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arts / rec.arts.tv / Did Satan's Demons & Goblins Conjor Up COVID To Make Conservatives Look Like Shitheads?

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o Did Satan's Demons & Goblins Conjor Up COVID To Make Conservatives Look Like ShiRed States = Shithole States

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Did Satan's Demons & Goblins Conjor Up COVID To Make Conservatives Look Like Shitheads?

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From: 232...@gmail.com (Red States = Shithole States)
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,alt.atheism,rec.arts.tv
Subject: Did Satan's Demons & Goblins Conjor Up COVID To Make Conservatives Look Like Shitheads?
Date: Sun, 21 Nov 2021 22:10:32 -0000 (UTC)
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 by: Red States = Shithol - Sun, 21 Nov 2021 22:10 UTC

These 6 red and blue states tell you everything you need to know about
where Delta is hitting hardest � and why

Politics is hardly the only factor driving vaccine hesitancy in the U.S.
But in a sign of how big a factor politics has become � and how the
politicization of vaccination is shaping where the hypercontagious Delta
variant is hitting hardest � an average of nearly twice as many people per
capita are now hospitalized for COVID-19 in states that voted for Donald
Trump in 2020 as in states that voted for Joe Biden, according to a Yahoo
News analysis.

And while blue states have vaccinated (on average) more than half their
residents, red states lag a dozen percentage points behind.

Comparing six specific states � Vermont, New Jersey, Minnesota, Florida,
Louisiana and Nevada � only throws this troubling trend into sharper
relief.

Hospitalization and vaccination numbers are, of course, not unrelated.
Studies have repeatedly shown that all approved COVID vaccines reduce the
risk of hospitalization (and death) by more than 95 percent. Likewise, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than 97
percent of all COVID patients in hospitals right now are unvaccinated.

As a result, the states with more unvaccinated residents also tend to be
the states with more hospitalized residents � and these states tend to be
disproportionately conservative.

Just how disproportionately conservative? Glance at any state-by-state
list of COVID data and the pattern becomes clear. Just three of the 25
states with the lowest vaccination rates voted for Biden; just three of
the 25 states with the highest vaccination rates voted for Trump. By the
same token, just 1 of the 10 states with the highest hospitalization rates
(Nevada) voted for Biden � and just 1 of the 10 states with the lowest
hospitalization rates (South Dakota) voted for Trump.

When you put it all together, the big picture is as striking as it is
unsettling. According to Yahoo�s analysis, the average full-vaccination
rate across states that voted for Biden was 54.4 percent as of Monday
morning. The average full-vaccination rate across states that voted for
Trump was far lower: just 41.7 percent.

In turn, these undervaccinated red states are now bearing the brunt of
Delta�s impact. Across the Biden states, today�s average hospitalization
rate is just 6 people for every 100,000 residents. Across the Trump
states, that same rate is now nearly twice as high: 11.2 per 100,000.
Critical care workers insert an endotracheal tube into a coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) positive patient in the intensive care unit (ICU) at
Sarasota Memorial Hospital in Sarasota, Florida, February 11, 2021.
(Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)
Critical care workers insert an endotracheal tube into a COVID patient at
Sarasota Memorial Hospital in Sarasota, Fla., in February. (Shannon
Stapleton/Reuters)

Tragically, this gap will probably only widen in the weeks ahead. Over the
last 14 days, blue-state hospitalizations have grown at an average rate of
24.4 percent. Meanwhile, red-state hospitalizations have grown at an
average rate of 60 percent � more than twice as fast.

Vermont leads the nation with 67 percent of its population fully
vaccinated; there, hospitalizations have actually fallen over the past two
weeks to a rate of less than 1 patient per 100,000 residents. Nearby
Massachusetts (64 percent), Maine (63 percent), Connecticut (63 percent)
and New Hampshire (58 percent) have similarly stratospheric vaccination
rates � and not a single one currently has more than 4 patients per
100,000 residents in the hospital because of COVID-19.

Beyond New England, the mid-Atlantic states tend to look a lot like New
Jersey: above-average vaccination rate (58 percent), below-average
hospitalization rate (5 patients per 100,000 residents). And across the
Upper Midwest, Minnesota � 54 percent fully vaccinated; just 3 per 100,000
hospitalized � is typical.

All these states voted for Biden.

Most Trump states are not faring as well. At 31 patients for every 100,000
residents, Florida now has the second-highest hospitalization rate in the
nation, and more people (upwards of 6,600) are in the hospital for COVID
there than in any other state � a tally that has doubled over the last two
weeks and is fast approaching record levels. Less than half of Floridians
(48 percent) are vaccinated, and an even lower number tend to be
vaccinated across north Florida, the epicenter of the state�s outbreak.
Low vaccination rates in Missouri (41 percent) and Arkansas (36 percent)
have propelled hospitalization rates there to equally high levels.
Feb 7, 2021; Tampa, Florida, USA; Maskless fans film anti-vaccination
protesters outside of the Healthcare Heroes entrance to Raymond James
Stadium before Super Bowl LV between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Tampa
Bay Buccaneers. (Mary Holt/USA TODAY Sports via reuters)
Anti-vaccination protesters before the Super Bowl on Feb. 7 in Tampa.
(Mary Holt/USA Today Sports via Reuters)

Nearby Louisiana appears to be next on Delta�s list. There,
hospitalizations have hit 22 patients per 100,000 residents after rising
174 percent over the last two weeks � faster than anywhere else in
America. Just 37 percent of Louisianans are fully vaccinated.

Again, politics isn�t the only factor here. Seasonality may play a part;
the Sun Belt saw the worst spread last summer too. Vaccine uptake has also
been relatively slow in some Democratic-leaning communities of color, and
there are large Black and Latino populations in many of the Southern and
Southwestern states where Delta is now wreaking the most havoc.

Nevada may illustrate this dynamic. Clark County (think Las Vegas) is a
Democratic stronghold that voted for Biden by nearly 10 points in 2020.
But with a population that�s just 41 percent vaccinated, the county�s
growing outbreak has pushed Nevada�s overall hospitalization rate to 34
patients for every 100,000 residents � the worst in America right now.
It�s possible that hesitancy among Clark County�s large Latino population
(about 30 percent) may be a contributing factor � though millions of
unmasked tourists crowding indoors for long periods of time probably has
as much (if not more) to do with it.

Either way, Nevada is the exception that proves the rule: The three blue
states with the lowest vaccination rates � Arizona (45 percent), Nevada
(44 percent) and Georgia (38 percent) � are also the three blue states
with the highest hospitalization rates, as well as three that Trump came
closest to winning in 2020.

In recent days, some encouraging signs have emerged on the vaccination
front. The average number of new inoculations jumped 28 percent last week,
likely in response to Delta�s worrisome spread, and more and more
Republican leaders have been urging their followers to get vaccinated.

Yet even so, it�s entirely possible that today�s vaccination gap will only
grow more political over time, not less.
Anti-vaccine rally protesters hold signs outside of Houston Methodist
Hospital in Houston, Texas, on June 26, 2021. (Mark Felix/AFP via Getty
Images)
An anti-vaccine protester in Houston on June 26. (Mark Felix/AFP via Getty
Images)

While a roughly equal share of Trump voters (58 percent), Latino adults
(57 percent) and Black adults (55 percent) say they have been at least
partially vaccinated, according to a Yahoo News/YouGov survey conducted
earlier this month, hesitancy is actually much higher among Trump voters
than any other group.

Just 7 percent of unvaccinated Trump voters, for instance, said they
planned to get vaccinated in the future � far lower than the share of
unvaccinated Black adults (26 percent) or unvaccinated Latino adults (29
percent) who said the same.

Similarly, more than two-thirds of unvaccinated Trump voters (68 percent)
said they would �never� get vaccinated, while less than half of
unvaccinated Black adults (41 percent) or unvaccinated Latino adults (28
percent) expressed the same level of hard-core resistance.

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