DeSantis for the win

Your buddy pushing the "Rational Ground" nonsense whose authors make you so happy..... has now made the Washington Post.

Are you actually making the case that this clown Kyle Lamb has any qualifications whatsoever for a Data Analyst job? Normally you at least act in a manner with some intelligence and integrity --- are you truly telling us that you find nothing wrong with the DeSantis administration hiring this guy to do COVID data analysis?



Florida Gov. DeSantis’s new data analyst: An anti-mask sports blogger pushing coronavirus conspiracies
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2020/11/11/kyle-lamb-data-florida-coronavirus-desantis/

When Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) needed a new mind to join the state’s team of data analysts, many of whom have been working to monitor the coronavirus pandemic, he turned to an unlikely candidate.

Last week, Kyle Lamb, a little-known sports blogger who moonlights as an anti-masker, announced he had been hired to do data analysis, “including but not limited to Covid-19 research,” for the governor of Florida.


Lamb, 40, is not a data scientist by trade or training. In his own words, he is “not an ‘expert.’” His public statements about the pandemic have frequently contradicted advice from public health officials, and he has dedicated much of his coronavirus commentary to undermining experts.

Yet Lamb, who has been cited on Fox News for his coronavirus-related tweets, will join a team that monitors coronavirus outbreaks in a state that has seen at least 852,174 cases and 17,460 deaths since the start of the pandemic. In the past week, the number of covid-19 cases has risen in Florida, and hospitalizations jumped by more than 20 percent.

Ryan Donnelly, a former sportswriter who worked with Lamb at a sports publication in 2018, told The Washington Post in a Twitter direct message that the podcast host has no background in data analysis or epidemiology.

“He is totally unfit for the role and appears to have been hired because he enjoyed posting charts and graphs on Twitter and offering misleading analysis alongside them,” Donnelly told The Post.

Lamb did not immediately return a request for comment late Tuesday.

While it’s unclear how the governor’s office came to its decision to hire Lamb, they may have spotted his work in a conservative blog that has promoted an unsubstantiated claim that Florida had overcounted covid-19 deaths, which has been previously cited by DeSantis’s spokespeople. DeSantis has often downplayed the severity of the pandemic and pushed to reopen businesses and schools in the state, even in the early weeks of the pandemic.

DeSantis’s office did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment, but a spokesman told the Miami Herald that Lamb’s work would pass “through about 10 hands” before reaching the governor’s desk.

“It’s not a covid-19 hire,” DeSantis spokesman Fred Piccolo told the Herald.

Lamb’s former colleagues in the Ohio sports world, where he previously worked as a blogger and podcast host, have characterized him in interviews with the Herald and Tampa Bay Times as “a nobody,” “an amateur,” an “Internet weirdo,” and a “crackpot.” The only education listed on his LinkedIn profile is a one-year stint at the Ohio Center for Broadcasting from 2000 to 2001.

The blogger found a modicum of prominence in Ohio when he was covering domestic violence allegations against former Ohio State assistant football coach Zach Smith. Donnelly described Lamb as a “mouthpiece for Zach Smith” who published attacks against the coach’s ex-wife, Courtney Smith, after she filed a restraining order and accused Smith of throwing her against a wall while she was pregnant. (OSU fired Smith in 2018 and he later pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct; he was sentenced to spend 20 days in jail after violating his ex-wife’s restraining order in December.)

But Lamb gained most of his large Twitter following when he began posting colorful spreadsheets and graphs generated in Excel as communities across the United States went into shutdowns because of the pandemic. Donnelly described many of Lamb’s covid-19 posts as “conspiracy theories and half-baked crackpot data” that were “constantly being proven wrong.”

Experts have taken issue with Lamb’s data analysis. A University of Florida professor retweeted several instances where Lamb appeared to make a clumsy error, including switching the axes of a graph showing new covid-19 cases in Ohio and creating messy spreadsheets that defied basic data organization principals.

“I am hyperventilating into my mask at the thought of this person being part of @GovRonDeSantis COVID data analysis team,” Emilio M. Bruna, a professor of tropical ecology and Latin American studies at the University of Florida, tweeted Tuesday.

Bruna decried the poor analysis in another tweet picking apart one of Lamb’s coronavirus charts: “We’re all going to die,” he wrote.


The Ohio Department of Health debunked at least one claim Lamb made about the state’s coronavirus test numbers being inflated, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported in July. Lamb later deleted his inaccurate tweet.

Lamb appears to work as an Uber driver and has had a smattering of sports-related podcast gigs over the years, according to his LinkedIn page. He has not been shy about his lack of credentials, work experience or formal education in medicine, epidemiology or public health.

“I’m not a doctor, epidemiologist, virologist or scientist,” Lamb wrote in the Patreon bio for his covid-19 podcast, “Beyond the Fold,” which has 43 patrons. “Experts don’t have all the answers.”

“My job isn’t to study the virus itself or tell you how to protect yourself, your children or your family,” Lamb continued. “However, I will tell you what the data says about risk and I’ll provide all the context I possibly can.”

In his latest podcast episode, which aired on Election Day, Lamb argued that global “elites” were using the pandemic as an excuse to strip away private property rights.

“This is not a conspiracy. This is not a hoax.” Lamb said at the outset of his Election Day broadcast, which was filled with unsubstantiated claims. “I’m not saying that the virus does not exist. I’m not saying that it was preplanned. It could have been, but I’m not saying that it is because there is no evidence that it was.”

For those who have known Lamb in Ohio, his new job has come as a shock.

“The idea that he is being put anywhere near the halls of power is so concerning,” Donnelly told The Post. “Everything he’s pulled at has been proven incorrect and misguided time and time again.”

Ah, so when you said Kyle Lamb was "my favorite blogger", this was just another made up accusation by you about me that had no substance in truth whatsoever. Like when you said I support Demon Sperm or something as a cure, and 5G caused COVID (other things I never said).

But in answer to me calling you out on this latest horseshit, you go off an try to redirect about how DeSantis hired the guy (someone I've cannot recall ever hearing of until you mentioned him).

Business as usual, right GWB? Make shit up and hope it sticks.

Another one to add to the collection of how you "always tell the truth!"
 
Ah, so when you said Kyle Lamb was "my favorite blogger", this was just another made up accusation by you about me that had no substance in truth whatsoever. Like when you said I support Demon Sperm or something as a cure, and 5G caused COVID (other things I never said).

But in answer to me calling you out on this latest horseshit, you go off an try to redirect about how DeSantis hired the guy (someone I've cannot recall ever hearing of until you mentioned him).

Business as usual, right GWB? Make shit up and hope it sticks.

Another one to add to the collection of how you "always tell the truth!"

The course of this thread demonstrates you pushing COVID nonsense from people who support the demon sperm doctor peddling HCQ, weird 5G causes COVID crap, and lots of other non-factual rubbish.

If you are going to use these as your go-to sources of flawed COVID "data" based on obvious nonsense then it is implicit you support all the other nonsense pushed by these clowns.

Since you are unwilling to state that it is improper for DeSantis to hire one of these clowns as a COVID data analyst then it's quite clear you support your state government shoveling non-factual nonsense as well.
 
The course of this thread demonstrates you pushing COVID nonsense from people who support the demon sperm doctor peddling HCQ, weird 5G causes COVID crap, and lots of other non-factual rubbish.

If you are going to use these as your go-to sources of flawed COVID "data" based on obvious nonsense then it is implicit you support all the other nonsense pushed by these clowns.

Since you are unwilling to state that it is improper for DeSantis to hire one of these clowns as a COVID data analyst then it's quite clear you support your state government shoveling non-factual nonsense as well.

I've asked you to show me where I've pushed demon sperm and 5G in this thread. You've yet to do so. But you certainly claim it a lot.

Also, where did I support or push Kyle what's his name in some fashion?

I may actually support the guy if I knew who he was and what he said.

I'd be happy to consider whether or not DeSantis should hire some guy I know nothing about if we could just get past this absurd claim of yours. But you can't admit being wrong, so why should I indulge you in reading any of the crap you put forth?
 
I've asked you to show me where I've pushed demon sperm and 5G in this thread. You've yet to do so. But you certainly claim it a lot.

Also, where did I support or push Kyle what's his name in some fashion?

I may actually support the guy if I knew who he was and what he said.

I'd be happy to consider whether or not DeSantis should hire some guy I know nothing about if we could just get past this absurd claim of yours. But you can't admit being wrong, so why should I indulge you in reading any of the crap you put forth?

fark_EFVjkTEyohAUuh62k0UCbuJrV68.jpg
 
Just take it as humor. After all you were searching for your buddy Kyle.

What I was searching for was evidence to support your claim that I even knew who the guy was, much less had him as my "favorite blogger".

Hard to take humor from someone who lies so regularly about things/people I support.
 
"DeSantis for the win" - where did the money go edition.

DeSantis has spent billions in federal cash with little oversight. And the spigot runs dry soon.
https://www.orlandosentinel.com/pol...0201111-khmkwbxognce5cl5ikzsxhdfnu-story.html

The first reports from the state on how CARES Act money was spent show that the large influx of federal funds not only helped Florida cope with the coronavirus pandemic but also helped relieve severe revenue losses.

Florida has spent $4.6 billion in federal funds provided through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Actfrom the onset of the coronavirus pandemic through Sept. 30, according to reports Gov. Ron DeSantis' administration filed with the U.S. Treasury Department.

The state received $5.8 billion in total and must spend the remaining $1.2 billion before Dec. 31, or else it reverts back to the federal government.

DeSantis' office has indicated they intend to spend the money by then, but they don’t anticipate Congress approving additional money or flexibility to use the money in 2021 despite hope from Democrats and Republicans alike that it would help cushion the state’s budget crunch.

The reports, obtained by the Orlando Sentinel this month after first requesting CARES Act details in September, are the first glimpse from the DeSantis administration on how it is spending the funds. The delay has angered Democrats such as Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith of Orlando, who had been asking for spending details since the summer.

Although the state constitution requires the Legislature to approve state spending, DeSantis has been able to use the CARES Act funds and other federal money to respond to the coronavirus without legislative oversight due to the state of emergency he declared and extended through Jan. 3.

“For months there has been no accountability or transparency for how Governor DeSantis is spending billions in CARES Act dollars,” Smith said. “How is it that one person has decided how billions of dollars in CARES Act money is being disbursed across the state of Florida? How does that happen in a democracy?”

DeSantis' aides defended his approach saying the spending was in keeping with guidance issued by the U.S. Treasury Department for how the money should be spent. They also said the money has provided critical services as Floridians grappled with the health and economic effects of the pandemic.

“In addition to supporting state-run community-based testing sites and ensuring adequate PPE for health care workers, these funds have been used to support our schools and provide housing assistance, among other initiatives to support Floridians,” DeSantis spokeswoman Meredith Beatrice stated in an email.

The spending so far includes nearly $2.4 billion to help school districts contend with the potential cut in state funds they would have received due to the large drop in attendance in K-12 schools. State law provides funds to schools based on physical attendance in class, and most schools would have seen severe cuts because so many children opted to learn remotely this year.

Another $257 million has gone to affordable housing, rent and mortgage assistance for those affected by the pandemic – which enabled DeSantis to veto $225 million passed by the Legislature for that purpose in the state budget.

Spending on contact tracing, COVID-19 testing and personal protective equipment was smaller by comparison, with more than $181 million was spent for those purposes, according to the reports. But DeSantis aides noted that CARES Act money is only part of the state’s response to the pandemic, and millions more in FEMA reimbursements is expected to help pay for similar uses.

The CARES Act money has helped the state avoid a large shortfall this fiscal year. Revenues are expected to be $3.4 billion short of original estimates, as much of the world shut down and brought the tourism industry to a standstill to help stop the spread of COVID-19.

Still, state economists estimate Florida will have a $5.4 billion shortfall for the next two fiscal years, starting July 1, 2021.

Just how much money is being used for normal operating purposes will be crucial for legislators in determining how craft the budget next year.

For instance, the report shows $750 million was spent on payroll for public health and safety employees, which includes Department of Health employees such as nurses, but also state law enforcement officials who have helped staff state-run coronavirus testing sites. Funds were also spent on payroll for prison guards,who have had to contend with new procedure and protocols and take on new risks as the pandemic spread through prisons.

Rep. Evan Jenne, a co-leader of the House Democrats, said he doesn’t see anything inappropriate with the spending in the reports, but is wary of how much the state is relying on one-time funds to run the government.

“If we’re running at that much of a deficit that you have to buoy how you’re paying people working in prisons then that doesn’t speak well for the future of our budget,” said Jenne, D-Dania Beach.

He also lamented that although lawmakers will gather in Tallahassee for a ceremonial organizational session next week, there won’t be any substantive meetings until January – meaning there won’t be any legislative oversight of the funds until after they’ve already been spent.
 

Article with full text...

COVID keeping Canadian tourists away from Palm Beach County this winter
https://www.palmbeachpost.com/story...nadians-away-south-florida-winter/6121841002/

Canadian tourists will not be coming down to Palm Beach County this year due to the coronavirus pandemic, and that spells bad news for businesses that rely on the dollars these winter visitors spend on everything from restaurants to real estate.

The land border between the United States and Canada remains closed for all non-emergency travel.

Air travel is permitted, but many Canadian travelers are wary of getting on an airplane. Among them is Mitchell Stein of Montreal. Since Stein was a child, he said he has been making the trek to South Florida during winters.

Now Stein is 56, and he still travels each year to South Florida, except this year. Stein said he used to stay in Jupiter, but in recent years, he has rented a condominium in Hallandale for several months.

This year, however, Stein said he plans to stay put in Montreal, despite the long, dark months ahead and the prospect of brutally cold weather.

"It's a very awkward year. It feels strange we are not going down," Stein said. But among his group of friends who travel south each year, "no one is going down."

The reason?

The response by the United States, and Florida, to the pandemic.

"The perception we have is that Florida is like the Wild West right now, and people are walking around without masks," Stein said.

Mask-wearing uneven as coronavirus infection numbers rise
He's not entirely wrong. Although Palm Beach County requires that masks be worn in public spaces where social distancing isn't possible, as well as inside businesses, Gov. Ron DeSantis recently prevented local governments from fining individuals who don't wear masks.

Consequently, mask-wearing is a crap shoot, unevenly followed in Palm Beach County. On any given day or night, particularly in hotspots such as downtown Delray Beach, restaurant workers wear masks, but most people stroll the crowded streets without facial coverings.

This is the case even as Florida's infection numbers are on the rise again. Some 4,651 new cases were tallied statewide on Monday, pushing Florida's total case count to 812,063, according to the daily update from the Florida Department of Health.

Palm Beach County also saw a significant jump in the number of new cases. Another 373 people in the county were diagnosed with the highly contagious respiratory disease.

2020 might have been record year for Canadian tourism, before COVID-19
For Palm Beach County tourism officials, the news is all bad when it comes to the Canadian tourist, the county's No. 1 international traveler.

In 2019, Canadian tourists accounted for 300,000 of 8.2 million tourists. These Canadian visitors, some of whom have winter homes here, spent $321 million last year, according to Discover The Palm Beaches, the county's tourism arm.

During the first quarter of 2020, which was trimmed by a couple of weeks when the pandemic hit in mid-March, some 121,000 Canadians visited, which meant 2020 would have been a record year for visitors from the Great White North, Discover said.

But these snowbirds will not be driving or flying south, at least at the moment.

"We are all heartbroken about the fact that they can't come right now, but there is some glimmer of positivity," said Jorge Pesquera, president of Discover The Palm Beaches.

Pesquera said Canadians who have delayed flying down to Florida may choose to do so in the first quarter of 2021. Air Canada flights to Palm Beach International Airport start up in December, although flights to Fort Lauderdale International Airport already are running at deeply discounted prices.

As for the land border closure, that restriction is in effect until Nov. 21. Pesquera and other tourism officials hope the border closure might be lifted after that date so Canadians who wish to drive to Florida can do so.

Stein, for one, said driving would be preferable to flying, especially since flights leaving Canada often have to sit on the tarmac for extended periods of time so the planes can be de-iced or the tarmac cleared of snow.

Stein doesn't like the idea of sitting on an airplane in a pandemic for long periods of time. Therefore he said he isn't keen to get on a plane right now.

But even if he were to arrive safely in South Florida, Stein is worried about something else: Being away from the socialized health-care system in Canada.

"The scary aspect, for a Canadian, is getting sick when you're down there," Stein said. "When you get sick in the United States, the cost is exorbitant."

"A lot of them have delayed their trip"

Real estate agents say they already miss their longtime Canadian customers.

"Canadians are almost another borough of New York, but I haven't had any Canadian leads come in," said Jeff Lichtenstein, founder of Echo Fine Properties in Palm Beach Gardens.

Lichtenstein said other real estate agents confirm that Canadians mostly are going to sit this season out and stay put up North.

For Bonnie Heatzig of Bex Realty in Boca Raton, it's the same story.

Heatzig said she sells a lot of property to Canadian buyers who come toFlorida in October and November and stay at the Boca Raton Resort & Club while they shop for real estate.

"They're fabulous clients. We love them when they're here," Heatzig said.

But due to travel restrictions and fears of COVID, "a lot of them have delayed their trip coming down here," Heatzig said.
 
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