Welcome to TheOhioOutdoors
Wanting to join the rest of our members? Login or sign up today!
Login / Join

2019-nCoV (Coronavirus)

giles

Cull buck specialist
Supporting Member
Toilet paper is the media’s fault. They can take all the credit for that one. They created the shortage. Same with water. I don’t see them shutting the water off or my well😂. I hope they all enjoy the TP soup they can make. I’ll be rolling out my new business plan next week. Gonna start collecting leaves tomorrow to sell all organic shit tickets.
 

Hedgelj

Senior Member
Supporting Member
8,198
189
Mohicanish
Toilet paper is the media’s fault. They can take all the credit for that one. They created the shortage. Same with water. I don’t see them shutting the water off or my well😂. I hope they all enjoy the TP soup they can make. I’ll be rolling out my new business plan next week. Gonna start collecting leaves tomorrow to sell all organic shit tickets.
Cities will burn if they cut off power or other utilities. There is no reason for that with the current issue.
 
  • Like
Reactions: giles

MoonLab

Where we’re going, we don’t need roads.
Supporting Member
10,508
165
Tooville
Yea, lol. Gonna bag up the leaves and wipe my ass. Save the tp for the winter, lol.
 

Sgt Fury

Sgt. Spellchecker
0C337781-8934-455D-B5F3-F51037066396.jpeg
 

Jackalope

Dignitary Member
Staff member
39,064
274
The real takeaway from this is just how unprepared we as a nation and state was. If this was SARS with a 15% mortality rate, or worse MERS with a 35% mortality rate, this would be a far more devastating situation. Both of those are a coronavirus just like this one. And who knows, there is still the possibility this could mutate and become more deadly.

Our inability to rapidly test and contain this put every American at risk. Americans will still pay the price with their lives but this could have been a massive national tragedy on a far greater scale.
 

Cogz

Cogz
1,360
77
TX
The real takeaway from this is just how unprepared we as a nation and state was. If this was SARS with a 15% mortality rate, or worse MERS with a 35% mortality rate, this would be a far more devastating situation. Both of those are a coronavirus just like this one. And who knows, there is still the possibility this could mutate and become more deadly.

Our inability to rapidly test and contain this put every American at risk. Americans will still pay the price with their lives but this could have been a massive national tragedy on a far greater scale.
Yup. The plague today would do more damage than it did 650 years ago.