As someone has had suicidal ideation in the past, I can say with some authority that you have no idea what you're talking about and should listen instead of shooting your mouth off in an attempt to score some cheap internet points. You don't speak for me and you never will.A pandemic happens and people end up secluded in their homes and get depressed and you think that's because of capitalism? And you think I'm the one with blind devotion to a certain economic system?
What are you saying, that getting laid off, secluded and being trapped indoors can't cause depression or suicide?As someone has had suicidal ideation in the past, I can say with some authority that you have no idea what you're talking about and should listen instead of shooting your mouth off in an attempt to score some cheap internet points. You don't speak for me and you never will.
If it requires one signature for it to pass, it's all one bill, right? Bundling stuff together doesn't make it "two bills".snip
You also do not get to speak for me. The only thing you give a shit about is what's convenient for you. If I died, it would mean nothing to you. Just another statistic you can use for a cheap piece of faux-emotional blackmail to try and bully better people than you into caving to your anti-human demands.What are you saying, that getting laid off, secluded and being trapped indoors can't cause depression or suicide?
Way to gatekeep
Please relax, nobody is speaking for you.You also do not get to speak for me.
Please take care of yourself during these stressful times.The only thing you give a shit about is what's convenient for you. If I died, it would mean nothing to you. Just another statistic you can use for a cheap piece of faux-emotional blackmail to try and bully better people than you into caving to your anti-human demands.
This is the last and only reply you're getting on this subject.
The following is indisputable:
- On September 17, 2020, the PA Supreme Court unilaterally extended the deadline for mail-in ballots to be received to three days after the election.
- The PA Supreme Court mandated that ballots received without a postmark would be presumed to be received on time.
- The PA Supreme Court allowed for the use of drop boxes for the collection of votes.
- On October 23, 2020, upon petition by the Secretary of the Commonwealth, the PA Supreme Court ruled that signatures need not be authenticated for mail-in ballots, thereby treating in-person and mail-in ballot votes dissimilarly and eliminating a critical safeguard against potentially fraudulent activity.
- Numerous documented inconsistencies associated with mail-in ballot correction, pre-canvassing, and canvassing which could all seriously undermine the reliability of voting in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
- Discrepancies exist between the SURE System, the official voter record in PA as established by statute, and the final certified vote for President. The vote in Pennsylvania should not have been certified prior to the reconciliation of this discrepancy.
Accordingly, I believe that a call for a Special Session on Elections is more than appropriate.
Because of the evidence.Why is it so hard to believe that Trump lost the election?
This isn't that new, the GOP has been pretending that the Democrats massively cheat in every election for a while now, they can hardly push for Voter ID laws to disenfranchise legitimate voters without the lie of lots of illegitimate ones.Why is it so hard to believe that Trump lost the election? He won in 2016 with a minority of votes because that's just how it works in America. How is it surprising that in 2020, after going out of his way to anatagonize the majority of people who didn't support him rather than trying to win them over, after embarassing America and it's people internationally, after making no attempt to hide government corruption, after an extremely poorly handled pandemic, he simply didn't have enough support to be reelected again?
You were supposed to destroy the Swamp! Not help it with pardons!
Do you know what the best, most reliable, most checked and validated evidence is?Because of the evidence.
This is pure arrogance.The pandemic was an avoidable natural disaster.
And what of all the places that didn't do this? All the places that did what you think was correct? Is that not equally a result of doing what they want? Are you suffering under the delusion that any centrally planned response is automatically going to be better than individual responses, because there's a hell of a lot of evidence of people and organizations going far above the response that was legally required.This is a direct result of an unregulated company being allowed to do whatever the fuck it wants. No centrally-planned response to the pandemic, no coherence or consistency in how companies respond. And the management, of course, are purely motivated by money, and will sacrifice employee wellbeing and safety for it.
Of course I do. If you have X total excess deaths, but many of them aren't from contracting the virus, then the total excess deaths represents a larger number than the excess deaths caused by the virus. Algebra.No, you don't just get to arbitrarily delete any number you feel like from official estimates and have it hold credibility.
I didn't remotely say that. If being laid off and having no income are the causes you're worried about, perhaps you want to reconsider economic shutdowns (like health experts have been telling people for months).Oh yeah, the rise in suicide isn't because people are laid off and getting evicted or such things that are often associated with suicide; they're just lonely.
Get real.
There's more than one way to be wrong. The person doing nothing isn't somehow made right just because the person who had medical procedures postponed before the pandemic arrived is wrong.Here is a governor doing the exact opposite of that and it going very, very poorly.
Why do you believe any of this? The US has the biggest safety nets in the world, and has run them at full force this whole time. All told, the US is near the top of the chart in per capita social spending, and that's without many of the universal spending programs other countries have, which should indicate how much goes into safety nets for the needy. And the US is high on the list for economic relief programs for Covid-19, both as a percent of GDP and per capita, despite the fact that such comparisons always fail to even consider programs at the state level and choose to compare federal policy to other nations. If you google charities running out of money, all the top results are about the UK.And if nothing else, the USA is probably the only first world country which right now is facing the potential for a hunger epidemic in a sixth of its population, because those people have lost their jobs, have no safety nets and are getting their food from private charities. Private charities who are running out of money, because the people staffing them and donating to them are facing similar hardships.
And yet you unhesitantly speak for others.You don't speak for me and you never will.
Yep, lots of places acted very well. That's deregulation for you: some are good, some are bad, you have to rely on pure goodwill from your employer, and if you have the poor luck to be employed by a scumbag then you're screwed. Sounds perfect: a public health response based on pure luck & blind trust.And what of all the places that didn't do this? All the places that did what you think was correct? Is that not equally a result of doing what they want? Are you suffering under the delusion that any centrally planned response is automatically going to be better than individual responses, because there's a hell of a lot of evidence of people and organizations going far above the response that was legally required.