Re: Politics

1786
In a press conference yesterday your president said the 20 most dangerous cities in America are all democratic led cities. It reminded me of a study I read late last year before the China virus hit. I went back and found it.

This study found that the 10 most dangerous cities in America were all democrat led. And of the top 25 most dangerous almost all were Democrat led.

And not surprising, these cities had strict gun control laws.

Of the democrat cities in that top 25 most dangerous, all were at the top of the list for least employed and poorest. At a time when our national unemployment rate was 3.7 %, the democrat ran cities had rates as high as 9.3%.

They also had the worst tax rates, most regulation, and least amount of incentives for investment.

The top 10 homeless populations in America were in democrat led cities.

At a time when the national average in poverty rate was 12.3% these democrat ran cities had a poverty rate as high as 39%

By any measure liberal policies are a loser. Yet all my friends want to do is insult a president that was getting amazing results before the Pandemic hit our shores. Not surprising that you guys wouldn’t care about little things like crime rates, considering I have yet see a single one of you the least bit appalled at the assaults, looting, property damage, and murders that your little Marxist buddies are causing all across the country.

Re: Politics

1787
Sherikia Hawkins, the city clerk for Southfield Michigan has been charged with six felony counts for allegedly altering absentee ballots during the November 2018 election. Ms. Hawkins, a registered Democrat, was arraigned Monday in Southfield on:

falsifying returns or records
forgery of a public record
misconduct in office
and multiple counts of using a computer to commit a crime.

She was released on $15,000 bond.

Read More: A Michigan City Clerk Has Been Charged With Altering Ballots | https://wbckfm.com/a-michigan-city-cler ... m=referral

-

Nothing to see here. Just more Trump lies. This never happened, in Joe’s bizarro world, any way.

Re: Politics

1788
The city of Salinas, California, is forcing an evangelical Christian church to sell its downtown property, saying it does not fit in with the new look of the town.

New Harvest Christian Fellowship bought the building in early 2018 after its congregation outgrew a space the church had been renting for more than 25 years. A new city ordinance, however, prohibits houses of worship from occupying the first floor of downtown buildings, the Christian Post reports.

The Pacific Justice Institute (PJI) filed a lawsuit on behalf of the church, arguing that the City’s zoning code and denial of New Harvest’s proposed use of its property “treat New Harvest on less than equal terms with nonreligious assemblies and substantially burden religious exercise, in violation of the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA).”


-

Leave it to Commiefornia. This is what the left wants to bring to the entire country.
No 2nd amendment at all, obviously.
And let's really take a hammer (and sickle) to the 1st amendment.
No free speech, well, just for people we agree with.
No freedom of religion, at all.
And remove the word "peaceably" from our right to assemble. We need to be able to break laws at will while protesting.

Re: Politics

1791
Oh Ken.

I actually refer to it as The Moo Goo Gai Pandemic most of the time. But to save time typing I just went with China virus this time.

Kung Flu
Flu Manchu
Chop Fluey
Peking Plague
The Commie Cough
Sweet n Sour Sicken

That's some of my favorites. Call it what you want, it is all Chinese Takeout.

And everybody should be reminded where it came from. And that they were too busy trying to cover it up to warn people early on.

You may worry about hurting the Communist Chinese feelings but I don't. Sumbitches are responsible for over a hundred thousand American deaths. I like to remind people as much as possible.

And please don't be one of those Karen's that complains about making a joke out of something killing people. You won't hurt my feelings, don't waste your time. I spent 6 weeks barely leaving my house due to my condition because of this thing. I take it seriously. When my wife and I went to Vegas to get married 10 years ago, we had two close friends go with us. Only people at our wedding. One of those friends, the husband, died from Covid-19 a few weeks ago in Florida. 39 years old. Again, I take it seriously.

But some times you have to have a laugh. If for no other reason to keep from screaming.

Re: Politics

1792
By the way, Ken. Did you liberals get upset when everyone said MERS? Wasn’t that insulting to Middle Easterners by your standards?

What about Zika? Insulting to Ugandans?

How about Ebola? Insulting to Congans?

How about Spanish Flu? Was that insulting to Spaniards?

(Swine Flu? Insulting to pigs? ... Yellow Fever? Insulting to cowards?)

Seriously, why is it that nobody had a problem with these names till people started calling this the Wuhan Flu, named after the region in China where it started, like they had always done before?

Cause China has that much control over big business and big tech in America. They bend over backwards to keep China happy. ... And because Progressive Socialists and Marxists here in America idolize their big commie brothers in China and don’t want to hurt their feelings.

Screw that. Don’t get sucked in.

Re: Politics

1793
Image
Bill Barr Gets Shredded: A Threat to ‘Our Rule Of Law and to Public Trust in It’

Two Justice Department lawyers and a former deputy attorney general detailed Barr’s corrupt meddling on behalf of Trump—while House Republicans embarrassed themselves.

By Joan WalshTwitter

JUNE 24, 2020


On the same day that a Trump-appointed judge backed Attorney General William Barr and instructed trial judge Emmet Sullivan to drop the case against former national security adviser Michael Flynn on charges to which he pleaded guilty, Assistant US Attorney Aaron Zelinsky outlined the corruption of Barr’s Justice Department in similarly meddling in the case of Trump buddy Roger Stone.

Testifying before the House Judiciary Committee, former Stone prosecutor Zelinsky essentially repeated what he said in a bombshell statement yesterday: He was pressured to “cut Roger Stone a break” because “he was the president’s friend.”

What I heard–repeatedly–was that Roger Stone was being treated differently from any other defendant because of his relationship to the President. I was told that the Acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, Timothy Shea, was receiving heavy pressure from the highest levels of the Department of Justice to cut Stone a break, and that the U.S. Attorney’s sentencing instructions to us were based on political considerations. I was also told that the acting U.S. Attorney was giving Stone such unprecedentedly favorable treatment because he was “afraid of the President.”

Zelinsky says the prosecution faced pressure to leave some of Stone’s misdeeds out of the sentencing recommendation, but resisted. When Shea first tried to reduce the recommendation that Stone be sentenced to seven to nine years, Zelinsky threatened to leave the prosecution team, and Shea relented. But when the sentence recommendation was announced, Trump tweeted his dismay, and Barr stepped in to reduce it himself. That’s when Zelinsky left the prosecution; he is still an assistant US Attorney for the District of Maryland.

Appearing with Zelinsky was a career Justice Department lawyer who went to the inspector general because of what he perceived as Barr’s corrupt meddling in antitrust cases. John Elias, who has worked for presidents of both political parties, reported possible “abuse of authority, a gross waste of funds, and gross mismanagement,” with Barr particularly targeting the cannabis industry, as well as car companies trying to meet California’s rigorous emissions standards. Cannabis company cases normally make up 2 percent of Justice Department cases, Elias testified; under Barr, that number rose to 30 percent.

Donald Ayer, former deputy attorney general under George H.W. Bush, was there to back up the two whistle-blowers: “I was privileged to serve in the Department of Justice under two Republican and one Democratic president, and I am here because I believe that William Barr poses the greatest threat in my lifetime to our rule of law and to public trust in it.” He said Trump’s attorney general worked on behalf of “an authoritarian president.”

On behalf of House Republicans, former George W. Bush attorney general Michael Mukasey defended Barr’s intervention, since Judge Amy Sullivan ultimately sentenced Stone to 40 months, which was within the window Barr recommended. Thus, he argued, Barr’s intervention made no difference; effectively “no harm, no foul.”

Anyone who watched the impeachment hearings suffered some PTSD sitting through this one. Republicans performed their trademark stupid pet tricks, insisting Zelinsky was politically motivated and relying on hearsay while barely acknowledging Elias’s charges. Early on, Texas Representative Louie Gohmert almost got ejected for banging on the table like an angry toddler. Ohio Representative Jim Jordan mockingly compared Zelinsky to the anonymous whistle-blower who triggered impeachment, insisting he had no firsthand knowledge of Shea’s reasoning. “All of the people I mentioned were in fact in conversation with Acting US Attorney Shea,” the assistant US Attorney replied calmly.

Representative Mike Johnson even mocked Zelinsky for testifying remotely, even after he said he had a newborn at home and the pediatrician cautioned against visiting Congress in person because of the coronavirus pandemic. Speaking of the pandemic, Arizona Representative Andy Biggs brought back the insane Fox News–fomented Obama-era “scandals” involving the New Black Panther Party and the Fast and Furious program, as the coronavirus ravages his home state. It even devolved into a culture war over masks; Jordan refused to wear one, breaking House rules, and said “the only masking we should be discussing” was the so-called “unmasking” of Michael Flynn by the Obama administration.

Bush administration veteran Ayer denounced the “Obamagate nonsense” the GOP minority was “spewing.”

Democratic Representative Cedric Richmond had the best retort to those insisting the hearing was only about embarrassing Trump: “Let’s just be clear. If we wanted to embarrass the president, we would sit back and do nothing, and just let him continue to embarrass himself and say that you should drink bleach.”

Maryland Representative Jamie Raskin committed to tracking down the “liars and felons and frauds” assisted by Barr on behalf of Trump—an important promise given that many leading Democrats are wary of trying to impeach Barr, though he deserves it, so close to an election. Raskin is the type of legislator I trust to honor that commitment, and I hope he has a lot of company. Even if Joe Biden wins in November, Barr and Trump and other administration wrongdoers need to face consequences for their behavior over these four long, lawless years.

https://www.thenation.com/article/polit ... testimony/
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

Re: Politics

1794
Image
Live updates: U.S. sets another single-day record for coronavirus cases

By
Hannah Knowles,
Katie Mettler,
Kim Bellware,
John Wagner,
Adam Taylor,
Hamza Shaban,
Steven Goff and
Michael Brice-Saddler

June 25, 2020 at 8:39 p.m. CDT


Across the United States, 39,327 new coronavirus infections were reported by state health departments on Thursday — surpassing the previous single-day record of 38,115, which was set on Wednesday. Texas, Alabama, Missouri and Nevada reported daily highs. The death toll also spiked, to about 2,500, as New Jersey added 1,854 probable deaths to its overall tally.

Texas reported 5,996 new coronavirus cases on Thursday, beating Wednesday’s record of 5,551. The state’s rolling average of 4,581 was a record and 340 percent higher than the rolling average on Memorial Day. The 47 new deaths were the most since May 20, according to tracking by The Washington Post.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) raised alarms about the biggest jump in new cases in his state since April, emphasizing that more than increased testing is at play. Ohio reported 892 new cases on Thursday, compared to 632 on Wednesday.

Here are some significant developments:

The number of Americans who have been infected with the novel coronavirus is likely 10 times higher than the number of cases reported, according to the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In a call with reporters Thursday, CDC Director Robert Redfield said, “Our best estimate right now is that for every case that’s reported, there actually are 10 other infections.”

A rush to reopen the nation’s economy without proper safety measures in place is behind this week’s spike in cases, Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, said Thursday on the “Today” show.

In New York, coronavirus hospitalizations dipped just below 1,000 for the first time since March 18, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D) said.

President Trump continued to push the discredited notion that coronavirus cases are increasing in the United States because of “GREAT TESTING” and complained that the news media was not spreading the word. While testing has increased, health experts say that in several states with rising caseloads, new cases are outpacing the spread of testing.

The World Health Organization said the global pandemic’s hotbed is now in Latin America, which has reported 100,000 fatalities as of this week. New flare-ups have also been reported in Australia, Germany and South Korea.

11:27 p.m.

Dozens of Secret Service officers and agents told to self-quarantine after Trump’s Tulsa rally

Dozens of Secret Service officers and agents who were on-site for President Trump’s rally in Tulsa last week were ordered to self-quarantine after two of their colleagues tested positive for the novel coronavirus, part of the fallout from Trump’s insistence on holding the mass gathering over the objections of public health officials.

The Secret Service instructed employees who worked the Tulsa event to stay at home for 14 days when they returned from the weekend trip, according to two people familiar with the agency’s decision.

The order came in the wake of the discovery — hours before the president’s Saturday evening rally — that at least six advance staffers who helped organize the trip had tested positive for the virus, including two Secret Service employees. Another two advance staffers tested positive after Trump returned to Washington on Sunday.

11:59 p.m.

Indiana Pacers’ Malcolm Brogdon is the latest NBA player to test positive


Indiana Pacers guard Malcolm Brogdon announced Wednesday that he has tested positive for the novel coronavirus, weeks before the National Basketball Association is set to resume play at Disney World next month.

The 27-year-old guard, who was in the midst of a career year before the NBA shut down on March 11, said that he still plans to play for the Pacers when the 2019-2020 season commences on July 30.

The NBA entered Phase 2 of its comprehensive reopening plan Tuesday, with players reporting to their teams in their respective home markets to undergo mandatory testing. Nikola Jokic, the Denver Nuggets’ all-star center, tested positive for the coronavirus, while the Arizona Republic reported Tuesday that two unidentified members of the Phoenix Suns also tested positive.


12:15 a.m.

Nevada to require face masks in public, inside all businesses


As Nevada experiences a record surge in new coronavirus cases, Gov. Steve Sisolak (D) said all residents and visitors will be required to cover their faces in public.

The order, which takes effect Friday and includes all businesses, comes three weeks after casinos were allowed to reopen and a month after restrictions were loosened on most other kinds of stores. Authorities suggested a stream of maskless crowds back onto the Las Vegas Strip may be tied to the surge.

“We’ve taken some steps backward,” Sisolak said at a news conference late Wednesday. “Clearly, for many, the excitement and enthusiasm of escaping from our confinement … overshadowed the good judgment we practiced in recent months.”

His directive makes Nevada the latest state to require masks in response to rapidly spreading outbreaks. In the past week, California, Michigan and North Carolina, as well as several cities in Arizona, Florida and Texas, all issued similar orders.

Sisolak said that businesses that do not comply will face police action, though he urged local agencies not to impose fines and fees as a way to enforce the order. Children between the ages of 2 and 9 and people with certain medical conditions are exempt.

Hours before his announcement, MGM Resorts and Caesars Entertainment said it would be requiring face masks inside its casinos, the Reno Gazette-Journal reported, and several restaurants on the Las Vegas Strip that had already shut down again.

During the news conference, the governor also apologized for making an “inexcusable” error in judgment when he and his wife were photographed failing to wear masks at a Carson City restaurant.

According to data tracked by The Washington Post, Nevada’s rolling seven-day average of new infections has climbed upward for nearly a week, even as testing levels remain flat.

2:35 a.m.

Utah governor reverses course on face masks, requiring them in state-run buildings


Utah Gov. Gary R. Herbert (R) will require people to cover their faces at state-run buildings, including liquor stores and higher education offices, he said Wednesday, and will move to allow counties to enact even stricter measures.

Although he stopped short of implementing a statewide requirement for face coverings — a move recently undertaken by Nevada and North Carolina — the order marks a rapid reversal for a state experiencing a growing coronavirus outbreak.

On Tuesday, Herbert suggested that he would not succumb to mounting calls for a face mask order, saying it would create “divisive enforcement issues.” After Utah’s top epidemiologist said a complete shutdown may be necessary, he rejected such a measure as well.

But on Wednesday, the governor said he had changed his mind and called on Utahns to “dial up” their personal response to the pandemic.

“The heavy hand of government sometimes has a negative reaction with the people,” Herbert said at his weekly news conference. “I’m hopeful we can get people to do the right thing for the right reasons, because they love their neighbor and want to protect their neighbor as well as themselves from the coronavirus.”

Instead of a statewide mask requirement, Herbert said Wednesday that he wanted city and county leaders to ask him for permission to issue such directives at the local level. He will soon approve such a request from the mayor of Salt Lake County, the state’s largest.

According to data tracked by The Washington Post, Utah has for more than a week straight seen a high in its rolling average of new infections, though testing has not increased substantially.

Herbert said he will keep current restrictions in place for at least two more weeks, with restaurants, gyms, salons and pools all allowed to operate under the current stage of reopening.

2:54 a.m.

Delhi overtakes Mumbai as worst-hit city in India by the virus


NEW DELHI — With over 70,000 coronavirus cases, Delhi has emerged as India’s new hot spot. On Wednesday, the city recorded 3,788 new infections and overtook Mumbai, previously the worst-hit city. Delhi, however, has tallied fewer deaths than India’s financial capital, where the count is nearing 4,000.

Delhi’s local government is scrambling to ramp up its infrastructure, which has begun to buckle as cases rise steadily. Patients have been shifted to railway cars that have been converted into isolation wards with medical teams deployed from the armed forces.

The city is racing to build a jumbo 10,000-bed health-care facility at the campus of a spiritual center. Hotels and banquet halls have been roped in to ease the pressure on hospitals. Delhi, whose metropolitan area is home to 29 million people, also plans to carry out door-to-door screening of every household in the next two weeks.

Earlier in June, Delhi’s top elected politician had warned that the city was likely to have more than 500,000 cases by the end of July.

India has struggled to contain the coronavirus pandemic ever since the government lifted a stringent lockdown in a bid to save the hemorrhaging economy. At the beginning of the month, India had about 200,000 cases. In three weeks, the cases have more than doubled to more than 473,000. It is now the world’s fourth-hardest-hit country, after the United States, Brazil and Russia.

3:21 a.m.

Analysis: How the split over face masks sums up America’s chaotic coronavirus response


By any measure, the United States has some of the top public health experts in the world. Yet as the novel coronavirus began to spread early this year, these U.S. experts repeatedly recommended against a simple tactic to prevent spreading the infection: face masks.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in January that it did not recommend the use of masks for “people who are well.”

But weeks later, the advice was reversed. On April 3, the CDC altered its recommendation to state that “cloth face coverings” should be worn when social distance cannot be maintained.

The U-turn regarding masks and the subsequent political divide over them has come to symbolize the chaos of the U.S. response to the still-raging pandemic. It also may be particularly damaging for America’s global standing, as it has drawn in not just political leaders such as President Trump but also widely respected public health experts who did not initially back the wearing of face masks.


5:04 a.m.

Australia launches door-to-door testing blitz to contain virus flare-up in suburbs


Australian health workers will go door-to-door to test more than 100,000 people in the Melbourne suburbs, authorities said Thursday, as worries mount that a flare-up of the coronavirus could lead to a possible resurgence.

Although Australia has battled the virus with relative success, with barely more than 100 deaths, the spreading outbreak threatens to undo a near-victory over the pandemic.

Just weeks after lifting most restrictions on business and public life, Daniel Andrews, the premier of Victoria state, urged residents to see participation in the free testing as their civic duty.

“Every Victorian who gets tested — every case that is identified — brings us one step closer to containing and slowing the spread of this virus,” he said in a statement.

New infections in his state, the country’s second most populous, make up the vast majority of Australia’s 270 active cases. Officials reported 33 new cases on Thursday, marking the state’s highest daily toll since April.

With the 10-day initiative, officials hope to target about half the residents in 10 communities near the city of Melbourne, with some efforts incorporating less invasive saliva tests.

Although the expanded testing will most likely cause the number of reported infections to climb, Andrews said such an outcome would be well worth it to keep local businesses open.

More than 1,000 military personnel are helping with expanded testing efforts, which involve sending ambulances and mobile test centers to every block.

Australia’s defense minister said they would largely be helping to enforce a mandatory 14-day quarantine for anyone who has recently arrived in the country, according to Reuters.

Victoria officials, who say they believe that patients with mild or no symptoms spread the virus at large family get-togethers, tightened a cap on public gatherings earlier this week.

5:38 a.m.

Trump health officials say they are not ‘pulling the rug’ out from testing sites


Top Trump administration health officials sought Wednesday to dampen a controversy over an end to federal management of 13 coronavirus testing sites, insisting that the change does not diminish access to diagnostic tests, even as infection numbers soar in many states.

Brett Giroir, an assistant secretary in the Department of Health and Human Services who is the government’s coronavirus testing coordinator, said seven sites in Texas and six elsewhere were part of an early phase of a federal community testing program for the virus that he called “antiquated,” saying they have been kept open a month longer than planned.

Giroir’s remarks, in an unusually lengthy conference call with journalists lasting nearly an hour, marked the second consecutive day that senior health officials publicly distanced themselves from President Trump’s assertion during a campaign rally Saturday that he had directed officials to “slow the testing down.”


7:05 a.m.

Coronavirus sweeps through Afghanistan’s security forces


KABUL — The novel coronavirus is sweeping through Afghanistan's security forces, according to senior Afghan security officials from four provinces who report suspected infection rates of 60 to 90 percent among their units — reducing the number of forces available to conduct operations or take up duty at outposts.

Few have died, the officials say, but little to no testing capacity has forced many into weeks of isolation, leaving deployable forces stretched thin at a time when the country is under pressure from both increased Taliban violence and from the United States, where officials are eager to see the government and militants begin direct talks.

7:10 a.m.

Analysis: Research explores how conservative media misinformation may have intensified coronavirus


Coronavirus infections have surged in a number of states, setting the United States on a markedly different pandemic trajectory than other wealthy nations.

There are many reasons the response to the pandemic tied to nearly 120,000 U.S. deaths has faltered, experts say, including the lack of a cohesive federal policy, missteps on testing and tracing, and a national culture emphasizing individualism.

In recent weeks, three studies have focused on conservative media’s role in fostering confusion about the seriousness of the coronavirus. Taken together, they paint a picture of a media ecosystem that amplifies misinformation, entertains conspiracy theories and discourages audiences from taking concrete steps to protect themselves and others.


7:30 a.m.

Tesla gave workers permission to stay home rather than risk getting covid-19. Then it sent termination notices.


SAN FRANCISCO — When he defiantly reopened the company’s Fremont plant against county orders last month, Elon Musk promised Tesla employees they could stay home if they felt uneasy. They would not be penalized.

If “you feel uncomfortable coming back to work at this time, please do not feel obligated to do so,” he wrote in an email sent to the company’s factory workers in early May that was viewed by The Washington Post.

Nonetheless, two Tesla workers say they received termination notices alleging a “failure to return to work” after they opted to take unpaid leave to protect themselves and their family members when the factory restarted production the second week of May.


7:54 a.m.

Fact Checker: Trump keeps saying Obama left him ‘no ventilators.’ The number is 16,660.


The president certainly has been offering a relatively consistent message — when the coronavirus pandemic struck, there were “no ventilators,” “none” or “very few,” and those few were “obsolete.”

Those phrases suggest that the number of ventilators the Obama administration left behind in the Strategic National Stockpile was zero.

So we were a bit surprised when Vice President Pence wrote in the Wall Street Journal on June 16: “The Strategic National Stockpile hadn’t been refilled since the H1N1 influenza outbreak in 2009, and it had only 10,000 ventilators on hand.”

Ten thousand certainly seems like a lot more than zero.

But now it turns out that even that number was a lowball figure. And it has been known for months. The real number was 16,600.


8:17 a.m.

Trump does not plan to abide by quarantine during visit to New Jersey


When he visits his Bedminster golf club this weekend, President Trump does not plan to abide by a new travel advisory in New Jersey and nearby states that are telling anyone coming from places hard hit by the coronavirus to quarantine for 14 days, the White House indicated.

Trump traveled earlier this week to Arizona, among the states designated as hot spots by the governors of Connecticut, New Jersey and New York when they announced their quarantine period Wednesday. Connecticut and New Jersey do not have plans to enforce the measure, while New York has made violations punishable by fines starting at $2,000.

“Anyone who is in close proximity to him, including staff, guests and press, are tested for COVID-19 and confirmed to be negative,” White House spokesman Judd Deere said in a statement.

“With regard to Arizona, the White House followed its COVID mitigation plan to ensure the president did not come into contact with anyone who was symptomatic or had not been tested,” Deere said. “Anyone traveling in support of the president this weekend will be closely monitored for symptoms and tested for COVID and therefore pose little to no risk to the local populations.”

As of Wednesday, the travel advisory applied to Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Utah and Texas.

During an appearance on CNN on Wednesday night, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D) played down concerns about Trump’s plans, noting that “there is a carve-out for essential workers, and I think by any definition the president of the United States is an essential worker.”

“I think the bigger point here is we want folks to really be responsible in terms of thinking about not just themselves, but their family and their communities,” Murphy said. “And we’ve beaten this virus down to a pulp in New Jersey with an enormous loss of life. We’ve been through hell, and we don’t want to go through hell again.”

8:52 a.m.

WHO official warns ‘significant resurgence’ in Europe could push health systems ‘to the brink’ again


The number of coronavirus cases in Europe increased for the first time in months last week, a World Health Organization official warned Thursday, with a “very significant resurgence” in 11 countries that could “push health systems to the brink once again” if left unchecked.

Hans Kluge, the WHO regional director for Europe, said 30 European countries had seen infections rise over the past two weeks.

“Last week, Europe saw an increase in weekly cases for the first time in months. For weeks I have spoken about the risk of resurgence as countries adjust measures,” Kluge said. “In several countries across Europe, this risk has now become a reality."

In 11 of the 30 countries with recently rising cases, he said, “accelerated transmission has led to very significant resurgence that if left unchecked will push health systems to the brink once again in Europe.”

WHO had noted some positive examples of containment, Kluge said, pointing to regional outbreaks in Poland, Germany and Spain, and many people across Europe were adhering to social distancing and wearing masks. “Bravo to the people!” Kluge said.

But there was still much more to be done on the continent, especially with regards to technology and contact tracing, he said.

“We need to get smarter in using the evidence and the information we have from our covid-19 surveillance systems to improve the only way we have to minimize transmission: find, isolate, test and care for every case,” he said. “Trace and quarantine every contact.”


9:02 a.m.

Macy’s will slash 3,900 corporate jobs as coronavirus hammers sales


Macy’s is laying off 3,900 corporate employees and managers, or about 3 percent of its total workforce, marking the latest effort by the beleaguered retailer to cut costs during the coronavirus pandemic.

The layoffs announced Thursday come just months after the beleaguered retailer said it would close 125 stores — about a fifth of its total — and shed 2,000 jobs after a disappointing holiday season. The company also is scaling back staffing at its Macy’s and Bloomingdale’s stores, distribution facilities and customer service centers but says it will “adjust as sales recover.”

The retail giant furloughed the majority of its 125,000 employees in mid-March after coronavirus-related closures led to a steep decline in sales. Many of those workers are expected to return to work in July as the company continues reopening stores across the country.

9:31 a.m.

After covid-19 scare, Ezekiel Elliott expresses concern about NFL’s plan to protect players, families


Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott said his case of covid-19 has been a mild one. But in a Twitch chat Wednesday with YouTube host Scooter Magruder he said the NFL needs to do everything it can to protect its players and their family members if it wants to have a season amid the novel coronavirus pandemic.

“I just feel like there’s a lot of moving parts that have to be figured out,” Elliott said. “I just don’t know how they can keep the players healthy. You’ve got to put the health of the players first. And it’s not even so much I would say the players’ health because I got corona and it didn’t really affect me much. But a lot of people have kids; they may have kids with asthma, their parents or grandparents may live with them.

“We have to find a way to make sure the players and their families, and the coaches also and their families, aren’t put at risk.”

9:02 a.m.

Macy’s will slash 3,900 corporate jobs as coronavirus hammers sales


Macy’s is laying off 3,900 corporate employees and managers, or about 3 percent of its total workforce, marking the latest effort by the beleaguered retailer to cut costs during the coronavirus pandemic.

The layoffs announced Thursday come just months after the beleaguered retailer said it would close 125 stores — about a fifth of its total — and shed 2,000 jobs after a disappointing holiday season. The company also is scaling back staffing at its Macy’s and Bloomingdale’s stores, distribution facilities and customer service centers but says it will “adjust as sales recover.”

The retail giant furloughed the majority of its 125,000 employees in mid-March after coronavirus-related closures led to a steep decline in sales. Many of those workers are expected to return to work in July as the company continues reopening stores across the country.

8:52 a.m.

WHO official warns ‘significant resurgence’ in Europe could push health systems ‘to the brink’ again


The number of coronavirus cases in Europe increased for the first time in months last week, a World Health Organization official warned Thursday, with a “very significant resurgence” in 11 countries that could “push health systems to the brink once again” if left unchecked.

Hans Kluge, the WHO regional director for Europe, said 30 European countries had seen infections rise over the past two weeks.

“Last week, Europe saw an increase in weekly cases for the first time in months. For weeks I have spoken about the risk of resurgence as countries adjust measures,” Kluge said. “In several countries across Europe, this risk has now become a reality."

In 11 of the 30 countries with recently rising cases, he said, “accelerated transmission has led to very significant resurgence that if left unchecked will push health systems to the brink once again in Europe.”

WHO had noted some positive examples of containment, Kluge said, pointing to regional outbreaks in Poland, Germany and Spain, and many people across Europe were adhering to social distancing and wearing masks. “Bravo to the people!” Kluge said.

But there was still much more to be done on the continent, especially with regards to technology and contact tracing, he said.

“We need to get smarter in using the evidence and the information we have from our covid-19 surveillance systems to improve the only way we have to minimize transmission: find, isolate, test and care for every case,” he said. “Trace and quarantine every contact.”

8:17 a.m.

Trump does not plan to abide by quarantine during visit to New Jersey


When he visits his Bedminster golf club this weekend, President Trump does not plan to abide by a new travel advisory in New Jersey and nearby states that are telling anyone coming from places hard hit by the coronavirus to quarantine for 14 days, the White House indicated.

Trump traveled earlier this week to Arizona, among the states designated as hot spots by the governors of Connecticut, New Jersey and New York when they announced their quarantine period Wednesday. Connecticut and New Jersey do not have plans to enforce the measure, while New York has made violations punishable by fines starting at $2,000.

“Anyone who is in close proximity to him, including staff, guests and press, are tested for COVID-19 and confirmed to be negative,” White House spokesman Judd Deere said in a statement.

“With regard to Arizona, the White House followed its COVID mitigation plan to ensure the president did not come into contact with anyone who was symptomatic or had not been tested,” Deere said. “Anyone traveling in support of the president this weekend will be closely monitored for symptoms and tested for COVID and therefore pose little to no risk to the local populations.”

As of Wednesday, the travel advisory applied to Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Utah and Texas.

During an appearance on CNN on Wednesday night, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D) played down concerns about Trump’s plans, noting that “there is a carve-out for essential workers, and I think by any definition the president of the United States is an essential worker.”

“I think the bigger point here is we want folks to really be responsible in terms of thinking about not just themselves, but their family and their communities,” Murphy said. “And we’ve beaten this virus down to a pulp in New Jersey with an enormous loss of life. We’ve been through hell, and we don’t want to go through hell again.”

Stay safe and informed as the United States reopens with our free Coronavirus Updates newsletter.

7:54 a.m.

Fact Checker: Trump keeps saying Obama left him ‘no ventilators.’ The number is 16,660.


The president certainly has been offering a relatively consistent message — when the coronavirus pandemic struck, there were “no ventilators,” “none” or “very few,” and those few were “obsolete.”

Those phrases suggest that the number of ventilators the Obama administration left behind in the Strategic National Stockpile was zero.

So we were a bit surprised when Vice President Pence wrote in the Wall Street Journal on June 16: “The Strategic National Stockpile hadn’t been refilled since the H1N1 influenza outbreak in 2009, and it had only 10,000 ventilators on hand.”

Ten thousand certainly seems like a lot more than zero.

But now it turns out that even that number was a lowball figure. And it has been known for months. The real number was 16,600.

7:30 a.m.

Tesla gave workers permission to stay home rather than risk getting covid-19. Then it sent termination notices.


SAN FRANCISCO — When he defiantly reopened the company’s Fremont plant against county orders last month, Elon Musk promised Tesla employees they could stay home if they felt uneasy. They would not be penalized.

If “you feel uncomfortable coming back to work at this time, please do not feel obligated to do so,” he wrote in an email sent to the company’s factory workers in early May that was viewed by The Washington Post.

Nonetheless, two Tesla workers say they received termination notices alleging a “failure to return to work” after they opted to take unpaid leave to protect themselves and their family members when the factory restarted production the second week of May.

7:10 a.m.

Analysis: Research explores how conservative media misinformation may have intensified coronavirus


Coronavirus infections have surged in a number of states, setting the United States on a markedly different pandemic trajectory than other wealthy nations.

There are many reasons the response to the pandemic tied to nearly 120,000 U.S. deaths has faltered, experts say, including the lack of a cohesive federal policy, missteps on testing and tracing, and a national culture emphasizing individualism.

In recent weeks, three studies have focused on conservative media’s role in fostering confusion about the seriousness of the coronavirus. Taken together, they paint a picture of a media ecosystem that amplifies misinformation, entertains conspiracy theories and discourages audiences from taking concrete steps to protect themselves and others.

7:05 a.m.

Coronavirus sweeps through Afghanistan’s security forces


KABUL — The novel coronavirus is sweeping through Afghanistan's security forces, according to senior Afghan security officials from four provinces who report suspected infection rates of 60 to 90 percent among their units — reducing the number of forces available to conduct operations or take up duty at outposts.

Few have died, the officials say, but little to no testing capacity has forced many into weeks of isolation, leaving deployable forces stretched thin at a time when the country is under pressure from both increased Taliban violence and from the United States, where officials are eager to see the government and militants begin direct talks.

6:45 a.m.

NFL teams could cover seating around field in attempt to make up lost revenue


The National Football League and its franchises are discussing a plan by which rows of seating closest to the field in stadiums this season could be covered and used to display the logos of sponsors and messaging for league and team initiatives.

The prospective measure is to be discussed by team owners when they meet Thursday by videoconference, according to a person familiar with the deliberations. The plan could be put into effect if teams are prohibited from having their stadiums filled with fans by state and local restrictions related to the novel coronavirus pandemic, according to that person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the NFL has not yet publicized the measure.

The plan would represent a health and safety measure that would create additional distance between fans in the stands and the players, coaches and other personnel on the field. It also could give teams the opportunity to generate revenue from sponsors that would partially offset money lost from the absence of fans.

5:38 a.m.

Trump health officials say they are not ‘pulling the rug’ out from testing sites


Top Trump administration health officials sought Wednesday to dampen a controversy over an end to federal management of 13 coronavirus testing sites, insisting that the change does not diminish access to diagnostic tests, even as infection numbers soar in many states.

Brett Giroir, an assistant secretary in the Department of Health and Human Services who is the government’s coronavirus testing coordinator, said seven sites in Texas and six elsewhere were part of an early phase of a federal community testing program for the virus that he called “antiquated,” saying they have been kept open a month longer than planned.

Giroir’s remarks, in an unusually lengthy conference call with journalists lasting nearly an hour, marked the second consecutive day that senior health officials publicly distanced themselves from President Trump’s assertion during a campaign rally Saturday that he had directed officials to “slow the testing down.”

5:04 a.m.

Australia launches door-to-door testing blitz to contain virus flare-up in suburbs


Australian health workers will go door-to-door to test more than 100,000 people in the Melbourne suburbs, authorities said Thursday, as worries mount that a flare-up of the coronavirus could lead to a possible resurgence.

Although Australia has battled the virus with relative success, with barely more than 100 deaths, the spreading outbreak threatens to undo a near-victory over the pandemic.

Just weeks after lifting most restrictions on business and public life, Daniel Andrews, the premier of Victoria state, urged residents to see participation in the free testing as their civic duty.

“Every Victorian who gets tested — every case that is identified — brings us one step closer to containing and slowing the spread of this virus,” he said in a statement.

New infections in his state, the country’s second most populous, make up the vast majority of Australia’s 270 active cases. Officials reported 33 new cases on Thursday, marking the state’s highest daily toll since April.

With the 10-day initiative, officials hope to target about half the residents in 10 communities near the city of Melbourne, with some efforts incorporating less invasive saliva tests.

Although the expanded testing will most likely cause the number of reported infections to climb, Andrews said such an outcome would be well worth it to keep local businesses open.

More than 1,000 military personnel are helping with expanded testing efforts, which involve sending ambulances and mobile test centers to every block.

Australia’s defense minister said they would largely be helping to enforce a mandatory 14-day quarantine for anyone who has recently arrived in the country, according to Reuters.

Victoria officials, who say they believe that patients with mild or no symptoms spread the virus at large family get-togethers, tightened a cap on public gatherings earlier this week.

3:21 a.m.

Analysis: How the split over face masks sums up America’s chaotic coronavirus response


By any measure, the United States has some of the top public health experts in the world. Yet as the novel coronavirus began to spread early this year, these U.S. experts repeatedly recommended against a simple tactic to prevent spreading the infection: face masks.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in January that it did not recommend the use of masks for “people who are well.”

But weeks later, the advice was reversed. On April 3, the CDC altered its recommendation to state that “cloth face coverings” should be worn when social distance cannot be maintained.

The U-turn regarding masks and the subsequent political divide over them has come to symbolize the chaos of the U.S. response to the still-raging pandemic. It also may be particularly damaging for America’s global standing, as it has drawn in not just political leaders such as President Trump but also widely respected public health experts who did not initially back the wearing of face masks.

2:54 a.m.

Delhi overtakes Mumbai as worst-hit city in India by the virus


NEW DELHI — With over 70,000 coronavirus cases, Delhi has emerged as India’s new hot spot. On Wednesday, the city recorded 3,788 new infections and overtook Mumbai, previously the worst-hit city. Delhi, however, has tallied fewer deaths than India’s financial capital, where the count is nearing 4,000.

Delhi’s local government is scrambling to ramp up its infrastructure, which has begun to buckle as cases rise steadily. Patients have been shifted to railway cars that have been converted into isolation wards with medical teams deployed from the armed forces.

The city is racing to build a jumbo 10,000-bed health-care facility at the campus of a spiritual center. Hotels and banquet halls have been roped in to ease the pressure on hospitals. Delhi, whose metropolitan area is home to 29 million people, also plans to carry out door-to-door screening of every household in the next two weeks.

Earlier in June, Delhi’s top elected politician had warned that the city was likely to have more than 500,000 cases by the end of July.

India has struggled to contain the coronavirus pandemic ever since the government lifted a stringent lockdown in a bid to save the hemorrhaging economy. At the beginning of the month, India had about 200,000 cases. In three weeks, the cases have more than doubled to more than 473,000. It is now the world’s fourth-hardest-hit country, after the United States, Brazil and Russia.

2:35 a.m.

Utah governor reverses course on face masks, requiring them in state-run buildings


Although he stopped short of implementing a statewide requirement for face coverings — a move recently undertaken by Nevada and North Carolina — the order marks a rapid reversal for a state experiencing a growing coronavirus outbreak.

On Tuesday, Herbert suggested that he would not succumb to mounting calls for a face mask order, saying it would create “divisive enforcement issues.” After Utah’s top epidemiologist said a complete shutdown may be necessary, he rejected such a measure as well.

But on Wednesday, the governor said he had changed his mind and called on Utahns to “dial up” their personal response to the pandemic.

“The heavy hand of government sometimes has a negative reaction with the people,” Herbert said at his weekly news conference. “I’m hopeful we can get people to do the right thing for the right reasons, because they love their neighbor and want to protect their neighbor as well as themselves from the coronavirus.”

Instead of a statewide mask requirement, Herbert said Wednesday that he wanted city and county leaders to ask him for permission to issue such directives at the local level. He will soon approve such a request from the mayor of Salt Lake County, the state’s largest.

According to data tracked by The Washington Post, Utah has for more than a week straight seen a high in its rolling average of new infections, though testing has not increased substantially.

Herbert said he will keep current restrictions in place for at least two more weeks, with restaurants, gyms, salons and pools all allowed to operate under the current stage of reopening.

Stay safe and informed as the United States reopens with our free Coronavirus Updates newsletter.

1:58 a.m.

Analysis: Trump’s approval ratings on coronavirus, Black Lives Matter protests continue to decline


For much of Donald Trump’s presidency, he avoided the kind of massive crises that truly try presidents. Americans had significant concerns about his steadiness as a leader in 2016, despite electing him, but those concerns were never really tested in the face of major upheaval.

The coronavirus and the Black Lives Matter protests have changed that, and they appear to have damaged Trump significantly.

Two polls released Wednesday morning reinforce this. A Washington Post-Ipsos poll shows that just 36 percent of American adults approve of Trump’s handling of the protests following the May 25 killing of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police, while 62 percent disapprove. A New York Times-Siena College poll, meanwhile, shows the same number disapproving — 62 percent — but just 29 percent approving.

12:15 a.m.

Nevada to require face masks in public, inside all businesses


As Nevada experiences a record surge in new coronavirus cases, Gov. Steve Sisolak (D) said all residents and visitors will be required to cover their faces in public.

The order, which takes effect Friday and includes all businesses, comes three weeks after casinos were allowed to reopen and a month after restrictions were loosened on most other kinds of stores. Authorities suggested a stream of maskless crowds back onto the Las Vegas Strip may be tied to the surge.

“We’ve taken some steps backward,” Sisolak said at a news conference late Wednesday. “Clearly, for many, the excitement and enthusiasm of escaping from our confinement … overshadowed the good judgment we practiced in recent months.”

His directive makes Nevada the latest state to require masks in response to rapidly spreading outbreaks. In the past week, California, Michigan and North Carolina, as well as several cities in Arizona, Florida and Texas, all issued similar orders.

Sisolak said that businesses that do not comply will face police action, though he urged local agencies not to impose fines and fees as a way to enforce the order. Children between the ages of 2 and 9 and people with certain medical conditions are exempt.

Hours before his announcement, MGM Resorts and Caesars Entertainment said it would be requiring face masks inside its casinos, the Reno Gazette-Journal reported, and several restaurants on the Las Vegas Strip that had already shut down again.

During the news conference, the governor also apologized for making an “inexcusable” error in judgment when he and his wife were photographed failing to wear masks at a Carson City restaurant.

According to data tracked by The Washington Post, Nevada’s rolling seven-day average of new infections has climbed upward for nearly a week, even as testing levels remain flat.

Stay safe and informed as the United States reopens with our free Coronavirus Updates newsletter.

11:59 p.m.

Indiana Pacers’ Malcolm Brogdon is the latest NBA player to test positive


Indiana Pacers guard Malcolm Brogdon announced Wednesday that he has tested positive for the novel coronavirus, weeks before the National Basketball Association is set to resume play at Disney World next month.

The 27-year-old guard, who was in the midst of a career year before the NBA shut down on March 11, said that he still plans to play for the Pacers when the 2019-2020 season commences on July 30.

The NBA entered Phase 2 of its comprehensive reopening plan Tuesday, with players reporting to their teams in their respective home markets to undergo mandatory testing. Nikola Jokic, the Denver Nuggets’ all-star center, tested positive for the coronavirus, while the Arizona Republic reported Tuesday that two unidentified members of the Phoenix Suns also tested positive.

11:27 p.m.

Dozens of Secret Service officers and agents told to self-quarantine after Trump’s Tulsa rally


Dozens of Secret Service officers and agents who were on-site for President Trump’s rally in Tulsa last week were ordered to self-quarantine after two of their colleagues tested positive for the novel coronavirus, part of the fallout from Trump’s insistence on holding the mass gathering over the objections of public health officials.

The Secret Service instructed employees who worked the Tulsa event to stay at home for 14 days when they returned from the weekend trip, according to two people familiar with the agency’s decision.

The order came in the wake of the discovery — hours before the president’s Saturday evening rally — that at least six advance staffers who helped organize the trip had tested positive for the virus, including two Secret Service employees. Another two advance staffers tested positive after Trump returned to Washington on Sunday.

11:25 p.m.

Coronavirus deaths lag behind surging infections but may catch up soon


With novel coronavirus infections setting a single-day national record Wednesday, health experts are taking little solace from one of the few bright spots in the current resurgence: Deaths are not rising in lockstep with caseloads.

But that may be just a matter of time.

“Deaths always lag considerably behind cases,” Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s top infectious-disease specialist, told Congress at a hearing Tuesday. In the weeks to come, he and others said, the death toll is likely to rise commensurately.

Which means Arizona, Texas and Florida, states that reopened early and now are experiencing runaway infection rates, are likely to be burying more dead in July.

9:47 a.m.

Delta threatens ban on passengers refusing to wear masks


The chief executive of Delta Air Lines said in a memo to all employees Thursday that any passenger who refuses to wear a mask or follow any other safety requirement on flights may be permanently banned from flying with Delta.

“We take the requirement to wear a mask very seriously,” Ed Bastian wrote. “So far, there have thankfully only been a handful of cases, but we have already banned some passengers from future travel on Delta for refusing to wear masks on board.”

Last month, Delta joined other U.S. airlines in mandating face coverings to help protect passengers and staff from contracting and spreading the coronavirus. Delta also has instituted several other safety measures to prevent the spread of the virus, including cleaning aircraft surfaces before every flight, blocking middle seats and capping the passenger capacity in the main cabin at 60 percent.

Despite the precautions, many Americans have abandoned travel plans. Bastian said that even as Delta has seen a steady increase in passenger volume as it adds flights, he expects summer demand to be just 25 percent of last year’s revenue.

A return to “normal,” he said, is probably years away.

10:06 a.m.

Rushed reopening led to spike in U.S. cases, health official says


Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, said Thursday on the “Today” show that a spike this week in U.S. cases of the novel coronavirus was caused by a rush to reopen the nation’s economy without proper safety measures in place.

State health departments reported 38,115 new infections on Wednesday, the highest single-day caseload in the United States since the pandemic began. Texas, Florida and California reported the most cases, with more than 5,000 each.

“It is pretty alarming. It is pretty worrisome,” Jha said. “We had hoped that we would be able to keep the virus at bay for a while, but we are seeing these resurgences, largely because we opened up too quickly, and we opened up without the right safeguards in place.”

“And I’m worried that we’re going to see increases in the number of cases in the days and weeks ahead,” Jha added.

It’s true, he said, that some states have increased their testing capacity, which is contributing to the increase in case numbers. But he also said that testing alone does not explain the spike. Hospitalization rates are up, too.

When asked about data that shows some of the new cases are in younger people, Jha said that does not necessarily bring him comfort. Young people can still succumb to the virus or get gravely ill, and doctors are still learning about the long-term side effects of the disease.

In addition, Jha said, young people risk infecting their parents or grandparents, who are more susceptible to the virus’s deadliest consequences.

To contain the uptick in cases, Jha said that hot-spot states such as Texas, Florida and California should implement statewide mask-wearing laws in public places, discourage indoor restaurant dining and continue to discourage large gatherings.


11:05 a.m.

Ex-FDA head: States with rising infections must act fast


States experiencing a sharp rise in new infections of the novel coronavirus face a daunting task of containing the outbreak and must be willing to make some tough calls — and fast, former FDA commissioner Scott Gottlieb warned.

“It’s going to be difficult now to get this under control. They still have a window of opportunity,” Gottlieb said in an interview on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” early Thursday. “Whatever these states do right now is really going to help them in about two weeks.”

Since the beginning of June, states like Arizona, Texas, California and Florida have seen record high rolling averages of new infections. And while deaths still lag, those could catch up soon.

Gottlieb pointed to a delay between New York City implementing a stay-at-home order and the city’s peak infection rate.

“The next week or two is largely baked in terms of what impact you can have on it from policy,” Gottlieb said.

He advised state and local officials to start thinking now about where their infection rates could be in two weeks and beyond and prepare to make adjustments.

Gottlieb acknowledged states are unlikely to shut down their economies again. “It’s very clear: They’re going to weather this,” he said. He urged officials to consider closing “congregant settings” like bars and dialing back nonessential medical procedures to ensure enough hospital capacity for coronavirus patients.


11:13 a.m.

Hospitalizations in New York slip below 1,000 for the first time since March


Coronavirus hospitalizations in New York have slipped just below 1,000 for the first time since March 18, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D) said Thursday.

The state also has recorded 17 new covid-19 deaths, “one of the lowest numbers since we started,” Cuomo said on CNN’s “New Day.” A day earlier, announcing a mandatory 14-day quarantine for anyone coming to New York from states with high viral spread, he had emphasized his state’s dramatic turnaround from the early days of the pandemic.

What started as the nation’s hardest-hit hot spot now has one of the slowest-rising case counts in the country, though its overall death toll remains the highest, both in raw numbers and relative to population. Especially devastated New York City is on track to move into the next phase of reopening July 6, Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) said Thursday.

Under that anticipated “phase 3,” gatherings of up to 25 people as well as indoor dining are allowed, and more businesses, including nail salons and massage parlors, can reopen. The city will be the last in New York to enter phase 3, and officials are still evaluating as July 6 nears.

Cuomo contrasted his approach to that of some governors who have been quicker to open up and are seeing rising infections and hospitalizations.

“I got lambasted by everyone saying just open up the economy, you’re overreacting, don’t listen to all these scientists … that’s just fearmongering,” he said on CNN. “It wasn’t.”

“The people who played politics now are causing this nation great havoc,” the governor said.

Cuomo was pessimistic about the country’s prospects even as New York hits encouraging milestones, saying he expects tens of thousands more Americans to die in the pandemic.

“It’s a real American tragedy that we’re living through right now,” he said.

11:46 a.m.

Ex-world leaders, Nobel laureates among more than 500 saying pandemic threatens democracy


The novel coronavirus pandemic is a “political crisis that threatens the future of liberal democracy,” says a letter released by the nonprofit National Democratic Institute and signed by more than 500 international figures, including former heads of state and government.

The letter, published online Thursday, takes aim at not only authoritarian countries but also democracies for certain restrictions issued in response to the ongoing pandemic.

“Authoritarian regimes, not surprisingly, are using the crisis to silence critics and tighten their political grip,” the letter says. “But even some democratically elected governments are fighting the pandemic by amassing emergency powers that restrict human rights and enhance state surveillance without regard to legal constraints, parliamentary oversight, or timeframes for the restoration of constitutional order.”

Among the signatories are former heads of state and government in more than 50 countries, as well as 13 Nobel laureates. A small number of currently serving government officials, including Taiwanese Foreign Minister Joseph Wu and Prague Mayor Zdeněk Hřib, have signed the letter.

Dozens of U.S. political figures signed as well. Among them are former deputy national security adviser Benjamin Rhodes, former governor of New Mexico Bill Richardson (D), former national security adviser H.R. McMaster, former Florida governor Jeb Bush (R), former special envoy to Ukraine Kurt Volker, former secretary of state Madeleine Albright, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and former ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul.

The letter does not name any country, but it notes that the pandemic “began in a country where the free flow of information is stifled and where the government punished those warning about the dangers of the virus.”

“Democracy does not guarantee competent leadership and effective governance,” the letter continues. “While democracies predominate among the countries that have acted most effectively to contain the virus, other democracies have functioned poorly in responding to the pandemic and have paid a very high price in human life and economic security.”


12:12 p.m.

Texas pauses reopening amid surge in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations


Gov. Greg Abbott (R) announced Thursday that Texas would delay moving into its next phase of reopening as it struggles to contain a surge in coronavirus infections and hospitalizations.

“The last thing we want to do as a state is go backwards and close down businesses,” Abbott said in a statement Thursday. “This temporary pause will help our state corral the spread until we can safely enter the next phase of opening our state for business.”

An hour before the governor paused the reopening, he issued an executive order to suspend elective surgeries at hospitals in Bexar, Dallas, Harris and Travis counties to ensure room for coronavirus patients.

The rolling average of daily new cases in Texas has increased 62 percent from the last week, jumping from 2,610 on June 18 to 4,227 as of Thursday, according to data tracked by The Washington Post.

Former Food and Drug Administration commissioner Scott Gottlieb warned Thursday that states such as Texas that have spiking infection rates would have to quickly implement policy changes to contain the outbreak in the weeks ahead. Gottlieb, speaking on MSNBC, also cautioned that the outcome of the next week or two is “already baked” in in hot spots.

Abbott said the state would not revert to the stricter closures of earlier phases. The state’s current third phase of reopening allows restaurants to operate at 75 percent capacity and outdoor amusement parks and carnivals to operate at 50 percent, while other businesses can move to between 25 and 50 percent capacity.

Masks remain advised but not mandatory statewide, though major counties have enacted requirements that people cover their faces while going into businesses.


12:18 p.m.

Trump continues to push discredited notion that testing is driving increase in cases


President Trump continued Thursday to push the discredited notion that coronavirus cases are increasing in the United States because of “GREAT TESTING” and complained that the news media was not spreading the word.

“The number of ChinaVirus cases goes up, because of GREAT TESTING, while the number of deaths (mortality rate), goes way down,” Trump said in a tweet. “The Fake News doesn’t like telling you that!”

The tweet was sent as Trump traveled from a wreath-laying ceremony at the Korean War Veterans Memorial to Joint Base Andrews, ahead of a planned trip to Wisconsin.

While testing has increased in the United States, health experts say that alone does not account for the increase in cases. In several states with rising caseloads, new cases are outpacing the spread of testing.

“For some states with rising case growth, it is almost certainly because more people are becoming infected,” Jennifer B. Nuzzo, an epidemiologist with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Center for Health Security, wrote in a recent Washington Post article in which she called Trump’s theory “dangerously wrong.”

The number of deaths nationwide had fallen in recent weeks, as Trump says, but that is largely because of a sharp decrease in deaths reported in some of the hardest-hit urban centers — most notably New York. The decline has since become less steep.

It remains unclear if the rising caseloads in states such as Texas, Florida and Arizona will lead to a corresponding upticks in deaths. Some experts have said the death rates may be lower recently because relatively more young people are being infected and they tend to survive the virus at higher rates.



1:27 p.m.

British authorities declare ‘major incident’ as huge crowds gather at beach


Authorities on Thursday warned people to stay away from the English seaside town of Bournemouth due to drastic overcrowding, with the country’s chief medical officer warning that cases of coronavirus will rise in England unless proper social distancing is maintained.

Half a million people had traveled to the town in southern England, causing gridlock and hindering access for emergency vehicles, according to Tobias Ellwood, a member of parliament for Bournemouth East.

Photographs and videos shared on social media showed large crowds at the beach in the coastal resort town in Dorset around 100 miles from London.

Darren Slade, a journalist with Bournemouth Echo, told Sky News there had been “fights breaking out, illegal camping at the beach overnight, and with no public toilets or anything open, all the waste has been left behind on the beach.”

The scenes came as England’s chief medical officer, Chris Whitty, warned that while the risk from covid-19 had decreased, the coronavirus is “still in general circulation.”

“If we do not follow social distancing guidance then cases will rise again. Naturally people will want to enjoy the sun but we need to do so in a way that is safe for all,” he wrote on Twitter.

Much of Britain has seen warm weather this week, with the hottest temperatures of the year recorded on Wednesday and Thursday. The country had been under strict lockdown rules since March, but Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced this week that the rules would be significantly relaxed on July 4, with holiday resorts and hotels — among others — able to open.

With limited options for international travel, domestic tourism destinations have voiced concerns about their outlook for this summer. Earlier this month, local councils in Dorset asked the national government to amend the guidance on travel so people would “stay local” and not leave their home areas.

“I am worried that we will see a second wave of infection here in Dorset as a result of the high number of visitors to the area over recent days,” Dorset Council leader Spencer Flower said in a statement released June 1.

1:49 p.m.

Coronavirus cases may be 10 times higher than reported, says CDC’s Robert Redfield


The number of Americans who have been infected with the novel coronavirus is likely 10 times higher than the number of cases reported, according to the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In a call with reporters Thursday, CDC Director Robert Redfield said, “Our best estimate right now is that for every case that’s reported, there actually are 10 other infections.”

Redfield said the estimate is based on blood samples collected from across the country that look for the presence of antibodies to the virus. For every confirmed case of covid-19, 10 more people had antibodies, Redfield said.

Currently, there are 2.3 million covid-19 cases reported in the United States. The CDC’s new estimate pushes that total up to at least 23 million.

Redfield and another top official at the CDC said Thursday that young people are driving the recent surge in the South and West. He estimated 92 to 95 percent of the U.S. population is still susceptible to the virus.


2:52 p.m.

Apple to re-close 14 stores in Florida


Apple announced on Thursday that it is re-closing 14 stores in Florida, as the state reported a second consecutive day of more than 5,000 new confirmed coronavirus cases.

The decision comes a day after the tech giant announced it would temporarily close seven stores in the Houston area, owing to the rapid rise in infections and hospitalizations in and around Texas’s largest city.

In recent days, Apple has announced the re-closing of 32 stores as case numbers surge in the United States, according to a count by CNBC.

Like many other major retailers, the tech company closed all stores worldwide in March, before gradually reopening its facilities in the United States as states and localities loosened their restrictions.

But with outbreaks spreading at record levels in much of the South and West, the move to shut some stores down again may signal a growing hesitance from major businesses to expose their employees and customers.

“We take this step with an abundance of caution as we closely monitor the situation,” the company said in a statement to ABC news affiliate KTRK, “and we look forward to having our teams and customers back as soon as possible.”

Apple has closed nearly a dozen stores in Arizona, Florida and the Carolinas, all of which have reported surges in new infections recently. Some other companies have made similar moves. On Wednesday, Disneyland in California said it would delay its reopening, which had been scheduled for July 17.

Of Apple’s 271 stores across the country, about 200 are now open, according to Bloomberg News, incorporating health measures such as mask requirements and temperature checks. Some locations only allow shoppers to make purchases online and then pick them up curbside.

Coronavirus hospitalizations in the Houston metro area have more than doubled since Memorial Day, with about 650 new cases per day on average, Mayor Sylvester Turner (D) said at a news conference Wednesday.

Hospitalizations have soared, too, with the Texas Medical Center reporting that 97 percent of its intensive care unit beds were occupied.

3:02 p.m.

White House’s Kudlow on new hot spots: ‘We just have to live with that’


Larry Kudlow, the White House’s top economic official, said Thursday that the administration does not anticipate a second wave of the novel coronavirus to hit the United States and that new hot spots popping up across the country are scenarios Americans will “just have to live with.”

Kudlow’s remarks on the government’s management of the pandemic came during an appearance on the Fox Business Network and while talking to reporters at the White House, Reuters reported.

A number of states have recorded record-high daily case counts this week, and on Wednesday the United States set a new daily high of 38,115 new infections reported by state health departments — surpassing the previous single-day record of 34,203 set on April 25.

Kudlow, director of the White House National Economic Council, told Fox Business that “there will be some shutdowns individually … in individual places and certain stores.”

“We are keeping a very close eye on this,” Kudlow said, according to Reuters.

Later, while speaking with reporters at the White House, Kudlow said that there is “no question” the United States will experience new hot spots. “We just have to live with that,” he said.

On Tuesday, Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s top infectious-disease expert and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said during a House committee hearing that the country is still experiencing the effects of the pandemic’s first wave. He characterized the new cases in states such as Florida, Texas and Arizona as a “disturbing surge.”

“That’s something I’m really quite concerned about,” Fauci said. “A couple of days ago, there were 30,000 new infections. That’s very disturbing to me.”

Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, echoed that concern Thursday morning during an appearance on the “Today” show.

“It is pretty alarming; it is pretty worrisome,” Jha said. “We had hoped that we would be able to keep the virus at bay for awhile, but we are seeing these resurgences, largely because we opened up too quickly and we opened up without the right safeguards in place.”


3:34 p.m.

Texas Medical Center hits normal ICU capacity, turns to surge inventories


Amid a statewide spike in covid-19 cases, the Texas Medical Center — which calls itself the largest medical complex in the world — hit 100 percent of normal operating capacity in its intensive care units this week and will use additional beds in its effort to handle a sustainable surge.

The normal ICU capacity at the Houston center is 1,330 beds, of which 374 (28 percent) are occupied by covid-19 patients. The sustainable surge capacity can accommodate 373 more people. A temporary ICU for 504 patients is also available.

“The reality is all of us have the ability to significantly expand capacity on a day-to-day, week-to-week, month-to-month basis,” Doug Lawson, chief executive of CHI St. Luke’s Health, which has facilities at the center, told the Houston Chronicle.

Gov. Greg Abbott (R) stopped elective surgeries in the state’s biggest counties, including in the Houston area, and said Texas would pause its reopening as it confronts a surge in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations.

The rolling average of daily new cases in Texas has increased 62 percent from the past week, jumping from 2,610 on June 18 to 4,227 on Thursday, according to data tracked by The Washington Post. The daily count has set a record each day for 13 consecutive days.

6:05 p.m.

U.S. sets another single-day record for coronavirus cases

Image
The United States on Thursday set another daily record for new coronavirus cases, surpassing Wednesday’s mark as several states, including Texas, reported single-day highs.

The new case total was 39,327, according to data maintained by The Washington Post. Wednesday’s count of 38,115 had demolished the previous high of 34,203 on April 25.

The seven-day average is 32,806 -- 9,112 more than last Thursday’s figure.

The death toll also spiked, to about 2,493, as New Jersey added 1,854 probable deaths to its overall tally.

It comes as the state health departments of Texas, Alabama, Missouri and Nevada reported daily highs of new cases. Thirty-nine states reported increases in their seven-day average compared to last Thursday, and 17 of them reported 40 percent increases.

Texas reported 5,996 new cases, beating Wednesday’s record of 5,551. The state’s rolling average of 4,581 was a record and 340 percent higher than the rolling average on Memorial Day. The 47 new deaths were the most since May 20.

The 350 new covid-19 hospitalizations Thursday in Texas increased the number of current patients to a record 4,739.

With 497 new cases, Nevada also reported a record rolling average for the seventh day in a row. The rolling average is now 398 — up 66 percent from last week’s rolling average of 240 cases.

Alabama reported 1,129 new cases, and the state has a total of 880 deaths, up from 801 deaths a week ago. Missouri is reporting just over a 1 percent increase in cases over the past 24 hours, bringing the state to roughly 19,400 total.

Georgia reported 1,714 new cases, the third consecutive day with more than 1,700.

Arizona has reported an almost 200 percent increase in hospitalizations since Memorial Day. Texas and Arkansas are 190 percent higher.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) raised alarms about the biggest jump in new cases in his state since April, emphasizing that more than increased testing is at play. Hospitalizations have increased, and those infected are trending younger, he said, echoing officials in other states.

After Arizona set a single-day case record on Wednesday with 3,593 cases, it reported 3,056 new infections on Thursday. Hospitalizations there hit another high of 2,463 people, up by more than 300 from Wednesday.

California reported its second-highest single-day caseload, with 5,349 new infections — down from Wednesday’s 7,149. Hospitalizations, which jumped more than 300 to 5,552, have increased 25 percent since Memorial Day.

In Florida, the daily caseload topped 5,000 for the second time in two days.


7:48 p.m.

Reopenings, record cases and full hospitals: America’s dissonant response to the pandemic


Americans are living through a split-screen pandemic: Their leaders are relaxing restrictions while their states set records for new coronavirus infections. Churches, beaches and bars are filling up, and so are hospital beds.

Early in the outbreak, President Trump told governors they were on their own — for testing, medical supplies and stay-at-home orders. Now, in this new phase of soaring cases and reopenings, the effects of this decentralized decision-making are particularly noticeable and subject to politics, with some states making seemingly arbitrary decisions.

Experts note a troubling lack of consistent, unified messaging from Trump and Vice President Pence, who have downplayed the danger and denigrated effective disease defenses such as mask-wearing, testing and social distancing — even as the administration’s own health officials contradict them. The coronavirus task force briefings, where health officials updated the public daily, disappeared weeks ago.

On Wednesday, the country reported more than 38,000 new cases, its highest-ever single-day count, according to data gathered and analyzed by The Washington Post. The counties home to Dallas, Phoenix and Tampa all reported record-high averages on at least 15 straight days in June.

In many places, the number of people sick enough to be hospitalized has also increased sharply. Those hardest hit include the largest states — California, Texas, Florida — and those that thought they had the virus under control, like Utah and Oregon.

“I think the politicians are in denial,” said Kami Kim, director of the Division of Infectious Disease and International Medicine at the University of South Florida.

The push to reopen quickly even as cases climb sends a dangerous and inaccurate message, said Andrew T. Pavia, the chief of the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at University of Utah Health.

“On the one hand, you get messages from politicians and the business community that we have to go, go, go and open up,” he said. “On the other hand, you’re seeing epidemiological indicators that we still have to be very careful.”

“It’s cognitive dissonance,” he added.


8:09 p.m.

White House coronavirus task force to hold press briefing on Friday


With cases on the rise, the White House coronavirus task force has scheduled its first press briefing in nearly two months for Friday afternoon.

Unlike the daily briefings held at the White House at the start of the crisis, this one will be held at the Department of Health and Human Services and be led by Vice President Pence, who heads the task force.

Trump played a significant role in the earlier briefings, but it’s unclear whether he will attend this one.

A month ago, Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the top U.S. infectious-disease expert, said he was hopeful that Americans would begin hearing directly from him and Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus task force coordinator, on a more regular basis again.

“I think you’re probably going to be seeing a little bit more of me and my colleagues,” Fauci predicted in a May 21 CNN interview. “They realize we need to get some of this information out. … Hopefully you’ll be seeing more of us.”


8:39 p.m.

Surprise birthday party in Texas believed to infect 17 family members


A surprise birthday party in Carrollton, Tex., last month is believed to be the source of 17 family members contracting the novel coronavirus, including a couple married 68 years.

As reported by WFAA in Dallas, the host of the party, who unknowingly had the virus, passed it onto seven relatives who attended. It then spread to 10 other family members.

Ron Barbosa told the TV station he didn't attend the May 30 party, which was for his daughter-in-law, who turned 30. His nephew was the host.

Though guests practiced social distancing, Barbosa said he believes the party, which was attended by 25 people, was the catalyst for the virus spreading. He also said it could’ve started spreading when his nephew went golfing with relatives before the party.

Three are hospitalized: Barbosa’s parents and his sister, who is also battling breast cancer. She did not attend the party.

His mother has been hospitalized since June 13. His father, who entered the hospital four days later, is on life support. “My dad’s hanging on by a thread,” Barbosa told WFAA.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2 ... pdates-us/


<
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

Re: Politics

1796
I want to thank the Domestic Terrorists, BLM Marxists and Antifa, for re-affirming Americans belief in the 2nd Amendment. And for helping Trump's re-election campaign.

-

The trifecta of coronavirus fears, George Floyd protests, and the push to defund the police has resulted in surging gun sales in Minnesota.

CBS 4 reports it all began with fears of virus-related civil unrest leading to record background checks for gun sales in March 2020.

The number of background checks conducted in Minnesota in March represented a 20-year high.

Then came the May 25 death of George Floyd and the subsequent riots, after which Frontiersman Sports owner Kory Krouse said the demand for guns went through the roof.

Krouse said, “People are really scared coming in here. We had a three, four hour wait just to get up to the counter during the height of … the rioting.”

As a result of the surge, gun store inventories are down and ammunition is scarce.

-

When Covid hit, while my wife and others were buying toilet paper, sanitizer, and disinfectant wipes, I stocked up on ammo. I'm all good.

And while I was off work for 6 weeks I built two new AR's. One is an AR-12 ... it is a semi-automatic 12 gauge shotgun in a AR style rifle format. 10 shell clip +1 in the pipe. ... 3 inch 00-buck shells, 11 shots of them just as fast as you can pull the trigger. I nick named it Armageddon. It can wipe out a large group threat in like 15 seconds.

Right now I have my eye on an AR500. (500 Auto Max) Just in case I need to take down a Rhino, or a Mack truck...

Re: Politics

1797
Did you drink the Clorox?
As you know that the virus is just like the flu and is not big deal if I were you I would just go to a bar in Florida this weekend and pick up the virus so you have natural immunity
We are proudly going to put a BLM sign on our front yard this weekend.
Are you in the blood and soil movement?
I would be careful with that firearm. After you miss your target, the bullet will likely his something you didnt intend.

Re: Politics

1798
I spend a lot more time at the range than you do looking for the truth, Ken. Don’t worry about me and mine. We are totally fine.

Biden says today that he has a plan that is going to put 720 million women to work.

Our population is 329 million.

Oh, but he also said yesterday that Wuhan Virus has killed 120 million Americans.

This, following his statement earlier in Primary that guns have killed 150 million Americans.

By my math, that means in Biden’s head we only have 59 million people left in America, yet he is going to put 720 million women to work.

This guy can barely put a sentence together now, and when he does it makes no sense. He couldn’t find his shoes with a map. He’s lost his mind.

Re: Politics

1799
Oh, no, say it ain’t so.

Joe and the liberal media says Trump is lying. There is no fraud in vote-by-mail.

Here 1 out of every 5 ballots were fraudulent in this one Jersey city!!

As I said, next time Joe posts a fact will be the first time.

https://www.realclearpolitics.com/artic ... 43551.html

1 in 5 Ballots Rejected as Fraud Is Charged in N.J. Mail-In Election

Following accusations of widespread fraud, voter intimidation, and ballot theft in the May 12 municipal elections in Paterson, N.J., state Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal (pictured) announced Thursday he is charging four men with voter fraud – including the vice president of the City Council and a candidate for that body.

With races still undecided, control of the council hangs in the balance. Paterson is New Jersey’s third largest city and the election will decide the fate of a municipal budget in excess of $300 million, in addition to hundreds of millions more in education spending and state aid.

In the City Council election, 16,747 vote-by-mail ballots were received, but only 13,557 votes were counted. More than 3,190 votes, 19% of the total ballots cast, were disqualified by the board of elections. Due to the pandemic, Paterson’s election was done through vote-by-mail. Community organizations, such as the city’s NAACP chapter, are calling for the entire election to be invalidated.

Mail-in ballots have long been acknowledged by voting experts to be more susceptible to fraud and irregularities than in-person voting. This has raised concerns from President Trump and other Republicans about the integrity of national elections in November, which are expected to include a dramatic increase in mail-in ballots. If Paterson is any guide, it ought to concern Democrats as well.

Over 800 ballots in Paterson were invalidated for appearing in mailboxes improperly bundled together – including a one mailbox where hundreds of ballots were in a single packet. The bundles were turned over to law enforcement to investigate potential criminal activity related to the collection of the ballots.

The board of elections disqualified another 2,300 ballots after concluding that the signatures on them did not match the signatures on voter records.

Reporting by NBC further uncovered citizens of Paterson who are listed as having voted, but who told the news outlet they never received a ballot and did not vote. One woman, Ramona Javier, after being shown the list of people on her block who allegedly voted, told the outlet she knew of eight family members and neighbors who were wrongly listed. “We did not receive vote-by-mail ballots and thus we did not vote,” she said. “This is corruption. This is fraud.”

There were multiple reports that large numbers of mail-in ballots were left on the lobby floors of apartment buildings and not delivered to residents’ individual mailboxes, further casting doubt on the integrity of the election.

Two of the election results in Paterson were particularly close. Initially, challenger Shahin Khalique defeated incumbent Mohammed Akhtaruzzaman by 1,729 votes to 1,721. After a second recount on June 19, that race is now tied 1,730-1,730. In that race, a video posted to Snapchat has surfaced that appears to show a man named Abu Razyen unlawfully handling a large stack of ballots he indicates are votes for Khalique. Khalique’s brother, Shelim, and Razyen have been charged by the state attorney general for crimes including fraud in casting mail-in votes, tampering, and unauthorized possession of ballots.

Incumbent council member William McKoy lost by 240 votes to challenger Alex Mendez after a recount on June 1. However, the McKoy-Mendez race is far from over – in the third ward of the city where the race was decided, over 24% of all ballots were disqualified by the Board of Elections. Mendez was also charged Thursday with six different crimes related to voter fraud. (Michael Jackson, Paterson’s incumbent 1st Ward city councilman and council vice president, was the fourth man charged yesterday. Jackson faces four counts related to voter fraud.)

In a legal complaint, the McKoy campaign is alleging outright fraud on behalf of the Mendez campaign. “At least one individual, YaYa Luis Mendez, has confessed to investigators working on behalf of the [New Jersey attorney general’s] office to having stolen ballots out of mailboxes, both completed and uncompleted, on behalf of and at the direction of the [Alex] Mendez campaign,” according to the complaint prepared by McKoy attorney Scott Salmon.

The attorney for Mendez, who leads in the vote count, isn’t disputing that the election results are unreliable. “This election is a sham, regardless of who are the ultimate victors, and this process has to be reviewed by the courts to address the deficiencies in the planning and execution of the election,” Gregg Paster, the attorney, is quoted as saying in Salmon’s complaint.

For his part, Paster alleges that the botched election has resulted in problems hurting Mendez’s chance of winning. On June 8, Paster sent a letter asking federal authorities to investigate voter intimidation on behalf of the Paterson’s mayor, Andre Sayegh, and local law enforcement.

Mendez is part of a faction opposing the mayor and hoping to gain control of the City Council and push back against the mayor’s agenda. The ensuing investigations into voting irregularities have resulted in Paterson police officers – including those assigned to the mayor’s private detail, according to Paster – knocking on doors and asking citizens about their votes. The local police department says the cops were assisting the state attorney general investigation into the election, serving as translators for differing Spanish dialects.

“Once you start having city police knocking on doors, investigating voting patterns, you're treading awfully close to the line of banana republic type of tactics,” Paster told RealClearPolitics. “There’s an intimidation factor – you have a lot of immigrants in Paterson, a lot of people that come from places where if the police show up at your door, a lot of times, you know, nobody ever sees you again. And while we're not alleging local cops are anything like that, this is where a lot of these people have come from and they're afraid of the police.”

Salmon admits Paterson’s recent election is “crazy,” but points to unique aspects of living in the town that make mail-in ballot fraud more likely – it’s one of the most densely populated cities in America, with lots of residents living in high-rise buildings that have communal mailboxes that are prime targets for ballot theft.

But as noted in Salmon’s legal complaint, Paterson was just one of 31 municipalities in New Jersey that held vote-by-mail elections on May 12. The average disqualification rate for mail-in ballots in all 31 elections across the state was an alarming 9.6%. (The ballot rejection rate drops to 8.1% if Paterson’s results are excluded.)

New Jersey’s municipal elections aren’t broadly comparable to nationwide elections for a variety of reasons, but the 2016 presidential election resulted in a popular vote total with a differential of just over 2%, with fewer than 80,000 votes in a handful of swing states determining the Electoral College victor. Voting irregularities with mail-in ballots could be much less pronounced than what happened in New Jersey last month and still produce a great deal of uncertainty in a national election.

Salmon is hoping vote-by-mail problems will be resolved in the months before the November election. “In New Jersey, people found out that this is going to be an all-mail-in election only a month before, whereas obviously November is still a ways away and there's a lot more time to educate voters on how to fill out these ballots and how to return them,” he told RCP. But he concedes that it’s “still a fair point” to look at New Jersey’s elections last month and see cause for concern about the national elections.

Rick Hasen, professor of law and political science at the University of California, Irvine, acknowledged on the Election Law Blog last month that there’s “genuine absentee ballot fraud scandal going on in Paterson, New Jersey and it is going to get a lot of national attention.” Hasen argues that it’s not cause for concern, however, noting there were only 491 prosecutions related to absentee ballots nationwide between 2000 and 2012.

“The rise in vote by mail should lead to increased vigilance against this sort of activity,” he wrote on May 20. “But the push to expand vote by mail is worth it given the great health benefits of increased voting by mail during a pandemic, the small risk of fraud, and the likelihood that fraud will get caught.”

Despite Hasen’s sanguine attitude, the problems in Paterson have received virtually no national attention so far. Salmon and Paster say they’ve had inquiries from only two national news outlets, and almost all coverage of the problems and fraud allegations in Paterson have been confined to local news outlets.

At the same time, dozens of lawsuits have been filed across the country contesting state requirements used to certify mail-in ballots. “Among the main targets are witness and signature requirements for absentee ballots -- such as signing the envelope, or getting a witness or notary to sign it, or making sure the voter's signature is legible,” notes an NPR report earlier this month.

Those lawsuits seeking to expand vote-by-mail include one brought in Nevada earlier year, which aims to do away with signature verification on mail-in ballots altogether – even though ballot signatures not matching voter records was the reason Paterson disqualified over 2,300 ballots.

Meanwhile, the president continues to be an outspoken opponent of voting by mail. He tweeted on June 22, “RIGGED 2020 ELECTION: MILLIONS OF MAIL-IN BALLOTS WILL BE PRINTED BY FOREIGN COUNTRIES, AND OTHERS. IT WILL BE THE SCANDAL OF OUR TIMES!” This and other Trump claims about vote-by-mail problems are frequently contested by the press.

“We've literally been expecting Trump to tweet about this for the last two weeks,” says Salmon. “Within the McCoy campaign, there have been ongoing jokes about how long it's going to take for Trump to find out about Paterson and start tweeting.”

Re: Politics

1800
Proud to be an American these days?

Sorry! I tried to hold back, but the state of USA affairs has me totally disgusted.
I am truly embarrassed to call myself an American.

WTF: Covid 19
5.1 Million positive cases and counting in the USA (understated).
165,000+ Deaths (understated)
Trump's pandemic response turned ‘America First’ Into America Last.
Europe is blocking U.S. travelers over cronavirus.
The Trump administration failed to take the pandemic seriously
A botched public health response.
A failure to help workers retain their jobs.
Three years of slashing critical safety nets.
A failure to prevent layoffs of state and local workers.
A failure to help small businesses.
Bending the curve:
What curve?
We are still heading in the wrong direction - skyrocketing in cases & deaths.
Trump rejected any accountability for the botched testing process: “I don’t take responsibility at all,”
Look where that's got us!
Trump inherited a booming economy from Obama and ran it into the ground due to his handling of the virus.
He ran this country into the ground.......just like his failed businesses!!!

WTF is going on with the Postal Service?
Mail boxes being removed from the streets?
Sorting machines being removed from the post office buildings?
Mail service men and women forced to "slow down" the mail.
Why? Vote by Mail!!!!!
Trump knows his dictatorship is in jeopardy. So why not stop the mail?
His ass is grass if he doesn't end mail in voting.

Vote By Mail is Safe despite all the Trump lies!!!
A Washington Post analysis of data collected by three vote-by-mail states with help from the nonprofit Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC) found that officials identified just 372 possible cases of double voting or voting on behalf of deceased people out of about 14.6 million votes cast by mail in the 2016 and 2018 general elections, or 0.0025 percent.

WTF is going on?
Trump Mercenaries in the streets attacking peaceful protests (which is a right this country was born with).
Is this the new norm for this county?
A police state?
Peaceful protesters blocked ICE buses in Bend, Oregon. So! What happened next?
After 12 hours of peaceful protesting, federal agents responded in force.
They used crowd-control weapons.
Is this the kind of country we want to be?
Want to know what a police state looks like in 2020?
Check out the comparison videos of what's happening in Hong Kong & Belarus with our good ol'e USA.

Our Democracy is under attack.
The Constitution is under attack.
The Post Office is under attack.
Civil Liberties is under attack.
The courts are being filled with many unqualified candidates.
They are young and will still be around long after we're gone.
We all know what's going on with the Supreme Court.
Ruth! Stay healthy and keep safe!!!!
The State Department is under Trump/Barr control.
The DOJ is under Trump/Barr control.
Barr no longer represents we the people!
He has become a Trump and White House personal attorney.
We're screwed!
Trump has his eyes on being a dictatorship.
Being a Putin clone! A President for life!
Problem: The Republicans on Capitol Hill are enablers.
They turn a blind eye just as they have the past 3 1/2 years.

WTF:
Trump congratulated Marjorie Taylor Greene on Wednesday morning, calling her a "future Republican Star" who is "strong on everything."
Greene is a QAnon supporter who made bigoted videos. She won the Ga. Primary and is likely heading to congress in a heavy red state.
She was denounced for videos deemed racist even by fellow Republicans who withdrew endorsements and declared her unfit for Congress.

All Those Lies!
'Do you regret all your lying?' A White House reporter's question startled Trump
SV Dáte took the president to task for repeated untruths but was quickly cut off.
SV Dáte had waited five long years to ask Donald Trump one question:
“Mr President, after three and a half years, do you regret at all, all the lying you’ve done to the American people?”
Confronted with Dáte’s question at Thursday’s White House briefing, Trump responded with a question of his own. “All the what?” he said.
Dáte: “All the lying, all the dishonesties.”
Trump: “That who has done?”
“You have done,” said Dáte, who is the Huffington Post’s White House correspondent.
“Tens of thousan–”, he began to say, before Trump cut him off and called on another journalist, who asked a question about payroll tax.
In July, the Washington Post reported that Trump had told more than 20,000 “false or misleading claims” over the course of his presidency.

For all you Ohio citizens out there:
Ohio blocks new ballot drop boxes amid alleged moves by Trump and DeJoy to "sabotage" Postal Service!!!!!

<
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller