Did anyone hear Saint Cuomo lie about Spanish Flu?

I wish you had an education. :palm: What is more remarkable is using an example where 675,000 Americans died as an example of good leadership. #dumb

In Chicago, for example, the mortality rate at one hospital reached nearly 40%, yet the city’s public health commissioner proclaimed, “Worry kills more people than the epidemic,”

The title reads "Things Governments can learn from the Spanish Flu" not "Things Governments Did during the Spanish Flu that should be repeated"!

Are you Donald Trump- or just stupid like him? Yes or NO!
 
In the first days of the lockdown we were told the country would open back up in 15 days or whatever it was. Trump floated the idea of April 12th but was shouted down for it.

Five weeks later here we are. Should we feel lied to?

Yes, we have been. We've been lied to about infections, mortality rates and causes of deaths. Now we are being told in Commiefornia, that we will not be open until June 1st.
 
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:laugh:
 
The Spanish Flu never started in the American Midwest you dumb lying ass. :palm:

The point is that Cuomo is trying to justify the 40 million unemployed and tens of thousands of bankruptcies by Government forced closures as an example of what worked....wait for it....like they did in 1918 when .....wait for it.....675,000 died.

#dumb

The only one's trying to distract and make this about Trump are you morons on the left. :palm:

Yes it did. The first reported case was at an army base in Kansas. Do you know ANYTHING?
 
By mid-September, the Spanish flu was spreading like wildfire through army and naval installations in Philadelphia, but Wilmer Krusen, Philadelphia’s public health director, assured the public that the stricken soldiers were only suffering from the old-fashioned seasonal flu and it would be contained before infecting the civilian population.

As civilian infection rates climbed day by day, Krusen refused to cancel the upcoming Liberty Loan parade scheduled for September 28. Krusen insisted that the parade must go on, since it would raise millions of dollars in war bonds, and he played down the danger of spreading the disease.

Just 72 hours after the parade, all 31 of Philadelphia’s hospitals were full and 2,600 people were dead by the end of the week.

The public health response in St. Louis couldn’t have been more different. Even before the first case of Spanish flu had been reported in the city, health commissioner Dr. Max Starkloff had local physicians on high alert and wrote an editorial in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch about the importance of avoiding crowds.

When a flu outbreak at a nearby military barracks first spread into the St. Louis civilian population, Starkloff wasted no time closing the schools, shuttering movie theaters and pool halls, and banning all public gatherings. There was pushback from business owners, but Starkloff and the mayor held their ground.

Dehner says that because of these precautions, St. Louis public health officials were able to “flatten the curve” and keep the flu epidemic from exploding overnight as it did in Philadelphia.

https://www.history.com/news/spanish-flu-pandemic-response-cities

List of bushiness that shut down

List of sports that were shut down

List of concerts that were canceled
 
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