Quote:
Originally Posted by Chico23231
Lol…you can’t rewrite history Punch. Florida vaccine roll out plan and execution was outstanding. They have the highest numbers of elderly living in the state which as we know and early on…these were the most vulnerable to the disease. They chose to prioritize them first…the competent decision. Look at retards in New York and other northern states who moved covid patients into nursing homes. Full fucking retards. Florida rollout per cap was always like top 5 meaning they were getting shots into arms faster than most states
Their hospitals were never…never overwhelmed unlike California and New York.
New Jersey had the highest number per cap of death throughout the pandemic…I don’t know if that is still the case but they lead all states for most the time
The media looked to smear Ron in Florida simply bc he is the republican…we know that. It’s crystal clear to anyone who isn’t a full fledged brainworm jackass
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40% of all the new case's are in three states wanna guess who they are? Texas, Florida and Missouri . Stop with the BS chico.
https://news.yahoo.com/florida-misso...172032337.html
Alexander Nazaryan
Alexander Nazaryan·National Correspondent
Thu, July 22, 2021, 1:20 PM·3 min read
In this article:
Coronavirus
WASHINGTON — Just three states are now driving the pandemic in the United States, as the divide between vaccinated and unvaccinated regions of the country becomes ever more stark, as the more transmissible Delta variant of the coronavirus spreads.
Forty percent of all new cases this week have been recorded in Florida, Texas and Missouri, White House pandemic response coordinator Jeff Zients revealed at a press briefing Thursday.
Florida alone accounts for 20 percent of all new cases nationally, Zients pointed out, a trend that has stretched into its second week.
Zients added that “virtually all” hospitalizations and deaths — a full 97 percent — are among unvaccinated people. “The threat is now predominantly only to the unvaccinated,” he said. A few vaccinated people do experience so-called breakthrough infections, but they tend to experience only mild COVID-19 illness, or no illness at all.