Lol Oklahoma is having a normal one. It is pulling a Florida and accusing the CDC of lying about Omicron prevalence in the state all because Oklahoma can't bother to do any sequencing.
11k sequences aren't a lot when you've had 700k cases. That's 1.6% of all cases.
92% was the estimate for the week ending December 18th for the HHS region that Oklahoma was a part of. The CDC modeling now has revised its modeling and projects 86.7% of cases for that region. Nothing about the claim is inaccurate. The CDC Nowcast lists the prediction intervals for its estimates and notes that estimates for recent weeks may change as more data are reported.
It'd be great to not have to rely on the Nowcast modeling, but sequencing can take several weeks. To make matters worse Oklahoma is last in the US in cases sequenced, so to have any reliable estimate of Omicron prevalence in the state you really need to pool neighboring states that have more sequencing.
Imagine thinking that a variant that is winning the replication race is somehow going to magically become less prevalent because you, I don't know, maybe beg your sky wizard of choice to make it so?