#if ron desantis could go ahead and die
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aksannyi · 2 years ago
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so uh
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baiheyurisolidarity · 2 years ago
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Getting a little personal here, but I've never really had any dysphoria about having a penis. I've never been under the impression that a penis was necessarily a boy or man's organ at the very least since I knew what being trans was (since I was 12), and it's not like I've ever thought about that stuff before or had it brought up so possibly never?
Anyway, part of the main reason I still wanted to go through with it is because I could possibly afford it without putting myself in a fuckton of debt and being permanently financially ruined and because due to where I live (let's say some heavily US republican led state), I wanted to be "biologically" or "hormonally" or whatever secure in case some day, on some people's whims, I suddenly have no access to the hormones I need to keep myself from wanting to die and I would never be legally allowed to have surgery like how out of state abortions are banned in many states in this country (aka if you go to some other state to get an abortion or whatever, you'd be charged legally in your home state).
So to put it more briefly, I more continued to push myself into going through with this surgery that I'm getting soon more out of political, biological, mental health, etc security rather than any sort of removal of gender dysphoria or even gender euphoria. If I had lived in some trans safe state, there's a far more likely chance I would have tapped out by now especially as my financial circumstances have been changing for the worse for various reasons I won't get into since I wouldn't have those things to worry about. Instead I'm full speed aheading into financially fucking myself and making it far more unlikely that I'll finish university with it being too late to turn back because fuckheads like Ron DeSantis and other US republicans got me worried that if I don't go through with this, I could lose all of my progress and be forced to detransition and want to kill myself. What a fun reason to have a surgery.
My regrets so far as I approach surgery are like, entirely financial. Fun medical and economic system we live in.
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ladystylestores · 5 years ago
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Sunbelt’s COVID-19 cases spike; some states back off on reopening | Coronavirus pandemic News
Arizona recorded more coronavirus deaths, infections, hospitalisations and emergency-room (ER) visits in a single day than ever before in a crisis Wednesday across the United States Sunbelt that sent a shudder through other parts of the country and led distant states to put their own reopening plans on hold.
In Florida, hospitals braced for an influx of patients, with the biggest medical centre in Florida’s hardest-hit county, Miami’s Jackson Health System, scaling back elective surgeries and other procedures to make room for victims of the resurgence underway across the South and West.
Cases in Texas rose by 8,076 on Wednesday, the highest daily increase since the pandemic started. 
On Wednesday, Vice President Mike Pence travelled to Arizona, where cases have spiked since stay-at-home orders expired in mid-May. Arizona reported record single-day highs of almost 4,900 new COVID-19 cases, 88 new deaths, close to 1,300 ER visits and a running total of nearly 2,900 people in the hospital.
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Coronavirus cases in Arizona, the US have spiked since stay-at-home orders expired in mid-May [Cheney Orr/Reuters] 
Florida recorded more than 6,500 new cases – down from around 9,000 on some days last week, but still alarming – and a running total of over 3,500 deaths. Ahead of the Fourth of July holiday, counties in South Florida are closing beaches to fend off large crowds that could spread the virus.
The increase in cases has been blamed in part on what New Jersey’s governor called “knucklehead behaviour” by Americans who are not wearing masks or obeying other social-distancing rules.
‘Not going back’
“Too many people were crowding into restaurants late at night, turning these establishments into breeding grounds for this deadly virus,” Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez said while forbidding restaurants with seating for more than eight people from serving customers inside from midnight to 6am.
Health experts say the virus in Florida and other Southern states risks becoming uncontrollable, with case numbers too large to trace.
Marilyn Rauth, a senior citizen in Punta Gorda, said Florida’s reopening was “too much too soon”.
“The sad thing is the COVID spread will probably go on for some time though we could have flattened the curve with responsible leadership,” she said. “Experience now has shown most people won’t social distance at beaches, bars, etc. The governor evidently has no concern for the health of the state’s citizens.”
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, a Republican, said on Tuesday that the state was “not going back” on reopening.
Fauci on coronavirus: ‘We are not in total control’
The soaring numbers have raised fears that many other states could see the same phenomenon if they reopen, too – or that people from the South and West could spread the virus to other regions.
Some distant states and cities that seemed to have tamed their outbreaks, including Colorado, Virginia, Delaware and New Jersey, hit pause or backtracked on some of their reopening plans for bars and restaurants. And New York and New Jersey are asking visitors from 16 states from the Carolinas to California to quarantine themselves for two weeks.
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said the city is delaying its resumption of indoor dining at restaurants, and not because of any rise in cases there.
“Even a week ago, honestly, I was hopeful we could. But the news we have gotten from around the country gets worse and worse all the time,” he said.
The number of confirmed cases in the US per day has roughly doubled over the past month, hitting 44,800 on Tuesday, according to a count kept by Johns Hopkins University. That is higher even than what the nation witnessed during the deadliest stretch of the crisis in mid-April through early May.
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Los Angeles, California is closing its beaches for the 4th of July holiday weekend [Mike Blake/Reuters]
Dr Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious-disease expert, warned on Capitol Hill on Tuesday that the rise across the South and West “puts the entire country at risk” and that new infections could reach 100,000 a day if people don’t start listening to public health authorities.
More US states step back from reopening as COVID-19 cases surge
“When you have an outbreak in one part of the country, even though in other parts of the country they’re doing well, they are vulnerable,” Fauci said.
The outbreaks in Florida, Arizona, Texas and California have already forced those states to reverse course and take such measures as shutting down bars and beaches and curbing restaurant capacity.
The virus in the US is blamed for more than 2.6 million confirmed cases and over 127,000 deaths – the highest toll in the world, by Johns Hopkins’s count. Worldwide, the number of infections is put at more than 10.6 million, with over half a million deaths.
The real numbers in the US and globally are believed to be significantly higher, in part because of limited testing and mild cases that have gone unrecorded.
The number of deaths per day in the US has continued to drop over the past week and is down to an average of about 550, compared with a peak of around 2,200 a day in mid-April, according to an Associated Press analysis. But experts note that deaths are a lagging indicator – it takes time for people to get sick and die – and they warn that the trend could reverse itself.
In New Jersey, where cases had been declining since late April, Governor Phil Murphy announced a pause on Monday, in part because of people not wearing masks and not observing social distancing.
“Unfortunately, the national scene, compounded by instances of knucklehead behaviour here at home, are requiring us to hit pause on the restart of indoor dining for the foreseeable future,” he said.
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day0one · 5 years ago
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Donald Trump refuses to lead as pandemic worsens and allies desert him on masks
Most Presidents would try to stop the United States from barreling toward disaster. But Donald Trump has nothing to say and no answers to mitigate a calamity unfolding on his watch that he seems resolved to ignore.
On the day when the government's top infectious disease specialist Anthony Fauci said he would not be surprised to see the US record 100,000 new coronavirus cases per day, Trump refused to break his deafening silence.
And the day after his White House described record-breaking new infections that are sweeping the nation as "embers that need to be put out," Trump's campaign claimed credit for the "phenomenal" success of his botched pandemic leadership.
Trump is now pretty much the sole figure in authority in either party -- including his major Republican allies -- who refuse to wear or endorse face masks that are proven to slow the spread of coronavirus but that he has stigmatized as a liberal plot to harm him politically.
"We must have no stigma, none, about wearing masks when we leave our homes and come near other people. Wearing simple face coverings is not about protecting ourselves, it is about protecting everyone we encounter," Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said on the Senate floor Monday.
But Trump on Tuesday tweeted cryptically "THE LONE WARRIOR!" -- apparently embracing his isolation from even political allies and the scientific approaches that have proven elsewhere to at least slow the spread of the coronavirus in the short term.
Trump's morning Twitter spree showed that his current preoccupations involve anything but the virus, despite Fauci saying on Tuesday that "we're going in the wrong direction." The President tweeted or retweeted claims that a story that Russia put a bounty on US soldiers in Afghanistan was a "hoax." He also fixated on protecting monuments from protestors, Joe Biden, economic growth, the stock market, cable news ratings and police reform. But he did not offer any plans for tackling the virus crisis or offer condolences to the victims.
Undeterred by the deepening national crisis, Trump is pressing ahead with plans for an early July Fourth celebration at Mount Rushmore that will bracket him symbolically and without irony alongside four of America's most revered Presidents, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt. The social distancing advised by Trump's government will not be enforced.
The White House did hold a briefing on Wednesday, but it appeared to be a premeditated attempt by White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany to fog the water around another drama rocking Trump -- claims that he did nothing about a Russian military intelligence scheme to put a bounty on the heads of US troops in Afghanistan. McEnany left the briefing room before she could be questioned about the pandemic.
Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, whose current wide lead in most general election polls can be explained partly by Trump's performance during the pandemic, pounced on the latest grave developments to lambast the President.
Seizing on Trump's remark in April that he was now a "wartime President," Biden adopted a tone of scathing mockery.
"What happened? Now it's almost July, and it seems like our wartime president has surrendered -- waved the white flag and left the battlefield," the Democrat said in a speech in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware.
In the vacuum left by resolute guidance that only the person in the Oval Office can provide, the coronavirus is quickening its deadly march across the country, with 37 states now seeing rising cases, and at least 19 slowing the reopening plans championed by the President while hospital emergency rooms see increasing admissions that suggest a fast rising death toll could be only days away.
Far from the four Presidents whose images he will survey in South Dakota, Trump's perverse failure to crank up a federal government effort to fight a worsening pandemic over which he has said the US has "prevailed" is beginning to resemble Herbert Hoover's indifference during the Great Depression in the 1930s.
Refusing to lead As the rest of the Western world presses ahead with careful reopening plans after governments suppressed their curves -- and bans American tourists because of the skyrocketing US infection rates -- Trump appears to have made a political calculation that the best approach is to refuse to lead.
Mounting a successful federal government response at this stage would require the capacity to unite the country and to brainstorm innovative solutions, as well as a President who is a master of detail and can unleash the promise of science and empathize with his compatriots at a tragic time.
But Trump's alternative method of presidential leadership has come unstuck. Dividing the country -- between Republican governors itching to open economies and Democrats who worried about a viral resurgence -- has proved disastrous to states that support him. The Trumpian tactic of demonizing opponents, lying about the facts and building an alternative reality in which everything is fine has been exposed by the pandemic.
And for all his claims to be a builder, Trump has failed to construct solutions in his near four years in power.
Many Trump supporters voted for the President in 2016 because they felt betrayed by the status quo and the political establishment. His still healthy ratings from his base suggest that not all voters share the horror of many in Washington at his negligence or even think Trump should be leading a role in fighting the pandemic that almost all of his predecessors would surely have demanded for themselves.
And the President is not directly to blame for the young Americans who continue to flock to bars or beaches or those who refuse to obey social distancing rules or to wear the masks in behaviors that could make the business or reopening economies safer and more sustainable.
But Trump's refusal even to set an example and to explain the gravity of the situation, coupled with his habit of prioritizing his own political prospects and interests over the national interest, has left much of the rest of the country in the lurch.
A former senior administration official who spoke to CNN's Jim Acosta Tuesday was referring to the President's frustration with intelligence briefings in connection with the latest Russia drama, their comment held lessons for his role in the pandemic as well.
"He's typically frustrated with intelligence because it shows a problem but doesn't provide an answer," the former official said.
As several past presidents have noted, the only problems that reach the Oval Office desk are those that others have failed to solve.
Scary statistics but it could get worse Days of scary statistics are telling a devastating story that cannot be disguised by Team Trump's spin. The US represents just 4% of the world's population but has a quarter of all coronavirus cases. On average, more than 1,000 Americans die every day from the disease. Some 127,400 have already succumbed. Black Americans are more than twice as likely to die from it, in figures that reflect the racial disparities currently driving another national crisis.
It is a measure of the odd limbo caused by lockdowns that the human toll that these figures represent -- as well as the severe economic blight caused by a pandemic that Trump denied for months, mismanaged, politicized and then ignored again -- is hidden from many Americans.
As bad as the latest statistics may be, Fauci raised the horrific prospect that things are going to get worse, a dispiriting prospect in a country already seared by months of social distancing and lockdowns.
"We are now having 40-plus thousand new cases a day. I would not be surprised if we go up to 100,000 a day if this does not turn around and so I am very concerned," Fauci told a Senate committee on Tuesday.
Fauci expressed dismay over people congregating in crowds and not wearing masks and inadequate attention being paid to federal guidelines on reopening that the President has declined to enforce.
"We're going to continue to be in a lot of trouble, and there's going to be a lot of hurt if that does not stop," he said.
As Trump shows no willingness to shift course and set a national example or lead a federal response to the virus, other medical experts are expressing fears that the coming July Fourth holiday could spark a similar spike in infections as appears to have been triggered by Memorial Day at the end of May.
"The virus is spreading rapidly. The time to act is now," said Houston Methodist Hospital President and CEO Marc Boom. Texas as a whole, which is seeing a rapidly rising curve, reported a record 6,975 new cases of Covid-19 on Tuesday.
Another state that is an epicenter of the coronavirus' prolonged surge is Florida, which put up more than 6,000 new cases on Tuesday. But Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Trump ally, continued to minimize the situation, making the case that it was good news that younger people -- who have traditionally been less severely affected by Covid-19, were a higher proportional slice of those who tested positive than was the case in the past.
"We're not going back, closing things," DeSantis said.
CORRECTION: This story has been updated to correct the location of Mount Rushmore.
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dipulb3 · 5 years ago
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Tennis great Novak Djokovic tests positive | Foxton News
New Post has been published on https://appradab.com/tennis-great-novak-djokovic-tests-positive-foxton-news/
Tennis great Novak Djokovic tests positive | Foxton News
White Home coronavirus advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci informed Congress Tuesday that some components of the U.S. are seeing a “disturbing surge” of infections and he is involved concerning the elevated neighborhood unfold. High officers from the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention, the Meals and Drug Administration and the Division of Well being and Human Providers are discussing what every company has accomplished in response to the coronavirus outbreak.
That is CNBC’s reside weblog overlaying all the newest information on the coronavirus outbreak. This weblog will likely be up to date all through the day because the information breaks. 
International circumstances: Greater than 9.11 million
International deaths: At the very least 472,541
U.S. circumstances: Greater than 2.31 million
U.S. deaths: At the very least 120,402
The information above was compiled by Johns Hopkins College.
Some faculties chopping educational packages as faculties take monetary hit from Covid-19 closures
12:24 p.m. ET — As faculties and universities throughout the nation face excessive monetary misery, some establishments are chopping the tutorial packages that have been as soon as central to a well-rounded training.
In early June, the College of Alaska system introduced it is going to reduce 39 academic departments in all, together with diploma packages in sociology, inventive writing, chemistry and environmental science.
With a purpose to keep afloat going ahead, extra faculties could should shift their priorities away from the worth of a liberal arts training and give attention to levels which have a direct return on funding, in keeping with Robert Franek, editor in chief of The Princeton Assessment. —Jessica Dickler
As Trump blames rising circumstances on testing, knowledge suggests the virus is spreading
Dr. Vincent Carrao attracts blood from a affected person for the coronavirus illness (COVID-19) check at Palisades Oral Surgical procedure, in Fort Lee, New Jersey, U.S., June 15, 2020. Image taken June 15, 2020.
Brendan McDermid | Reuters
11:54 a.m. ET — President Donald Trump has continued responsible rising coronavirus circumstances on elevated testing regardless of mounting proof that the virus is spreading quickly all through some communities.
“Instances are going up within the U.S. as a result of we’re testing excess of every other nation, and ever increasing,” Trump tweeted early Tuesday. “With smaller testing we might present fewer circumstances!”
Citing an increase in lots of states that the % of whole exams coming again optimistic is on the rise, public well being specialists and a few politicians have pushed again, saying that infections, not simply confirmed circumstances, are accelerating.
“Even with the testing growing or being flat, the variety of folks testing optimistic is accelerating quicker than that,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, informed reporters final week. ” that is proof that there is transmission inside these communities.” —Will Feuer
Higher care and youthful sufferers might decrease the mortality charge, Dr. Scott Gottlieb says
11:26 a.m. ET — Because the coronavirus seems to contaminate principally youthful folks in not less than some states and medical doctors be taught to supply higher take care of Covid-19 sufferers, the mortality charge of the illness will seemingly drop within the weeks forward, former Meals and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb informed CNBC.
Younger and in any other case wholesome individuals are much less prone to die of Covid-19, in keeping with knowledge compiled by the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention. Nevertheless, younger folks can nonetheless develop extreme illness in addition to die of the illness and scientists are nonetheless researching the long-term well being results of an an infection.
“Because the hospitals refill with Covid sufferers, we’ll see how a lot the mortality charge declines as a operate of it is a youthful cohort, youthful age cohort, but additionally we’ve higher therapy,” Gottlieb stated on CNBC’s “Squawk Field.” “There is no query that we’ll protect extra life now that we’ve these therapeutic alternatives accessible to us.” —Will Feuer
Delta CEO requires a authorities mask-wearing mandate
10:01 a.m. ET — Main U.S. airways now require passengers to put on masks on board in an effort to curb the unfold of Covid-19, however implementing it’s tough with no authorities mandate, Delta Air Strains’ CEO Ed Bastian stated. Proper now, the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention recommends facial coverings like masks in locations the place it’s tough to socially distance, reminiscent of on airplanes.
“Should you take your masks off, no … we won’t forcibly take away you from the airplane,” Bastian informed Axios in an interview that aired Monday evening. “If the federal government have been to mandate it I believe that will assist. If the federal government mandated it then you’ll be able to implement it.”
The federal government has “left it to the airways to make these selections.” Final week, American Airways stated it’s quickly banning a passenger who refused to put on a masks, saying he can return when these face coverings are not required on flights. —Leslie Josephs
Tennis participant Novak Djokovic exams optimistic after organizing exhibition sequence
A file photograph dated June 5, 2016 reveals Novak Djokovic of Serbia returns to Andy Murray of United Kingdom in the course of the males’s single last match on the French Open tennis event at Roland Garros Stadium in Paris, France on June 05, 2016.
Mustafa Yalcin | Anadolu Company | Getty Pictures
9:57 a.m. ET — High-ranked Serbian tennis participant Novak Djokovic examined optimistic for the coronavirus after enjoying in a tennis exhibition sequence he organized, the Related Press reported.
Djokovic grew to become the fourth participant to check optimistic following matches in Belgrade and Zadar, Croatia. Each Djokovic and his spouse have examined optimistic.
There was no social distancing measures carried out on the matches as gamers have been seen hugging one another, per the AP report. Djokovic has been criticized for internet hosting the exhibition amid well being considerations with the pandemic.
Organizers of the Adria Tour confirmed to AP that the third stage of the sequence, initially deliberate subsequent for subsequent week in Bosnia, has been canceled. —Alex Harring
Shares open solidly greater following temporary China-U.S. commerce deal scare in a single day
9:38 a.m. ET — Inventory futures recovered from earlier losses to commerce greater on the open after White Home commerce advisor Peter Navarro clarified his remarks that urged the U.S.-China commerce deal is over.
Navarro shortly walked again his remarks. “My feedback have been taken wildly out of context,” he stated in a press release. “They’d nothing in any respect to do with the Part I commerce deal, which continues in place.”
Dow Jones Industrial Common futures have been up about 230 factors firstly of buying and selling. S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100 futures additionally traded greater. 
Shares prolonged Monday’s positive aspects, regardless of unease surrounding the rising variety of Covid-19 “sizzling spots” throughout the nation. —Terri Cullen
College of Michigan pulls out of internet hosting presidential debate, citing well being considerations
9:30 a.m. ET — The College of Michigan stated it will likely be pulling out of its settlement with the Fee on Presidential Debates to host a normal election presidential debate on its campus within the fall.
The talk will nonetheless happen on Oct. 15, however will as an alternative be held in Miami on the Adrienne Arsht Heart for the Performing Arts of Miami-Dade County, in keeping with a press release by the fee.
The College of Michigan’s determination to again out was rooted in considerations over the general public well being dangers of bringing candidates, campaigns and the media to campus in the course of the pandemic, the Detroit Free Press reported Monday, citing sources with direct information of the matter.
College President Mark Schlissel wrote in a letter to the committee that internet hosting the controversy is not possible, given the general public well being and issues of safety which accompany bringing so many guests to the Ann Arbor, Mich. campus. —Alex Harring
Each day new circumstances within the U.S. development upward
Sanofi CEO says the corporate might contribute two profitable coronavirus vaccines
8:56 a.m. ET — Sanofi CEO Paul Hudson informed CNBC each of the French drugmaker’s vaccine pursuits could possibly be profitable in stopping Covid-19.
“The world wants billions of doses. We need to be sure each nation, all people that wants that safety, can get it,” Hudson stated on “Squawk Field.” “We predict we’ll positively play an element with one, and possibly even each of our vaccines.”
Hudson’s feedback come after Sanofi introduced a possible $2 billion take care of U.S. biotech agency Translate Bio to develop a Covid-19 vaccine. Sanofi has already entered a vaccine partnership with GlaxoSmithKline, a British pharmaceutical firm.
Hudson touted Translate Bio’s expertise engaged on therapeutics utilizing mRNA expertise, which tells human cells to supply specified proteins so as to produce an immune response to a selected illness. The vaccine candidate from Sanofi and Translate Bio could possibly be prepared “later in 2021,” Hudson stated.
“One of many explanation why we went deeper into this collaboration was as a result of they have been on mRNA for 10 years. They know the way it make it scaled, which has by no means been accomplished earlier than with every other firm. As soon as we have cracked it, which we predict we are going to, we’ll be capable to get to giant volumes in a short time,” he stated. —Kevin Stankiewicz
England pubs, eating places and motels to reopen on July 4
Persons are seen shopping for takeaway pints at a pub on Wandsworth Frequent on Might 28 2020 in London, England.
Peter Summers | Getty Pictures
8:05 a.m. ET — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson introduced England’s pubs, eating places and motels will likely be permitted to reopen on July Four as a part of the nation’s subsequent section of a resumption of enterprise, in keeping with a Reuters report. 
“All hospitality indoors will likely be restricted to desk service and our steerage will encourage minimal workers and buyer contact,” he stated in parliament, in keeping with Reuters. “We are going to ask companies to assist NHS Take a look at and Hint reply to any native outbreaks by amassing contact particulars from clients.” —Sara Salinas
German district goes again into lockdown after outbreak at meat processing plant
A person speaks to overseas labourers inside an space secured by native police forces inside an condominium advanced utilized by the Toennies meat firm to deal with labourers from japanese Europe in the course of the coronavirus pandemic on June 20, 2020 in Verl close to Guetersloh, Germany.
Alexander Koerner
7:13 a.m. ET — A district in Germany that has seen an acute outbreak of coronavirus circumstances at a meat-processing plant is being put again into lockdown, the premier of North Rhine-Westfalia stated. 
State premier Armin Laschet stated he was placing the district of Guetersloh, residence to round 360,000 folks, again underneath lockdown till June 30. The transfer comes after not less than 1,000 employees at a meat processing plant within the space contracted Covid-19.
Germany has been lauded all through the coronavirus disaster in Europe as a rustic that had seemingly managed to manage the virus’ unfold, largely by way of an organized and early contact tracing system. Now, nevertheless, the nation has seen a resurgence of circumstances attributable to a number of localized outbreaks in numerous components of the nation.
In addition to the outbreak in Guetersloh, a big Covid-19 outbreak within the district of Goettingen in Decrease Saxony was traced to household gatherings and one other, in Magdeburg within the state of Saxony-Anhalt, emerged in a number of faculties that at the moment are closed. In Berlin, an outbreak of 85 circumstances has been linked to members of a non secular neighborhood. —Holly Ellyatt
AstraZeneca’s potential vaccine reveals promise in pigs with two photographs
AstraZeneca’s constructing in Luton, Britain.
Tim Eire | Xinhua Information Company | Getty Pictures
7:03 a.m. ET — AstraZeneca’s potential coronavirus vaccine confirmed some promise in a trial of pigs, which discovered that two doses of the shot produced extra antibodies than one dose. 
The analysis, which was printed by The Pirbright Institute, suggests that a two-shot method of the Oxford College-developed vaccine candidate may be only in stopping Covid-19 an infection.
“The researchers noticed a marked enhance in neutralizing antibodies, which bind to the virus in a approach that blocks an infection,” the Pirbright group stated in a press release. Nevertheless, the potential vaccine nonetheless should show it is protected and efficient in people as effectively.
The potential vaccine, also called AZD1222, is being developed in partnership between researchers at Oxford College and pharmaceutical firm AstraZeneca. The candidate is already in human trials and the corporate beforehand stated it hopes to have knowledge on whether or not it is efficient in stopping Covid-19 later this yr. —Will Feuer
Learn CNBC’s earlier coronavirus reside protection right here: Chinese language agency will get approval for potential vaccine trials; euro zone downturn eases
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d2kvirus · 5 years ago
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Dickheads of the Month: March 2020
As it seems that there are people who say or do things that are remarkably dickheaded yet somehow people try to make excuses for them or pretend it never happened, here is a collection of some of the dickheaded actions we saw in the month of March 2020 to make sure that they are never forgotten.
It turns out that proven liar Boris Johnson hiding in a mansion for two weeks rather than say or do anything when large parts of the country were flooded was merely an appetiser for his approach to COVID-19, which mainly consisted of briefly mostaking himself for Lord Farquaad when telling the nation that some people will die and it's a sacrifice he is willing to make, and then going on to state that the approach he will be taking is one of herd immunity...and approach that requires 60% of the population to contract the virus, which means that if COVID-19 had a fatality rate of just 1% that’s around 400,000 people he’s casually allowing to die - and given the fatality rate is estimated at the time of writing as being between 2-3% all of a sudden having eugenicists tucked away in his backroom staff gets a lot more sinister
So with COVID-19 panic nicely stoked, what did the panic buyers rush out to buy as they feared the possibility of having to self-isolate for two weeks?  Their own bodyweight in toilet role and antibacterial - not antiviral - hand sanitiser, as opposed to things you need if you’re locked away from the world for two weeks such as food or water
Isn’t it funny how every single journalist and pundit who was creaming about how the Labour budget pledges in their 2019 manifesto ranged from being “unworkable” to “COMMUNIZZM” were all out in force to praise Rishi Sunak for his brave and forward-thinking Budget...that simply copy & pasted the budget pledges from Labour’s 2019 manifesto
...similarly, convicted felon Darren Grimes was quick to tweet photos of empty shelves in the UK as an example of what would happen if Corbyn got elected.  Photos that were taken this month, in a country where Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson won the election, so as arguments against “soShulIzm” go that’s a really bad one
The problem with putting a brainless drone like Matt Hancock in a position of responsibility is that, when everyone is grossly overstating how many of us are going to die in agony of Chinese Death Flu, the only thing he knows how to do is try and save face for his party - which is the only logical explanation for him outright lying about the Tory government working with supermarkets to make sure they’re fully stocked at a time when the shelves are being cleared out of toilet roll and hand sanitiser by stupendously misinformed paranoiacs
...that being said, even Matt Hancock is aware that listing the Early Warning and Response System as a red line is profoundly idiotic, and has been proven to be profoundly idiotic by COVID-19 - however, because Dominic Cummings has stated that it’s a red line, we should opt out of it because of reasons
It was no surprise that Dan Hodges responded to the allegations of Priti Patel bullying Home Office staff by penning an article that did nothing but sneer, damning Labour supporters for saying they wanted diversity but then criticising a woman of Indian descent whose parents fled to the UK from Uganda...which apparently means she can’t be criticised for gross incompetence, having a remarkable streak of vindictiveness, and we definitely should not mention she should not be a minister due to the whole being guilty of treason thing
Minister of Propaganda Laura Kuenssberg continued her LARPing of Terry Gilliam’s Brazil when stating that the reason the Tories were pulling back from their insane idea of infecting 60% of the population to increase immunity was because the science had changed since they proposed the idea, rather than reporting the reality - which is her fucking job - that the science has remained consistent, it’s just the Tories were surprised when the public didn’t respond well to the idea of deliberately contracting COVID-19 so that the Tories could continue fumbling their way through it
The list of totalitarian moves from the Tory government got that little bit longer when they blocked The British Museum’s move to make Mary Beard a trustee because of her expressing pro-Remain views, which definitely isn’t cause for revealing proven liar Boris Johnson is expecting a child he acknowledges the existence of concern
Florida governor Ron DeSantis has been put in a quandary with Spring Break right around the corner even though the COVID-19 pandemic is right on top of him, so he looked for advice of how to deal with the situation - which appears to have been him watching that well-known documentary Jaws to see how the mayor of Amity Island responded to a series of shark attacks right before the 4th of July by pretending that everything was fine
Congratulations to Richard Branson for being the first billionaire in the UK to try and paint themselves as the poor, innocent victim of the COVID-19 pandemic by demanding the government give him £7.5bn to cover the losses incurred by having to pay his staff for flights which won’t take place - even though he’s more than capable of covering their pay for the duration out of his £4.2bn fortune
...as opposed to Tim Martin who merely said that pubs should remain open, because if a single Wetherspoons closes he loses money, and by the way Britait should go ahead no matter what - and when pubs were forced to close, first staff were informed via passive aggressive press release that they wouldn’t be paid a penny for the duration of their enforced closures, before Martin decided the best thing to do in the situation is post a video where he tells his disgruntled employees they may as well get a job at Tesco if money is so important
A round of applause for Matt Gaetz for proving how COVID-19 isn’t a big deal by wearing a gas mask on the floor of the House of Representatives to show how people are blowing it out of all proportion...and within a few days looking like a monumental bellend when somebody within his own district died from it
So are we allowed to talk about how, when Dominic Raab was asked about flying Brits back from Lima, his response had him believe that Lima is in the Philippines?  I have to ask, considering people are still hounding Diane Abbott about the one time she flubbed her sums in 2017 yet somehow don;t have a single thing to say about the Foreign Secretary not even knowing which continent Lima is in
Nobody told Jeremy Warner about the Telegraph having a readership primarily made up of people above retirement age, which is the only logical reason for him to make his comment about how COVID-19 “might even prove mildly beneficial in the long term by disproportionately culling elderly dependants” - and, yes, that is a direct quote from Warner
It’s almost tragic that Douglas Carswell used Covid-19 as an opportunity to tweet the ludicrous assertion that Universal Basic Income shouldn't be introduced because the Romans subsidising grain in 123 BC is what caused the Roman Republic to collapse...even though the Roman Republic lasted until 44 BC, a mere 79 years later.  For some strange reason, Carswell spent the remainder of the day blocking everyone who pointed this out...
One thing that would help Lisa Nandy is that, if she's going to say how terrible it was there were various competing factions within the Labour party under Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership, it would really help if she didn’t think she could omit the small detail of her being so prominent in one of these factions that she was front and centre of an attempted coup to overthrow Corbyn almost as soon as he was elected party leader
It took Dominic Raab less than twenty seconds of his first press conference as interim leader to show just how seriously he’s taking instructions about how to avoid infection when he started licking his fingers after touching the pages of his briefing notes, something which had been established as something you should not do for several weeks before this
Nothing sums up the BBC more than how, when looking for an expert to talk about COVID-19 on Newsnight, they brought on waffling gargoyle Nigel Farage - somehow missing the facts that he has no connections with the NHS and is neither an MP or MEP, so they may as well have brought in Larry the cat as an “expert” for the segment
As advice for aspiring boxers goes, the advice Billy Joe Saunders gave about imagining your wife or girlfriend giving you lip as motivation for attempting an uppercut to the chin throws up a lot of questions - with one of them being answered very quickly, namely the question about when his boxing license would be revoked 
Of course sentient testicle Toby Young was going to venture forth his batshit opinions about Covid-19, but he went all-out writing a piece saying that we should simply let the elderly and the disabled die as they’re a strain on our economy and, if they follow his instructions, the lockdown will be over by Easter Sunday and we can send the kiddywinkles back to school
In a single tweet Alison Pearson managed to race bait by saying that the term “Made in China” shall forever be a badge of shame...while making herself look like a clueless clod as Twitter helpfully informed everyone that said tweet was sent via her Chinese-made iPhone
...sort of like Isabel Oakeshott howling with indignant rage about how terrible it is that some private school are sending the bills for next year’s education to their pupils’ parents as if that is the worst thing to happen during the Covid-19 crisis
...although Isabel Oakeshott being Isabel Oakeshott it didn’t take long to top that by predictably turning Prince Charles testing positive for Covid-19 by twisting that into an excuse to attack Meghan Markle for her and Prince Harry not dropping everything to rush back to the UK
At some point Vanessa Hudgens should have considered that, if she's going to post a live video of her discussing COVID-19, it might have been a good idea to write down a basic structure first so she didn’t run the risk of sounding as callous as she did clueless - which naturally led to Paul Joseph Watson to tweet out the usual finger-pointing about how millennials are treating the outbreak with a laissez-faire attitude, as if noted Boomers such as Xi Jinping, Donald Trump and Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson have been the image of proactiveness 
It’s worrying that Derbyshire Police were so quick to act as if they were Judge Dredd, using police drones to harass people who were taking walks even though the lockdown guidelines clearly allow exercise as a reason to leave your home
It seems that Red Bull Leipzig have experienced one of the worst symptoms of COVID-19, namely seeing somebody of Far Eastern origin and completely losing their shit, which would explain why they booted a group of Japanese fans out of their ground on the assumption that, as they look a bit Chinese, that obviously meant they were going to infect the entire ground
According to Fiona Bruce she was surprised by the levels of toxicity surrounding Question Time, conveniently forgetting the time she egged on a hostile crowd by doing a fully routine of jokes about Diana Abbott ahead of an episode in which Abbott appeared 
Leeds goalkeeper Kiko Casilla appears to have gone to the Wayne Hennessey School of Not Knowing An Obviously Bad Thing Is Bad, since his defence of when brought up on charges of calling a Charlton player a “fucking n-word” (and, no, it wasn’t “n-word” that he said) was that he wasn't aware that calling somebody that was in any way offensive
Of course we could rely on Kirstie Allsopp to somehow make the Covid-19 crisis all about her, and naturally she responded to the lockdown by taking her entire family to their second property in Devon...including one family member who had tested positive for Covid-19
And finally, as per usual, we have Donald Trump waving around his medical degree from Trump University where he claims that he’s the most qualified doctor in the entire United States and nobody should worry about COVID-19 as he has plenty of a vaccine that doesn’t exist, and besides the virus only exists in countries that are part of the Schengen agreement so everything’s fine, and don’t forget it's actually called “Chinese flu” and must be addressed as such at all times so the blame is placed firmly on China for everything he gets wrong
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alfredrserrano · 5 years ago
Text
SoFla landlords, retailers brace for coronavirus impacts
From left: Scott Sherman, Scott Sandelin, Felix Bendersky and Niesen Kasdin
Commercial landlord Scott Sherman is trying to get ahead of potential losses and hardship South Florida retail tenants are facing. His Miami-based Tricera Capital is giving them the ability to defer rent payments for the near future, as bars and restaurants are forced to close and the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic unfolds.
Across South Florida, from Miami-Dade County to Fort Lauderdale and Boca Raton, counties and cities enacted emergency measures this week to shut down restaurants, bars, nightclubs, movie theaters, gyms and other entertainment-type venues to help prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus.
“It’s a tough balancing act for a landlord,” Sherman said. “The tenant wants free rent and that’s great, but the landlord has to pay property taxes and the mortgage.”
Tricera Capital, which owns about 500,000 square feet of South Florida retail including in Miami’s Design District and Fort Lauderdale’s Flagler Village, is among many retail landlords dealing with the widespread impact on the real estate industry.
Local stores such as Books & Books in Miami as well as national retailers like Nordstrom, Macy’s, Bloomingdales, Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus, Williams Sonoma and Pottery Barn have announced they are closing their stores during the pandemic.
As a result, retail and office tenants are expected to ask their landlords for rent breaks — if they haven’t already, brokers said. Miami-Dade County’s decision to halt evictions last week included evictions of commercial tenants, a spokesperson said.
The impacts of the shutdown on South Florida’s economy, which is heavily dependent on the hospitality industry, including hotels and cruise lines, could have a domino effect on all facets of residential and commercial real estate.
“This is going to be a huge blow to the industry and to those folks that don’t have a serious balance sheet with cash on it. Even if landlords help, it will be a huge problem,” said Scott Sandelin, a retail broker with Marcus & Millichap.
Sandelin and others expect many tenants won’t be able to pay their rent come April 1. “I just hope it’s not too long because most businesses do not have that much staying power in the absence of help from the government and from the landlords,” Sandelin said. “I certainly think it will catapult the businesses that cater to delivery and takeout.”
Miami restaurateur and chef Michelle Bernstein and other local chefs posted videos on social media directed at Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez.
  View this post on Instagram
 Please watch @rondesantisfl @mayorgimenez @miamidadecounty @mayordangelber thank you @gavinkaysen & @paulkahan for being trailblazers
A post shared by Michelle Bernstein (@chefmichy) on Mar 17, 2020 at 8:36am PDT
“We need help from the city and state to survive,” Bernstein wrote. “We need economic relief, an immediate response by you that would provide much-needed assistance to allow us to keep our sales tax and county tax, which is due on March 20. It would help us all stay afloat.”
Felix Bendersky, restaurant broker and owner of F+B Hospitality, called the emergency orders shutting down restaurants and bars “a real reality check” for restaurateurs.
In attempts to stay afloat, chefs are looking to rent their restaurant kitchens as ghost kitchens and commissaries as they pivot to delivery and takeout only. Pink Pie, a pie and coffee shop in Wynwood, posted on Instagram that it would be selling its pies out of Batch, The Cookie Company’s Fort Lauderdale location, as a “pop-up.” Remaining open for delivery in Wynwood “does not make financial sense for us,” Pink Pie said on the social media platform. It will be closing its Wynwood store temporarily.
  View this post on Instagram
 A post shared by PINK PIE Ⓡ (@trypinkpie) on Mar 18, 2020 at 6:22am PDT
Bendersky and others said that if businesses can hang on past the 90-day mark, there will be opportunities. But a number of restaurants will be forced to close permanently. “You adapt or you die,” he said. So far, restaurants in demand for delivery and takeout are within the three-mile delivery zone of highly populated areas, he added.
Luis Gazitua, a partner at JAG Insurance Group, said a number of restaurant owners want to know if an interruption in business is covered by their insurance. His answer? Probably not.
Gazitua, whose family owns the chain of Sergio’s restaurants in Miami-Dade, said diseases and pandemics aren’t typically included in coverage.
“We’ve spoken to different attorneys. It will be interesting to see how they respond. The problem there is, [is] insurance companies have never really charged for that,” Gazitua said. “It’s going to be catastrophic.”
Attorney Neisen Kasdin, managing partner of Akerman’s Miami office and a former mayor of Miami Beach, said that lenders and the courts will likely be reluctant to foreclose on businesses. For landlords, kicking out tenants also makes little sense, Kasdin said.
“If you are a landlord and your tenant is a restaurant that has to close now, what are you going to do?” said Kasdin. “You are not going to be able to put another tenant in there.”
The Trump Administration is seeking to boost the economy through a stimulus package of between $850 billion to more than $1 trillion, according to media reports. The package could include $200 billion to $300 billion in direct relief to small businesses and $250 billion could be direct payments toward Americans, according to CNBC. The Federal Reserve also cut its benchmark interest rates to near zero to stimulate the economy, and plans to purchase at least $700 billion of assets.
In Florida, Gov. DeSantis is launching an emergency bridge loan program to support small businesses impacted by the virus. The program, managed by the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity, will start accepting applications on Thursday through May 8. It will offer short-term, interest-free loans totaling up to $50 million.
Yet, some wonder if these moves will be enough to help prevent an economic bloodbath.
“Our whole economy is pretty much service. I would say we may be more affected than in China, just because it’s all services,” said Scott Barnhart, a professor of finance at Florida Atlantic University. “It’s pretty dramatic.”
The post SoFla landlords, retailers brace for coronavirus impacts appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.
from The Real Deal Miami https://therealdeal.com/miami/2020/03/18/sofla-landlords-retailers-brace-for-coronavirus-impacts/ via IFTTT
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walterfrodriguez · 5 years ago
Text
SoFla landlords, retailers brace for coronavirus impacts
From left: Scott Sherman, Scott Sandelin, Felix Bendersky and Niesen Kasdin
Commercial landlord Scott Sherman is trying to get ahead of potential losses and hardship South Florida retail tenants are facing. His Miami-based Tricera Capital is giving them the ability to defer rent payments for the near future, as bars and restaurants are forced to close and the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic unfolds.
Across South Florida, from Miami-Dade County to Fort Lauderdale and Boca Raton, counties and cities enacted emergency measures this week to shut down restaurants, bars, nightclubs, movie theaters, gyms and other entertainment-type venues to help prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus.
“It’s a tough balancing act for a landlord,” Sherman said. “The tenant wants free rent and that’s great, but the landlord has to pay property taxes and the mortgage.”
Tricera Capital, which owns about 500,000 square feet of South Florida retail including in Miami’s Design District and Fort Lauderdale’s Flagler Village, is among many retail landlords dealing with the widespread impact on the real estate industry.
Local stores such as Books & Books in Miami as well as national retailers like Nordstrom, Macy’s, Bloomingdales, Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus, Williams Sonoma and Pottery Barn have announced they are closing their stores during the pandemic.
As a result, retail and office tenants are expected to ask their landlords for rent breaks — if they haven’t already, brokers said. Miami-Dade County’s decision to halt evictions last week included evictions of commercial tenants, a spokesperson said.
The impacts of the shutdown on South Florida’s economy, which is heavily dependent on the hospitality industry, including hotels and cruise lines, could have a domino effect on all facets of residential and commercial real estate.
“This is going to be a huge blow to the industry and to those folks that don’t have a serious balance sheet with cash on it. Even if landlords help, it will be a huge problem,” said Scott Sandelin, a retail broker with Marcus & Millichap.
Sandelin and others expect many tenants won’t be able to pay their rent come April 1. “I just hope it’s not too long because most businesses do not have that much staying power in the absence of help from the government and from the landlords,” Sandelin said. “I certainly think it will catapult the businesses that cater to delivery and takeout.”
Miami restaurateur and chef Michelle Bernstein and other local chefs posted videos on social media directed at Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez.
  View this post on Instagram
 Please watch @rondesantisfl @mayorgimenez @miamidadecounty @mayordangelber thank you @gavinkaysen & @paulkahan for being trailblazers
A post shared by Michelle Bernstein (@chefmichy) on Mar 17, 2020 at 8:36am PDT
“We need help from the city and state to survive,” Bernstein wrote. “We need economic relief, an immediate response by you that would provide much-needed assistance to allow us to keep our sales tax and county tax, which is due on March 20. It would help us all stay afloat.”
Felix Bendersky, restaurant broker and owner of F+B Hospitality, called the emergency orders shutting down restaurants and bars “a real reality check” for restaurateurs.
In attempts to stay afloat, chefs are looking to rent their restaurant kitchens as ghost kitchens and commissaries as they pivot to delivery and takeout only. Pink Pie, a pie and coffee shop in Wynwood, posted on Instagram that it would be selling its pies out of Batch, The Cookie Company’s Fort Lauderdale location, as a “pop-up.” Remaining open for delivery in Wynwood “does not make financial sense for us,” Pink Pie said on the social media platform. It will be closing its Wynwood store temporarily.
  View this post on Instagram
 A post shared by PINK PIE Ⓡ (@trypinkpie) on Mar 18, 2020 at 6:22am PDT
Bendersky and others said that if businesses can hang on past the 90-day mark, there will be opportunities. But a number of restaurants will be forced to close permanently. “You adapt or you die,” he said. So far, restaurants in demand for delivery and takeout are within the three-mile delivery zone of highly populated areas, he added.
Luis Gazitua, a partner at JAG Insurance Group, said a number of restaurant owners want to know if an interruption in business is covered by their insurance. His answer? Probably not.
Gazitua, whose family owns the chain of Sergio’s restaurants in Miami-Dade, said diseases and pandemics aren’t typically included in coverage.
“We’ve spoken to different attorneys. It will be interesting to see how they respond. The problem there is, [is] insurance companies have never really charged for that,” Gazitua said. “It’s going to be catastrophic.”
Attorney Neisen Kasdin, managing partner of Akerman’s Miami office and a former mayor of Miami Beach, said that lenders and the courts will likely be reluctant to foreclose on businesses. For landlords, kicking out tenants also makes little sense, Kasdin said.
“If you are a landlord and your tenant is a restaurant that has to close now, what are you going to do?” said Kasdin. “You are not going to be able to put another tenant in there.”
The Trump Administration is seeking to boost the economy through a stimulus package of between $850 billion to more than $1 trillion, according to media reports. The package could include $200 billion to $300 billion in direct relief to small businesses and $250 billion could be direct payments toward Americans, according to CNBC. The Federal Reserve also cut its benchmark interest rates to near zero to stimulate the economy, and plans to purchase at least $700 billion of assets.
In Florida, Gov. DeSantis is launching an emergency bridge loan program to support small businesses impacted by the virus. The program, managed by the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity, will start accepting applications on Thursday through May 8. It will offer short-term, interest-free loans totaling up to $50 million.
Yet, some wonder if these moves will be enough to help prevent an economic bloodbath.
“Our whole economy is pretty much service. I would say we may be more affected than in China, just because it’s all services,” said Scott Barnhart, a professor of finance at Florida Atlantic University. “It’s pretty dramatic.”
The post SoFla landlords, retailers brace for coronavirus impacts appeared first on The Real Deal Miami.
from The Real Deal Miami & Miami Florida Real Estate & Housing News | & Curbed Miami - All https://therealdeal.com/miami/2020/03/18/sofla-landlords-retailers-brace-for-coronavirus-impacts/ via IFTTT
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