That being said, I am so not looking forward to the Craxy as the replacement for Supreme Court Justice Souter is considered.
The wackier ultra-cons are already revving up the hate parade.
Sigh.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
That being said, I am so not looking forward to the Craxy as the replacement for Supreme Court Justice Souter is considered.
The wackier ultra-cons are already revving up the hate parade.
Sigh.
"It was once said that a black man would be president when pigs flew. Well lo and behold, 100 days into his presidency...swine flu." - unknown
That one was spammed around my campus via text messaging.
Ow. Stupid ankle.
Um. I wanted this to not be a post just to say "ow," but I can't think of anything else to say, so I'll leave it as just a whining post.
hey ankle! Stop hurting Hil!
We were informed today that if anyone at our school is verified to have swine flu, we will be closing for FOURTEEN DAYS. Seriously, people? I mean, I get that they're trying to nip this in the bud, but that seems excessive.
We have several students out with flu symptoms right now and a number of verified cases in LA County, so...yeah. We shall see.
We've gotten a bunch of "stay sanitzed" instructions (I just got back from sanitizing the ladies' room) but no mention of what to do if we feel sick.
We were informed today that if anyone at our school is verified to have swine flu, we will be closing for FOURTEEN DAYS.
Yipes. There are 4 or 5 schools in this area that have closed for a few days since Wed. Most are only closing for 3 school days (plus the weekend). It's only a matter of time before it hits my district. I just hope if we close that it won't add more days at the end of the year, but I suspect that it will.
The CDC is recommending 7-10 day closures for schools and professional cleaning/disinfection of the building for verified cases, so the school decided not to take any chances.
And I think in terms of cost/benefit taking precautions make sense. Right now not that deadly. But the 1918 epidemic started out mild and mutated into something deadly. Somewhere between 20 and 40 million people died in it. U.S. life expectancy was lowered by ten years. Each person who catches it is a chance of a mutation into a 1918 level of virulence. Lowering the chances of that happening is worth considerable economic cost. Not panicing is one thing. Taken precautions is worth while. And yes even a worst case scenario may not be quite as bad as 1918. We have anti-virals now, and know more about public health. But, better not to go there.