93Grad

August 24th, 2020 at 8:19 PM ^

Shocked.  Not shocked. 
 

of course the SEC powers that be will ignore all of this and carry on with their primary pursuit of footbawwww.  

Rockford Rams

August 25th, 2020 at 10:12 AM ^

I actually read the article and it said that prior to enrollment they performed 30,000 tests and came back with 310 positives.  That's a 1.03% positivity rate.  

Michigan does about 30,000 tests per day on average.  We are nowhere near 1%, more like 2-4%.

When put in context the Covid positives are surprisingly low.

Imjesayin

August 25th, 2020 at 10:38 AM ^

Maybe if you actually read it, you’d have seen that the numbers came from “point of care” testing, which means testing only people who are sick enough to seek testing and care or some who feel they were exposed. This is not a randomized sampling of the campus.
 

There are undoubtedly many more on campus who have it and aren’t seeking care and testing for whatever reason but are spreading it. You are using the “logic” of Trump: if we don’t test for it, it’s not happening. 
 

“According to the website, the new figure only represents positive tests found through sentinel testing, point of care testing at campus health centers and self-reported tests from private providers in the area.

Entry testing was not included in the numbers shared Wednesday.”

Jonesy

August 25th, 2020 at 3:21 PM ^

Well the parties are science and logic vs rampant stupidity. You know every post is either going to be 'see, this is going poorly, as expected' vs 'this is an acceptable level of cases/deaths/whatever heres my crayon math to show that actually more people have herpes and have died from cows than sharks so its fine.'

BuckeyeRealist13

August 25th, 2020 at 12:25 PM ^

Are you serious?

lol you think you have to choose between “humanity” and playing football?

Jesus man 

How pathetic is it that a program like Michigan is hiding in the basement letting Nebraska and Iowa fight for them?


Buckeye Nation is fighting harder for Michigan football than Michigan fans are. It’s sad how much more in common you have with Rutgers/Maryland than you do with the B1G.

BuckeyeRealist13

August 25th, 2020 at 1:58 PM ^

jjelliso- I’ll be protesting and writing letters to Warren doing my part.

I know Michigan hasn’t been a football school for a long time, I guess I just thought you guys had a little fight left in you.

Sit on the sidelines with Northwestern, Maryland, and Rutgers. We’ll fight for this conference.

MgoHillbilly

August 25th, 2020 at 2:16 PM ^

You may want to consider finding something other than football to base your happiness on. Your need to be combative suggests that you have some mental health issues that need addressing. Even if osu were to win against us this year and win the conference, you'd still be behind Michigan in wins and conference titles. A missed year won't change that.

BuckeyeRealist13

August 25th, 2020 at 2:32 PM ^

Have you guys always been this soft? Serious question.

i remember when this used to be a rivalry now it’s like talking on a Northwestern football forum.

I’m not mad, I’m just sad for the truly passionate Michigan fans out there.

MgoHillbilly

August 25th, 2020 at 2:42 PM ^

We're passionate.  That's why we're on the blog.  But most here have already accepted the importance of postponing the season.  I've seen the OSU website where y'all seem to just now be going through the denial and anger stages of grieving.  Your own sense of self worth is so tied into a game that you've all made it harder than it needed to be because you can't make sense of a universe without OSU football.  That's truly sad.  The world is much bigger (and the people in it are much more important) than OSU football.  If it makes you feel any better, at least your fanbase isn't as passionate as the SEC is.  If you were, you'd be doing more than writing letters and crying on our board.  Also, your fanbase's "efforts" are embarrassing the conference.  You're acting like spoiled children having a tantrum and everyone notices.  They just don't agree with you.

BuckeyeRealist13

August 25th, 2020 at 2:49 PM ^

Mgo - This isn't about Ohio State football. The sad thing is we are more passionate about Michigan football than some Michigan fans are on this board. 

We are acting like people should act when a something you care about it ripped away for no other reason than politics. 

BuckeyeRealist13

August 25th, 2020 at 2:43 PM ^

You’re not defending Warren are you? lol, please tell me you don’t support that clown.

Football is so much more than a game, and that is ok. It is a part of our culture, and that is fine.

Where are you from by the way if you don’t mind me asking? 
 

I don’t want to judge all Michiganders based off of you if you aren’t even from the Midwest.

BuckeyeRealist13

August 25th, 2020 at 2:56 PM ^

I am going to leave. I feel like I'm on a Rutgers football forum right now. Hell they even have more fight than you guys do.

The next time you shit on Nebraska for fighting for this conference, just remember they are more B1G than you guys have been for a long long time.

So take your asses out of our conference along with Rutgers and Maryland. 

I've never been more embarrassed of a so called "traditional program" in my life. You guys are pathetic. 

BuckeyeRealist13

August 25th, 2020 at 3:04 PM ^

As soft as you guys have become where football is of such little importance in your communities.

You have 7 years left to post the all time series record.

This used to be a rivalry of respect. We have no respect for you guys. You are such a sore thumb culturally now to the rest of the B1G. You have aligned yourselves with Rutgers, Maryland, and Northwestern.

Penn State is our rival. Northwestern is yours. 

gustave ferbert

August 26th, 2020 at 9:08 AM ^

Judging by the turnout at the Wade protest at the B1G offices, not many of your little minions from Buckeye nation left their doublewide crawlspace to join in either. 

 

I'm sorry you pissed away last month's lot rent on your Justin Fields jersey for this season. . .

MgoHillbilly

August 24th, 2020 at 8:21 PM ^

They would still play if Saban were on a ventilator.  Not that they should, but I expect the SEC schools will do everything they can to continue playing because football is everything down here and there's also a political point to be made.

teldar

August 24th, 2020 at 10:26 PM ^

Not in my lifetime. But it used to be that even cbs and abc had anchors on their national shows who were politically moderate. I don't remember watching nbc. News showed used to give the news. Now they're so far off the left side of the spectrum they're dragging moderates to what would have been considered radical 20 years ago. 

OSUMC Wolverine

August 25th, 2020 at 12:10 AM ^

simply uttering the word socialism in the political realm when i was a child was political suicide...even for a democrat. i was a registered democrat most of my life, but the democratic party was pulled from beneath my feet as the policies radicalized. socialized medicine, open boarders, raising taxes only to spend more. in the past working age men and women providing for themselves ans their dependents was the expectation of all, not expecting the government to provide for those persons. shifting the cost of healthcare from employers who benefit from a healthy workforce to the government doesnt make sense. Bill Clinton was an outspoken supporter of border security because of how poor security was crushing low income Americans and preventing them from improving their economic status. Raising taxes to pay down debt I conpletely support, raising taxes to create more soending in a dsficit environment is unwise to say the least. Demovrats pushed fiscal responsibility liong ago...days long gone.

outsidethebox

August 25th, 2020 at 8:29 AM ^

The narrow, egocentric thinking, here, is pathological. (The Republicans have had control of our legislative branch for most of my 67 years and a good number of years they have controlled both houses and the executive branch-and now they have politicized the SC in their favor-"some of the responsibility"???) The fact is that our little planet is in desperate need of cooperation-across all political/national and economic lines. The limiting factor here is a human one. Even religion has not been able to make a dent in our egocentrism. 

It's time for us to pay attention to those godless Europeans-on all kinds of fronts. Those carrots that are hanging in front of us have long since rotted. Time to wake up and smell the roses. 

trueblueintexas

August 25th, 2020 at 2:12 AM ^

Get ready to realize the Republican Party has been pulled from underneath your feet as well.  Unless you support things like economic elitism with no middle class, lower educational standards, deficit spending, social and religious control by the federal gov’t, racism, and lawlessness in the name of justice and freedom. The last 40 years have been a pretty ugly transformation for a once proud party.

trustBlue

August 25th, 2020 at 2:34 AM ^

Oh trust me, they are cool with all that stuff.

When you have a facist authoritarian running the country into the ground, but their biggest complaint is that the other party wants to make sure people have affordable healthcare, you can be that sure that when he's talking about the good ol Democrats, he's thinking about Strom Thurmond. 

JonnyHintz

August 25th, 2020 at 7:23 AM ^

“Working age men and women providing for themselves and their dependents.” This was much more attainable “back in the day,” as wages were much higher as compared to they are now. Wages haven’t kept up with the rise of inflation and even working class people are much poorer now than they were back then. Excess wealth has been concentrated into the upper class since those days instead of trickling down to the workers. 
 

“shifting cost of healthcare from employers to government doesn’t make sense.” Well that’s not really how that works. Your employer doesn’t “provide” your healthcare. They choose which insurance agency to go through and what plan to use and they make contributions to it (you might by crazy if you think most companies are actually choosing the best healthcare option for their employees). By shifting to a government healthcare option, your employer would still be contributing to the healthcare plans of their employees. The major difference with the government plan is that you’re paying into a non-profit instead of paying these insurance agencies to record billions in profits while also cutting out a large portion of the administration costs. This alone drops the cost of healthcare below what we pay now. It “doesn’t make sense,” except that it makes perfect sense. Instead of you paying for insurance out of your paycheck and then paying out of pocket costs, you pay slightly more in taxes and your out of pocket costs virtually disappear. In the end it SAVES you money, as has been the case in every country around the world that went to a government based healthcare plan.

 

”Raising taxes,” doesn’t inherently mean spending more money. In fact, more often than not, it actually means saving money. 

Bluesince89

August 25th, 2020 at 8:56 AM ^

Do you want to guess at what the marginal tax rate for the wealthy was during the good, ol' past you're yearning for? 

Also, shifting the cost from employers does make perfect sense.  A healthy society benefits everyone - government, business, and individuals.  How many people stay in crappy jobs they hate just because of healthcare benefits? These people are less productive and unhappier.  We'd be far better off with a system that doesn't tie healthcare to your job.  People would be willing to take a chance on starting a business if they didn't have to worry about healthcare for their families for example.  Also, if the current economic situation doesn't show that healthcare tied to jobs is a bad idea, I don't know what will.