What's the White House's plan, anyway?
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wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 22:15 last edited by
Does anyone know?
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wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 22:17 last edited by
@jon-nyc I assume you're talking about opening up the economy.
In another thread, Jolly commented that at least half a dozen governors are talking about easing restrictions.
Whose responsibility is it? State governors or the federal government?
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wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 22:18 last edited by
Currently being formulated.
I think the state of New York is ahead of the White House.
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@jon-nyc I assume you're talking about opening up the economy.
In another thread, Jolly commented that at least half a dozen governors are talking about easing restrictions.
Whose responsibility is it? State governors or the federal government?
wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 22:19 last edited by@George-K said in What's the White House's plan, anyway?:
@jon-nyc I assume you're talking about opening up the economy.
In another thread, Jolly commented that at least half a dozen governors are talking about easing restrictions.
Whose responsibility is it? State governors or the federal government?
The Feds can advise. The Governors have the power, just as they have the lockdown power.
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wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 22:20 last edited by
WOuldn't you have thought the CDC would have some sort of plan in existence, or at least the outline of one? I mean, not the capacity to execute it necessarily, but wouldn't you think they've 'war gamed' this stuff at some point?
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WOuldn't you have thought the CDC would have some sort of plan in existence, or at least the outline of one? I mean, not the capacity to execute it necessarily, but wouldn't you think they've 'war gamed' this stuff at some point?
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WOuldn't you have thought the CDC would have some sort of plan in existence, or at least the outline of one? I mean, not the capacity to execute it necessarily, but wouldn't you think they've 'war gamed' this stuff at some point?
wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 22:29 last edited by@jon-nyc said in What's the White House's plan, anyway?:
WOuldn't you have thought the CDC would have some sort of plan in existence, or at least the outline of one? I mean, not the capacity to execute it necessarily, but wouldn't you think they've 'war gamed' this stuff at some point?
Knowing the CDC, maybe not.
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wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 22:38 last edited by
To be fair, we could have did ask that question three weeks ago and let’s look at where we are today versus what people where saying. We should at least do a gap analysis so we can have more confidence against the new dire predictions of not knowing what the problem is, how to mitigate and what to do.
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wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 22:40 last edited by
I don't quite understand your post.
'Hammer and Dance' was out maybe 2 weeks ago? Hard to tell in Covid time.
One presumes that was something like received wisdom in epidemiology circles, and wasn't invented on the fly.
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WOuldn't you have thought the CDC would have some sort of plan in existence, or at least the outline of one? I mean, not the capacity to execute it necessarily, but wouldn't you think they've 'war gamed' this stuff at some point?
wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 22:49 last edited byThe outlines of the plan are out there all over the place in pieces. I believe we will see something like an eight point plan, we’ve already started talking about elements in other threads. I suspect they won’t release until finalized which is smart.
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wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 23:01 last edited by Jolly
I suspect China has tightened up security at their bioweapons lab and as soon as we get past this current mess, we may not have another major pandemic for several decades.
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@George-K said in What's the White House's plan, anyway?:
@jon-nyc I assume you're talking about opening up the economy.
In another thread, Jolly commented that at least half a dozen governors are talking about easing restrictions.
Whose responsibility is it? State governors or the federal government?
The Feds can advise. The Governors have the power, just as they have the lockdown power.
wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 23:14 last edited by@Jolly said in What's the White House's plan, anyway?:
The Feds can advise. The Governors have the power, just as they have the lockdown power.
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WOuldn't you have thought the CDC would have some sort of plan in existence, or at least the outline of one? I mean, not the capacity to execute it necessarily, but wouldn't you think they've 'war gamed' this stuff at some point?
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wrote on 13 Apr 2020, 23:20 last edited by Copper
Yes, Mr. Trump has been saying it is up to him
He has his emergency
The states have their emergencies
They each want their own toy
I'm just happy they are talking about it, that will lead to action eventually
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wrote on 14 Apr 2020, 00:05 last edited by
Jon, the plan? My gut is it’ll be a “we are going to follow the advice of experts and wait” delay tactic until a few states naturally ease restrictions and once that becomes palatable, Trump will endorse it and claim credit.
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@Jolly said in What's the White House's plan, anyway?:
The Feds can advise. The Governors have the power, just as they have the lockdown power.
wrote on 14 Apr 2020, 00:11 last edited by@jon-nyc said in What's the White House's plan, anyway?:
@Jolly said in What's the White House's plan, anyway?:
The Feds can advise. The Governors have the power, just as they have the lockdown power.
With all due respect to President Trump, I think I'll wait and see what the MA Governor and my company management have to say.
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@Jolly said in What's the White House's plan, anyway?:
The Feds can advise. The Governors have the power, just as they have the lockdown power.
wrote on 14 Apr 2020, 00:38 last edited by Jolly@jon-nyc said in What's the White House's plan, anyway?:
@Jolly said in What's the White House's plan, anyway?:
The Feds can advise. The Governors have the power, just as they have the lockdown power.
Mr. Trump is wrong. He can advise, he cannot compel.
Of course, he owns some mighty big sticks and carrots.
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wrote on 14 Apr 2020, 00:54 last edited by
That might have been his most boneheaded tweet yet. specially after putting a lot of responsibility on governors to get their own PPE. Very, very bad move and it will come back on him n November.
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wrote on 14 Apr 2020, 01:36 last edited by
He really is his own worst enemy. His opponents would be better off gently tweaking him like this, and letting him go off on a tear and making himself look insecure, than attacking full frontal, which is what he enjoys.
It's a bit like those family meals where you see if you can get certain relatives to go off an a rant by just dropping a couple of words into the conversation about national service, or The Empire or something.
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He really is his own worst enemy. His opponents would be better off gently tweaking him like this, and letting him go off on a tear and making himself look insecure, than attacking full frontal, which is what he enjoys.
It's a bit like those family meals where you see if you can get certain relatives to go off an a rant by just dropping a couple of words into the conversation about national service, or The Empire or something.
wrote on 14 Apr 2020, 01:40 last edited by@Doctor-Phibes said in What's the White House's plan, anyway?:
He really is his own worst enemy.
Indeed. It takes a lot of effort to distinguish what he does from what he says. If he could just STFU....