Saw the blurb about hydroxychloroquine being "unproven" and wanted to point you to a NIH study published in 2005 titled, "Chloroquine is a potent inhibitor of SARS coronavirus infection and spread". This is the same NIH for which Dr Fauci works, the study is for public consumption so peruse at your leisure when time permits. Thanks.
Wow, when you put that much spin on a topic you risk it spinning completely out of control. The Judge ruled the Governor needed to follow the law, period. Which sets time limits on her powers (14 days plus option for 14 day extension) after which she needs to actually involve the legislature. She probably should have been working on that ever since announcing the extension. From the decision:
"When granting this additional power over the movement and gatherings of citizens, the
legislature saw fit to add additional time restrictions. Those time restrictions contained in
section (5) of that provision only allow the Governor to extend the emergency declaration for 14 additional days from the original 14-day period. This provision makes the maximum time restriction to be 28 days by operation of law. The Governor in her original executive order 20-3 set her executive order to 60 days. This is well beyond the maximum 28-days allowed by ORS 433.441. This court finds that when the Governor utilized the provisions of ORS 433.441 in her executive order, she triggered all the provisions of ORS 433.441 including the time restrictions in ORS 433.441(5)."
Saw the blurb about hydroxychloroquine being "unproven" and wanted to point you to a NIH study published in 2005 titled, "Chloroquine is a potent inhibitor of SARS coronavirus infection and spread". This is the same NIH for which Dr Fauci works, the study is for public consumption so peruse at your leisure when time permits. Thanks.
Wow, when you put that much spin on a topic you risk it spinning completely out of control. The Judge ruled the Governor needed to follow the law, period. Which sets time limits on her powers (14 days plus option for 14 day extension) after which she needs to actually involve the legislature. She probably should have been working on that ever since announcing the extension. From the decision:
"When granting this additional power over the movement and gatherings of citizens, the
legislature saw fit to add additional time restrictions. Those time restrictions contained in
section (5) of that provision only allow the Governor to extend the emergency declaration for 14 additional days from the original 14-day period. This provision makes the maximum time restriction to be 28 days by operation of law. The Governor in her original executive order 20-3 set her executive order to 60 days. This is well beyond the maximum 28-days allowed by ORS 433.441. This court finds that when the Governor utilized the provisions of ORS 433.441 in her executive order, she triggered all the provisions of ORS 433.441 including the time restrictions in ORS 433.441(5)."