Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Pentagon pulls money from overseas projects to pay for border wall
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/04/28/pentagon-money-border-wall-216156
Defense Secretary Mark Esper is
restoring more than half a billion dollars in funding for military
construction projects in the U.S. that were put on hold to help fund
President Donald Trump's border wall, and instead will take money from
projects that are primarily overseas.
The move, which is laid out in a memo
dated Monday and obtained by POLITICO, drew an angry response from
Democrats, who say the administration is "trampling" on Congress' power
of the purse.
London Orthodox school redacted books to hide monarchs’ immodest behavior
https://www.jpost.com/omg/london-orthodox-school-redacted-books-to-hide-monarchs-immodest-behavior-626268
A haredi Orthodox girls high school in London redacted history books to cover up what it considers the immodest behavior of British monarchs.
Bill de Blasio, Chirlane McCray get roasted for park stroll during coronavirus
https://nypost.com/2020/04/27/bill-de-blasio-chirlane-mccray-stroll-through-prospect-park/
Mayor Bill de Blasio and wife Chirlane McCray didn’t let coronavirus
stop them from traveling 11 miles from Manhattan to Brooklyn’s Prospect
Park for a leisurely stroll — eliciting outrage from New Yorkers, online
video shows.
De Blasio Breaks Up Rabbi’s Funeral and Lashes Out Over Virus Distancing
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/28/nyregion/hasidic-funeral-coronavirus-de-blasio.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage
In
a series of tweets, Mr. de Blasio denounced the gathering, which was
broken up by the police, and warned that any violation of the
social-distancing guidelines in place to stop the virus’s spread could
result in a summons or an arrest.
“Something absolutely unacceptable happened in Williamsburg tonite: a large funeral gathering in the middle of this pandemic,” the mayor said in one post.
“When I heard, I went there myself to ensure the crowd was dispersed.
And what I saw WILL NOT be tolerated so long as we are fighting the
Coronavirus.”
Chaim Deutsch, a City Council member who represents a section of Brooklyn with a large Orthodox Jewish population, reacted with anger and disbelief on Twitter, writing, “This has to be a joke.”
Mr.
Deutsch wrote: “Did the Mayor of NYC really just single out one
specific ethnic community (a community that has been the target of
increasing hate crimes in HIS city) as being noncompliant?? Has he been
to a park lately? (What am I saying - of course he has!)”
“But
singling out one community is ridiculous,” he added in another post.
“Every neighborhood has people who are being non-compliant. To speak to
an entire ethnic group as though we are all flagrantly violating
precautions is offensive, it’s stereotyping, and it’s inviting
antisemitism. I’m truly stunned.”
Others
pointed to the crowds that gathered across the region earlier in the
day to watch a military flyover by pilots from the Navy’s Blue Angels
and the Air Force’s Thunderbirds that was meant to honor essential
workers.
Coronavirus antibody tests have "really terrible" accuracy, researcher says
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/04/28/health/coronavirus-antibody-tests-terrible/index.html
Of the 12 antibody tests that were studied by the COVID-19 Testing Project,
one of the tests gave false positives more than 15% of the time, or in
about one out of seven samples. Three other tests gave false positives
more than 10% of the time.
She said while it's unrealistic to think
all tests will be 100% accurate all the time, their false positive
rates should be 5% or lower, or ideally 2% or lower.
Bern said one of the reasons for the
high false-positive rates is relaxed requirements from the US Food and
Drug Administration.
In
mid-March, when it became clear that Covid-19 was starting to whirl out
of control, the FDA loosened its approval standards in order to get more
antibody tests out on the market quickly.
The
agency started to allow companies to sell tests without first providing
evidence that they worked. Some 175 test developers have taken
advantage of these new rules and can legally market their antibody tests
without first having their validation data evaluated by the FDA.
‘Life Has to Go On’: How Sweden Has Faced the Virus Without a Lockdown
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/28/world/europe/sweden-coronavirus-herd-immunity.html?action=click&module=Spotlight&pgtype=Homepage
The Swedish Public Health Authority
has admitted that the country’s seniors have been hit hard, with the
virus spreading through 75 percent of the 101 care homes in Stockholm.
Employees of the homes complain of shortages of personal protective
equipment.
When
responses are assessed after the crisis, Mr. Tegnell acknowledges,
Sweden will have to face its broad failing with people over the age of
70, who have accounted for a staggering 86 percent of the country’s
2,194 fatalities to date.
That
percentage is roughly on par with most other countries, but some
critics here say the mortality rate among seniors could have been far
lower with adequate preparation. In a letter to one of Sweden’s most
prominent newspapers, Dagens Nyheter, 22 scientists accused the Public Health Authority of negligence.
“They tell
people, stay home, but they also keep the restaurants open,” said Lena
Einhorn, a virologist and one of the signatories of the letter. “They
are advising people working in elderly homes only to wear masks when a
patient is sick. Their policies are both ambiguous and rigid.”
Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Approval for Trump's Handling of Coronavirus Outbreak Sinks to Record Low
President Donald Trump has received his lowest marks yet for his
handling of the coronavirus outbreak, with net approval of his
leadership on combating the pandemic down 22 points, according to a new
Morning Consult poll.
Of 1,984 registered voters surveyed between
April 24 and 26, 51 percent said they did not approve of Trump's
handling of the outbreak, compared with 43 percent who said they did
approve.
As a result, the net approval for Trump's performance,
which is determined by deducting the share of those who disapprove from
the share who do approve, sat 8 percentage points "underwater," Morning
Consult said in a breakdown of its findings.
Republicans, Who Do You Think Is Bailing Out Your State?
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/27/opinion/coronavirus-state-budgets.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage
As negotiations over the next coronavirus relief package heat up, a key point of contention — perhaps the key point — is whether Congress will provide meaningful aid to struggling state and local governments.
Boiling
down the politics: Democratic lawmakers favor the move. Many
Republicans, including the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, do
not. Some in the Trump administration have suggested that withholding aid is a great way to pressure
states to reopen sooner rather than later. This is both cynical and
destructive. Denying states a financial lifeline, even as Washington is showering trillions of dollars on the private sector, will only
exacerbate the economic devastation that Congress is trying to mitigate.
The idea of thrifty, self-sufficient red states propping up blue states
has long been a Republican canard. In 2017, Paul Ryan, who was the House
speaker, trotted out this line
while pushing to repeal the exemption for state and local taxes as part
of the tax package. (Ultimately, the deduction was merely capped.)
“States that got their act together are paying for states that didn’t,”
he claimed, and promised that his desired repeal would put an end to the
rest of the country “propping up profligate, big-government states.”
This claim was wrong then, and it is wrong now. To the contrary, a 2017 Associated Press analysis
noted that “High-tax, traditionally Democratic states (blue), subsidize
low-tax, traditionally Republican states (red) — in a big way.”
In other words, Mr. McConnell’s state is effectively subsidized by blue states like New York and New Jersey. Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York reminded Mr. McConnell of this during his Thursday news briefing. “Senator McConnell, who’s getting bailed out here?” the governor demanded. “It’s your state that is living on the money that we generate.”
In other words, Mr. McConnell’s state is effectively subsidized by blue states like New York and New Jersey. Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York reminded Mr. McConnell of this during his Thursday news briefing. “Senator McConnell, who’s getting bailed out here?” the governor demanded. “It’s your state that is living on the money that we generate.”
World can’t agree on how to count COVID-19 deaths, muddying toll
https://www.timesofisrael.com/world-cant-agree-on-how-to-count-covid-19-deaths-muddying-toll/
Some countries list only those who die in hospitals, others include victims suspected of carrying the virus who were never tested
In the United States, which has the
highest death toll in the world at more than 50,000, the counting method
varies from one state to another: while New York counts deaths in care
homes, California does not.
In the United States, there are an increasing number of complaints
from people whose relatives have died, officially of pneumonia, before
COVID-19 tests became available.
Hasidim clash with police in quarantined Beit Shemesh neighborhood
https://www.timesofisrael.com/hasidim-clash-with-police-in-quarantined-beit-shemesh-neighborhood/
A large crowd of Hasidim clashed with police in Beit Shemesh on
Tuesday, three days into a government-mandated closure of two of the
city’s ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods.
Dozens of black-clad men screamed “Nazis” as law enforcement
officers attempted to shut down Ateret Yehoshua Talmud Torah, an
Orthodox elementary school in the Hasidic enclave of Ramat Beit Shemesh
Bet, which had remained open in violation of Health Ministry directives
intended to stop the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Sweden says its coronavirus approach has worked. The numbers suggest a different story
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/04/28/europe/sweden-coronavirus-lockdown-strategy-intl/index.html
Younger children have continued to go to school, although universities and schools for older students have switched to distance learning. Businesses -- from hair salons to restaurants -- have remained open, although people have been advised to work from home where possible.
On
April 7, the government introduced a bill allowing it to act quickly
and take decisions on temporary measures where needed. Care home visits
were banned from April 1 and the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs
asked people to refrain from non-essential travel, adding: "Keep your
distance and take personal responsibility."
Among
Nordic countries -- which share similar cultural, geographical and
sociological attributes -- the contrast with Sweden is great. Finland declared a state of emergency, closed schools and banned gatherings of more than 10 people on March 16, restricted travel to and from its Uusimaa region on March 28 and closed restaurants, cafes and bars on April 1.
Jan Albert, a professor in the Department of Microbiology, Tumor and Cell Biology at the Karolinska Institutet,
told CNN: "It's clear that Sweden had more deaths [than many other
European countries] up until now, and that's probably at least in part
because we haven't had as strict a lockdown and not a lockdown enforced
by law."
But he said he believed
the majority of scientists in Sweden had been "relatively quiet" about
the herd immunity plan because they thought it could work.
Asked whether the death toll would have
been lower if Sweden had followed the same path as other European
countries in introducing strict restrictions, Tegnell replied: "That's a
very difficult question to answer at this stage. At least 50% of our
death toll is within the elderly homes and we have a hard time
understanding how a lockdown would stop the introduction of the disease
into the elderly homes."
Whether
Sweden's Covid-19 strategy has succeeded or failed may not be clear for
months to come, but as countries across the globe count their dead and
wonder whether they could have done more to halt the spread of the
virus, the world will be watching.
Join - Jews come together to recite Psalms in memory of Israel's fallen
https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/haredim-to-light-virtual-candle-for-soldiers-in-one-people-project-625987
In the framework of the project, participants can choose among the 24,000 soldiers who lost their life for Israel, learn about who they were and recite Psalms for them.
Thousands of haredi (ultra-Orthodox) Israelis are marking Yom Hazikaron (Remembrance Day) by lighting a virtual candle and reciting Psalms to honor the memory of fallen soldiers.
The
project “One People – Loving and Remembering” features a special
website where participants can sign up to read chapters of Psalms with
the goal of completing the full book 24,000 times, as many as those who
lost their lives fighting for Israel. In order to complete the task,
everyone is invited to join (in order to join click here.)
Can COVID-19 cause heart inflammation in children?
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/279316
'Multi-system inflammatory
state' noted in children who have coronavirus or may have suffered in
the recent past, medical experts say.
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