During the outset of the pandemic, when Americans were frightened and confused about how to protect themselves from the deadly virus, President Trump held a news conference where he added his non-scientific opinion as to what people should do to avoid catching the highly contagious COVID. Trump believed in his deep knowledge of science because, he once said, he had an uncle who taught at MIT.
The New York Times reported that Trump’s suggestion about how to avoid COVID caused a large public response, as well as warnings from public health agencies:
WASHINGTON — In Maryland, so many callers flooded a health hotline with questions that the state’s Emergency Management Agency had to issue a warning that “under no circumstances” should any disinfectant be taken to treat the coronavirus. In Washington State, officials urged people not to consume laundry detergent capsules. Across the country on Friday, health professionals sounded the alarm.
Injecting bleach or highly concentrated rubbing alcohol “causes massive organ damage and the blood cells in the body to basically burst,” Dr. Diane P. Calello, the medical director of the New Jersey Poison Information and Education System, said in an interview. “It can definitely be a fatal event.”
Even the makers of Clorox and Lysol pleaded with Americans not to inject or ingest their products.
The frantic reaction was prompted by President Trump’s suggestion on Thursday at a White House briefing that an “injection inside” the human body with a disinfectant like bleach or isopropyl alcohol could help combat the virus.
“And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute,” Mr. Trump said after a presentation from William N. Bryan, an acting under secretary for science at the Department of Homeland Security, detailed the virus’s possible susceptibility to bleach and alcohol.
“One minute,” the president said. “And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning? Because you see it gets in the lungs and it does a tremendous number on the lungs. So it would be interesting to check that.”
Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the White House’s coronavirus response coordinator, was sitting to the side in the White House briefing room, blinking hard and looking at the floor as he spoke. Later, Mr. Trump asked her if she knew about “the heat and the light” as a potential cure.
“Not as a treatment,” Dr. Birx said, adding, “I haven’t seen heat or light —” before the president cut her off.
Mr. Trump’s remarks caused an immediate uproar, and the White House spent much of Friday trying to walk them back. Also Friday, the Food and Drug Administration warned that hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine, two drugs that the president has repeatedly recommended in treating the coronavirus, can cause dangerous abnormalities in heart rhythm in coronavirus patients and has resulted in some deaths.
Later, Trump insisted he was being sarcastic, not serious.
After Trump’s press conference, reports to poison control centers spiked.
Time magazine reported on a bulletin from the American Association of Poison Control Centers, which held that reports of poisoning from ingesting bleach and other disinfectants rose after Trump’s remarks.
The Hill reported a sharp increase in calls to poison control centers after Trump made his remarks.
The Michigan Poison Center reported an increase in calls to poison centers in at least five states after Trump’s remarks. The makers of Clorox and Lysol issued statements urging the public not to ingest their products.
The Harvard Business Review published an article asserting that we can never know for sure how many people drank bleach and how many died, because so many people who answer survey questions don’t understand the question or the answer.
The NIH concluded that no one died of ingesting bleach because 100% of those surveyed gave answers to the questions that were silly, mischievous, or ignorant. The author of the Harvard Business Review article was a contributing author to the NIH study.
Politico posted a reminiscence of the day that Trump recommended ingesting bleach exactly one year later, when he was no longer in office.
One year ago today, President Donald Trump took to the White House briefing room and encouraged his top health officials to study the injection of bleach into the human body as a means of fighting Covid. It was a watershed moment, soon to become iconic in the annals of presidential briefings. It arguably changed the course of political history.
Some ex-Trump aides say they don’t even think about that day as the wildest they experienced — with the conceit that there were simply too many others. But for those there, it was instantly shocking, even by Trump standards. It quickly came to symbolize the chaotic essence of his presidency and his handling of the pandemic. Twelve months later, with the pandemic still lingering and a U.S. death toll nearing 570,000, it still does.
“For me, it was the craziest and most surreal moment I had ever witnessed in a presidential press conference,” said ABC’s chief Washington correspondent Jon Karl, who was the first reporter at the briefing to question Trump’s musings about bleach.
For weeks, Trump had been giving winding, stream-of-consciousness updates on the state of the Covid fight as it clearly worsened. So when he got up from the Oval Office to brief reporters gathered in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room on April 23, there was no expectation that the day’s proceedings would be any different than usual.
Privately, however, some of his aides were worried. The Covid task force had met earlier that day — as usual, without Trump — to discuss the most recent findings, including the effects of light and humidity on how the virus spreads. Trump was briefed by a small group of aides. But it was clear to some aides that he hadn’t processed all the details before he left to speak to the press.
“A few of us actually tried to stop it in the West Wing hallway,” said one former senior Trump White House official. “I actually argued that President Trump wouldn’t have the time to absorb it and understand it. But I lost, and it went how it did.”
Trump started his press conference that day by doing something he’d come to loathe: pushing basic public safety measures. He called for the “voluntary use of face coverings” and said of his administration, “continued diligence is an essential part of our strategy.”
Quickly, however, came a hint at how loose the guardrails were that day. Trump introduced Bill Bryan, head of science and technology at the Department of Homeland Security. “He’s going to be talking about how the virus reacts in sunlight,” the president said. “Wait ‘til you hear the numbers.”
As Bryan spoke, charts were displayed behind him about surface temperatures and virus half-lives. He preached, rather presciently, for people to “move activities outside” and then detailed ongoing studies involving disinfectants. “We tested bleach,” he said at one point. “I can tell you that bleach will kill the virus in five minutes.”
Standing off to the side, Trump clasped his hands in front of his stomach, nodded and looked out into the room of gathered reporters. When Bryan was done, he strode slowly back to the lectern.
“A question that probably some of you are thinking of if you’re totally into that world,” Trump began, clearly thinking the question himself, “So, supposing we hit the body with a tremendous — whether it’s ultraviolet or just very powerful light — and I think you said that that hasn’t been checked, but you’re going to test it. And then I said, supposing you brought the light inside the body, which you can do either through the skin or in some other way, and I think you said you’re going to test that, too. It sounds interesting. And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute. And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning. Because you see it gets in the lungs, and it does a tremendous number on the lungs. So it would be interesting to check that.”
Dr. Deborah Birx, Trump’s former coronavirus response coordinator, sat silently off to the side as the president made these suggestions to her. Later, she would tell ABC, “I didn’t know how to handle that episode,” adding, “I still think about it every day.”
Inside the Biden campaign, aides were shocked as well. They were working remotely at that juncture, communicating largely over Signal. But the import of what had happened became quickly evident to them.
“Even for him,” said one former Biden campaign aide, “this was stratospherically insane and dangerous. It cemented the case we had been making about his derelict covid response.”
In short order, the infamous bleach press conference became a literal rallying cry for Trump’s opponents, with Biden supporters dotting their yards with “He Won’t Put Bleach In You” signs. For Trump, it was a scourge. He would go on to insist that he was merely being sarcastic — a claim at odds with the excited curiosity he had posing those questions to Birx. His former team concedes that real damage was done.
“People joked about it inside the White House like, ‘Are you drinking bleach and injecting sunlight?’ People were mocking it and saying, ‘Oh let me go stand out in the sun, and I’ll be safe from Covid,” said one former administration official. “It honestly hurt. It was a credibility issue. … It was hurting us even from an international standpoint, the credibility at the White House.”
That Trump was even at the lectern that day was head-scratching for many. For weeks, he and his team had downplayed the severity of the Covid crisis even as the president privately acknowledged to the Washington Post’s Bob Woodward that it had the potential to be catastrophic. But as it became clearer that the public was not buying the rosy assessments, Trump had decided to take his fate into his own hands — assembling the press on a daily basis to spin his way through the crisis.
He loved it. The former administration official said Trump was elated with the free airtime he was getting on television day after day. “He was asking how much money that was worth,” the aide recalled. The coverage was so ubiquitous that, at one point, Fox News’ Bret Baier attended the briefing and peppered the president with questions because his own show was being routinely interrupted.
The bleach episode changed all that.
Aides immediately understood what a public health quagmire Trump’s remarks had created. White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany insisted he was being taken out of context.
“President Trump has repeatedly said that Americans should consult with medical doctors regarding coronavirus treatment, a point that he emphasized again during yesterday’s briefing,” McEnany said in a statement issued the next day. “Leave it to the media to irresponsibly take President Trump out of context and run with negative headlines.”
His aides realized that it was not a good strategy for him to present medical advice to the public, but Trump loved the attention.

Before Dienne pops on to say that Trump did not literally say drink bleach (he said that doctors should look into injecting disinfectant), here’s the salient point: Trump is such an utter freaking moron that he thought that getting disinfectant inside you would be a good thing. And he was addressing the entire nation, including the vast number of idiots across the country who would interpret his comments as an informed call for them to get disinfectant into themselves right away–by one means or another. ROFL. Trump’s comments were among the most stupid ever uttered by a politician, up there with Texas governor Ma Ferguson’s alleged comment about bilingual education that “If English was good enough for Jesus Christ, it ought to be good enough for the children of Texas.”
Now, please, go ahead. Defend Trump’s idiotic comment again. You keep making a fool of yourself by doing that.
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Thanks for the laugh, Bob. Sometimes I forget how deeply ignorant some people are.
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Wow, Ma and Pa Ferguson. Just read up on them. Good grief. My favorite part: in ’32 the Texas Rangers openly supported the opposing candidate in Ma’s run for a 2nd term. As soon as she took office, she fired them all, and the legislature slashed salaries and funding. Wikipedia: “The result was that Texas became a safe hideout for many Depression-era gangsters… such as Bonnie and Clyde, George ‘Machine Gun’ Kelly, Pretty Boy Floyd, and Raymond Hamilton [Barrow gang].”
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Tsar Vladimir the Defenestrater, aka Tsar Vladimir the Short, reaped enormous rewards for his investment in his dog, Trump. From long experience, he knew that could count on the fact that Trump was idiot enough to BELIEVE ANYTHING and be bent into any shape. It is a testament to our system of checks and balances–to those around Trump like Milley and Esper and eventually even Barr and Bolton–that Trump’s tenure, as bad as it was, wasn’t far worse (and it was really, really bad, of course, a kind of nightmare–ask the children who went hungry because Trump cut their lunches; ask the families of people who died because of his politicization of Covid or of our allies who died because of his abandonment of the Kurds, for a start). We had an Adderall-addicted serial con man, pathological liar, and Russian Asset sitting in the Oval Office for four years and survived–at a terrible cost, of course, in lives here and abroad, but we made it through even this–having a Russian Asset in the Presidency. That that is so is nothing short of astonishing.
But it ain’t over yet. A second Trump term is unthinkable. It could be catastrophic.
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bob the lunatic!!!! Still psyop on russia, so sad!!!
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Hi, troll! Back again. Your hero Trump suffered a huge setback in federal court today. Not sad. Hahaha!!!
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Look. Diane is sick and tired of your coming onto this site using various names and IP addresses (via a VPN?) to make these disgusting and idiotic comments. Please stop. At some point, this becomes harassment, and the police can get involved. Get it? I hope so.
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So, she has asked you politely. Stop posting here. Don’t make her take this further. Stop. Now.
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Look, take your demented trash back to my website. I’ll laugh at it there. And you can post your idiocies there until Armageddon for all I care. HOWEVER, stop harassing Diane. She is a woman in her mid-eighties, for crying out loud. Have you no decency?
She has asked you repeatedly to stop posting here. She has taken active measures to block post from your IP address. Yet you persist. This is harassment. Stop posting here, now. Diane has asked you nicely more than once to do so.
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I don’t know whether to root for the now Extreme Court to allow states to kick Trump off their ballots. It seems pretty clear that Trump is going to suffer a BIGLY loss, and it would probably suit the Just Us’s partisan goals to get him out of the way so that someone with a shot at winning can run in his place. I suppose that I have to say, because it is the freaking law, yes, they have to do that. The Constitution requires them to do so. But it’s also the case that giving the Orange Con Man, Trump the Moronovirus, the boot, would be a great boon to Republican chances to regain the presidency and would lift the curse upon the party that his reign over it has been.
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Because here’s the thing, plain as day: TRUMP IS A LOSER. He has lost and lost and lost and lost. Even when he won the 2016 election because of the Electoral College, he lost the popular vote. And almost everyone who worked for him during his presidency has now turned against him. Familiarity, in this case, REALLY breeds contempt. AND, most importantly, almost every candidate Trump endorsed in the midterms lost. He is Mr. Loser. And he’s going to lose in November. So, the Just Us’es, being partisan hacks, would serve themselves if they moved him aside pronto.
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From the NIH link: “In our attempts to replicate the CDC’s results, we found that 100% of reported ingestion of household cleaners are made by problematic respondents. Once inattentive, acquiescent, and careless respondents are removed from the sample, we find no evidence that people ingested cleaning products to prevent a COVID-19 infection.”
So, a lot of wasted bandwidth to say that no one seriously reported injecting bleach.
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Seems notable.
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Despite the small money amount that Koch gave Haley’s campaign and his verbiage about disliking Trump, the fact that Kansas Sen. Roger Marshall (election denier), today, praised Trump (great for farmers) at The Hill website, signals Koch’s support for Trump. While Marshall isn’t up for re-election, he was funded by Koch in the past.
Does that sound about right, Dienne?
Btw- Marshall was “raised in a devout Christian home” and opposes abortion.
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Charles Koch is a Libertarian, so he does not align with most Repugnicans on a lot of issues like the Common Core, drug policy, and immigration. And he has said that he is not a practicing Christian and has no particular faith or belief system.
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I don’t know about bleach, but there has been a lot of kool-aid made available to potential followers.
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Roy,
You just had a brilliant marketing idea:
Kool-aid flavored bleach!
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You better market that product. I can’t stand the liability
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Thank you, Diane, for keeping this guy’s stupidity at the forefront in this election season. It matters. People should not be allowed to forget.
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Bob,
Don’t forget the video of Trump throwing paper towels to Puerto Ricans after a devastating hurricane that knocked out power lines and left many people homeless.
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One could make a long, long, long list of the utter stupidities during this profoundly ignorant and incompetent man’s tenure (using the term “man” loosely; the has the cognitive level of a toddler).
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Where do you get your advice about military matters? From “the shows.” OMG. You can’t make up stuff this stupid.
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Diane has all the liberal talking points down pat!!! 1/2 lies a susual. Biden is great though, how amazing . Why did trump give so much money to HBCU more than anyone ever if hes racist, whty has trump done more for blacks and hispanics more than Obama? Blacks and hispanics want trump back now!!! Here come the illegals to steal votes!!!
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Unrelatedly, Dartmouth today became the first Ivy to ditch the ACT/SAT test optional policy adopted during the pandemic. I’m sure many others here disagree, but I hope others will follow.
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As the father of a college freshman next fall, I can assure you that colleges that declare themselves ACT optional are not really optional at all. Unless you are wealthy and you don’t need help, your scholarship offers depend on your scores. For most of us, the money is the difference.
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The cost is absolutely insane.
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I used to think the tests should be ditched, but I’m now having second thoughts. I think the SAT and the ACT need a major revamping because as they are right now, it’s just more Common Core nonsense and being able to pick the “correct” answer in 20 seconds (gotcha questions and knowing a trick to pick the best answer)….rather than being knowledge based. The college curriculum has had to be dumbed down so much because of the “college and career ready” (since kindergarten!) for ALL. Most of the kids on campus shouldn’t even be there and many are done after the 1st year with major debt to boot. It’s really a shame what it has become.
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Lisa,
David Coleman, the architect of the Common Core, is CEO of the College Board, which produces the SAT.
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LisaM– assuming your description applies especially to the verbal portion. I picked up an interesting factoid from comments at WaPo coverage of Dartmough’s decision. I already knew that SAT/ACT score predicts only freshman year grades, and not necessarily graduation rate. Learned that there is actually a correlation to graduation rate– but only for STEM majors.
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Yeah, Coleman totally Cored the verbal. The same idiotic stuff one sees in the state tests–choose the most plausible answer from a number of plausible answers. Moronic. Horrific. He should have called this the Scholastic Commoncore Achievement Test, or SCAT.
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Trump’s Republican guy, Mike Roman (legal troubles currently in the news) held a senior position with the International Democrat Union (based in Germany, housed in the Christian Social Union) which works to get hard right governments elected. The Tyee, a Canadian news source describes the network that Roman is part of and its links to hard right politicians in Hungary, Israel and India. “Who is Mike Roman…” (9-6-2023)
and, ” …organizations that help get right wing parties elected” (8-6-2019).
Koch is referenced in the articles.
Roman is on Give Send Go, a religious site, trying to raise defense funds, self-describing as a devout Catholic with 7 kids.
In a bit of a surprise, Front Porch Strategies, a political firm in Delaware, Ohio (Columbus area) is referenced by The Tyee. Before the time described in the articles, the firm reportedly was involved in the goal of overturning Roe v Wade.
The news source, Council of Canadians (“Regina City Council Robocalls…”, 9-24-2013), reported that
“(Front Porch Strategies) specializes in robocallls….for GOP candidates and ultra-conservative Christian groups.” One project was described as challenges to women’s reproductive freedom.
For blogs concerned about fascism, the reporting about IDU by The Tyee, should be of interest.
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Britannica- The Christian Social Union was founded by Catholics and protestants committed to…a united Europe operating under Christian principles.
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For those who prefer the convenience of omission of religion, the Tyee articles referenced above forego any reference to right wing religion.
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You do know that you can cut and paste URLs, right, and that then your readers can simply click on them?
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Republican policies lead to death, media noted the consequences of lack of universal healthcare (other developed nations have it) on longevity and mortality.
Today, a publication retracted anti-abortion articles that had been cited in courts and used by the GOP to force pregnancies. The risk of death from pregnancy is 13 times higher than for abortion.
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The US ranks 47th in life expectancy.
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For those who do not know, the OECD is an economic organization that includes most of the wealthiest, most prosperous countries of the world. Per capita healthcare cost in the United States is TWICE the average in the OECD and the highest in the OECD. And our healthcare outcomes are among the very lowest. We have the highest rates of cancer and heart disease and close to the lowest longevity and the close to the highest infant mortality. So, we pay twice as much and have worse outcomes.
Why?
Because we are the only one of these countries that does not have a single, universal, national health insurance program. In our country, a huge percentage of our healthcare dollar goes into private profits of big pharmaceutical companies, of big hospital chains, and big, private healthcare insurers. Our system incentivizes waste and substandard care and denies care to many.
Consider dental care. MOST American seniors have no dental coverage and cannot afford dental care. It is not covered by Medicare.
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