Shared posts

07 May 20:34

Sweden never shut down, now its death rate AND its economy are worse than its neighbors

by kos
James.galbraith

and yet the GOP will learn nothing

Many conservatives are in love with the idea of Sweden’s approach—no lockdown. They don’t take into consideration that half of Swedes live alone, or that they have a top-notch universal healthcare system. They just think “no lockdown” is a better response to the novel coronavirus pandemic. 

If nothing else, Sweden’s alternative response to the virus was … a good control group. And what we’re learning now is that failing to shut down hasn’t just led to more deaths, but—surprise surprise!—it also didn’t prevent its economy from tanking. In fact, Sweden is poised for more economic pain than its neighbors. 

Sweden is quickly rising up the ranks of the world leaders in deaths. Here is the world ranking of deaths per million residents, excluding micro-nations:

Deaths per million Belgium Spain Italy UK France Netherlands Sweden Ireland USA
726

558

495
451
395
309
301
284
230

Sweden (like the United States) has been quickly moving up this horrid chart and will overtake the Netherlands sometime this weekend for the sixth spot in the world. Meanwhile, its neighbors following more standard shutdown protocols are looking pretty okay:

Deaths per million Sweden Denmark Finland Norway
301

89

46
40

It’s not even close. So Sweden is starting to wonder whether this all made sense. “[Anders] Tegnell, who has been leading the country's COVID-19 response and previously defended the nation's decision not to impose a lockdown, this week admitted he was ‘not convinced’ the unconventional anti-lockdown strategy was the best option to take," reported Newsweek. Tegnell called the death toll, now surpassing 3,000 dead, a “horrifyingly large number.”

But that sacrifice in blood at least saved the country’s economy, right? Well, that’s the funny part. (And not in a “ha ha” funny way.) “Sweden’s economy is expected to contract between 6.9% and 9.7%,” reported CNBC. Meanwhile, this is what the International Monetary Fund expects from other European countries:

Economic contraction Sweden Italy Spain France UK Germany Denmark Finald
6.9-9.7%

9.1%

8%
7.2%
7%
6.5%
6.5%
6%
In a sane world, this controlled “experiment” would be reason enough for policymakers in the United States to hold back on reopening their states and the country. Instead, those ignoramuses are hell-bent on making the same obvious mistakes, pretending that returning to “business as usual” will rescue the country from economic calamity. And sure, Republicans are stupid enough to go out and get infected, doing the virus’ dirty work for it. But the economy isn’t going anywhere as long as most people, who are sane and smart, refuse to put themselves in danger for a movie or haircut. 
Or, to put it another way: It is impossible for the economy to rebound as long as a deadly virus is killing Americans at a clip of several thousand a day. If you don’t believe that, just look at Sweden.

07 May 20:28

Azar faulted workers' 'home and social' conditions for meatpacking outbreaks

by Adam Cancryn and Laura Barrón-López
James.galbraith

The only thing they have in common is their workplace, so it must be their individual conditions that are to blame. Genius!


The country’s top health official downplayed concerns over the public health conditions inside meatpacking plants, suggesting on a call with lawmakers that workers were more likely to catch coronavirus based on their social interactions and group living situations, three participants said.

HHS Secretary Alex Azar told a bipartisan group that he believed infected employees were bringing the virus into processing plants where a rash of cases have killed at least 20 workers and forced nearly two-dozen plants to close, according to three people on the April 28 call.

Those infections, he said, were linked more to the "home and social" aspects of workers' lives rather than the conditions inside the facilities, alarming some on the call who interpreted his remarks as faulting workers for the outbreaks, the people said.

"He was essentially turning it around, blaming the victim and implying that their lifestyle was the problem," said Rep. Ann Kuster (D-N.H.), who told POLITICO that Azar’s comments left her deeply concerned about the administration’s priorities in fighting the pandemic. "Their theory of the case is that they are not becoming infected in the meat processing plant, they're becoming infected because of the way they live in their home."

Azar's remarks came during a discussion with Republican and Democratic lawmakers about the coronavirus pandemic and its impact on rural health — a conversation that was largely dominated by worries about the state of rural hospitals.

But the discussion veered onto the subject of meatpacking plant conditions after Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) voiced concerns about plant closures and asked about the availability of coronavirus testing for the facilities.



Azar emphasized the need to keep the plants open, according to the three people on the call. He also theorized that workers were largely not becoming infected at the meatpacking plants, and were instead contracting the coronavirus from their communities.

Azar noted in particular that many meatpacking workers live in congregate housing, allowing that more testing at facilities would help but that the bigger issue was employees' home environments. One possible solution was to send more law enforcement to those communities to better enforce social distancing rules, he added, according to two of the lawmakers on the call.

"Law enforcement is not going to solve the problem," Kuster said. "It was so far off base."

An HHS spokesperson on Wednesday declined to offer any evidence supporting Azar’s assertions and said the department doesn’t comment on specifics of conversations with members of Congress, but contended that “this is an inaccurate representation of Secretary’s Azar’s comments during the discussion.”

After publication of this story, HHS spokesperson Michael Caputo said in a statement that "Secretary Azar simply made the point that many public health officials have made: in addition to the meat packing plants themselves, many workers at certain remote and rural meatpacking facilities have living conditions that involve multifamily and congregate living, which have been conducive to rapid spread of the disease."

Caputo also denied that Azar mentioned a role for law enforcement.

A spokesperson for Roberts did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

At least 6,500 meatpacking plant employees have contracted Covid-19 so far, raising concerns about the conditions for a mostly low-income workforce that's made up predominantly of racial minorities and immigrants. Some 44 percent of meatpackers are Latino and 25 percent are African American, according to an analysis by the Center for Economic and Policy Research. The League of United Latin American Citizens estimates 80 percent of those working in meat processing plants are undocumented or refugees.

The outbreaks have driven a spike in cases across rural areas in the Midwest and in Georgia, where state officials say the close quarters inside the plants — where hundreds of employees often work elbow-to-elbow — have exacerbated the virus' spread.


That's also contributed to a larger nationwide trend of the coronavirus disproportionately affecting people of color. Generations of health disparities contributing to chronic conditions, low rates of insurance coverage and exposure to occupational hazards have made the pandemic worse for black and Latino Americans, public health experts say, who represent a far greater percentage of hospitalizations and deaths compared to their share of the population.

On Tuesday, the Iowa Department of Health confirmed outbreaks in four separate plants — including a Tyson Foods factory where 58 percent of workers had tested positive for Covid-19.

Still, federal officials have backed keeping meat-processing plants open amid worries about disrupting the national food chain. President Donald Trump last week deemed the facilities essential infrastructure, warning in an order that mass closures would "threaten the continued functioning of the national meat and poultry supply chain."


The move prompted Latino Democratic lawmakers to call on the administration to investigate the working conditions at meat processing plants and issue a temporary emergency safety standard.

Meat processing plant workers often cluster in neighborhoods surrounding the facility, and indeed tend to live in more crowded households that could contribute to the coronavirus' spread, said Christine Petersen, an epidemiologist at the University of Iowa.

Yet while the lack of widespread testing means it's difficult to definitively say where and how those workers are being infected, she questioned the accuracy of Azar's assertions — arguing that with much of the nation locked down, it's likely that the plants have become the epicenter of the disease's spread in many rural areas.

"The risk factor appears to be the packing plants and not the homes, because that's the gathering place," Petersen said, citing studies of cell phone data that showed severe drop-offs in daily travel over the last couple months. "I don't think we can say it was because certain groups were socializing more."

The CDC in a report issued on Friday similarly attributed the outbreaks at least in part to the crowded conditions inside the plants, finding that while meatpacking employees could also be at risk in their communities, the facilities had many of the same characteristics as other hard-hit workplaces, like nursing homes and prisons.

"Similarly, the crowded conditions for workers in meat and poultry processing facilities could result in high risk for SARS-CoV-S transmission," the CDC report said. "Respiratory disease outbreaks in this type of setting demonstrate the need for heightened attention to worker safety."

07 May 20:09

Dallas Salon Owner Cries To Supporters After Being Sprung From Jail By All-Republican Texas Supreme Court: WATCH

by John Wright

Dallas salon owner Shelley Luther was released from jail Thursday, after serving two days of a seven-day sentence for violating an order to close her business amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The Texas Tribune reports: She had been in jail since Tuesday after being sentenced to seven days, but the Texas Supreme Court on Thursday morning granted a motion to release her. The order came soon after Gov. Greg Abbott announced he was modifying his recent executive orders related to the coronavirus pandemic to eliminate jail time for Texans who violate the restrictions. The move by Abbott was an attempt to release Luther, and prevent the jailing of others who have violated similar orders in recent weeks. A small crowd with balloons and posters started cheering “Shelley’s free” upon her release, according to video from KTVT. “I’m a little overwhelmed,” Luther said. “I just want to thank all of you who i just barely met, and now you’re all my friends. You mean so much to me, and this would have been nothing without you.”

Watch it below.

The post Dallas Salon Owner Cries To Supporters After Being Sprung From Jail By All-Republican Texas Supreme Court: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.

07 May 20:08

Dear America: Testing isn't necessary, unless you're meeting Trump. Then it's mandatory

by Kerry Eleveld
James.galbraith

Rules are only for little people

Donald Trump doesn't see the value in doing too much coronavirus testing these days. "In a way, by doing all this testing we make ourselves look bad,” Trump said Wednesday. Besides, what's the point? The reopening is happening and a spike in deaths because of it "could very well be the case," as Trump put it. He's accepted death as a consequence of an economic reboot and so should America.  

Except for when it comes to his personal health. Then exactly everyone who comes into contact with him simply must be tested. Asked Tuesday if he had any concerns about the health risks of traveling with an entourage of people to tour a Honeywell plant in Arizona, Trump laid out the mandatory testing regimen in exquisite detail.

“Everybody traveling has been tested,” he said. “We have great testing. And literally, they’ve been tested over the last hour. And the test result comes back in five minutes, and we have great testing. Or they wouldn’t be allowed to travel with me.” 

Or they wouldn't be allowed to travel with me. Why? Because that would be too dangerous, naturally.

But the rest of America, they're "warriors" who don't need to be tested in Trump's estimation. Well, actually, he included himself in the warrior bit. “We have to be warriors,” Trump explained, for the sake of getting America back to work. “We can’t keep our country closed down for years.” (Actually, countries doing adequate testing and tracing are proving capable of reopening their economies and societies without risking a massive spike in deaths.)

In fact, the latest White House press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, kindly explained Wednesday that the need for increased testing among most Americans heading back to work was a "myth," even though absolutely everyone around Trump must be tested for the sake of safety.

"Why shouldn’t all Americans who go back to work be able to get a test before they do to feel comfortable in their own work environment to be interacting with other individuals?," a reporter asked at Wednesday's White House press briefing (they’re sporadically back on the books for now).

"Yeah, well, let’s dismiss a myth about tests right now," McEnany responded. "If we tested every single American in this country at this moment, we’d have to retest them an hour later, and then an hour later after that. Because at any moment, you could theoretically contract this virus.  So the notion that everyone needs to be tested is just simply nonsensical."

Oh, so testing is futile.

"The people who need to be tested are vulnerable populations," she continued.

Oh, so it's not futile. 

"That’s why Dr. Birx has repeatedly emphasized we need to surge nursing homes with the testing, meat-processing facilities," McEnany explained. "That’s where the testing is needed.  We have to be strategic with our testing and we have done that so far."

Oh, so nursing homes, meatpacking plants, and Trump's coterie (technically, absolutely everyone interacting with Mike Pence must also get tested).

Perfect. America's approach to safety in nursing homes and meatpacking plants has now been declared "strategic." In one instance, the coronavirus has raged through the country’s nursing homes, infecting both residents and health workers at an alarming rate and leaving a trail of bodies in its wake. In the other instance, Trump has invoked the Defense Production Act (DPA) to force meatpacking plants to remain open once enough testing was done to detect serious safety issues for their workers. 

In summation: Don't worry America, testing isn't necessary, except where it is necessary. And when real problems arise, Trump—operating out of the safest of safe cocoons—will use the DPA to force you back to work anyway. Because you're warriors ... er, um … or sacrificial lambs. Or whatever. But death is all a part of Trump’s master plan, anyway. So who needs tests? The numbers will just go up. We’ll know plenty when people drop dead. Again, it’s all in the plan. Trump’s got this.

07 May 20:07

Trump’s war on the Postal Service just got a giant boost

by Paul Waldman
James.galbraith

What could possibly go wrong

The USPS is going to be run by one of the Republican Party's top fundraisers.
07 May 19:38

The White House has 2 testing standards: One for Trump and another for everyone else

by Aaron Rupar
James.galbraith

Of course

President Trump tours a Honeywell International Inc. factory producing surgical masks in Phoenix, Arizona, on May 5. | Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

They say it’s “nonsensical” for everyone to get tested — with exceptions for anyone who crosses paths with Trump.

Unlike many Americans who are worried about contracting or spreading the coronavirus, President Donald Trump has yet to be seen in public wearing a mask. He even went without one during his visit on Tuesday to a Honeywell facility in Arizona that otherwise requires them. The White House’s (flawed) rationale for this is that Trump doesn’t have to because he and everyone he comes into contact with is tested for the virus.

In this respect, the White House is operating with one safer standard for officials, and another less-safe standard for the “warriors” Trump is now urging to go back to work in the teeth of a pandemic. This disparity was put on stark display on Wednesday.

“The notion that everyone needs to be tested is simply nonsensical,” press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said during Wednesday’s press briefing, in response to a question from NBC’s Peter Alexander about why all Americans can’t get tested like the president before they go back to work.

Those comments came hours after Trump appeared in the Oval Office with a group of nurses who weren’t wearing masks or social distancing — basic safety precautions they said weren’t necessary because they had all been tested for the coronavirus before meeting with the president.

McEnany didn’t argue that more testing wouldn’t be a good thing. Her argument was that testing on the scale Alexander suggested would be impractical because “if we tested every single American in this country at this moment, we’d have to test them an hour later and an hour later after that, because at any moment you could theoretically contract this virus.”

While testing all 328 million Americans every hour is obviously more than can be asked for, some experts do think that everyone needs to get tested on a regular basis in order for some sense of normalcy to be restored. My colleague German Lopez has detailed perhaps the most aggressive and prominent of these proposals:

Paul Romer, a Nobel Prize-winning economist, has projected that the US needs more than 20 million tests each day, effectively letting the country test each person in the country every two weeks. He estimated that would cost $100 billion — which may sound like a lot, but it pales in comparison to the cost of keeping the economy shut down.

Coincidentally, news that broke on Thursday about one of Trump’s personal valets testing positive for the coronavirus serves as a good example of how testing can help stop the spread. CNN reported that since the valet had been in direct contact with Trump, following the positive test, both Trump and Vice President Mike Pence were administered coronavirus tests that came back negative.

Testing of that sort helps trace the virus’s spread. But because of inadequate capacity, it continues to be extremely difficult for people who don’t have symptoms to get tested, even though they play a key role in spreading the coronavirus.

Not only is the US nowhere near conducting the 20 million tests a day that Romer recommends, but it’s nowhere near conducting the 500,000 or so that experts who are more modest about testing think is necessary to safely reopen businesses. Right now, on a good day, the US is conducting about half that, or 250,000 tests, according to information gathered by the Covid Tracking Project.

Trump is not interested in engaging with this problem. He’s regularly contradicted public health experts in his own government by insisting, falsely, that states already have more than enough testing capacity to reopen businesses and schools. But the reality is there hasn’t even been enough tests for all 100 US senators to be proactively screened or for professional sports franchises to procure them.

Instead of deploying the almost unlimited resources of the federal government in the hope of solving the problem, however, Trump has largely delegated the testing problem to cash-strapped states, while telling brazen lies about how US testing stacks up compared to other countries. He even alluded to self-interested motives for resisting demands to expand the country’s testing capacity on Wednesday, telling reporters that “if we did very little testing, we wouldn’t have the most cases. So, in a way, by doing all of this testing, we make ourselves look bad.”

Trump has political reasons for wanting to keep the known number of coronavirus cases in the country as low as possible, but it seems a very different set of rules apply to him.

It makes sense — even if it’s not 100 percent foolproof — that the White House is screening people who come in contact with the president. In addition to keeping the president healthy, it allows him to not wear a mask and in that way project a sense of normalcy to Americans, many of whom aren’t leaving their homes these days without one.

But Trump is only able to do that because the White House has testing abilities that the rest of the country doesn’t. To use the military metaphors Trump is accustomed to, the general is sending his “warriors” into battle without the intelligence needed to know where the “invisible enemy” is hiding.


Support Vox’s explanatory journalism

Every day at Vox, we aim to answer your most important questions and provide you, and our audience around the world, with information that has the power to save lives. Our mission has never been more vital than it is in this moment: to empower you through understanding. Vox’s work is reaching more people than ever, but our distinctive brand of explanatory journalism takes resources — particularly during a pandemic and an economic downturn. Your financial contribution will not constitute a donation, but it will enable our staff to continue to offer free articles, videos, and podcasts at the quality and volume that this moment requires. Please consider making a contribution to Vox today.

07 May 19:25

Trump's Justice Department drops case against ex-Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn

by Hunter
James.galbraith

Jesus fucking christ. How the fuck is this permitted?

The Associated Press is now reporting that the Justice Department is dropping its criminal case against ex-Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn, now claiming the FBI's interview was "unjustified" by the agency's counterintelligence probe of Flynn and conducted "without basis."

Flynn twice pled guilty to lying to the FBI about his contacts with the Russian ambassador, promising cooperation with federal investigators but later rescinding that cooperation and offering, through new lawyers, increasingly bizarre claims of agency wrongdoing.

AP reports that Trump Attorney General William Barr was "briefed" on the decision, made by a U.S. Attorney assigned to review the Flynn case, last week.

Thursday, May 7, 2020 · 7:13:49 PM +00:00 · Hunter

The only person signing this motion to dismiss is the lawyer William Barr installed after he removed the U.S. attorney who oversaw the Flynn case after Robert Mueller handed it off. No other line attorneys. https://t.co/URt1acIAs3

— Cristian Farias (@cristianafarias) May 7, 2020

Thursday, May 7, 2020 · 6:48:14 PM +00:00 · Hunter

Another very highly respected DOJ attorney withdrawing from a case, this one about Michael Flynn. Something is deeply wrong. https://t.co/aPHtYWzsnp

— Neal Katyal (@neal_katyal) May 7, 2020

Thursday, May 7, 2020 · 6:58:26 PM +00:00 · Hunter

The DOJ filing here is absurd and contradicts the Department's long standing positions. There is no reasonable explanation here other than that Bill Barr is seeking to undo the Mueller investigation on behalf of Trump while the world is distracted by a deadly global pandemic.

— Susan Hennessey (@Susan_Hennessey) May 7, 2020

Thursday, May 7, 2020 · 7:01:12 PM +00:00 · Hunter

You can read the Department of Justice filing here.

07 May 19:24

Study Finds COVID-19 in Semen, Contradicting Previous Research

by John Wright
James.galbraith

umm what?

Last month, we told you how researchers at the University of Utah said it’s unlikely that COVID-19 can be transmitted through semen.

Now, a separate study has cast doubt on those findings, and raised the possibility that the virus can be spread through sex, which researchers have said would have major implications.

The Associated Press reports: Doctors detected the virus in semen from six of 38 men hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19. Four were still very sick with the disease while two were recovering. There was no long-term follow-up so it is not known how long the virus may remain in semen or if men can spread it to their partners during sex. The results contrast with a study of 34 Chinese men with COVID-19 published last month in the journal Fertility and Sterility. U.S. and Chinese researchers found no evidence of virus in semen tested between eight days and almost three months after diagnosis.

More from the New York Times: If semen tests positive for the coronavirus, that does not mean that infectious virus is present, said Dr. Stanley Perlman, a professor of microbiology, immunology and pediatrics at the University of Iowa, who was not involved in the study. … If scientists were to find infectious virus present in semen, there may be implications for the safety of oral sex and the handling of semen. Across the world, many fertility clinics have stopped accepting new patients — not only to reduce patient traffic, but also because of concerns that donor sperm might infect women trying to get pregnant. There’s an urgent need for more studies, noted Dr. Amir Kashi of the Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences in Tehran in a paper titled, “Covid-19 and Semen: An Unanswered Area of Research.”

Regardless of whether it can be transmitted through semen, COVID-19 can be spread through kissing and other close contact — as well as rimming — which is why health experts have advised against hooking up during the outbreak. 

The post Study Finds COVID-19 in Semen, Contradicting Previous Research appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.

07 May 19:04

Virginia Republicans Set to Oust Incumbent GOP Congressman Who Officiated Gay Wedding

by John Wright
James.galbraith

Because the GOP is nothing but bigots. Anyone that shows the minimal amount of decency can't stick around

GOP Congressman Denver Riggleman, right, and Republican challenger Bob Good

Republicans in Virginia are set to oust an incumbent GOP congressman, Rep. Denver Riggleman, after he officiated a gay wedding last year.

Bob Good, a former Liberty University athletics director, is challenging Riggleman for the Republican nomination in Virginia’s 5th Congressional District. Good announced Wednesday that he has 62 percent of the district’s delegates, meaning he would defeat the incumbent at the party’s upcoming convention, which has been delayed due to the COVID-19 crisis.

Good has said he has a “biblical view of marriage” and that Riggleman does not represent the “conservative values of this district.” On his website, Good touts his opposition to the “transgender bathroom mandate,” and vows to defend “religious freedom” and “Judeo-Christian principles.”

Raw Story reports: Riggleman, a freshman lawmaker elected in 2018, is best known for a controversy in which he was accused of posting “Bigfoot erotica.” He maintains there was nothing pornographic about the drawings he circulated on social media as part of his interest in Bigfoot lore, although the images did include pictures of the hypothetical genitals. However, this is not why Republicans have soured on him. He has been rapidly losing goodwill with the party ever since he officiated a same-sex wedding in 2019. Virginia’s 5th Congressional District sprawls across most of the central portion of the state. It is one of the state’s more conservative districts, although it is home to some progressive cities, most notably Charlottesville. If Riggleman fails to win the nomination, it could make the race competitive for Democrats, whose most prominent candidate is Marine veteran and businessman R. D. Huffstetler.

More from Roll Call: Google Riggleman, and there’s the picture. It appeared in media accounts that noted it is still rare for a Republican to do such a thing. Riggleman’s wife, Christine, posted it on her Facebook page, a gesture that did not go unnoticed. There’s the congressman, squinting as he reads prepared remarks. There are the two grooms, former campaign volunteers, wearing matching windowpane plaid. … At its essence, Riggleman’s predicament is procedural: As news of the wedding spread, three GOP county committees voted to censure him. The 5th Congressional District Republican Committee narrowly missed voting to do the same. In November, the district committee voted to name the party’s 2020 nominee at a convention rather than a primary, a move widely seen as targeting Riggleman.

The post Virginia Republicans Set to Oust Incumbent GOP Congressman Who Officiated Gay Wedding appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.

07 May 19:01

Microsoft's GitHub Account Allegedly Hacked, 500GB Stolen

by msmash
A hacker claims to have stolen over 500GB of data from Microsoft's private GitHub repositories, BleepingComputer reports. From the report: This evening, a hacker going by the name Shiny Hunters contacted BleepingComputer to tell us they had hacked into the Microsoft GitHub account, gaining full access to the software giant's 'Private' repositories. The individual told us that they then downloaded 500GB of private projects and initially planned on selling it, but has now decided to leak it for free. Based on the file stamps in the leaked files, the breach may have occurred on March 28th, 2020.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

07 May 18:09

Georgia's 'reopening' results in 60,000+ out-of-state visitors a day coming to spread the virus

by Hunter
James.galbraith

Typhoid Mary is now an entire state

A University of Maryland analysis of anonymized smartphone data shows that Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp's lifting of state-ordered business closures has had the predictable, and warned-of, effect: More than 62,000 additional out-of-state visitors are arriving daily. That’s a 13% increase in state-to-state travel.

According to The Washington Post's writeup, almost all of that traffic came from adjacent Alabama, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Florida, four states where business restrictions kept restaurants, theaters and other nonessential service businesses closed when Georgia's reopened. Georgia, then, created a near-perfect scenario for spreading the virus inside and outside the state.

It's important to understand that this is not an unexpected outcome. The phenomenon of out-of-towners from shelter-in-place cities retreating to places with fewer restrictions, whether they be wealthy Americans deciding to wait it out in a second home or, far more commonly, less-well-off people crossing county lines to do shopping that their home city may consider nonessential, is known. (My own county hastened its shelter-in-place orders for precisely this reason: Increased travel from the adjacent shelter-in-place county was increasing the likelihood of a cross-county virus "hop." Soon afterward, and for much the same reasons, a California state order imposed restrictions everywhere.)

The reopening of Georgia entertainment and service sectors gave ample incentives for restless Americans just over state borders to pop in for a day trip, unknowingly or knowingly spreading the virus through Georgia establishments, and/or unknowingly bringing the virus back from Georgia's own county hotspots to their own communities. Shelter-in-place orders in counties with active outbreaks are rendered considerably less effective if a 20-minute drive can get residents somewhere with more lax rules.

We don't know yet if Georgia's "reopening" will lead to new COVID-19 clusters in neighboring states. It's almost assured to happen, however, just as the reopening Georgia businesses is certainly assured to escalate transmissions inside the state. The virus doesn't file taxes, have a driver's license or give a damn about political borders. It goes wherever its host takes it.

Georgia and the rest of the nation now has hard data, however, that seems to quantify what pandemic experts have warned about: Spotty lockdowns diminish the value of having lockdowns to begin with. States and governors that go it alone are doing the virus' work.

07 May 17:29

Republicans now want us to embrace mass death

by Paul Waldman
If you care about the economy, they say, you'll be willing to sacrifice hundreds of thousands of American lives.
07 May 17:29

The Supreme Court’s “Bridgegate” decision leaves a big hole in America’s anti-corruption laws

by Ian Millhiser
James.galbraith

And the GOP will walk right through every time they can

Day 1 of the 2019 Concordia Annual Summit Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie at the 2019 Concordia Annual Summit in New York City on September 23, 2019. | Riccardo Savi/Getty Images for Concordia Summit

The Court’s decision opens the door to a distressing form of government corruption.

The thrust of Justice Elena Kagan’s unanimous decision in Kelly v. United Statesa case involving the New Jersey “Bridgegate” scandal — is that “not every corrupt act by state or local officials is a federal crime.”

The Supreme Court tossed out the convictions of two political appointees of former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who had been convicted of violating a federal wire fraud statute in the Bridgegate scandal — a corrupt effort to punish a mayor who refused to endorse Christie’s reelection bid.

Christie, a Republican, hoped to secure the endorsements of several Democratic mayors in his state, including Mayor Mark Sokolich of Fort Lee, in 2013’s election. After Sokolich informed Christie’s office that the governor would not receive the mayor’s endorsement, several of Christie’s appointees executed a scheme to punish Sokolich by halting traffic in Fort Lee.

The George Washington Bridge, which spans the gap between Fort Lee and Manhattan, typically has three dedicated lanes that serve local traffic from Fort Lee. After Sokolich refused to endorse Christie, Christie’s subordinates reallocated two of these lanes to general traffic. The result was a traffic jam so severe that it completely gridlocked the town.

As Kagan explains, “School buses stood in place for hours. An ambulance struggled to reach the victim of a heart attack; police had trouble responding to a report of a missing child.”

No one, including the defense attorneys in this case, denies that Kelly involves an “abuse of power.” But the Supreme Court nonetheless reversed the convictions of the Christie appointees behind this traffic scheme.

The reason for this decision turns on a technical distinction in a federal anti-corruption law. But it also stems from a long line of Supreme Court decisions reading a different anti-corruption law very narrowly. Kelly is the culmination of a series of Court decisions that have opened up a massive hole in America’s anti-corruption laws.

The case turns on a very technical dispute about “property”

The two defendants in Kelly are William Baroni, who Christie appointed as deputy executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, and Bridget Anne Kelly, who served as Christie’s deputy chief of staff. Both were convicted of violating a federal wire fraud statute, which makes it a crime to execute “any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises.”

In McNally v. United States (1987), the Supreme Court determined that this somewhat cryptic statutory language only applies to “schemes to deprive [a victim] of their money or property.”

So that’s where the prosecution against Baroni and Kelly fails. Though the two former officials’ actions were undoubtedly corrupt, the purpose of their scheme was not to deprive anyone of money or property. As Kagan writes, Baroni and Kelly did not “walk away with the lanes [on the George Washington Bridge]; nor did they take the lanes from the Government by converting them to a non-public use.”

What they did was reallocate two lanes from drivers originating from the town of Fort Lee to the general populace. Under the Court’s decisions, Kagan concluded, “that run-of-the-mine exercise of regulatory power cannot count as the taking of property.”

Fair enough. Kagan is correct that “not every corrupt act by state or local officials is a federal crime,” and Kelly is hardly the first time that someone who committed an immoral act escaped criminal charges because there was no federal statute forbidding the specific thing that they did.

Yet, as Kagan’s opinion also notes, Congress attempted to fill in this hole in America’s anti-corruption law, but the Supreme Court blocked that effort.

The Supreme Court has drastically shrunk a law targeting government corruption

As Kagan writes, shortly after the Supreme Court decided McNally, “Congress responded to that decision by enacting a law barring fraudulent schemes ‘to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services’—regardless of whether the scheme sought to divest the victim of any property.” But the Court determined that “honest services” law was too vague, and it adopted “‘a limiting construction,’ confining the statute to schemes involving bribes or kickbacks.”

Indeed, the Court narrowed this honest services law to such an extent that many forms of bribery are now effectively legal. Consider McDonnell v. United States (2016), which dealt with former Virginia Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell’s conviction for honest services fraud.

The facts of McDonnell are fairly astonishing. McDonnell was friends with Jonnie Williams, who ran a company selling a nutritional supplement derived from tobacco. Williams wanted one of Virginia’s public universities to conduct a study on this supplement, which Williams could potentially use to gain FDA approval of the supplement for use in an anti-inflammatory drug.

Williams also lavished gifts on McDonnell and his wife, including a Rolex watch for the governor and $20,000 in designer clothing for the governor’s wife. In total, the McDonnells received over $175,000 in loans and gifts from Williams.

Gov. McDonnell, meanwhile, did a number of favors for Williams, including introducing Williams to the state’s health secretary, and hosting a lunch event for Williams’s company at the governor’s mansion — an event attended by several university researchers.

Nevertheless, the Supreme Court held that these favors were not enough to render McDonnell’s actions criminal. To sustain a conviction, the Supreme Court concluded, McDonnell would have had to make a policy decision in return for a bribe — or, at least, McDonnell would have needed to have pressured a subordinate into making such a decision.

It wasn’t enough that McDonnell introduced Williams to key state employees who could have benefited Williams’s company.

Kelly, meanwhile, is the mirror image of McDonnell. In McDonnell, there were no shortage of corrupt payments from Williams to McDonnell, but McDonnell’s actions were nonetheless legal because he did not perform an “official act” that benefited Williams.

In Kelly, by contrast, Christie’s subordinates did perform an official act that impacted thousands of people in Fort Lee. But there is no evidence that they were bribed to do so. They appear to have committed this act largely to spite a mayor who did not give Christie something that he wanted.

Read together, the cases suggest that state officials have a fair amount of leeway to commit corrupt acts, so long as they don’t accept some sort of bribe and make a policy decision that benefits the person who paid them a bribe.

Kelly could open the door to widespread corruption

In the wake of Kelly, McDonnell, and similar cases, federal anti-corruption law now has a considerable blind spot. An official may not change policy to benefit someone who pays them a bribe. And they may not use their office to corruptly obtain property for their own use. But there is no federal ban on using their power in office to punish political opponents, or potentially to reward political supporters.

Imagine, for example, if the Trump administration were to make it easy for companies to obtain permits if their CEO endorses President Trump, while simultaneously denying permits to companies whose CEO endorsed Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden. Or imagine that Trump simply dislikes a particular company, so he pressured the Justice Department to file a suit against that company.

Such actions could trigger a civil lawsuit — treating different companies differently because of the political views of their CEOs would violate the First Amendment. But it now appears unlikely that government officials could face criminal charges for engaging in such a scheme.

And that means that those officials are more likely to engage in such schemes.


Support Vox’s explanatory journalism

Every day at Vox, we aim to answer your most important questions and provide you, and our audience around the world, with information that has the power to save lives. Our mission has never been more vital than it is in this moment: to empower you through understanding. Vox’s work is reaching more people than ever, but our distinctive brand of explanatory journalism takes resources — particularly during a pandemic and an economic downturn. Your financial contribution will not constitute a donation, but it will enable our staff to continue to offer free articles, videos, and podcasts at the quality and volume that this moment requires. Please consider making a contribution to Vox today.

07 May 17:22

FCC fines Sinclair $48M, refuses to revoke its broadcast licenses

by Jon Brodkin
James.galbraith

Just more money that they're already fleecing from idiots, but they can keep on doing what they're doing.

A corporate building with a sign that says,

Enlarge / A sign for the Sinclair Broadcast buildings seen on October 12, 2004 in Hunt Valley, Maryland. (credit: Getty Images | William Thomas Cain)

Sinclair Broadcasting Group has agreed to pay a $48 million fine for portraying sponsored TV segments as news coverage—and other violations—in the largest-ever civil penalty paid by a broadcaster in Federal Communications Commission history.

The FCC announced the penalty yesterday, saying that a consent decree signed by Sinclair includes the fine and a "strict compliance plan" in order to "close three open investigations," including one into Sinclair's actions during its failed attempt to acquire Tribune Media Company. FCC Chairman Ajit Pai resisted calls to go further, which means that Sinclair is in no danger of losing broadcast licenses.

"Today's penalty, along with the failure of the Sinclair/Tribune transaction, should serve as a cautionary tale to other licensees seeking Commission approval of a transaction in the future," Pai said. "On the other hand, I disagree with those who, for transparently political reasons, demand that we revoke Sinclair's licenses. While they don't like what they perceive to be the broadcaster's viewpoints, the First Amendment still applies around here."

Read 15 remaining paragraphs | Comments

07 May 17:21

Tulsa ‘Christian’ Targets Gay Couple Across the Street with Horrific Anti-LGBT Yard Signs: WATCH

by John Wright
James.galbraith

And fuck you Oklahoma

A gay couple in Tulsa is speaking out after a “Christian” neighbor put up horrific anti-LGBT signs in his yard directly across the street from their house.

Jon Bailey told KJRH-TV that he put up the signs, including a rainbow flag with a black “X” through it, because he was “brought up in a Christian home with Christian morals and values.”

“I believe that homosexuality is wrong,” Bailey said. “I”m not putting them [gay people] down, I’m just standing up to them and saying this is wrong. I’m trying to show them there is a better way.”

Partners Christopher Jones and Terry Geasland (pictured), who live across the street, said they are greeted by the signs every time they walk outside.

“That’s hate. We do not need this in Tulsa, Oklahoma,” said Jones, adding that they are one of three gay couples that live in the neighborhood. “It’s like wow, in your face. It’s very ugly. It’s demeaning and it’s a violation of humility towards my family.”

Tulsa police say there’s nothing they can do about the signs, while LGBT advocates fear the situation could turn violent.

“Talk like this is just a step away from violence and people need to understand that members of the LGBTQ community are susceptible to being attacked, assaulted, and in some cases killed, it stems from comments like these that come from peoples hearts,” said Toby Jenkins, director of Tulsa’s LGBT community center.

Bailey plans to keep the signs up.

“I know my rights,” he told the station. “The gay and lesbian community are bullying people into being quiet and to being silent, and they are making people like me that are standing up against them feel like criminals.”

On Wednesday night, Bailey wrote, “I’m famous!” below a link to KJRH’s report on Facebook.

Before his interview with the station, he wrote: “Calling on All prayer warriors. I have an interview today at 3 pm with at least 1 news channel. The subject is homosexuality and why I’m against it and what I’ve done out of love for my homosexual neighbors. Please pray that the holy spirit fills me with the correct words to say. Thank u everyone!”

As of Thursday, Bailey’s business — Bailey Home Service — was beginning to receive some negative reviews on Facebook.

“These people are bigots,” one commenter wrote. “Don’t use their services. They post their hypocritical signs in their front lawn while claiming to be Christians to intimidate and degrade their neighbors and fellow man.”

FYI, the business also has a Yelp page.

Watch KJRH’s report below.

The post Tulsa ‘Christian’ Targets Gay Couple Across the Street with Horrific Anti-LGBT Yard Signs: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.

07 May 17:19

Senator Richard Burr and His Brother-in-Law Dumped Stock on the Same Day. Then the Market Crashed.

by Robert Faturechi and Derek Willis, ProPublica
James.galbraith

Reminder: this is not ok

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

Sen. Richard Burr was not the only member of his family to sell off a significant portion of his stock holdings in February, ahead of the market crash spurred by coronavirus fears. On the same day Burr sold, his brother-in-law also dumped tens of thousands of dollars worth of shares. The market fell by more than 30% in the subsequent month.

Burr’s brother-in-law, Gerald Fauth, who has a post on the National Mediation Board, sold between $97,000 and $280,000 worth of shares in six companies — including several that have been hit particularly hard in the market swoon and economic downturn.

A person who picked up Fauth’s phone on Wednesday hung up when asked if Fauth and Burr had discussed the sales in advance.

In 2017, President Donald Trump appointed Fauth to the three-person board of the National Mediation Board, a federal agency that facilitates labor-management relations within the nation’s railroad and airline industries. He was previously a lobbyist and president of his own transportation economic consulting firm, G.W. Fauth & Associates.

Burr came under scrutiny after ProPublica reported that he sold off a significant percentage of his stocks shortly before the market tanked, unloading between $628,000 and $1.72 million of his holdings on Feb. 13 in 33 separate transactions. As chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee and a member of the health committee, Burr had access to the government’s most highly classified information about threats to America’s security and public health concerns.

Before his sell-off, Burr had assured the public that the federal government was well-prepared to handle the virus. In a Feb. 7 op-ed that he co-authored with another senator, he said “the United States today is better prepared than ever before to face emerging public health threats, like the coronavirus.”

That month however, according to a recording obtained by NPR, Burr had given a VIP group at an exclusive social club a much more dire preview of the economic impact of the the coronavirus, warning it could curtail business travel, cause schools to be closed and result in the military mobilizing to compensate for overwhelmed hospitals.

The timing of Burr’s stock sales drew widespread outrage, allegations of insider trading, calls for his resignation and an FBI investigation.

Burr defended his actions, saying he relied solely on public information, including CNBC reports, to inform his trades and did not rely on information he obtained as a senator.

Fauth avoided between $37,000 and $118,000 in losses by selling off when he did, considering how steeply the companies’ shares fell in recent weeks, according to an analysis by Luke Brindle-Khym, a partner and general counsel of Manhattan-based investigative firm QRI. Brindle-Khym obtained Fauth’s financial disclosure from the Office of Government Ethics and shared it with ProPublica. Government forms only require that the value of stock trades be disclosed in ranges. After the February sales, the total value of Fauth’s individual stock holdings appears to be between $680,000 and $2 million.

Alice Fisher, Burr’s attorney, told ProPublica that “Sen. Burr participated in the stock market based on public information and he did not coordinate his decision to trade on Feb. 13 with Mr. Fauth.”

She did not respond to a question about whether Burr discussed anything he learned as a senator with Fauth or any other relatives.

A review of Fauth’s financial disclosure forms since 2017 show that he is not a frequent stock trader, but that he also had a major day of sales in August 2019.

On Feb. 13, Fauth or his spouse sold between $15,001 and $50,000 of Altria, the tobacco company; between $50,001 and $100,000 of snack food maker Mondelez International; and between $1,001 and $15,000 of home furnishings retailer Williams-Sonoma. He also sold stakes in several oil companies, which have been hit particularly hard, including between $15,001 and $50,000 of Chevron; between $1,001 and $15,000 of BP and between $15,001 and $50,000 of Royal Dutch Shell.

The finances of the Burrs and Fauths have intersected before. Federal Election Commission records show that Burr’s leadership PAC, Next Century Fund, has paid $120,348 since 2002 to his sister-in-law, Mary Fauth, Gerald’s wife, who serves as treasurer. The PAC has also paid $104,850 in rent and utilities over the same period to 116 S. Royal St. Partners, in which Gerald Fauth is a partner.

Do you have access to information about stock trading by Trump administration officials or members of Congress that should be public? Email robert.faturechi@propublic.org or reach him on Signal/WhatsApp at 213-271-7217. Here’s how to send tips and documents to ProPublica securely.

Update, May 6, 2020: This story was updated with new comment from Sen. Richard Burr’s attorney.

Filed under:

The post Senator Richard Burr and His Brother-in-Law Dumped Stock on the Same Day. Then the Market Crashed. appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.

07 May 17:17

McDonald’s Customer Opens Fire on Employees Over Dining Room Closure Due to COVID-19 (VIDEO)

by John Wright
James.galbraith

Too many fucking guns

Four McDonald’s employees in Oklahoma City were injured when a customer opened fire after learning that the fast-food restaurant’s dining room was closed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

From the local ABC affiliate: Police told KOCO 5 that a woman entered the lobby of the McDonald’s near Southwest 89th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, where employees informed her that the dining room was closed because of safety precautions surrounding the coronavirus pandemic. At some point, the woman pulled out a gun and opened fire on the employees, police said. The woman has not been named by police after her arrest. Police first told KOCO 5 on Wednesday that there were two suspects involved. They later determined that the woman was the only suspect involved. According to police, one of the employees was shot and three others were injured. They were taken to an area hospital, and police said the victims’ injuries are not considered to be life-threatening.

More from CNN: The incident is one of a number reported across the country that authorities said were related to restrictions put in place to combat the spread of the virus. In Michigan, a Family Dollar store security guard was shot after telling a customer to wear a face mask — a mandate in place by the state for all retail stores. Also in Michigan, a man wiped his nose on a Dollar Tree worker’s shirt after the employee told him he needed to wear a mask. In Southern California, a customer wore what appeared to be a Ku Klux Klan hood during a trip to the grocery store — and repeatedly ignored staff requests to remove it.

McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski spoke to Good Morning America about the shooting on Thursday. Watch it below.

The post McDonald’s Customer Opens Fire on Employees Over Dining Room Closure Due to COVID-19 (VIDEO) appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.

07 May 17:17

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick Pays Jailed Salon Owner’s Fine; Judge Smacks Down AG Ken Paxton for Demanding Her Release (VIDEO)

by John Wright
James.galbraith

Fuck Texas so hard

dallas salon owner shelley luther

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, a right-wing extremist and notorious anti-LGBT bigot, has paid the fine of a Dallas salon owner who was jailed for violating an order to close her business amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“7 days in jail, no bail and a $7K fine is outrageous. No surprise Texans are responding. I’m covering the $7K fine she had to pay and I volunteer to be placed under House Arrest so she can go to work and feed her kids,” Patrick tweeted Wednesday.

Patrick has said that America should reopen despite the COVID-19 crisis because “there are more important things than living.” He has also suggested that senior citizens should be willing to die from the virus to save the economy.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, Attorney General Ken Paxton, Sen. Ted Cruz, Congressman Chip Roy and other Republicans also rushed to Luther’s defense, while Fox News host Sean Hannity compared her to “Braveheart.” (It’s worth noting that Luther was jailed for violating Abbott’s own coronavirus restrictions.)

A GoFundMe campaign in support of Luther, which describes her as “American Hero” who “decided to resist tyranny,” has raised more than $500,000, more than doubling its original goal.

Paxton wrote a letter Wednesday to Judge Eric Moyé, who sentenced Luther, calling the decision “outrageous” and demanding her release.

Moye, joined by 11 other state district judges in Dallas, responded by accusing Paxton of violating the Texas Code of Judicial Conduct, which bars ex parte communications about a case.

“In this context, for you to ‘Urge’ a judge towards a particular substantive outcome in this matter is most inappropriate and equally unwelcome,” Moyé and the other judges wrote. “Please to no communicate with the Court in this manner further. …

“It is contrary to the concept of an independent Judiciary and offends the tradition of separation of powers for any member of the Executive Branch of Texas government to interject itself into the proceedings of the judicial branch,” the judges wrote.  “For the sake of ALL of the citizens of Texas, please let the Judicial process play out without any further interference.”

Luther’s attorney, Warren Norred, plans to seek her release with an appeal to the Texas Supreme Court. Meanwhile, salons in Texas can reopen Friday.

Watch a report from CBSDFW.com below.

The post Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick Pays Jailed Salon Owner’s Fine; Judge Smacks Down AG Ken Paxton for Demanding Her Release (VIDEO) appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.

07 May 17:15

Don't Let 'Big Meat' Freak You Out Over Shortages

James.galbraith

Just accelerate the move to plant-based options :)

By Isaac Cabe  Published: May 06th, 2020 
07 May 17:15

Trump administration blocks release of CDC guidelines for reopening safely

by Laura Clawson
James.galbraith

What the fuck?

When the White House released its “Opening Up America Again” guidelines last month, a lot of people noticed that something was missing: details on how to do that safely. Now, the Trump administration has blocked the release of a detailed guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The 17-page “Guidance for Implementing the Opening Up America Again Framework” was supposed to be published last Friday—but then, an unnamed CDC official tells the Associated Press, scientists were told it “would never see the light of day.” And it’s reportedly not because the document had errors or was incomplete, but because, with Donald Trump pushing reopening no matter what, the White House doesn’t want to release detailed guidance.

A “person close to the White House’s coronavirus task force” told the AP that releasing detailed guidance for opening specific areas of the economy is a “slippery slope,” supposedly because different areas of the country are affected differently by coronavirus. But the science isn’t different from place to place, even if the infection levels are, and the guidelines for safely reopening a restaurant in New York City and Albany, Georgia, should be the same. That’s an area where the White House’s “Opening Up America Again” guidelines left questions.

”You can say that restaurants can open and you need to follow social distancing guidelines. But restaurants want to know, ‘What does that look like?’ States would like more guidance,” the chief medical officer of the Association of State and Territory Health Officers told the AP. Those are blanks that the CDC’s “Guidance for Implementing the Opening Up America Again Framework” could have filled in. The shelved CDC report called for restaurants and bars to avoid salad bars, buffets, and drink stations, to space their tables six feet apart, and to have sneeze guards at cash registers. Phone apps could be used to replace buzzers for people waiting to be seated. And it had similar guidance for schools, churches, summer camps, day care centers, and more.

If there’s one thing Donald Trump has made clear, though, it’s that he doesn’t want the public thinking about any of this in too much detail. “Hopefully that won’t be the case” that reopening will cause deaths to rise, he said Wednesday, but “It could very well be the case.” It will be the case, and he doesn’t want us thinking about how many deaths, or how directly they will be a result of poor reopening decisions. 

Trump continues to pin his hopes on magical thinking—and it sounds like the “slippery slope” involved in releasing the more detailed CDC guidance is not the difference between what it takes to prevent coronavirus infection in San Francisco and Jacksonville so much as it is the difference between believing that “This virus is going to disappear,” as Trump said Wednesday, and understanding that it will take work to control it until there’s a vaccine or treatment.

“It’s a question of when,” Trump went on. “Will it come back in a small way? Will it come back in a fairly large way? But we know how to deal with it now much better.” We know how, to some extent … but his administration is busy suppressing the information, because it doesn’t like the answers.

07 May 17:13

Cartoon: Donald J. Trump on social protest, the American way

by RubenBolling

Because of the COVID mess, the two upcoming Tom the Dancing Bug books, Tom the Dancing Bug: Into the Trumpverse, and The Super-Fun-Pak Comix Reader, will now be available by online pre-order only.

Information about the books, including how to pre-order, and special offers here. The deadline for ordering is June 30, 2020.

"Delve into the dementia, the dread, and the delightfulness of this collection of Tom the Dancing Bug's strips -- it's history through the lens of a self-loathing insomniac. In a way, it's all of us." -Patton Oswalt

JOIN Tom the Dancing Bug's INNER HIVE. Get exclusive access to comics before they are published, sneak peeks, insider scoops, and lots of other stuff. JOIN TODAY.

FOLLOW @RubenBolling on the Twitters and a Face Book perhaps some Insta-grams, and even my/our MeWe.

07 May 17:09

Indianapolis Police Fatally Shoot Black Man During Facebook Live Broadcast, Then Appear to Joke About His ‘Closed Casket’ Funeral: WATCH

by John Wright
James.galbraith

Jesus fucking christ. County goes on lockdown and it's a lynching extravaganza by the cops

Protests erupted Wednesday night in Indianapolis after police fatally shot a young black man following a pursuit that the now-deceased suspect broadcast on Facebook Live.

The Indianapolis Star identified the victim as 21-year-old Sean Reed, who reportedly was an Air Force veteran.

The Washington Post reports: In the latter part of the video, the man later identified as Sean Reed appears nervous talking to the nearly 4,000 people tuning into the chase, explaining in expletives where he was and begging for help. “Somebody come get my stupid ass,” the man said. “Please come get me! Please come get me! Please come get me!” … From there, the shaky video went dark as the man, who seemingly lodged the phone in the waistband of his pants, is heard sprinting and panting in a 30-second chase by foot. A voice can be heard yelling at the man, “Stop! Stop!” “F— you,” the driver replied. In the eight seconds that followed, around 11 or 12 gun shots are heard in succession. There’s a brief pause before another two more shots are heard.

More from the Star: Another recording of the Facebook Live appears to show the aftermath. The camera is still pointing to the sky, with more than 16,000 people now tuned in to watch. The video captures a conversation, seemingly among police officers at the scene, but it is not clear. A man says: “I think it’s going to be a closed casket, homie” — apparently referring to a closed casket funeral for the man who was just shot. It’s unclear who is speaking at this point.

Watch a report from WTHR below.

The post Indianapolis Police Fatally Shoot Black Man During Facebook Live Broadcast, Then Appear to Joke About His ‘Closed Casket’ Funeral: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.

07 May 17:07

Trump donor named next postmaster general

by Matthew Choi and Daniel Lippman
James.galbraith

Ridiculous


A major donor to President Donald Trump will become the next head of the U.S. Postal Service, an institution that has frequently come under criticism from the president amid one of its worst financial crises.

Louis DeJoy, a North Carolina businessman, will take over as postmaster general on June 15, according to a news release. He will replace Megan Brennan, whose intention to retire was reported by The Washington Post in October. Brennan had been subject to months of complaints from Trump that the Postal Service was losing too much money, The Post reported at the time.

Trump has repeatedly characterized the Postal Service as hemorrhaging money, demanding that it charge delivery behemoths such as Amazon more. Last month, Trump called the Postal Service a “joke” as it suffers major losses amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The Postal Service requested up to $75 million in federal assistance to keep operating, and though the Trump administration has signaled that it is willing to help, the president has continued to accuse it of being too cozy with Amazon.

“The post office, if they raised the price of a package by approximately four times, it would be a whole new ballgame,” Trump said during the signing ceremony for a coronavirus relief package last month. “But they don’t want to raise it because they don’t want to insult Amazon, and they don’t want to insult other companies, perhaps, that they like. The post office should raise the price of the packages to the companies. Not to the people, to the companies. If they did that, it would be a whole different story.”

The Postal Service is an independent agency enumerated in the Constitution. The Government Accountability Office had already found last year that USPS‘s financial health was “deteriorating and unsustainable“ because of the decline in first-class mail and rising expenses to cover growing compensation and benefits for workers.

DeJoy has been a substantial donor to Trump and Republican causes since the 2016 election. His wife, Aldona Wos, served as ambassador to Estonia under President George W. Bush and was nominated to serve as Trump’s next ambassador to Canada.

DeJoy previously worked in the private sector, and is the former chief executive of XPO Logistics’ supply chain business in the Americas and has collaborated with the Postal Service during his career, according to a news release. The Post first reported DeJoy’s new appointment.

“Having worked closely with the Postal Service for many years, I have a great appreciation for this institution and the dedicated workers who faithfully execute its mission,” DeJoy said in a news release. “I look forward to working with the supporters of the Postal Service in Congress and the Administration to ensure the Postal Service remains an integral part of the United States government.”

Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) — chairman of the House Government Operations Subcommittee, which has jurisdiction over the Postal Service — expressed dismay at the appointment on Wednesday evening.

“President Trump rewards a partisan donor by installing him at the United States Postal Service,” he said in a statement. “The Postal Service is in crisis and needs real leadership and someone with knowledge of the issues. This crony doesn’t cut it.”

07 May 16:52

Poll: 20% of Republicans insist they'll refuse a COVID-19 vaccine if and when one is available

by Dartagnan
James.galbraith

They'll hopefully keep killing each other off

In these challenging times, sometimes it’s hard to know whether to laugh or cry: One in five Republicans would decline to get vaccinated for the novel coronavirus.

Some Republicans in the U.S. may not be lining up to receive a vaccine for the coronavirus when it becomes available, according to polling data released Tuesday by Morning Consult.

***

Republicans are almost three times as likely to refuse vaccination for coronavirus as Democrats. While only 7 percent of Democrats said they would not be vaccinated against the virus, 20 percent of Republicans polled said they would choose not to receive the vaccine.

It’s not entirely clear why there is such widespread resistance to a not-yet-existent vaccine on the right, but we can make some educated guesses.

Some people view any vaccinations as an infringement on their “freedoms.” Others might just not trust medical science.

Some of the resistance shown by Republicans towards getting the vaccine could be linked to the anti-vaccination movement. Those who are against such preventative medications believe that vaccinations can be linked to other conditions, such as autism.

But one in five seems like an awfully high percentage of “anti-vaxxers.” There must be something else at work, here … wait, I think I’ve got it!

I suppose people might decline to be vaccinated if someone with the loudest megaphone on the planet spent two months minimizing the seriousness of the virus, or claiming it was all a “hoax,” which, like a miracle, would just “go away.” Or maybe if someone with the second-loudest megaphone, or third loudest, said pretty much the same thing.

Perhaps people were encouraged by their governor to believe that the virus somehow only selectively stalked and infected “city” (i.e., Black or brown) people. Maybe their governor publicly announced it was fine to go on and get a tattoo and massage before a trip to the local bowling alley.

All of those things might influence people’s decision. Hell, these folks might even be taking cues from the president and vice president, who don’t seem to think that the novel coronavirus is that big of a deal.

Republicans have eschewed CDC guidance for mitigating against coronavirus, including social distancing protocols and the wearing of face masks. Vice President Mike Pence was criticized for not wearing a face mask during his tour of the Mayo Clinic in April.

Or maybe like this jackass in Ohio, people might consider it an infringement on their God-given right to infect other people with a deadly virus.

“This is not the entire world,” state Rep. Nino Vitale wrote in a lengthy Facebook post on Monday morning. “This is the greatest nation on earth founded on Judeo-Christian Principles.”

“One of those principles is that we are all created in the image and likeness of God. That image is seen the most by our face. I will not wear a mask,” he continued.

It may just involve some serious magical thinking at work, with folks telling themselves they’re not at risk, or likely to recover. Yet even that requires a whole lot of willful ignorance. It means that those harrowing scenes on the nightly news showing hospital workers desperately trying to care for people in intensive care units all over the country just didn’t make an impression. It means ignoring all those public service announcements on the TV. It means ignoring the fact that people they actually know have died.

Maybe it’s just to “own the libs.” Or to prove all those Hollywood-types and musicians wrong. Whatever the reason, it’s a real puzzle how people could feel this way. Especially with 70,000 dead already, just in the U.S.

Most people don’t expect a vaccine for COVID-19  to be developed until 2021—at the earliest. So the impact of this apparent resolve by so many Republicans to refuse a vaccine, assuming these numbers hold steady, won’t be felt immediately.

But it sure is going to make control of the government a lot easier for Democrats from 2022 on.

07 May 00:34

Error Types

Type IIII error: Mistaking tally marks for Roman numerals
06 May 22:59

Democrats are in a strong position for the fall. So why all the hand-wringing?

by Paul Waldman
James.galbraith

Because the media can't live without "Dems just might blow it" and continually portraying the party as weak and snivelling. Only the GOP gets to be strong

They might still screw things up, but right now it's looking pretty good.
06 May 21:14

COVID-19 wallops meat plant workers; shortages hit shelves, fast food

by Beth Mole
James.galbraith

Well there's that ~60% saturation point we keep expecting :P

A sign outside the Smithfield Foods pork processing plant, one of the country's largest known Coronavirus clusters, is seen on April 21, 2020 in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

Enlarge / Smithfield Foods pork plant in South Dakota is closed indefinitely in the wake of its coronavirus outbreak. (credit: Getty | Kerem Yucel)

Meat- and poultry-processing facilities have become hotspots for COVID-19 outbreaks, with cases spreading in over 100 plants across the country.

Federal and state public health researchers reported Friday, May 1, that at least 115 meat and poultry plants in 19 states have had been affected by the pandemic. In all, the researchers counted at least 4,913 sickened workers and at least 20 deaths. The findings are likely an undercount given different testing strategies at facilities and the fact that some facilities did not submit any data.

For instance, the only data researchers had from Iowa indicated that only 377 workers in two plants in the state had been sickened. But on Tuesday, May 5, Iowa health officials announced that there were at least 1,653 cases from four plants that had outbreaks—meaning 10 percent or more of the workforce had been sickened.

Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

06 May 21:11

Five GOP governors declare victory over coronavirus as cases surge in some of their states

by Kerry Eleveld
James.galbraith

That seems unwise

Republican governors from the five states that have entirely declined to issue statewide stay-at-home orders to slow the spread of coronavirus declared their approach a "model for success" Tuesday that can be replicated across the country.

"Our collective experience ensures that our contribution toward reopening our nation’s economy is stable, safe and durable," they wrote in the Washington Post, all but declaring their states victorious. The authors included Govs. Mark Gordon of Wyoming, Pete Ricketts of Nebraska, Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas, Kim Reynolds of Iowa, and Mike Parson of Missouri. But a quick google suggests all is already not well in several of those states.

Campaign Action

"More than 1,600 workers at four Iowa meatpacking plants have been infected with the coronavirus, state health officials reported Tuesday," according to the Des Moines Register, the same day the op-ed appeared in the Post.

In other news from Tuesday, "Missouri reported the highest number of new coronavirus cases in one day Monday," the same day the state reopened some businesses, according to the New York Post. The 368 new cases reported Monday followed 319 new cases the day before, so not necessarily a weird fluke.  

As of Tuesday, the city of Grand Island, Nebraska, also had 1,228 COVID-19 cases in a city of some 51,000, putting the "per capita rate of infection well above that of New York, the hardest-hit state in the nation," noted the Wall Street Journal.

Arkansas also announced Wednesday that more than 100 inmates and one staff member had tested positive for COVID-19 at a low-security prison in Forrest City. 

As we noted yesterday, it's almost impossible to say what's in store for many of these states that are simultaneously reporting upticks in COVID-19 cases and newly easing whatever social distancing measures they had enacted. There's about a month-and-a-half lag time between disease spread, incubation, and death. 

So frankly, one has to wonder what the heck kind of political calculus these governors were making when they decided to memorialize in writing the notion that they had successfully cracked the coronavirus code.

06 May 20:35

Trump admin’s botched pandemic response detailed in whistleblower complaint

by Jon Brodkin
James.galbraith

This should be a fun hearing

Closeup photograph of a coach's whistle on a blue background.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Getty Images)

A new whistleblower complaint by a former US health official details how the Trump administration's COVID-19 response was hampered by cronyism and denial about the virus's severity. The 89-page complaint filed by Rick Bright, an immunology expert who led the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) until he says he was forced out of his position, provides an inside look at the Trump administration's approach to public health before and during the pandemic.

From spring 2017 until his "involuntary removal" last month, "HHS [Health and Human Services] leadership pressured Dr. Bright and BARDA to ignore expert recommendations and instead to award lucrative contracts based on political connections and cronyism," the complaint said. "Dr. Bright repeatedly clashed with [Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response Robert] Kadlec and other HHS leaders about the outsized role played by John Clerici, an industry consultant to pharmaceutical companies with a longstanding connection to Dr. Kadlec, in the award of government contracts."

For example, Bright in 2017 objected to a push "to extend a contract with Mr. Clerici's client, Aeolus Pharmaceuticals, which an IPR [in-process review] had concluded should be allowed to expire without further funding. In attempting to justify the extension of this failed contract, Mr. Clerici emphasized that Aeolus's Chief Executive Officer was a 'wildcard' and a friend of Jared Kushner, President Trump's son-in-law and a Senior Advisor to the President. Dr. Bright stood his ground on this contract, which led to some discord between him and HHS leadership."

Read 27 remaining paragraphs | Comments

06 May 19:22

Axios: Trump intends to challenge COVID-19 death count, accuse hospitals of lying

by Hunter
James.galbraith

No depths are too low for the GOP

Axios is now reporting that Trump will soon dive deeply into even worse behavior than he is currently wallowing in, and that the pile of excrement posing as president will soon argue that the people dying of COVID-19 are actually now dying of something else.

"A senior administration official said he expects the president to begin publicly questioning the death toll as it closes in on his predictions for the final death count and damages him politically," Axios reports.

An alleged argument, says the outlet, will be that because because Medicare is giving money-losing hospitals a 20% bonus for treating each COVID-19 patient, there is a "distorted financial incentive" for hospitals to claim their patients are dying of the pandemic.

So we can prepare for that, no doubt. Trump and his team of fascist, corrupt incompetents are contemplating how boldly they can publicly argue that America's medical personnel are faking COVID-19 deaths to cheat his government out of money. And it is quite possibly the worst and most unforgivable claim this team of grifting bone-spur-having cowards has yet come up with, whether they say it publicly or chicken out, continuing to merely grouse to each other about it behind the scenes, and there is very little else that can be said about that without saying something we all might at some point regret.

There is absolutely no evidence for a claim that hospitals are faking pandemic deaths. None. Zero. It is insane, psychopathic bullshit spewed by a decompensating narcissist so wounded that a worldwide pandemic is not bowing to his fantasy wishes and simply evaporating that he instead will be arguing that the pandemic itself is in large part a hoax against him, his tiny hands, his puffy spray-painted face, and his own grand reality-bending majesty.

In reality, it is an absolute certainty that American COVID-19 deaths are still being substantially undercounted, including in New York. And the United States is not alone in having to revise its numbers upward as the true scope of the pandemic becomes clear; other countries have seen sudden "jumps" of deaths after it became clear that insufficient testing had not kept up with the true numbers.

Though Axios relies on at least two sources for the claim that Trump and team believe hospitals are being dishonest for financial gain, the outlet reported that another "senior" official "pushed back," instead claiming that Trump is not "skeptical" of those deaths per se but is more narrowly peeved because the death toll is being revised to include "presumptive" COVID-19 deaths—in other words, people showing all the symptoms of the disease but who were not able to be tested before being carted off to makeshift morgues because impeached and criminal President Shitforbrains would not take the steps necessary to ramp up testing and has now washed his shriveled grifting hands of even trying. So Dear Leader's new "thinking," says the pushbacker, is that he needs to "properly convey" to the American people why they should not be "startled" by the escalating death toll number.

Aside from being a nuance about three times more difficult than anything Donald Trump's walnutbrain-to-mouth pipeline has been able to clearly express during the whole duration of his extended political foray, it is also conspicuously not a direct refutation of what the other sources reported. Trump believes the numbers are inflated; Trump believes the numbers are inflated because hospitals are reporting "presumptive" cases that Trump believes should not be included on his scoreboard; Trump therefore believes it is an attack on him, and intends to attack back. Possibly by publicly arguing what he and his advisers are grousing about in private: those hospitals are lying.

The logic behind such a push would be self-evident, when dealing with a man as obviously impaired as Trump. Trump claimed everything was under control, and demanded the economy perform its dance for him in time for election season. He therefore needs to now claim that regardless of what the pandemic death toll rises to next, he is still being victorious: It is just that the Media, and the Hospitals, and the Cemeteries are lying to you.

And then he will order the Blue Angels to fly over again, perhaps this time drop bombs on hospitals he most suspects are somehow cheating him or making him look bad. You cannot say he would not consider it. Look around you. He has sent every malevolent thing his brain can think of out his word-hole and towards his equally moral-devoid sycophants at one point or another, and his skin still crawls as he tries to think of new ones that might finally end the criticisms once and for all.