 or is it still not important.
"I never agreed to sacrifice my health and possibly my life and cannot believe that I am being forced to do so."
Exactly my first point.
"I am already immunocompromised, and not taking this medication with likely put me into a lupus flare, making serious complications from COVID more likely," she said.
Why is lupus not being viewed as severe as COVID-19? Both are chronic illnesses so why is one more important than the other.
A 45-year-old woman with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) said she received an online message from her health care provider stating it will no longer refill her vital hydroxychloroquine prescriptions because that drug is being used to treat the "critically ill with COVID-19," the disease caused by the novel coronavirus. The letter thanked her for her "sacrifice."
The fact that they forced her to stop receiving her medicine instead of asking is extremely disrespectful.