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Thursday, July 02, 2020

Herman Cain: I Got The Coronavirus!

Coronavirus got Mr. 999.
Ah, shucky ducky, Mr. 999, may have picked up more than pizza slice!

Guess Donald J. Trump's Black quota in Tulsa went up just about 5% that night he held that rally!

Former presidential candidate and Black goofball Herman Cain is diagnosis with COVID-19. He and many Black conservatives like Terrence K. Williams, Katrina Pierson, Diamond & Silk and C.L. Bryant may have been exposed to the coronavirus after attending the disappointing Tulsa rally.

The controversial rally was held at the BOK Arena in Tulsa last week and it drew heavy criticism.

Trump refused to wear in facial mask and told supporters and allies that were attending his rallies they didn't have to wear one. Also they can't sue Trump or the presidential campaign for catching any illness while attending.




Six staffers working with the Trump campaign and ten U.S. Secret Service Agents tested positive for the coronavirus.

Even campaign manager Brad Parscale may have caught the coronavirus.

Addressing speculation he may have picked it up at Trump’s campaign event, Cain’s team said in a statement they are unsure how or where he contracted the virus.

"We honestly have no idea where he contracted it," HermanCain.com editor Dan Calabrese wrote on the site. "I realize people will speculate about the Tulsa rally, but Herman did a lot of traveling the past week, including to Arizona where cases are spiking. I don't think there's any way to trace this to the one specific contact that caused him to be infected. We'll never know."

Regardless of what Cain did, he did not wear facial protection and symptoms gotten worse enough for him to be hospitalized.
Trump's rally went bust and folks may have been exposed to COVID-19.
The 73-year old former presidential candidate and former radio host was considered a pick for the U.S. Board of Governors for the Federal Reserve.

Cain's history of sexual abuse tanked his presidential campaign and his career.

Cain is best known for promoting his 9-9-9 plan. The nine ways of governing. Cain was then the CEO of the Godfather's Pizza. He was ruthless mocked for his 9-9-9 plan due to the fact it sounds like a pizza order.

Here's Terrence K. Williams defending Cain.




Here's the map.



Here's things to remember about the coronavirus. Revised.

1. Wash your hands frequently. Wash for at least 20 seconds (two Happy Birthday songs).

2. Do not touch your face (mouth, nose and eyes)

3. Cough into your elbow instead of your hands.

4. Keep a safe distance (at least 6 to 10 feet) from individuals. Businesses are now issuing social distancing and will have the right to refuse service if you're not adhering to the guidelines.

5. If you're sick, please stay home. You could spread the disease to others and trust me, you could face legal ramifications if you're sick and you deliberately showing up to work.

6. There is no treatment or cure for the COVID-19.

7. Follow state and federal laws regarding this. Some states have relaxed regulations but that doesn't mean you're fully able to return to normal life. You have to stay vigilant and remind yourself that you can still catch this despite social distancing and safe sanitation practices.

8. Do not hoard items like toilet paper, milk, eggs, bread, gloves, hand sanitizer, etc.

9. Use social media like Facebook Messenger, Meet, Zoom, Google Duo, Skype or social media to connect.

10. COVID-19 can live on surfaces for more than 72 hours. Including steel, plastic and cardboard.

11. A pandemic has no timeline. The coronavirus is new and scientists are trying to figure out how to combat this.

12. COVID-19 doesn't care about borders. The coronavirus spreads from human to human contact. We have no confirmation on how it made it to the United States. Don't believe what Donald J. Trump says about it coming from China. It was detected in China, then Italy and our first confirmed case was in January 2020 in the United States. We probably had thousands of people affected in 2019 and we just didn't know it.

13. If you deliberately infect other individuals, food and first responders, you will be charged with crime. So if people are trying to cough on you, sneeze on you, lick food products, lick toilet seats and refuse to wear masks where its required, they could face criminal charges. This is a controversial issue because some believe the mask isn't protecting them and some don't care about you or your family's health.
Terrence K Williams may have been exposed to COVID-19.
14. If you have signs of bluish lips or face, inability to wake or stay awake, new confusion, persistent pain in the chest, trouble breathing or blood in cough, call 9-1-1. There are mobile testing sites in your community but always check with a doctor first before getting a test at a public center. Most doctors will not take you openly without facial protection and confirmed symptoms.

15. Not all symptoms of COVID-19 are confirmed or denied. New issues keep showing up. So don't believe everything you've heard. The most common symptoms are noted above. Also please note that asymptomatic individuals are folks who have no symptoms but are spreading. Those are folks who look normal but have it and not showing signs yet.

According to the CDC, there is still not enough information on antibodies for COVID-19 and whether they can prevent someone from getting reinfected. It still recommends that people with a positive antibody test follow recommendations for protecting themselves and others.

The coronavirus doesn't care about your age, race, gender, sexuality, nationality, religion, politics, economic or social standings. It doesn't care about anything. It's a living organism that causes mild symptoms that include: fever, sore throats, chills, respiratory issues, loss of taste or smell and other unknown symptoms. If you have a weak immune system or health issues, your risk increases.

Death does happen to at least 40% of those who are affected by COVID-19.

Healthy people can die from this. Take this seriously. You only have one life!

If you need more information, visit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention at cdc.gov.

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