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The rural-urban Rona divide myth is slowly being busted.

The bump in coronavirus cases is most pronounced in states without stay at home orders. Oklahoma saw a 53% increase in cases over the past week, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Over same time, cases jumped 60% in Arkansas, 74% in Nebraska, and 82% in Iowa. South Dakota saw a whopping 205% spike.

The remaining states, North Dakota, Utah and Wyoming each saw an increase in cases, but more in line with other places that have stay-at-home orders. And all of those numbers may very well undercount the total cases, given a persistent lack of testing across the US.
 
Oklahoma’s bump probably came from one nursing home in Grove. They had 66 cases confirmed this week. That’s practically Joplin.
 
Don't confuse him with facts.
In the Springfield area they have a business with 65 people being quarantined and 13 of those have tested positive so far. They don't tell what the business is for obvious reasons.
 
Oklahoma’s bump probably came from one nursing home in Grove. They had 66 cases confirmed this week. That’s practically Joplin.

people in nursing homes don’t count? Interesting. Tell N.Y., where 10 different homes have lost large numbers of citizens.
 
I am. So go ahead. Get out there and mingle. Shake some hands. Go shopping.
Hit the bars. I need a good laugh.

Look at the numbers each day. That 4000+ number was due to NY declaring a bunch of deaths to be Covid 19 deaths. The total per day is still very high but nowhere near 4000.

There were less deaths on April 17 than there were on April 15 let alone April 14. Probably be less deaths on April 18.
 
I am. So go ahead. Get out there and mingle. Shake some hands. Go shopping.
Hit the bars. I need a good laugh.

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Look at the numbers each day. That 4000+ number was due to NY declaring a bunch of deaths to be Covid 19 deaths. The total per day is still very high but nowhere near 4000.

There were less deaths on April 17 than there were on April 15 let alone April 14. Probably be less deaths on April 18.

There are a lot of people dying. Others are very sick.
 
There are a lot of people dying. Others are very sick.
Yes it is bad, however that number on April 14 is obviously an outlier based on NY classifying a bunch of deaths of anyone sick remotely suspected of having WuFlu19 without being tested. If you look at the graph it clearly doesn’t fit. 2400, 2500, 4100, 2500, 2500.
Still over 50% of the deaths are in the NYC area. NY had twice as many dead on April 14 as the state of California has the entire time. Why?
 
Yes it is bad, however that number on April 14 is obviously an outlier based on NY classifying a bunch of deaths of anyone sick remotely suspected of having WuFlu19 without being tested. If you look at the graph it clearly doesn’t fit. 2400, 2500, 4100, 2500, 2500.
Still over 50% of the deaths are in the NYC area. NY had twice as many dead on April 14 as the state of California has the entire time. Why?
Wuflu19? Ohhh that’s a good one. That one would really rile up Don Lemon.
 
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people in nursing homes don’t count? Interesting. Tell N.Y., where 10 different homes have lost large numbers of citizens.
Don’t think I said that??? I have probably spent more time than you in nursing homes the past five years and I prayed for the elderly today. Only meant to explain that in Oklahoma’s case the bump came from one source.
 
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Don’t think I said that??? I have probably spent more time than you in nursing homes the past five years than you and I prayed for the elderly today. Only meant to explain that in Oklahoma’s case the bump came from one source.
Yep, fish in a barrel....full of holes.
 
Dude, good news! it's widespread (maybe 80x more than reported) and sunshine kills it off, and heat and humidity.

Will cases go up as we open up? Of course. But this thing isn't nearly as bad as we think.
 
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