Citation (RegardZehef @ 13/04/2020 13:05)

S'il parle du coronavirus c'est debile de parler d'antibiotiques, mais sorti du contexte c'est dur de savoir s'il est pas en train de parler des superbugs (bacteries resistantes aux antibiotiques) qui est un autre des grands defis de la medecine moderne, et potentiellement une enorme crise sanitaire a venir

Il dit jamais anti-antibiotique par contre
Citation (Parisian @ 13/04/2020 13:08)

Il parle d’antibiotiques mais parle également de germes et de maladies neusocomiales, donc je vois pas le problème en fait, a part un discours un peu simpliste mais il est pas médecin

Ca pue le Trump bashing bien debile, qu’ils s’occupent de leur candidat déjà après nous avoir fait une tentative avec Crook Hilary

Je pensais aussi parce que bon quand meme, mais non. Voila le transcript complet:
Citation
Q Three hundred fifty million. That’s not what I’m getting at. What I’m getting at is priorities. And Dr. Birx has mentioned how there have been priorities in certain regional parts of the country. And I wanted to ask you specifically about one industry in particular, and that’s food-processing plants. Is there a priority to get testing at food-processing plants all across the country?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, you’re asking that because of what happened — it’s a fair question, too — what happened in Denver. Because in Denver, I’ve never seen — I said, “What’s going on?” We’re looking at this graph where everything’s looking beautiful and it’s coming down and then you got this one spike. It’s — I said, “What happened to Denver?”
And many people, very quickly, and they — by the way, they were on it like, so fast, you wouldn’t believe it. They knew every aspect. They had people go and — not only testing, “Who did you see? Where were you? How many people did you meet? Were you out to dinner in somebody else’s home? Where were you?” Where did — where did this number of people come from? How did — they are totally on it.
Now, this just happened. I just saw it this morning. I’m looking at everything smooth, going down, topping out. And then you have this one spike in Denver. It’s like, where did this come from?
So we’ll be looking at that. And we don’t want cases like that happening. This was — but this — this is the kind of thing can happen. This is very complex.
This is a very brilliant enemy. You know, it’s a brilliant enemy. They develop drugs like the antibiotics. You see it. Antibiotics used to solve every problem. Now one of the biggest problems the world has is the germ has gotten so brilliant that the antibiotic can’t keep up with it. And they’re constantly trying to come up with a new — people go to a hospital and they catch — they go for a heart operation — that’s no problem, but they end up dying from — from problems. You know the problems I’m talking about. There’s a whole genius to it.
We’re fighting — not only is it hidden, but it’s very smart. Okay? It’s invisible and it’s hidden, but it’s — it’s very smart. And you see that in a case like a Denver.
But, you know, I think we’re doing well, and they’re on Denver like you wouldn’t believe. I came in this morning; it was a flurry. I said what’s going on? They said, “Denver.” I said, “What happened to Denver?” Because Denver was doing pretty well. And they’ve got that under control. But, yeah, that would be a case where you do some very big testing.