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Category: Health

Amazon is ‘chickenshit’ for firing protesting workers, says VP as he quits

Amazon is ‘chickenshit’ for firing protesting workers, says VP as he quits

Motherboard reports: Tim Bray, a well known senior engineer and Vice President at Amazon has “quit in dismay” because Amazon has been “firing whistleblowers who were making noise about warehouse employees frightened of Covid-19.” In an open letter on his website, Bray, who has worked at the company for nearly six years, called the company “chickenshit” for firing and disparaging employees who have organized protests. He also said the firings are “designed to create a climate of fear.” Amazon’s strategy…

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Biden & Warren: Trump is using a $500 billion slush fund to reward his political friends and punish his political enemies

Biden & Warren: Trump is using a $500 billion slush fund to reward his political friends and punish his political enemies

Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren write: Sixty-four thousand dead. Thirty million people out of work. Small businesses collapsing. Communities of color hit exceptionally hard. Even the most ideological conservatives have been forced to acknowledge that government is an essential part of the COVID-19 solution. Government delivers best when its actions are fair, transparent and accountable. But President Donald Trump’s approach to this crisis doesn’t reflect these values. Without change, more lives will be lost and more families will go broke….

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Could ‘innate immunology’ protect us from the coronavirus?

Could ‘innate immunology’ protect us from the coronavirus?

Melinda Wenner Moyer writes: As the world waits for a coronavirus vaccine, tens of thousands of people could die. But some scientists believe a vaccine might already exist. Surprising new research in a niche area of immunology suggests that certain live vaccines that have been around for decades could, possibly, protect against the coronavirus. The theory is that these vaccines could make people less likely to experience serious symptoms — or even any symptoms — if they catch it. At…

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34 days of pandemic: Inside Trump’s reckless attempts to reopen America

34 days of pandemic: Inside Trump’s reckless attempts to reopen America

The Washington Post reports: The epidemiological models under review in the White House Situation Room in late March were bracing. In a best-case scenario, they showed the novel coronavirus was likely to kill between 100,000 and 240,000 Americans. President Trump was apprehensive about so much carnage on his watch, yet also impatient to reopen the economy — and he wanted data to justify doing so. So the White House considered its own analysis. A small team led by Kevin Hassett…

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Dr Birx decries Michigan protests: It’s ‘devastatingly worrisome’

Dr Birx decries Michigan protests: It’s ‘devastatingly worrisome’

Politico reports: Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, said on Sunday she found it “devastatingly worrisome” that anti-quarantine protesters in Michigan had flocked in tight quarters to the state Capitol, defying social-distancing guidelines. Appearing on “Fox News Sunday,” the doctor said the protesters at the rally were especially concerning because, “if they go home and infect their grandmother or their grandfather who has a comorbid condition, and they have a serious or an unfortunate outcome, they will…

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The months of magical thinking: As the coronavirus swept over China, some experts were in denial

The months of magical thinking: As the coronavirus swept over China, some experts were in denial

Helen Branswell writes: The response to the coronavirus pandemic in the United States and other countries has been hobbled by a host of factors, many involving political and regulatory officials. Resistance to social distancing measures, testing debacles, and longtime failures to prepare for the possibility of a pandemic all played a role. But a subtler, less-recognized factor contributed to the wasting of precious weeks in January and February, when preparations to try to stop the virus should have kicked immediately…

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Global backlash builds against China’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak

Global backlash builds against China’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak

The New York Times reports: Australia has called for an inquiry into the origin of the virus. Germany and Britain are hesitating anew about inviting in the Chinese tech giant Huawei. President Trump has blamed China for the contagion and is seeking to punish it. Some governments want to sue Beijing for damages and reparations. Across the globe a backlash is building against China for its initial mishandling of the crisis that helped loose the coronavirus on the world, creating…

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The rest of the world is laughing at Trump

The rest of the world is laughing at Trump

Anne Applebaum writes: Quotations from the president’s astonishing April 23 press conference have appeared on every continent, via countless television channels, radio stations, magazines, and websites, in hundreds of thousands of variations and dozens of languages—often accompanied by warnings, in case someone was fooled, not to drink disinfectant or bleach. In years past, many of these outlets presumably published articles critical of this or that aspect of U.S. foreign policy, blaming one U.S. president or another. But the kind of…

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Three potential futures for Covid-19: recurring small outbreaks, a monster wave, or a persistent crisis

Three potential futures for Covid-19: recurring small outbreaks, a monster wave, or a persistent crisis

Sharon Begley writes: As epidemiologists attempt to scope out what Covid-19 has in store for the U.S. this summer and beyond, they see several potential futures, differing by how often and how severely the no-longer-new coronavirus continues to wallop humankind. But while these scenarios diverge on key details — how much transmission will decrease over the summer, for instance, and how many people have already been infected (and possibly acquired immunity) — they almost unanimously foresee a world that, even…

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Apple data shows shelter-in-place is ending, whether governments want it to or not

Apple data shows shelter-in-place is ending, whether governments want it to or not

John Koetsier writes: Bye-bye shelter-in-place. Hello re-opening. Apple’s Mobility Trends report shows that traffic in the US and other countries like Germany has pretty much doubled in the past three weeks. It had been down up to 72%. And location data provider Foursquare says that gas and fast food visits are back to pre-COVID-19 levels in the American Midwest. Rural areas are following the same pattern. “Gas station traffic has returned to pre-COVID-19 levels in the Midwest, and in rural…

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The coronavirus genome is like a shipping label that lets epidemiologists track where it’s been

The coronavirus genome is like a shipping label that lets epidemiologists track where it’s been

The steady rate of genetic changes lets researchers recreate how a virus has travelled. nextstrain.org, CC BY By Bert Ely, University of South Carolina and Taylor Carter, University of South Carolina Following the coronavirus’s spread through the population – and anticipating its next move – is an important part of the public health response to the new disease, especially since containment is our only defense so far. Just looking at an infected person doesn’t tell you where their version of…

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Can Drs. Birx and Fauci serve Trump in good conscience?

Can Drs. Birx and Fauci serve Trump in good conscience?

Frances Z. Brown write: How should a decorated public health professional serving in the White House react when the president of the United States stands next to her and openly muses about the medical potential of injecting disinfectant? This is the moral dilemma facing Deborah Birx, Anthony Fauci, Robert Redfield and other physicians and scientists coordinating the government’s pandemic response. When President Trump offers sorcery over evidence-based medicine — as when he said, in February, that warm weather would make…

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Diary of Samuel Pepys shows how life under the bubonic plague mirrored today’s pandemic

Diary of Samuel Pepys shows how life under the bubonic plague mirrored today’s pandemic

There were eerie similarities between Pepys’ time and our own. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images By Ute Lotz-Heumann, University of Arizona In early April, writer Jen Miller urged New York Times readers to start a coronavirus diary. “Who knows,” she wrote, “maybe one day your diary will provide a valuable window into this period.” During a different pandemic, one 17th-century British naval administrator named Samuel Pepys did just that. He fastidiously kept a diary from 1660 to 1669 – a period of…

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Expert report predicts up to two more years of coronavirus pandemic misery

Expert report predicts up to two more years of coronavirus pandemic misery

CNN reports: The new coronavirus is likely to keep spreading for at least another 18 months to two years—until 60% to 70% of the population has been infected, a team of longstanding pandemic experts predicted in a report released Thursday. They recommended that the US prepare for a worst-case scenario that includes a second big wave of coronavirus infections in the fall and winter. Even in a best-case scenario, people will continue to die from the virus, they predicted. “This…

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Coronavirus was ‘not manmade or genetically modified’ says lead U.S. intelligence agency

Coronavirus was ‘not manmade or genetically modified’ says lead U.S. intelligence agency

CNBC reports: The top U.S. spy agency said for the first time on Thursday that the nation’s collective intelligence community does not believe that the coronavirus was manmade or genetically modified. “The Intelligence Community also concurs with the wide scientific consensus that the COVID-19 virus was not manmade or genetically modified,” the Office of Director of National Intelligence said in a rare statement. “The IC will continue to rigorously examine emerging information and intelligence to determine whether the outbreak began…

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The only way to get back to normal this summer is to test everyone in the U.S., says leading economist

The only way to get back to normal this summer is to test everyone in the U.S., says leading economist

The Washington Post reports: Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Romer says a return to nearly normal life is possible this summer if the United States does wide-scale testing for the coronavirus. Romer is calling on the U.S. government to test everyone in the nation once every two weeks and isolate people who test positive for the deadly coronavirus. He estimates that doing so would cost $100 billion, a hefty sum but far less than the $2 trillion Congress has spent so…

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