The New York Times published an insightful and informative analysis of the federal government’s failure to act, as the threat of the coronavirus became clear at the start of 2020. It’s an absorbing story of bureaucratic delays, missed signals, a lack of urgency, a failure of planning and communication, and a failure to mobilize the nation in time to save thousands of lives. It’s a long read but worth your time.
By Michael D. Shear, Abby Goodnough, Sheila Kaplan, Sheri Fink, Katie Thomas and Noah Weiland
March 28, 2020
WASHINGTON — Early on, the dozen federal officials charged with defending America against the coronavirus gathered day after day in the White House Situation Room, consumed by crises. They grappled with how to evacuate the United States consulate in Wuhan, China, ban Chinese travelers and extract Americans from the Diamond Princess and other cruise ships.
The members of the coronavirus task force typically devoted only five or 10 minutes, often at the end of contentious meetings, to talk about testing, several participants recalled. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, its leaders assured the others, had developed a diagnostic model that would be rolled out quickly as a first step.
But as the deadly virus spread from China with ferocity across the United States between late January and early March, large-scale testing of people who might have been infected did not happen — because of technical flaws, regulatory hurdles, business-as-usual bureaucracies and lack of leadership at multiple levels, according to interviews with more than 50 current and former public health officials, administration officials, senior scientists and company executives.
The result was a lost month, when the world’s richest country — armed with some of the most highly trained scientists and infectious disease specialists — squandered its best chance of containing the virus’s spread. Instead, Americans were left largely blind to the scale of a looming public health catastrophe.
The absence of robust screening until it was “far too late” revealed failures across the government, said Dr. Thomas Frieden, the former C.D.C. director. Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins, said the Trump administration had “incredibly limited” views of the pathogen’s potential impact. Dr. Margaret Hamburg, the former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, said the lapse enabled “exponential growth of cases.”
And Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, a top government scientist involved in the fight against the virus, told members of Congress that the early inability to test was “a failing” of the administration’s response to a deadly, global pandemic. “Why,” he asked later in a magazine interview, “were we not able to mobilize on a broader scale?”
Across the government, they said, three agencies responsible for detecting and combating threats like the coronavirus failed to prepare quickly enough. Even as scientists looked at China and sounded alarms, none of the agencies’ directors conveyed the urgency required to spur a no-holds-barred defense.
Dr. Robert R. Redfield, 68, a former military doctor and prominent AIDS researcher who directs the C.D.C., trusted his veteran scientists to create the world’s most precise test for the coronavirus and share it with state laboratories. When flaws in the test became apparent in February, he promised a quick fix, though it took weeks to settle on a solution.
The C.D.C. also tightly restricted who could get tested and was slow to conduct “community-based surveillance,” a standard screening practice to detect the virus’s reach. Had the United States been able to track its earliest movements and identify hidden hot spots, local quarantines might have confined the disease.
Dr. Stephen Hahn, 60, the commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, enforced regulations that paradoxically made it tougher for hospitals, private clinics and companies to deploy diagnostic tests in an emergency. Other countries that had mobilized businesses were performing tens of thousands of tests daily, compared with fewer than 100 on average in the United States, frustrating local health officials, lawmakers and desperate Americans.
Regulations at the F.D.A., led by Dr. Stephen Hahn, made it difficult for hospitals to test patients at the same rate as in other countries.
Alex M. Azar II, who led the Department of Health and Human Services, oversaw the two other agencies and coordinated the government’s public health response to the pandemic. While he grew frustrated as public criticism over the testing issues intensified, he was unable to push either agency to speed up or change course.
Mr. Azar, 52, who chaired the coronavirus task force until late February, when Vice President Mike Pence took charge, had been at odds for months with the White House over other issues. The task force’s chief liaison to the president was Mick Mulvaney, the acting White House chief of staff, who was being forced out by Mr. Trump. Without high-level interest — or demands for action — the testing issue festered.
Under Alex M. Azar II, the health secretary, the C.D.C. and F.D.A. failed to break out of their business-as-usual habits.
At the start of that crucial lost month, when his government could have rallied, the president was distracted by impeachment and dismissive of the threat to the public’s health or the nation’s economy. By the end of the month, Mr. Trump claimed the virus was about to dissipate in the United States, saying: “It’s going to disappear. One day — it’s like a miracle — it will disappear.”
By early March, after federal officials finally announced changes to expand testing, it was too late. With the early lapses, containment was no longer an option. The tool kit of epidemiology would shift — lockdowns, social disruption, intensive medical treatment — in hopes of mitigating the harm.
Now, the United States has more than 100,000 coronavirus cases, the most of any country in the world. Deaths are rising, cities are shuttered, the economy is sputtering and everyday life is upended. And still, many Americans sickened by the virus cannot get tested.
In a statement, Judd Deere, a White House spokesman, said that “any suggestion that President Trump did not take the threat of Covid-19 seriously or that the United States was not prepared is false.” He added that at Mr. Trump’s direction, the administration had “expanded testing capacities.”
Dr. Bruce Aylward, a senior adviser at the World Health Organization, led an expert team to China last month to research the mysterious new virus. Testing, he said, was “absolutely vital” for understanding how to defeat a disease — what distinguishes it from others, the spectrum of illness and, most important, its path through populations.
“You want to know whether or not you have it,” Dr. Aylward said. “You want to know whether the people around you have it. Because you know what? Then you could stop it.”
“You can’t stop it,” he warned, “if you can’t see it.”
A Startling Setback
The first time Dr. Robert Redfield heard about the severity of the virus from his Chinese counterparts was around New Year’s Day, when he was on vacation with his family. He spent so much time on the phone that they barely saw him. And what he heard rattled him; in one grim conversation about the virus days later, George F. Gao, the director of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, burst into tears.
Dr. Redfield, a longtime AIDS researcher, had never run a government agency before his appointment to lead the C.D.C. in 2018. Until then, his biggest priorities had been fighting the opioid epidemic and the spread of H.I.V. Suddenly, a man who preferred treating patients in Haiti or Africa to being in the public glare was facing a new pandemic threat.
At first, Dr. Redfield’s agency moved quickly.
On Jan. 7, the C.D.C. created an “incident management system” for the coronavirus and advised travelers to Wuhan to take precautions. By Jan. 20, just two weeks after Chinese scientists shared the genetic sequence of the virus, the C.D.C. had developed its own test, as usual, and deployed it to detect the country’s first coronavirus case.
“That’s our prime mission,” Dr. Redfield said later in an interview, “to get eyes on this thing.”
Assessing the virus would prove challenging. It was so new that scientists had little information to work with. China provided limited data, and rebuffed an early attempt by Mr. Azar and Dr. Redfield to send C.D.C. experts there to learn more. That the virus could cause no symptoms and still spread — something not initially known — made it all the more difficult to understand.
To identify the virus, the C.D.C. test used three small genetic sequences to match up with portions of a virus’s genome extracted from a swab. A German-developed test that the W.H.O. was distributing to other countries used just two, potentially making it less precise.
But soon after the F.D.A. cleared the C.D.C. to share its test kits with state health department labs, some discovered a problem. The third sequence, or “probe,” gave inconclusive results. While the C.D.C. explored the cause — contamination or a design issue — it told those state labs to stop testing.
The startling setback stalled the C.D.C.’s efforts to track the virus when it mattered most. By mid-February, the nation was testing only about 100 samples per day, according to the C.D.C.’s website.
Dr. Redfield played down the problem in task force meetings and conversations with Mr. Azar, assuring him it would be fixed quickly, several administration officials said.
With capacity so limited, the C.D.C.’s criteria for who was tested remained extremely narrow for weeks to come: only people who had recently traveled to China or had been in contact with someone who had the virus.
The lack of tests in the states also meant local public health officials could not use another essential epidemiological tool: surveillance testing. To see where the virus might be hiding, nasal swab samples from people screened for the common flu would also be checked for the coronavirus.
The C.D.C. announced a plan on Feb. 14 to perform the screening in five high-risk cities: New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle. An agency official said it could provide “an early warning signal to trigger a change in our response strategy.” But most of the cities could not carry it out.
“Had we had done more testing from the very beginning and caught cases earlier,” said Dr. Nuzzo, of Johns Hopkins, “we would be in a far different place.”
The consequences became clear by the end of February. For the first time, someone with no known exposure to the virus or history of travel tested positive, in the Seattle area, where the U.S.’s first case had been detected more than a month earlier. The virus had probably been spreading there and elsewhere for weeks, researchers later concluded. Without a more complete picture of who had been infected, public health workers could not do “contact tracing” — finding all those with whom any contagious people had interacted and then quarantining them to stop further transmission.
The C.D.C. gave little thought to adopting the test being used by the W.H.O. The C.D.C.’s test was working in its own lab — still processing samples from states — which gave agency officials confidence. Dr. Anne Schuchat, the agency’s principal deputy director, would later say that the C.D.C. did not think “we needed somebody else’s test.”
And the German-designed W.H.O. test had not been through the American regulatory approval process, which would take time.
Throughout February, Dr. Redfield shuttled between Atlanta, where the C.D.C. is based, and Washington, holding multiple calls every day with Mr. Azar and participating in the coronavirus task force.
Mr. Azar’s take-charge style contrasted with the more deliberative manner of Dr. Redfield, who lacked the kind of commanding television presence that impressed Mr. Trump. He was “a consensus person,” as one colleague described him, who sought to avoid conflict. He relied heavily on some of the C.D.C.’s career scientists, like Dr. Schuchat and Dr. Nancy Messonnier, the director of the agency’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.
Under scrutiny from Congress, Dr. Redfield offered reassurances. Responding on Feb. 24 to a letter from 49 members of Congress about the need for testing in the states, he wrote, “CDC’s aggressive response enables us to identify potential cases early and make sure that they are properly handled.”
Days later, his agency provided a workaround, telling state and local health department labs that they could finally begin testing. Rather than awaiting replacements, they should use their C.D.C. test kits and leave out the problematic third probe.
Meanwhile, the agency’s epidemiologists were growing more concerned as the virus spread in South Korea and Italy. On Feb. 25, Dr. Messonnier gave a briefing with a much blunter warning than usual. “Disruption to everyday life might be severe,” she said.
Mr. Trump, returning from a trip to India, was furious, according to senior administration officials. Later that day, Mr. Azar seemed to be tamping down the level of concern. All Dr. Messonnier had meant, he said at a news conference, was that people should “start thinking about, in their own lives, what that might involve.”
“Might,” Mr. Azar repeated emphatically. “Might involve.”
Barriers to Testing
Dr. Stephen Hahn’s first day as F.D.A. commissioner came just six weeks before Mr. Azar declared a public health emergency on Jan. 31. A radiation oncologist and researcher who helped turn around MD Anderson in Houston, one of the nation’s leading cancer centers, Dr. Hahn had come to Washington to oversee a sprawling federal agency that regulates everything from lifesaving therapies to dog food.
But overnight, his mission — to manage 15,000 employees in a culture defined by precision and caution — was upended. A pathogen that Mr. Trump would later call the “invisible enemy” was hurtling toward the United States. It would fall to the newly arrived Dr. Hahn to help build a huge national capacity for testing by academic and private labs.
Instead, under his leadership, the F.D.A. became a significant roadblock, according to current and former officials as well as researchers and doctors at laboratories around the country.
Private-sector tests were supposed to be the next tier after the C.D.C. fulfilled its obligation to jump-start screening at public labs. In other countries hit hard by the coronavirus, governments acted quickly to speed tests to their populations. In South Korea, for example, regulators in early February summoned executives from 20 medical manufacturers, easing rules as they demanded tests.
But Dr. Hahn took a cautious approach. He was not proactive in reaching out to manufacturers, and instead deferred to his scientists, following the F.D.A.’s often cumbersome methods for approving medical screening.
Even the nation’s public health labs were looking for the F.D.A.’s help. “We are now many weeks into the response with still no diagnostic or surveillance test available outside of C.D.C. for the vast majority of our member laboratories,” Scott Becker, chief executive of the Association of Public Health Laboratories, wrote to Mr. Hahn in late February. “We believe a more expeditious route is needed at this time.”
Ironically, it was Mr. Azar’s emergency declaration that established the rules Dr. Hahn insisted on following. Designed to make it easier for drugmakers to pursue vaccines and other therapies during a crisis, such a declaration lets the F.D.A. speed approvals that could otherwise take a year or more.
But the emergency announcement created a new barrier for hospitals and laboratories that wanted to create their own tests to diagnose the coronavirus. Usually, they faced minimal federal regulation. But once Mr. Azar took action, they were subject to an F.D.A. process called an “emergency use authorization.”
Even though researchers around the country quickly began creating tests that could diagnose Covid-19, many said they were hindered by the F.D.A.’s approval process. The new tests sat unused at labs around the country.
Stanford was one of them. Researchers at the world-renowned university had a working test by February, based on protocols published by the W.H.O. The organization had already delivered more than 250,000 of the German-designed tests to 70 laboratories around the world, and doctors at the Stanford lab wanted to be prepared for a pandemic.
“Even if it didn’t come, it would be better to be ready than not to be ready,” said Dr. Benjamin Pinsky, the lab’s medical director.
But in the face of what he called “relatively tight” rules at the F.D.A., Dr. Pinsky and his colleagues decided against even trying to win permission. The Stanford clinical lab would not begin testing coronavirus samples until early March, when Dr. Hahn finally relaxed the rules.
Executives at bioMérieux, a French diagnostics company, had a similar experience. The company makes a countertop testing system, BioFire, that is routinely used to check for the flu and other respiratory illnesses in 1,700 hospitals around the country. It can provide results in about 45 minutes.
“A lot of us said, you know, your typical E.U.A. is just much too demanding,” said Dr. Mark Miller, the company’s chief medical officer, referring to the emergency approval. “It’s going to take much too much time. And can’t you do something to shorten that?”
Officials at the F.D.A. tried to be responsive, Dr. Miller said. But rather than throw out the rules, the agency only modified the regulatory requirements, still requiring weeks of discussions and negotiations.
After conversations with the F.D.A. in mid-February, the company received emergency approval for its BioFire test on March 24. (The company also began talking to the F.D.A. in January about another type of test, but decided not to pursue it in the United States for now.) Dr. Miller said that while he was ultimately satisfied with the F.D.A.’s actions, the overall response by the government was too slow, especially when it came to logistical questions like getting enough testing supplies to those who needed them.
“You’ve got other countries — and I’m sorry, unfortunately, the U.S. is one of those — where they’ve been slow, disorganized,” he said. “There are still not enough tests available there to test everybody who needs it.”
In an emailed statement, Dr. Hahn maintained that his agency had moved as quickly as it safely could to ensure that tests would be accurate. “Since the early days of this pandemic,” he said, “the F.D.A.’s doors have always been and still remain open to test developers.”
A Lack of Trust
Alex Azar had sounded confident at the end of January. At a news conference in the hulking H.H.S. headquarters in Washington, he said he had the government’s response to the new coronavirus under control, pointing out high-ranking jobs he had held in the department during the 2003 SARS outbreak and other infectious threats.
“I know this playbook well,” he told reporters.
A Yale-trained lawyer who once served as the top attorney at the health department, Mr. Azar had spent a decade as a top executive at Eli Lilly, one of the world’s largest drug companies. But he caught Mr. Trump’s attention in part because of other credentials: After law school, Mr. Azar was a clerk for some of the nation’s most conservative judges, including Justice Antonin Scalia of the Supreme Court. And for two years, he worked as Ken Starr’s deputy on the Clinton Whitewater investigation.
As Mr. Trump’s second health secretary, confirmed at the beginning of 2018, Mr. Azar has been quick to compliment the president and focus on the issues he cares about: lowering drug prices and fighting opioid addiction. On Feb. 6 — even as the W.H.O. announced that there were more than 28,000 coronavirus cases around the globe — Mr. Azar was in the second row in the White House’s East Room, demonstrating his loyalty to the president as Mr. Trump claimed vindication from his impeachment acquittal the day before and lashed out at “evil” lawmakers and the F.B.I.’s “top scum.”
As public attention on the virus threat intensified in January and February, Mr. Azar grew increasingly frustrated about the harsh spotlight on his department and the leaders of agencies who reported to him, according to people familiar with the response to the virus inside the agencies.
Described as a prickly boss by some administration officials, Mr. Azar has had a longstanding feud with Seema Verma, the Medicare and Medicaid chief, who recently became a regular presence at Mr. Trump’s televised briefings on the pandemic. Mr. Azar did not include Dr. Hahn on the virus task force he led, though some of the F.D.A. commissioner’s aides participated in H.H.S. meetings on the subject.
And tensions grew between the secretary and Dr. Redfield as the testing issue persisted. Mr. Azar and Dr. Redfield have been on the phone as often as a half-dozen times a day. But throughout February, as the C.D.C. test faltered, Mr. Azar became convinced that Dr. Redfield’s agency was providing him with inaccurate information about testing that the secretary repeated publicly, according to several administration officials.
In one instance, Mr. Azar appeared on Sunday morning news programs and said that more than 3,600 people had been tested for the virus. In fact, the real number was much smaller because many patients were tested multiple times, an error the C.D.C. had to correct in congressional testimony that week. One health department official said Mr. Azar was repeatedly assured that the C.D.C.’s test would be widely available within a week or 10 days, only to be given the same promise a week later.
Asked about criticism of his agency’s response to the pandemic, Dr. Redfield said: “I’m personally not focused on whether they’re pointing fingers here or there. We’re focused on doing all we can to get through this outbreak as quickly as possible and keep America safe.”
For all Mr. Azar’s complaints, however, he continued to defer to the scientists at the two agencies, according to several administration officials. Mr. Azar’s allies said he was told by Dr. Redfield and Dr. Fauci that the C.D.C. had the resources it needed, that there was no reason to believe the virus was spreading through the country from person to person and that it was important to test only people who met certain criteria.
But even in the face of a crescendo of complaints from doctors and health care researchers around the country, Mr. Azar failed to push those under him to do the one thing that could have helped: broader testing.
In a statement, Caitlin Oakley, Mr. Azar’s spokeswoman, said that the secretary had “empowered and followed the guidance of world-renowned U.S. scientists” on the testing issue. “Any insinuation that Secretary Azar did not respond with needed urgency to the response or testing efforts,” she said, “are just plain wrong and disproven by the facts.”
By Feb. 26, Dr. Fauci was concerned that the stalled testing had become an urgent issue that needed to be addressed. He called Brian Harrison, Mr. Azar’s chief of staff, and asked him to gather the group of officials overseeing screening efforts.
Around noon on Feb. 27, Dr. Hahn, Dr. Redfield and top aides from the F.D.A. and H.H.S. dialed in to a conference call. Mr. Harrison began with an ultimatum: No one leaves until we resolve the lag in testing. We don’t have answers and we need them, one senior administration official recalled him saying. Get it done.
By the end of the day, the group agreed that the F.D.A. should loosen regulations so that hospitals and independent labs could move forward quickly with their own tests.
But the evening before, Mr. Azar had been effectively removed as the leader of the task force when Mr. Trump abruptly put Mr. Pence in charge, a decision so last-minute that even the top health officials in the White House learned of it while watching the announcement.
Previous presidents have moved quickly to confront disease threats from inside the White House by installing a “czar” to manage the effort.
During an outbreak of the Ebola virus in 2014, President Barack Obama tapped Ron Klain, his vice president’s former chief of staff, to direct the response from the West Wing. Mr. Obama later created an office of global health security inside the National Security Council to coordinate future crises.
“If you look historically in the United States when it is challenged with something like this — whether it’s H.I.V. crises, whether it’s pandemic, whether it’s whatever — man, they pull out all the stops across the system and they make it work,” said Dr. Aylward, the W.H.O. epidemiologist.
But faced with the coronavirus, Mr. Trump chose not to have the White House lead the planning until nearly two months after it began. Mr. Obama’s global health office had been disbanded a year earlier. And until Mr. Pence took charge, the task force lacked a single White House official with the power to compel action.
Since then, testing has ramped up quickly, with nearly 100 labs at hospitals and elsewhere performing it. On Friday, the health care giant Abbott said it had received emergency approval for a portable test that could detect the virus in five minutes.
The president boasted on Tuesday that the United States had “created a new system that now we are doing unbelievably big numbers” of tests for the virus. The U.S., he said, had done more testing for the coronavirus in the last eight days than South Korea had done in eight weeks.
Yet hospitals and clinics across the country still must deny tests to those with milder symptoms, trying to save them for the most serious cases, and they often wait a week for results. In tacit acknowledgment of the shortage, Mr. Trump asked South Korea’s president on Monday to send as many test kits as possible from the 100,000 produced there daily, more than the country needs.
Public health experts reacted positively to the increased capacity. But having the ability to diagnose the disease three months after it was first disclosed by China does little to address why the United States was unable to do so sooner, when it might have helped reduce the toll of the pandemic.
“Testing is the crack that split apart the rest of the response, when it should have tied everything together,” said Dr. Nahid Bhadelia, the medical director of the Special Pathogens Unit at Boston University School of Medicine.
“It seeps into every other aspect of our response, touches all of us,” she said. “The delay of the testing has impacted the response across the board.”

Yesterday, the Department of Public Health in my state gave the first breakdown of confirmed COVID-19 cases here by zipcode and I found out on the news last night that I live in THE zipcode with the highest number of infected people, in both my city and my state. This is REALLY scary!
Meanwhile, Trump continues to argue with my state’s governor over resources, since we are a blue state. What Trump doesn’t seem to realize is that the largest number of people in my city who voted for Trump in 2016 came from my zipcode, so his previous failure to act and his current actions are killing his base right here in my neighborhood! I know a lot of those people and I don’t agree with their politics, but despite being sorely misguided, many are very kind and no one deserves being treated this way!
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I live next to Eglin Air Force Base, the largest Air Force Base in the country. Over 10,000 people are on the base including active military as well as many military contractors. The military has declined to reveal the number of COVID-19 cases on the base. The base could be a close ticking time bomb that is shrouded in mystery. In today’s paper the military issued the following statement:
Everyone should fashion face coverings from household items such as clean T-shirts that can cover the nose and mouth areas. The N95 respiration and surgical masks are reserved for appropriate medical personnel.
With a military budget of over $900 billion dollars, does this sound like a model of preparedness?
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This is another consequence of fetishizing the military in the way most Americans do. Contractors get billions of unaccountable money and grunts and the rest of the nation bear the true costs. But hey, they’re all heroes and they can tough it out.
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& the grunts in the nation bearing the true costs in this case are those living in the mil base’s locale. It’s no different than the big corporations suckling off middle/ upper-midclass taxpayers & terrorizing the locals w/industrial waste/ emissions/ property encroachments/ bullying town govt into submission/ near-zero contribution to local arts etc: we’re supposed to grovel in thanks for the dwindling spin-off of local jobs/ biz. (Don’t even get me started on the effects of freeloading universities on local property taxes, grew up in a college town.)
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Trump insisted Monday his administration was doing a great job with its coronavirus response.
Trump: “Nobody’s ever seen anything like what we’ve done,” he said, adding that governors are “very happy.” “They may see [the media] and say, ‘Oh, oh we’re not happy.’ But they’re very happy on the phone.”
The State Health commissioner in Indiana is admitting that this state isn’t doing very well.
………………………….
State rushing to get more testing
April 7, 2020
INDIANAPOLIS – Several more area residents have died of the coronavirus as Indiana struggles to get needed tests, personal protective equipment and ventilators for the sick.
“We are all kind of Band-Aid, patching it together to get as many tests done as we can,” said State Health Commissioner Dr. Kristina Box.
Box acknowledged in a daily briefing alongside Gov. Eric Holcomb that a lack of available tests limits our ability to know how many Hoosiers are actually sick.
She provided statistics showing Indiana’s testing of about 336 per 100,000 residents lags that of surrounding states. Illinois and Michigan are about 460 individuals per 100,000 residents, and Ohio and Kentucky are at about 373 per 100,000 residents…
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Trump is either naive or stupid or a liar, to quote Acting Secretary of the Navy Modly
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Trump is all of those descriptors and add “treasonous” to the list.
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I choose All of the Above. Yesterday, when a reporter asked him about an Inspector General’s report that describes 300 hospitals, all of which lack sufficient tests, Trump’s response was simply to scream at the reporter and reiterate what a great job he’s doing. We missed the opportunity to ramp up testing, test widely, isolate and contain affected areas. For two months, Trump fiddled and tweeted while the virus became endemic.
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https://www.huffpost.com/entry/trump-covid-19-coronavirus-dictator-but-not-how-you-think_n_5e8ca74ac5b62459a92fc66b
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It’s sad but we knew it on some level, right? We knew the President who spends all day attacking people on Twitter and making appearances on Fox news doesn’t get any actual work done. He never stops talking- he’s everywhere, all the time, and none of it is work. We’ve all been watching this reality show for 3 years. They play-act as government officials. It’s a game to them. They wouldn’t (and didn’t) have time to do anything else.
We knew none of them were working. They show us this themselves every day.
The recovery effort isn’t going to be any better than the prevention effort was- they’re terrible at their jobs. They aren’t going to magically get better.
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You absolutely nailed this, Chiara. I’m not really a President, but I play one on Fox News.
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The only thing they have managed to do since the crisis started was produce and put on a nightly television show where they all lie for Trump and compliment their own work.
That’s the best we’re going to get. They’re not capable of better. It’s a tv show. Not even a very good tv show. A mediocre show.
Work doesn’t do itself. None of them were doing any so nothing got done. Which we knew- we all watched them NOT doing it.
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This is just one small example:
“Pressure mounted Tuesday to remove the acting Navy secretary, presenting a stark choice for Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper…”
This guy flew for 36 hours in the middle of a crisis to spend 30 minutes delivering an unhinged rant in defense of President Trump.
This is the quality of the “work”. Unbelievably bad. They get worse every week.
You better hope your state is governed by grownups. None of these people are going to help you. They don’t know how.
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Yesterday I saw a rare moment of decency from President Trump when he commented that he was going to try to mediate between Esper and the captain of that ship and noted that the captain had an exemplary record and that he didn’t want to see the guy’s life and career destroyed because he had a bad day.
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Trump realized that the Acting Secretary of the Navy was giving him bad press. Modly resigned today. You don’t embarrass Trump and survive.
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No matter how sycophantic you have been, no matter how many times you have done his dirty work, the boss will turn on you on a dime, often for reasons so ridiculous that they make sense only to him. And then he will whack you.
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This crisis shows how important it is to elect qualified individuals to office. One of Trump’s flaws is the people he appoints to do the work of the country. Loyalty/brown noses are not a good determinant for the jobs which surround the presidency.
The fact that those in charge of our country’s health could not or would not work together has turned into a tragedy costing many people their lives. What a fiasco!
So many mistakes on so many levels by so many people. It boggles the mind.
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Trump just fires the Inspector General who was selected by his peers to provide oversight for the $2 trillion appropriated to combat the economic pain of the pandemic. Trump opposes independent auditors.
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Consistency is another issue which exacerbated the problem. Fire those who are incompetent, not those who don’t “pretend” to worship the ground the President walks upon or those appointees who disagree with his oddball ideas. This is not a way to run a country,
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I live next to Eglin Air Force Base, the largest Air Force Base in the country. Over 10,000 people are on the base including active military as well as many military contractors. The military has declined to reveal the number of COVID-19 cases on the base. The base could be a close ticking time bomb that is shrouded in mystery, but nobody knows. In today’s paper the military issued the following statement:
Everyone should fashion face coverings from household items such as clean T-shirts that can cover the nose and mouth areas. The N95 respiration and surgical masks are reserved for appropriate medical personnel.
With such an enormous military budget, the level of preparedness does not inspire confidence.
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It’s important to keep in mind that government usually serves the public better than does the private sector. Trump is the exception. Gates was on the Daily Show recently, saying his foundation is more agile and efficient than government, the same stale argument made for years about charters and vouchers. Be wary of disaster capitalists, and keep the faith in government. Make Gates pay taxes and revive the social safety net.
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The irony of a government that has spent decades testing the things that can’t be measured and failing to test when society, as we know it, is as stake.
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Very insightful. I will steal this line.
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And, the reason is private business interests corrupting departments and agencies.
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Excellent point.
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This article is another hatchet job that pleases the Koch oligarchy.
Strange that whenever the food and drug mega-corporations wanted action from the FDA, they got it.
There’s a lot more to this story than the paintbrush that public employee managers were abiding their own counsel and being inert.
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Interesting. Hopefully the entire truth will come out.
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This White House Doesn’t Give Two Shits About You
By Michael Moore, Michael Moore’s Facebook Page
07 April 20
Trump and the profit motive are murdering our doctors and nurses and citizens. We’ve now been told that the National Stockpile of emergency equipment is there for the PRIVATE SECTOR to use to supply BUSINESS so that the PRIVATE SECTOR can SELL medical gear to hospitals for a PROFIT. That is what Pence and Jared Kushner and the Pentagon told the American people yesterday at the White House press conference. Are we going to put up with this? What are we going to do? This ignorant arrogant murdering bastard of a president must be removed from office — and we cannot wait until November. Every one of his enablers must be shut down too. We must rise up. We must be heard. I will help in any way I can. A nonviolent mass movement of millions can shut these people down, can force them to do what we tell them to do. Why wait until you’ve lost a loved one to act? This White House doesn’t give two shits about you. They told you this pandemic was a “hoax. “ Trump told you this virus was “like the flu,” that it was nothing, that it would be gone just like that. Months after he could’ve acted, he sits there today refusing to send the full help that’s needed, refusing to set up a national coordinated effort, refusing to declare a national lockdown, refusing even to keep his own hands off his own face. Trump, through stupidity or design, is out to kill us. This sounds like it can’t be happening. It is. IT IS. We need to use our collective smarts to survive. And we have no time. FEMA has just ordered another 100,000 body bags! They need a MILLION! Or more. History is full of people who just stood by and did nothing. Sometimes because they were paralyzed by fear, sometimes because they just didn’t believe they could make a difference. This is one of those moments when you must not be frozen in place. We’ve been told to “shelter in place.” But when that term is used in a school or mass shooting it means that once you shelter in place you must also immediately join with others to rush the shooter and take him down. If you just sit there or hide under your theater seat, he is going to go up and down the aisle and shoot you like the sitting duck you are. Trump is his own psychopath and he will not change so that you can live. Do you want to live? Do you want your parents and grandparents to live? What are you willing to do? Not with a gun, but with your brain and your guts and your ability to organize others. What is your idea? WHAT IS YOUR IDEA? Tell me! Tell us! Post it here. And then let’s organize and lead and ACT like our lives depended on it. Because they do.
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This article makes Azar a hero. Donald Trump appointed him to the Health and Human Services job to reward his theocratic base. Azar is anti-abortion. Given Trump’s other cabinet pics, what are the odds that Azar is working for the people?
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He’s looking out for Lilly’s bottom line and setting himself up for a cushy AEI gig some time soon.
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Just saw this and thought of you:
https://www.thenation.com/article/society/republicans-are-using-the-coronavirus-to-kill-off-abortion-rights/
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The “faithful” and the hierarchy of the Catholic Church- US Conference of Catholic Bishops and state Catholic Conferences- are a more formidable threat to democracy than evangelicals.
There’s a glimmer of hope, media is beginning to be woke.
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I actually thought Azur sounded incompetent. He was definitely not a hero. He did not get the job done. In fact, the job still isn’t done. They are flying by the seat of their pants (or should I say sinking fast). If it wasn’t for our Governors (well, most of them) we would be in much worse shape.
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Trump’s appointees are, first, venal.
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I actually thought Azur sounded incompetent. He was definitely not a hero. He did not get the job done. In fact, the job still isn’t done. They are flying by the seat of their pants (or should I say sinking fast). If it wasn’t for our Governors (well, most of them) we would be in much worse shape.
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We know that Trump didn’t write this message. It made sense and was complete sentences. Trump’s vocabulary doesn’t include all of these words and there is no mention of how great he is.
This was posted on news from the WH:
As President Trump writes in his Message for World Health Day 2020:
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Trump writes only with a Sharpie. Those words are too big for him.
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And the enemy is not invisible, it is very visible. And he forgot to thank the morticians who are dealing with all the dead Americans’s and their grieving families who can’t even perform a proper burial.
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Trump didn’t write this. LOL. Yes, clearly, Stephen Miller is still employed.
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Anything that shows a touch of empathy or compassion was definitely not written by Stephen Miller.
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Trump keeps saying that America is facing an invisible enemy, but it’s difficult to avoid seeing him.
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Good one!!!
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Yeah. It’s interesting how much the Fox crowd has embraced this crisis now. before, they dismissed it because it was a threat to the economy. But they sat down, did a quick analysis (meaning, they recalled each others’ dirty fantasies on how to get even richer and more powerful) and realized that they can use the crisis to their advantage. They can use it to mess with the election, they can pass legislations behind people’s back because they are busy with the virus, they can make the majority of the $2 trillion package benefit big businesses and religious institutions, they can give more power to individuals citing the extreme circumstance, they can show themselves as heroes of the war on corona while pursue individual agendas (like Gates have done). The opportunities are endless—exactly as in war.
To tell you the truth, I was surprised to see how slow the Foxies were in embracing this excellent opportunity for power and gold grab.
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From Fareed Zakaria [CNN]:
Johns Hopkins epidemiologist Jennifer Nuzzo tells JSTOR Daily that “we’re definitely not overreacting.” Three months before Covid-19 began to spread in Wuhan, Nuzzo (along with colleagues) published a report for the WHO entitled “Preparedness for a High-Impact Respiratory Pathogen Pandemic,” and Nuzzo says the Covid-19 pandemic has been worse than imagined. “[W]e would’ve anticipated shortages in global supplies, but the extent to which they’re in short supply has exceeded some of the grimmest expectations,” she tells JSTOR.
At least in the US, Nuzzo sees the lockdowns as a result of failed leadership: “I think the fact that we are all sitting here sheltering in place is the result of a lack of preparedness and a lack of appropriate response once we saw what was happening in China,” she says. “I mean we have a third of the population of China, and we had several months lead time. Yet we now have more cases than China ever had. In my mind, that’s failure.”
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It’s as if Trump spent trillions building up “the greatest war machine of all time”, but forgot to check the oil.
Even dismantled the pandemic response team Obama established to check that threat.
Now the entire economy has seized up like a car that has run out of oil because of Trump’s incompetence to check a very predictable pandemic threat that scientists have been warning us about for decades.
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The global shortage of toilet paper is causing some weird happenings:
In Australia, a cafe began accepting rolls of TP as payment — a cup of coffee will run you three rolls. In Hong Kong, crooks held up a supermarket at gunpoint; all they took was 600 rolls of the soft stuff. A pet store in Dornburg, Germany, last week set up an outdoor toilet paper drive-through in a parking lot when the owner was able to obtain a massive shipment.
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A scenario where business intelligence-gathering first identified the virus in China, not governments? Trump’s trade advisor is described as the person issuing the early warnings. If so, which companies had the info.?
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Has the employer of the first Covid patient in the US. been identified? He lived in the Seattle area and had been visiting family in Wuhan before symptoms appeared.
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The photo and name of the New Rochelle , N.Y., attorney made it to network news. The reason for the disparity in coverage?
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Was the Seattle Covid 19 patient, an employee of a major tech company or a small fish in a small pond.
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It’s important to realize that some experts have expressed their opinion that this is a huge overreaction to the virus.
Here is an article about this titled “12 experts questioning the corona virus panic”
These people really are experts, and I checked some of them, and they really wrote articles or open letters, gave interviews where they clearly, honestly believe, this whole thing is a big overreaction.
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The alarmist messaging had a goal- to avoid overwhelming the hospitals as occurred in NYC and Italy.
A worldwide novel epidemic with no prevention, treatment or cure is alarming. Medical care’s last resort, a ventilator, from which fewer than 1/2 recover, is hard to sell as business as usual.
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I don’t know if the orders to close down almost everything were right. Maybe they could have let more businesses stay open but required limits on the number admitted at the same time. We are confronted with a highly contagious disease for which there is no vaccine or cure, which strikes people down arbitrarily. What do these experts recommend?
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Thanks. These were interesting stats and opinions. It struck me the other day that the problem was that Covid is a problem that is too big for any one person. Economists will see it one way. Epidemiologists will see it various ways (as this article suggests). Politicians see it as opportunity, because politics is always about opportunity for ideology. Amalgamating all the points of view almost damns any real thinker to failure at some level.
The real question will be what occurs to make us all go back to work, to make us all go back to gathering. Humans are social, and not being social is often as lethal as passing on a disease, not just economically speaking but in terms of lost interaction.
My own opinions on the matter are not worth hearing, but I feel the need for social distancing has been borne out by the experience of Italy. When will we accept this virus as part of our normal behavior? Do we wait until we have an effective vaccine? Do we go back to social togetherness on Easter? (No to that one). I have to trust that there are people who see the horribly complex decisions we have to make. I have no trust in the present governments of the world to be a party to that logic, no matter what.
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Governments don’t act independently of the multinational corporations, especially the U.S.
Read the mission of the CDC Foundation at its site.
Former Foundation board chairs included the chair and CEO of the Koch’s Georgia Pacific and, the co-founder of Home Depot .
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Mate,
I read the article with comments by 12 skeptical expert, and I’m skeptical of the article. It’s dated—two weeks old, and the rates of contagion and death rates have gone up considerably. They belittle the risks to healthcare workers, but their skepticism is not shared by healthcare workers, who seem to have a great fear of catching the virus. First responders are showing high rates of disease as well. Anyone who shares their complacency should be sure not to wear gloves or a face mask.
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Indeed, Diane. & the health care & first responder heroes are dying.
2 just in their early 50s yesterday, here in Chicago. One in NYC who had been a NYFD officer, had been a first responder at Ground Zero, 9/11 & who was relatively young,
Also, did anyone see the pictures of Election Day polling places in WI, after the SCoWI overturned Gov. Evers’ orders to postpone the elections? Not only, at some, were voters not social distancing, but a number of them weren’t even wearing masks.
How nice that some people decide, in advance, that they aren’t going to randomly cough or sneeze (what I had routinely seen in airports/on planes prior to c-19, & I have arrived at my destination more than once w/a terrible cold which kept me in bed an entire weekend, rather than enjoy a visit)!
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Trump the Magnificent is now getting his ‘facts’ from Hannity.
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Trump, Citing Hannity’s Show, Claims Things Are ‘Great’ With Ventilators
Updated Apr. 08, 2020
“In fact, we just saw your show and a couple of other people just reported back to me that everyone is in great shape from the standpoint of ventilators.”
President Donald Trump told Fox News host and unofficial presidential adviser Sean Hannity on Tuesday night that he had learned partly from the prime-time star’s show just how “great” things are with ventilators and vital medical supplies during the coronavirus pandemic. Insisting that the nation is close to the peak of coronavirus cases, Trump said he “was right” that states wouldn’t need nearly as many beds and ventilators as originally thought.
“In fact, we just saw your show and a couple of other people just reported back to me that everyone is in great shape from the standpoint of ventilators which are very hard because they were expensive and big and they are very high tech,” Trump declared. “But they are very hard to get and we are building thousands of them, and we have that in good shape.”…
https://www.thedailybeast.com/trump-citing-hannitys-show-claims-things-are-great-with-ventilators?source=email&via=desktop
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And, in Nashville, John Prine has been taken by the Covid. Rest in the Green River, old poet.
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Trump: “I don’t want to create havoc and shock and everything else.”
Trump’s previous sentiment: “Because of all we’ve done, the risk to the American people remains very low.”
Why does the press continue to broadcast his lies? Have medical experts come up and speak so we can learn something. I’m tired of his continued bloviating.
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Trump Defends His Weeks Downplaying Coronavirus: I’m A ‘Cheerleader’
“I don’t want to create havoc and shock and everything else,” the president said. “I obviously was concerned about it.”
President Donald Trump rejected assertions that he had downplayed the spread of the novel coronavirus for weeks, saying Tuesday that he maintained a rosy public outlook while working behind the scenes because he felt the president needed to be a “cheerleader” for the country.
“The cases really didn’t build up for a while, but you have to understand, I’m a cheerleader for this country,” Trump said during a daily coronavirus briefing at the White House. “I don’t want to create havoc and shock and everything else. But ultimately, when I was saying that, I’m also closing it down. I obviously was concerned about it.”
Trump’s comments came after CBS reporter Ben Tracy asked about memos written by top White House adviser Peter Navarro in January and February that included bleak warnings related to the coronavirus, saying it could cost the U.S. economy trillions of dollars and potentially infect or kill millions of Americans.
The memos circulated among the top echelons of the Trump administration and came at the same time the president was downplaying the threat of the virus, saying the country had it “totally under control” and that the outbreak would have “a very good ending.”…
Article: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/trump-coronavirus-cheerleader_n_5e8d0872c5b6e1a2e0fb7aeb?ncid=engmodushpmg00000006
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This is the best Borowitz Report yet!!
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Experts Recommend Disinfecting Television After Trump Has Been On
By Andy Borowitz
April 7, 2020
Experts Recommend Disinfecting Television After Trump Has Been On
WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—People should get in the habit of thoroughly disinfecting their televisions after Donald J. Trump has been on, a cross-section of experts confirmed on Tuesday.
“If you have access to disinfectant wipes, thoroughly clean the television,” Dr. Davis Logsdon, of the University of Minnesota, said. “If the television is on your kitchen counter, wipe down the counter and put any dishes and other kitchen items that were exposed to Trump in the dishwasher. This won’t eliminate all traces of Trump, but it can’t hurt.”
Dr. Carol Foyler, of U.C.L.A. advised that “disinfecting your television is good as far as it goes, but everyone needs to be aware that, if Trump has been on TV, it is possible that Trump has been transmitted to you through the air.”
“I would take off your clothes, put them in the wash, and take a shower,” she said. “After you get out of the shower, if you have hand sanitizer, slather your naked body with it. This is what I do after Trump has been on.”…
https://www.newyorker.com/humor/borowitz-report/experts-recommend-disinfecting-television-after-trump-has-been-on?utm_source=onsite-share&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=onsite-share&utm_brand=the-new-yorker
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Two world health experts-
The President of the Gates Foundation, a doctor, resigned on Dec. 5, 2019.
Bill Gates left Microsoft’s board in March.
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The latest news from the far R is that CDC is asking hospitals to inflate the number of deaths from COVID-19. [I guess more deaths will make Trump look bad so hospitals are supposed to lie.] I’ve read that a nurse in NY says that the number of dead is underreported. Dead people are lined up along the hallways of hospitals.
…………………
Alert: CDC Telling Hospitals To Inflate Coronavirus Data? Damning Evidence
(Tea Party 247) – We have been informed daily of the number of Americans who have been confirmed to have contracted or died of the novel, Chinese-based coronavirus.
But just how thorough is this data?
The Gateway Pundit reports that:
The amount of Americans who are reported to have died from the Coronavirus is based on a CDC coding system that will “result in COVID-19 being the underlying cause more often than not.”
A new ICD code was established to keep track of Coronavirus deaths.
The U07.1 code will be used for death by Coronavirus infection.
However, there’s another secondary code, U07.2, “for clinical or epidemiological diagnosis of COVID-19 where a laboratory confirmation is inconclusive or not available,” the CDC guidelines read.
“Because laboratory test results are not typically reported on death certificates in the U.S., NCHS is not planning to implement U07.2 for mortality statistics.”
Hold up.
So coronavirus stats are being based partly on cases when the doctor simply thought that someone had the coronavirus?
This is not OK!!
“The underlying cause depends upon what and where conditions are reported on the death certificate. However, the rules for coding and selection of the underlying cause of death are expected to result in COVID-19 being the underlying cause more often than not,” the guidelines read.
“COVID-19 should be reported on the death certificate for all decedents where the disease caused or is assumed to have caused or contributed to death,” CDC guidelines issued March 24 read. “Certifiers should include as much detail as possible based on their knowledge of the case, medical records, laboratory testing, etc.,” the guidance continues.
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I remember specifically that Trump wanted money to go to hotels and cruise ships. Oh my, I wonder why? This is disgusting.
Many poor and disabled Americans aren’t even getting the ONE TIME $1,200 check. That isn’t enough to help anyone over a long period of time. This $2 trillion should have been given to small businesses and people who need help.
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Yes, Trump Hotels Do Appear to Qualify for Coronavirus Bailout Benefits.
April 8, 2020
President Donald Trump’s hotels in D.C., New York and Chicago all seem to qualify for benefits from the coronavirus bailout. So does his winery lodge in Virginia.
Last month’s $2 trillion bailout bill barred President Donald Trump, his family or other officials from benefiting from one of the law’s giant loan programs. But as reporters noticed, there was no such language included for other elements of the bailout. Some provisions of the bailout are particularly beneficial to businesses like Trump’s.
There is no evidence that any provisions in the bailout were written specifically to benefit the president. It’s also not known whether the Trumps will seek such aid. We asked the Trump Organization and White House about whether the company plans to apply for bailout loans. They did not respond.
First, at least four of Trump’s hotels each seem to qualify for a separate, forgivable loan…
The bailout has a huge loan program to help many businesses with payroll and other costs. While it’s only open to smaller companies, there’s a carveout for hotels: As The New York Times reported, the law says individual hotels can each qualify for separate loans, even if they’re all owned by a single company, so long as the hotel itself has 500 or fewer employees.
The provision was pushed by a hotel industry group, which argued it was needed for 33,000 hotels to qualify for the bailout. The group, of which some Trump hotels are members, organized a meeting between hotel CEOs and Vice President Mike Pence in mid-March to discuss the industry’s struggles and ask for help.
Each small business — and each hotel — can qualify for up to $10 million in loans, depending on payroll costs. The loans can then be forgiven if the money is used to cover payrolls and other ongoing expenses.
Four Trump hotels appear to qualify: two that Trump owns and two that his company manages…
https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-inc-hotels-do-appear-to-qualify-for-coronavirus-bailout-benefits
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I thought the Dems insisted on language to ensure that Trump didn’t collect.
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To reply to Roy, at 7:55 AM: Yes, the great songwriter & singer (most famous, I think, for “Angel From Montgomery,” a best-selling hit for Bonnie Raitt)–73 years old–had survived both neck & lung cancer, only to be felled by a disaster that should never, ever have happened to the extent it has in America.
There was a 2-page recap of Prine’s career & songs–headlined in tofay’s Chicago Sun-Times (he was a native of Maywood, a Chicago suburb, & started out in the Army, then as a postman, then was seen by Roger Ebert {said to have discovered “the singing mailman”}, &, later at Chicago’s famous Earl of Old Town, where Pail Anka & Kris Kristofferson, blown away by him, flew him to NYC w/in 24 hrs., &, shortly thereafter,
Prine had a record contract & a successful career.
I believe, on an earlier post, that I’d written something about Prine, & that someone had submitted a video link (I don’t remember which post, though).
Anyway, if someone could send one (or more) in & post, here, anyone who hadn’t heard him before will clamber for his recordings.
Bob Dylan: “Prine’s stuff is pure Proustian existentialism. Midwestern mindtrips to the nth degree…Nobody but Prine could write like that.”
Sure you will see some tribute to him tonight on one of the late shows (Colbert, e.g.)
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Trump has to blame someone else for everything. He never sees his own ignorance as causing the delays that proved to be lethal.
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Coronavirus: WHO chief urges end to ‘politicisation’ of virus…Shared from BBC News
28 minutes ago
The head of the World Health Organization (WHO) has urged unity, as the agency comes under continued fire from US President Donald Trump.
Speaking on Wednesday, Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus defended the WHO’s work and called for an end to the politicisation of Covid-19.
The Ethiopian also said that he had received deaths threats and has been subjected to racist abuse.
Mr Trump said he would consider ending US funding for the UN agency.
He accused the WHO of being “very China-centric” and said they “really blew” their pandemic response.
Dr Tedros has now dismissed the comments, insisting: “We are close to every nation, we are colour-blind.”…
Timing of Trump’s threat questioned
By David Willis,
BBC North America correspondent
Facing growing criticism over his handling of this crisis, President Trump is now seeking to pin the blame for the spread of the coronavirus on the World Health Organization.
Officials at the UN agency criticised his decision to impose a ban on travellers entering the US from China at the end of January – a move the president has since touted as crucial to controlling the spread of the virus – and with conservative commentators and some Senate Republicans taking to the airwaves to denounce the Geneva-based body, Mr Trump has clearly decided it would be politically expedient to join them.
He sees the WHO as being biased towards China, and believes it was too unquestioning of the early information about Covid-19 that came from the Chinese.
The WHO is not above criticism, particularly for its early assertion that human transmission had not been proven, and its reticence later on to declare a pandemic. But even some of the president’s leading supporters are questioning the timing of his threat to withhold funding for the world’s leading health organisation – coming, as it does, at the height of a global pandemic.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-52224183
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I received an email from my Trump-loving friend. She wanted me to U-tube the XX2 Report. We can all learn that Dr. Fauci is a deep state operative. He is a Democrat who donated at least $1200 to Hillary for America & Hillary Victory Fund in 2016 campaign vs. Trump. Dr. Fauci wrote a 2013 email praising Hillary.
The mainstream media corrupt politicians and everyone else, they don’t want to talk about hydorxychloroquinne. For some reason they don’t want anyone to know about this drug…. Trump, who said he is not a doctor, is talking with other people and they are saying great things about it.
This announcer is intimating that Trump sent some drugs to the UK because they couldn’t get hydorxychloroquinne and that perhaps that is why Boris Johnson is getting better. [I got this far in the video and stopped listening. Where do people get this CR*P?] Trump supporters will believe anything. Research is being done on hydorxychloroquinne by NIH but the results won’t be published until Dec. 31, 2020.
……………………………………….
XX2 Report: Soon The World Will Understand, The Truth Will Shock The World – Episode 2143bApr 8, 2020
https://youtu.be/4ChyaFhvGB4
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Remember this is satire. I LOVE Borowitz!!
Dang. Now Trump might have to wait until the pandemic is over before he can have a parade glorifying the great job he is doing.
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Fauci Gently Tells Trump Why He Can’t Hold Parade to Celebrate Great Job He Is Doing
By Andy Borowitz
March 28, 2020
WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Dr. Anthony Fauci spent several hours on Saturday gently explaining to Donald J. Trump why it would be “a bad idea” to hold a giant parade to celebrate the great job the President is doing to combat covid-19, Dr. Fauci has confirmed.
Trump first raised the idea of a massive parade early Saturday morning, arguing that it would address the “biggest problem” created by the pandemic thus far: the lack of appreciation for his own efforts regarding it.
“A parade would put Jay Inslee and that woman in Michigan in their place,” Trump bitterly insisted.
As Trump began drawing up plans for a parade, a panicked Dr. Fauci interceded and tried to explain that such a celebration would be “much nicer” if held after the pandemic is over…
https://www.newyorker.com/humor/borowitz-report/fauci-gently-tells-trump-why-he-cant-hold-parade-to-celebrate-great-job-he-is-doing?utm_source=onsite-share&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=onsite-share&utm_brand=the-new-yorker
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Just what this country needs. /s
The Hill:
Trump officials lay groundwork for May reopening
The Trump administration is laying the foundation to push for a reopening of parts of the U.S. economy as early as the beginning of May amid rising pressure over unemployment numbers rivaling those during the Great Depression.
President Trump and top government officials in recent days have talked about seeing “glimmers of hope” and “light at the end of the tunnel” while publicly discussing ideas for how to revive the economy.
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Mnuchin says U.S. businesses could reopen in May.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Thursday that he thinks the U.S. could reopen the economy during the month of May. “I do,” Mnuchin told CNBC host Jim Cramer in a phone interview on Thursday morning in response to a question about whether the country could be “open for business” in the month of May. This comes on the heels of President Trump saying he’d like to see the economy open with a “big bang.” (The Hill)
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That’s three weeks from now.
Soon they will say June, not May.
Let’s see how crowded the church pews are this Sunday.
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How refreshing to hear what Obama says in a virtual meeting with mayors. WE NEED A LEADER, not a bloviating moron.
………………….
CNN–
Former President Barack Obama addressed a group of mayors organized by Bloomberg Philanthropies on Thursday, telling the group that “the biggest mistake any us can make in these situations is to misinform.”
“Speak the truth. Speak it clearly. Speak it with compassion. Speak it with empathy for what folks are going through,” Obama said, according to a press release on the virtual meeting.
Obama also pushed the mayors to bring in as many smart advisers and experts as possible.
“The more smart people you have around you, and the less embarrassed you are to ask questions, the better your response is going to be,” Obama said.
This is the fourth virtual meeting Bloomberg’s group has held with mayors. Two of the previous meetings have featured speeches by Former Presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton.
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Great!👍🏿 I have written a blog on the dame topic, do check it. 🙂 https://iumarmuzaffar.wordpress.com/2020/06/24/failure-means-loser/
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