The Colorado Sun has a new article up titled, “What is driving Colorado’s COVID surge? Not even the experts are sure”:
What is driving Colorado’s COVID surge? Not even the experts are sure.
➡️ https://t.co/E4ramUaO5j pic.twitter.com/y2iGkp9d9J
— The Colorado Sun (@ColoradoSun) November 6, 2021
And these “experts” don’t have any answers:
“I don’t have a great answer for that and, believe me, I’m looking.” https://t.co/7ADs2c23xN
— The Colorado Sun (@ColoradoSun) November 5, 2021
Wow. It must be nice to be a Dem governor and now get blamed for a Delta outbreak
it's amazing what happens when you don't have a GOP gov to blame for the surge in Delta cases. https://t.co/2hhyHF8tWX
— Greg Pollowitz (@GPollowitz) November 7, 2021
Unfortunately, as we saw in Florida, there’s not much that can be done to stop it:
“For now, the curve is going to keep going up, barring something unexpected,” said Dr. Jonathan Samet, the dean of @ColoradoSPH and the leader of the state’s COVID-19 Modeling Group.https://t.co/yNAME9QiPi
— CU Anschutz Medical Campus (@CUAnschutz) November 7, 2021
Maybe the health experts missed it when Gov. Ron DeSantis warned states to be ready once the weather turned cold?
https://t.co/LydFyQWEyx pic.twitter.com/8JT4rNLa4D
— Cernovich (@Cernovich) November 7, 2021
And Virginia Tech professor and air-flow expert Linsey Marr, who’ve we quoted before, predicted this back in September:
I suspect we'll see high caseloads spread north as the weather cools and people start relying on heating, thus closing up windows and doors, trapping and recirculating indoor air. Plus the low-humidity effect, although it probably doesn't matter because Delta is so transmissible. https://t.co/4ePsDAG8O1
— Linsey Marr (@linseymarr) September 15, 2021
Nobody should be surprised by this:
Almost opposites pic.twitter.com/I3owU5PKse
— Eric Topol (@EricTopol) November 7, 2021
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