Hosted by Jenifer (Zarknorph)
Confused malcontents swilling Chardonnay while awaiting the Zombie Apocalypse.
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5/2/20
Billionaire businessman Clive Palmer has taken out ads in major newspapers spruiking hydroxychloroquine as a COVID-19 treatement.
Read more from www.abc.net.au5/2/20
Supporters of US President Donald Trump have taken to social media to defend his musings that "powerful light" and disinfectant could possibly be used to kill the novel coronavirus inside human bodies.
One such Facebook post claims that when Mr Trump talked of internal disinfectant, he was referring to "Ultraviolet Radiation" administered into the body. According to the post, the method kills bacteria and has been "used for a while now".
"Just because it’s called a 'disinfectant' doesn’t mean it’s Pine-Sol," the post states.
PolitiFact found that while the post may be referring to a treatment called "ultraviolet blood irradiation", used mainly in the alternative-medicine community, there was no evidence such treatments could kill viruses or bacteria.
5/2/20
I would take the time to explain that cartoon to you, but you'd simply hear what you wanted to hear (here's a hint: the blue characters are Leftists. Any red characters represent conservatives.)
Anyway, drink deeply from the well of uninformed arrogance. . .
5/2/20
I'm quite sure that meme wasn't created by you but it's a failed one. The name is Paul McCartney, not MacCartney. Misspelling his last name ruins the joke.
Just to let you know...
5/2/20
That's not what Frank McZappa told me . . .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=17&v=nwR9pZ74j8Q&feature=emb_logo
5/3/20
Coronavirus has killed more than 200,000 people, shut down global economies, left millions of people out of work, and had drastic impacts on daily life.
But a sizeable minority across the world continues to insist the threat is overblown.
In videos circulating online, on social media pages, at US political rallies and sometimes in the mainstream media, doubts about the severity of the disease continue to be expressed by coronavirus sceptics, naysayers and deniers.
"More than a few politicians and millions of citizens still don't believe [the coronavirus pandemic] is happening," University of Sydney politics professor John Keane wrote recently.
"Dogged in their stupidity, thinking only of themselves, they are sure that it's all a hoax, or a media-hyped exaggeration whose falsity will soon be exposed."
Fake news and misinformation have spread as fast and as far as the virus itself, infecting social media newsfeeds across the world.
While those obsessed with 5G and bioweapon conspiracy theories have been vocal, they are by no means the only ones advocating views contrary to the scientific consensus surrounding the virus.
Continued...