Murphy Bothered by 'Mixed Bag' COVID-19 Numbers

Appearing in North Brunswick this morning, Governor Phil Murphy shared some somewhat distressing overnight COVID-19 numbers. "We're not out of the woods yet," said the governor. "The rate of transmission is up a little bit from yesterday to 1.14%.
He cited 565 new positive cases, 24 confirmed deaths, 30 new hospitalizations (which is down, the nugget of good news in his report) and 37 hospital discharges.
"It's a mixed bag at best," said Murphy. "We need everybody to remain vigilant."
Specifically, he urged people to avoid close-quarters socialization, and fretted out loud about people continuing to socialize without implementing COVID-19 combat measures.
Murphy made his remarks in North Brunswick, where just over a little week ago, a male rights activist donned a FedEx outfit and murdered the son of a federal judge, in an act "overwhelmed with hatred," the governor said.
"Our thoughts and prayers continue to be with North Brunswick," he said, immediately prior to announcing $15 million in direct grant funds to back small businesses through the small business emergency grant fund.
Murphy again swatted at the Republicans' federal stimulus bill, which he has repeatedly bemoaned as inadequate. "It's another example of why we need more federal cash and federal assistance," the governor said. "Not only will we keep frontline workers employed but we will be able to drive more money to the small business community."
[caption id="attachment_98315" align="alignnone" width="893"] Carlos Medina, chairman of the NJ Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, participated in the press conference in support of Governor Murphy.[/caption]
From the Governor's Office:
Murphy is a D bag. You can only keep people down for so long before the revolt. I see it already. Warren County has not been hit by the virus with any intensity. The county has had single digit new cases each day for the last month. People here are tired of Murphy's one size fits all edicts. I see people now are disregarding everything he says because he is out of touch with Warren County and THAT is equally as dangerous as reopening too soon. Not to mention the fact that there will be no place to go by the time Murphy decides it is safe. Businesses are dying.