Saturday, May 02, 2020

Coronavirus News (72)

Get Ready for a Postcoronavirus World. The Economy Will Never Be the Same.
Coronavirus: crackdowns, racism and forced quarantine heighten tension for Africans in Guangzhou Community representatives say Chinese authorities risk harming trade and relationships with African nations .... Some tough measures may be a cover for finding overstayers, the professor says
Health care workers deserve our steadfast support, not just during a coronavirus pandemic It is an irony that Hong Kong is now stopping to clap for the health care workers who were harassed during last year’s protests ........ Attitudes around the world towards medics are not always appreciative: expect attitudes to change when these workers start demanding compensation for Covid-19 oversight
Singapore’s addiction to growth is built on the backs of migrant workers Some 90 per cent of the island nation’s Covid-19 cases are linked to migrant worker dormitories – exposing ingrained social and systemic prejudices ..... The question is whether conditions, practices and attitudes towards these workers will change after the crisis has abated ............. The coronavirus outbreak that Singapore suppressed so well during its early onset surged in mid-April, metastasising in scores of overcrowded dormitories housing the bulk of the island’s 320,000 construction workers, most of whom are from India and Bangladesh. ........... As of yesterday, nearly a month after the state enforced a nationwide lockdown, Covid-19 cases linked to migrant worker dormitories account for nearly 90 per cent of Singapore’s cases, which at more than 17,500 is the highest in Southeast Asia. ........

Some 180,000 migrant workers have been placed in isolation.

......... Government regulations such as the minimum space criteria for housing migrant workers – a woeful 4.5 square metres per worker – are partly to blame for the calamity. But so are the employers who exploit those regulations, as well as the public who have tacitly accepted for years that living conditions unfit for ourselves are more than adequate for men like Periyakarrupan. ..........

These deeply ingrained social and systemic prejudices, which existed well before the current crisis, remain at play when the government distinguishes between “high migrant worker cases” and “low community transmission” – a distinction that merely reflects the wider public’s separation of such workers from mainstream society.

................ the literally tone-deaf community singalong of a national song, Home, to thank those who have virtually no option of ever making Singapore their true home. .........

Singapore’s economy, whose high-growth model is greatly dependent on cheap imported labour.





Coronavirus: Singapore urged to consider migrant workers’ mental health amid ‘circuit breaker’ lockdown More than 323,000 workers in the city state are currently confined to cramped dormitories and other places of residence with up to 20 people per room ...... An online survey conducted this month found the majority of migrant worker respondents were expressing feelings of sadness and depression .........

More than 323,000 migrant workers in the city state are currently confined to 43 mega-dormitories and 1,200 other similar places of residence where they are largely restricted to cramped rooms which house up to 20 people...... Nearly 80 per cent of the country’s 11,178 infections come from within the migrant worker community, following a series of outbreaks inside their dormitories that began in late March.

......... the stress the workers may be facing – amid worries about being the next to be infected and anxiety about a loss of wages – could have a long-term impact on their mental health. .........

“These mental health challenges arise amidst the fear of Covid-19 challenges, the absence of places for the workers to go to raise their concerns, and the fear of facing consequences if they raise their concerns”

.............. deeply concerning, with conditions for social distancing still not in place in the dormitories. ........ Chinese nationals – who make up one of the largest groups of Singapore’s low-wage migrant workers alongside Bangladeshis and Tamils from India – were not surveyed.


Coronavirus: why Singapore fears a ‘hidden reservoir’ of Covid-19 cases Coronavirus cases in the city state have ballooned past 10,000 from just 1,000 at the beginning of this month ...... While four in five have been traced to migrant worker dormitories, there are also concerns about cases where the infection’s origin remains unknown ....... The number of coronavirus infections in Singapore rose to 10,141 on Wednesday, a remarkable increase given the city state had only 1,000 cases on the first day of the month. ..... Almost 80 per cent of these infections are linked to migrant workers living in 43 mega-dormitories across the country. .......... about 68 per cent of community cases are considered “unlinked”, fuelling suspicions there is a “larger hidden reservoir” of cases within the rest of society. ......... The circuit breaker measures that have banned social gatherings and reduced public transport usage and traffic volume by 70 per cent have helped to reduce community transmission.



How did migrant worker dormitories become Singapore’s biggest coronavirus cluster? Cases in the island nation have more than quadrupled in the past two weeks, propelled by a surge in infections among migrant workers ....... The government has upped its efforts amid criticism, with former diplomat Bilahari Kausikan saying ‘we did drop the ball on foreign workers’ .......... There are 323,000 low-wage migrant workers in the country, who

take on jobs shunned by Singaporeans in industries such as construction, estate maintenance and manufacturing.

Their accommodation includes 43 mega-dormitories with more than 1,000 workers each, some 1,200 factory-converted dormitories which typically house 50 to 100 workers each, and temporary living quarters with around 40 workers on various construction sites. ........ Manpower minister Josephine Teo attributed this rapid spread to workers socialising across dormitories on their days off, then again with different groups of friends within their dormitories. “They might, you know, cook together, eat together. Relax together” ........ “We did drop the ball on foreign workers,” wrote former Singapore diplomat Bilahari Kausikan, an active commentator on social media. ......... the poor living conditions faced by these men. They sleep on bunk beds, 12 to 20 people packed into a room ventilated by small fans attached to the ceiling or walls. Hundreds of men on each floor share communal toilets and showering facilities. ........ workers are transported squeezed into the back of a truck, and not showing up for work leads to a fine – so many of them work despite being ill. ........

worker dormitories, where conditions are nearly ideal for transmission of infection

........ The 43 mega-dormitories that house 200,000 workers are operated by the likes of offshore and marine company Keppel and real estate firm Cushman & Wakefield, as well as listed companies such as Centurion, which also operates student hostels and workers’ accommodation in Malaysia and Australia. ..........

They charge construction companies who hire the workers S$300 to S$400 (US$210-US$280) per worker for lodging each month, while workers pay around S$130 a month for three catered meals a day.



Coronavirus: Indian superstar Rajinikanth offers supportive words to Singapore’s quarantined workers ‘This too shall pass,’ the 69-year-old star said in a Tamil New Year message to the workers who are under lockdown in the city state ...... More than 40 per cent of Singapore’s total of 3,252 infections are work permit holders, many of whom live in the country’s 43 mega-dorms



Coronavirus: after Little India riot, Singapore promised migrant workers decent housing. What happened? Some 13,000 migrant workers in dorms – mostly from India, Bangladesh and China – have tested positive for Covid-19 since the start of April ....... Their living conditions have now become a matter of national debate amid criticism they were in the government’s blind spot ......... Before leaving his hometown of Dhaka 17 years ago in search of better wages in Singapore’s construction industry, Zakir Hossain Khokan was a freelance journalist in Bangladesh. ...... It cost S$10,000 (US$7,094) to pay the recruiters, but his family was able to raise the funds by selling land and taking out loans and the 41-year-old is now a quality assurance officer, living in one of the city state’s many crowded mega-dormitories......... Since the start of April, some 13,000 migrant workers living in dorms –

mostly labourers from India, Bangladesh and China

– have tested positive for the Covid-19 illness caused by the virus, constituting some 85 per cent of Singapore’s total infections. ........

Singapore had its first infection as early as January 23 and the first migrant worker caught the disease on February 8.

........ About one-third of the island nation’s 1 million-strong low-wage foreign workforce are packed into its 43 mega-dormitories and 1,200 factory-converted dormitories, as well as an undocumented number of temporary living quarters on construction sites. ........

low-wage workers appeared to be in Singapore’s blind spot in its handling of the pandemic, which had won plaudits early on.

.......... Koh said the way Singapore treated its foreign workers was “not First World but Third World”. ........ a riot in Little India in 2013. A road accident in December that year killed an Indian construction worker, angering other foreign workers who formed a 300-strong mob that set fire to police and emergency vehicles. Some 50 police officers were injured and the government had to mobilise its elite Gurkha contingent. ........ a committee of inquiry to investigate the riot. Residents testified that migrant workers, who visited Little India to buy groceries and remit money, would often congregate under apartment buildings to drink and eat. Some residents said they were unhappy that the workers littered, vomited and urinated there. ........ Another reason for the rapid spread was that most migrant workers continued to do their jobs even after some businesses in Singapore had begun to implement work-from-home arrangements and other mitigation efforts ......... In response to the surging rates of infection among migrant workers, Singapore gazetted 25 of its 43 dormitories as isolation zones, with workers staying in their rooms and meals sent to them. All construction has been halted and workers outside dorms have been put on stay-home notice. The government is also testing close to 3,000 workers a day and quickly isolating sick ones. In dorms with widespread infections, workers showing symptoms are isolated and monitored, and only tested later. ........ defended the dormitories, saying that they were “designed in normal times and deemed to be entirely appropriate”. “Two months ago, no one had heard of safe distancing, and no one envisaged anything like Covid-19” ........ “Their fear of speaking out and having visas revoked and lack of direct communication channels to the state are both structural problems that need to be addressed,” she said, suggesting that “a dorm management committee of sorts for each dormitory or a union of migrants to better represent migrant interests directly to the relevant ministries could be formed”. ............

While some workers might flee Singapore in the wake of the pandemic, advocates said more would come because of the enduring poverty in their homelands.

....... “Are migrant workers simply recipients of pity and charity? Or is it time for a rights-based approach that fully respects our shared humanity and concretely, legally and practically, empowers the workers? To change government policy, we need to change the mentality of society” ........ April 2020: Infections spiked throughout the month as the disease tore through dormitories, with more than 1,000 new cases on some days. By April 30, Singapore had more than 16,000 cases – nine in 10 of which were migrant workers. All construction was halted and workers who were not locked down were placed on stay-home notices






Taiwan rewards health minister Chen Shih-chung’s coronavirus success story

The Taiwanese pandemic response has been one of the best in the world and the public is giving credit to one man

...... Professionals and public praise calm, informative style and occasional displays of humour ........

Taiwan’s health minister Chen Shih-chung

............ “If you go clockwise, you will win, if you go anticlockwise, you will lose.” ....... With more than 3 million Covid-19 infections worldwide, Taiwan – which has reported just 429 cases and six deaths since January 21 – is one of the few places in the world to have kept the pandemic at bay. As of Friday, there had been no new cases in Taiwan for six consecutive days and no local transmission for 19 days in a row. ......... Chen’s swift response, timely orders and frank communications ..... the minister, who often tells reporters at the daily briefing: “Have a heart! We all should keep empathy in dealing with certain matters.” .........

praised Chen for being a good communicator with high emotional intelligence.

......... has worked hard to keep Taiwan’s pandemic response in the hands of health professionals. He has often stressed that

“political rhetoric would only spoil professionalism and confrontation serves only to split society”

. .......... In a March 26 opinion poll by Taiwan’s cable news network TVBS, Chen – who has become the most searched person on Google in the past few months in Taiwan – was given an approval rating of 91 per cent, highest by far of all Taiwan’s politicians, including Tsai. ......... “He is a workaholic, often giving his time to work and meetings,” she said, adding that when she asked her four-year-old son what gifts should be given for his dad’s birthday, he said: “Work meetings.”


Bank of China’s US$1 billion hole from plunging oil shows how investors and banks alike are ill-prepared for risks of chasing after high returns Bank of China’s Crude Oil Treasure product would ultimately burn holes in the pockets of the lender’s retail customers, estimated to total 7 billion yuan ..... At least 60,000 people have invested in the product, according to Chinese media ........

anyone holding the contracts after their expiry on April 22 could be forced to take delivery of the crude oil in Cushing, Oklahoma.

......... “This is utterly disheartening and beyond any normal person's comprehension,” Wang said .......... That would make China’s oldest bank the biggest known victim of April’s melee in the global oil market, surpassing the collapse of Singapore’s Hin Leong oil-trading empire.......... Two decades since becoming a World Trade Organisation member, Chinese households – with

US$10 trillion in total savings

– are still limited by a dearth of investible options, forcing many adventurous investors to pursue high-yielding speculations often without proper appreciation of the associated risks. Over the years, these have veered from real estate to fine art and Bordeaux wine, to speculations in such exotic products as Pu’er tea and even the hoarding of garlic. .......... “All hope is gone,” Wang said. “I hadn't been able to sleep and I have no appetite to eat since this happened.”




Coronavirus more likely to kill men and the obese, study says British researchers link being male or obese to lower Covid-19 survival rates in largest study conducted outside China .......

Obese people could be at greater risk because they have reduced lung function and their immune systems may overreact

......... China,” where 6.6 per cent of adults were obese in 2016, compared with 29 per cent in England in 2017. ........ obese people are dying more than other groups because they have reduced lung function and possibly more inflammation in adipose tissue, the fatty tissue found under the skin and around internal organs. ....... This might then contribute to an enhanced “cytokine storm”, a potentially life-threatening overreaction by the body’s immune system.


Trump weighs banning US$50 billion of US federal savings from holding MSCI emerging market stocks, including Chinese equities The US Thrift Savings Plan is scheduled to transfer US$50 billion of its international fund to mirror an MSCI All Country Wolrd Index, which captures equities in emerging markets including China ...... Opponents of the transfer, including Republican Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, in recent weeks have engaged in a last-minute effort to stop it

It’s unfair to blame China for coronavirus pandemic, Lancet editor tells state media Richard Horton tells state broadcaster CCTV the rest of the world should try to work with China rather than pointing the finger ...... British medical journal’s editor-in-chief says ‘China is not responsible’ for the Covid-19 outbreak first identified in Wuhan .......... the international community should instead work with the Chinese authorities in dealing with the outbreak. ..........

“China didn’t want this epidemic”

....... “China isn’t responsible for this pandemic. It’s happened.” ....... The editor of the British-based medical journal offered a strong defence of China during the CCTV interview, saying that while it is important to understand the origin of the virus, it was “not helpful” and “not scientific” to seek for a patient zero and such efforts could be “highly stigmatising and discriminatory”. ........... “It’s very important to understand the origin of this virus and to study those origins scientifically and not to allow such conspiracy theories to contaminate our thinking,” he said, adding that

these would only “risk destabilising our response to this virus”

. ....... “What is very disappointing is seeing the politicians who are giving credibility to conspiracy theories … and damaging the potential and prospect of global collaboration by being so openly critical of other countries such as China and organisations such as the World Health Organisation. I don’t think that’s a helpful response,” Horton said, adding that

countries should work “intensively together” to address the challenge of the pandemic

. ....... Horton has been vocal in criticising Western governments’ slow response to the pandemic, and in the interview said that many leaders had ignored repeated warnings in a series of papers published in The Lancet about the danger and risk posed by the virus........ “Most Western countries and the United States of America wasted the whole of February and early March before they acted” ........ Last month Horton also criticised Donald Trump’s decision to halt funding to the World Health Organisation, calling it “a crime against humanity” on Twitter.






Pros And Cons Of Reopening America Before Coronavirus Pandemic Ends Definitely better option from virus’s perspective. ..... Already burned business down for insurance money.

Coronavirus News (71)

Dr. Runa Jha, Chief Pathologist and Director at government laboratory, featured by UN Women as one of five women on the...

Posted by Kanak Mani Dixit on Friday, May 1, 2020
Posted by Ashutosh Tiwari on Saturday, May 2, 2020

अमेरिकी कंपनियों ने यूएस डिपार्टमेंट ऑफ स्टेट्स के साथ हुई सीक्रेट बैठक में चीन से अपना व्यापार समेटकर भारत ले जाने का...

Posted by Pranesh Jha on Friday, May 1, 2020

I am pretty sure that the Founding Fathers would change the Constitution after this clusterf$&@

Posted by Alex Romanovich on Thursday, April 30, 2020

बिहार में 28 लाख मजदूरों ने घर वापसी के लिए आवेदन दिया है. ये महाराष्ट्र और दक्षिण भारत के राज्यों से फंसे हैं,...

Posted by Pranesh Jha on Friday, May 1, 2020


Nobel Laureate Tasuku Honjo refutes claims of novel coronavirus being man-made False quote goes viral on social media Nobel Laureate and Distinguished Professor Tasuku Honjo of the Kyoto University Institute of Advanced Study on Monday released an official statement through the university refuting claims to have alleged that the coronavirus was man made. ........ A false quote citing Honjo has been making rounds on social media platforms such as WhatsApp. The forward states that Honjo had previously worked with a laboratory in China and that he had said that the virus was not natural. ....... “In the wake of the pain, economic loss, and unprecedented global suffering caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, I am greatly saddened that my name and that of Kyoto University have been used to spread false accusations and misinformation,” Hojo said in the official statement. ......... The text message that has gone viral on WhatsApp claiming that Japan’s Nobel Prize-winning immunologist Tasuku Honjo had said that coronavirus is “manufactured by China” and ends with a link to Honjo’s Wikipedia page. .......

the broadcasting of unsubstantiated claims regarding the origins of the disease is dangerously distracting

....... Earlier this month, WhatsApp limited the number of forwards that a user can send in order to stop users from spreading misinformation The platform has also launched a Covid-19 information hub in association with the World Health Organization.


Trudeau announces ban on 1,500 types of 'assault-style' firearms — effective immediately

Posted by Madheshi Association in America - MAA on Saturday, April 25, 2020
Posted by Madheshi Association in America - MAA on Saturday, May 2, 2020


Merkel Makes Sense

Germany's Merkel wants green recovery from coronavirus crisis Governments should focus on climate protection when considering fiscal stimulus packages to support an economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said ......... Merkel wants to combine the task of helping companies recover from the pandemic with the challenge of setting more incentives for reducing carbon emissions. ....... Speaking at a virtual climate summit known as the Petersberg Climate Dialogue, Merkel said she expected difficult discussions about how to design post-crisis stimulus measures and about which business sectors need more help than others. ......... “It will be all the more important that if we set up economic stimulus programmes, we must always keep a close eye on climate protection,” Merkel said ........ supporting modern technologies and renewable energies. ......... U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres told the conference there could be an opportunity for the world in the “dark times” of the coronavirus crisis. ........ “The restart can lead to a healthier and more resilient world for everyone,” he said. ...... Merkel said governments should pull in private-sector money through international financial markets to finance the costly shift towards a more climate-friendly economy........ Merkel also welcomed the more ambitious goal set by the European Commission, the European Union’s executive, of cutting greenhouse gas emissions by up to 55% by 2030 compared to 1990 levels. .......... The EU agreed last week to build a trillion-euro recovery fund to revive economies ravaged by the pandemic and has already signed off on state aid worth 1.8 trillion euros ($1.95 trillion).

Friday, May 01, 2020

Coronavirus News (70)



What you need to know about the COVID-19 vaccine Humankind has never had a more urgent task than creating broad immunity for coronavirus. .......... One of the questions I get asked the most these days is when the world will be able to go back to the way things were in December before the coronavirus pandemic. My answer is always the same: when we have an almost perfect drug to treat COVID-19, or when almost every person on the planet has been vaccinated against coronavirus. ........

Humankind has never had a more urgent task than creating broad immunity for coronavirus. Realistically, if we’re going to return to normal, we need to develop a safe, effective vaccine. We need to make billions of doses, we need to get them out to every part of the world, and we need all of this to happen as quickly as possible.

.......... Our foundation is the biggest funder of vaccines in the world, and this effort dwarfs anything we’ve ever worked on before.

It’s going to require a global cooperative effort like the world has never seen. But I know it’ll get done. There’s simply no alternative.

.................. Although eighteen months might sound like a long time, this would be the fastest scientists have created a new vaccine.

Development usually takes around five years.

Once you pick a disease to target, you have to create the vaccine and test it on animals. Then you begin testing for safety and efficacy in humans. ............... this year’s flu vaccine is around 45 percent effective. ......... After the vaccine passes all three trial phases, you start building the factories to manufacture it, and it gets submitted to the WHO and various government agencies for approval. ............... Every day we can cut from this process will make a huge difference to the world in terms of saving lives and reducing trillions of dollars in economic damage. ........... As of April 9, there are 115 different COVID-19 vaccine candidates in the development pipeline. I think that eight to ten of those look particularly promising. ........... two new approaches that some of the candidates are taking: RNA and DNA vaccines. ............ The first candidate to start human trials was an RNA vaccine created by a company called Moderna. ......... Here’s how an RNA vaccine works: rather than injecting a pathogen’s antigen into your body, you instead give the body the genetic code needed to produce that antigen itself. When the antigens appear on the outside of your cells, your immune system attacks them—and learns how to defeat future intruders in the process. You essentially turn your body into its own vaccine manufacturing unit. ............. Since COVID would be the first RNA vaccine out of the gate, we have to prove both that the platform itself works and that it creates immunity. It’s a bit like building your computer system and your first piece of software at the same time. ............ We don’t know yet what the COVID-19 vaccine will look like. Until we do, we have to go full steam ahead on as many approaches as possible. ............ The smallpox vaccine is the only vaccine that’s wiped an entire disease off the face of the earth, but it’s also pretty brutal to receive. It left a scar on the arm of anyone who got it. One out of every three people had side effects bad enough to keep them home from school or work. A small—but not insignificant—number developed more serious reactions. ........... The smallpox vaccine was far from perfect, but it got the job done. The COVID-19 vaccine might be similar...............

I suspect a vaccine that is at least 70 percent effective will be enough to stop the outbreak. A 60 percent effective vaccine is useable, but we might still see some localized outbreaks. Anything under 60 percent is unlikely to create enough herd immunity to stop the virus.

.......... The older you are, the less effective vaccines are. Your immune system—like the rest of your body—ages and is slower to recognize and attack invaders. That’s a big issue for a COVID-19 vaccine, since older people are the most vulnerable. ........ we might end up with one that only stops you from getting sick for a couple months (like the seasonal flu vaccine, which protects you for about six months). ................

We need to manufacture and distribute at least 7 billion doses of the vaccine.

.......... In order to stop the pandemic, we need to make the vaccine available to almost every person on the planet. We’ve never delivered something to every corner of the world before. ............... Each vaccine type requires a different kind of factory. We need to be ready with facilities that can make each type, so that we can start manufacturing the final vaccine (or vaccines) as soon as we can. This will cost billions of dollars. Governments need to quickly find a mechanism for making the funding for this available. Our foundation is currently working with CEPI, the WHO, and governments to figure out the financing. ....... Most people agree that health workers should get the vaccine first. But who gets it next? Older people? Teachers? Workers in essential jobs? ........... I think that low-income countries should be some of the first to receive it, because people will be at a much higher risk of dying in those places. COVID-19 will spread much quicker in poor countries because measures like physical distancing are harder to enact. More people have poor underlying health that makes them more vulnerable to complications, and weak health systems will make it harder for them to receive the care they need. Getting the vaccine out in low-income countries could save millions of lives. The good news is we already have an organization with expertise about how to do this in Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. ......................... we’re going to scale this thing up so that the vaccine is available to everyone. And then, we’ll be able to get back to normal—and to hopefully make decisions that prevent us from being in this situation ever again. ........




The World’s Biggest Social Virtual Reality Gathering Is Happening Right Now VRChat also works on the desktop without a VR device. ...... V-Ket displays some of the most complex and intricate virtual world architecture you will find anywhere in social VR. ......... V-Ket 4 kicked off at 7pm San Francisco time the evening of Tuesday April 28 (11am Wednesday in Tokyo), and will run for ten days. ........ given the ongoing pandemic where we’re spending even the most mundane parts of our day online, the idea that we’ll someday socialize, shop, play, and even work inside some form of digital environment is becoming a far more recognizable development of our modern era. ......... social VR doesn’t yet feel like the rich experience of virtual life depicted in science fiction like Snow Crash and Ready Player One ..... When I visited China and Japan a few years ago, it was already clear that consumer adoption of virtual reality was far beyond what we currently see in the West. https://www.v-market.work/v4/



Ramayan is world’s most watched show now, breaks all records with 7.7 crore viewership Since March 28, Doordarshan telecast Ramanand Sagar’s Ramayan on public demand. It has now become the most-watched show with 7.7 crore viewers......... Ramayan is being telecast again since March 28 on public demand. In fact, when it was telecast for the first time, the serial had broken all records of popularity, and the show has repeated its history again.......... Ramanand Sagar had made a total of 78 episodes of this serial based on Valmiki’s Ramayana and Tulsidas’ Ramcharitmanas........ For the first time in the country, the serial was originally broadcast from January 25, 1987 to July 31, 1988. Then, every Sunday, at 9.30 a.m. the show was aired on TV. ....... From 1987 to 1988, Ramayan became the most watched serial in the world. ...... Interestingly, when the serial started airing in the country for the first time, people used to remain glued to the TV sets. Since there were less TVs at homes then, most of the people used to gather at some neighbour’s place to watch Ramayan.
Video: Ramayana
Pandemic Prophecy In The Ramayana?



Welcome to Your Sensory Revolution, Thanks to the Pandemic The very idea that there are only five distinct senses took ages to mature, gaining credence in the Enlightenment. This period not only discounted erstwhile senses—such as the sense of “intuition”—but arranged the five senses into a distinctive hierarchy. ........ The Age of Reason empowered the eye as the sense of truth; seeing was believing, said most thinkers in the 1700s. Sight was followed by hearing, understood as more refined than the so-called lower or proximate senses. Those are smell, taste, and touch, senses that had once been held in high esteem in the ancient and medieval worlds, but which lost their currency and became more associated with the animal senses......... These changes took time. Seeing was believing by about 1800, but it had taken centuries for the original iteration of the phrase, “seeing is believing, but feeling’s the truth,” to lose its tactile component............

Once-trusty eyes betray us in the face of an invisible enemy. Seeing is no longer believing. Those who appear perfectly healthy may be unknowing disease transmitters.

........... Desolate city streets are new sights; the absence of airplane contrails strikes many as almost primordial; masks render once-familiar faces unrecognizable. ........ Many urban dwellers hear less traffic and formerly smothered sounds, such as birdsong, now can be heard. ........ Human voices are louder because there are no whispers at six feet. ........ Clammy hamburgers on soggy buns served with limp french fries, anyone? Grocery stores now ration once taken-for-granted staples, notably eggs, milk, and meat. ........ Touch is the obvious sensory casualty in all of this. Centuries of handshaking habits have evaporated; high fives are gone. Outside of families, hugs, kisses, and nuzzles have all been lost with the fear of infection......

In sensory terms, there has been nothing like this....... Even the violence done to the senses by wars, hurricanes, tornadoes, and earthquakes is modest in scale and scope compared to this sensory revolution.

......... Thanks to virtual communication, “See ya” and “I hear ya” should remain stable, but “staying in touch” and “getting a grip” could go the way of the sensory dinosaur. .......... But if normalcy eludes us? ...... A whole new world of sensory engagement will emerge, and it could be terrifying. Our soundscape could be civil strife, punctuated with the smell of tear gas and the resounding sting of rubber bullets on flesh. ........ There is no sensory past that can guide us here. It is a genuine revolution of the senses. And it stinks.

What four coronaviruses from history can tell us about covid-19 Four coronaviruses cause around a quarter of all common colds, but each was probably deadly when it first made the leap to humans. We can learn a lot from what happened next ............. 1889, a disease outbreak in central Asia went global, igniting a pandemic that burned into the following year. It caused fever and fatigue, and killed an estimated 1 million people. The disease is generally blamed on influenza, and was dubbed “Russian flu“. ........... Another possibility is that this “flu” was actually a coronavirus pandemic. The finger has been pointed at a virus first isolated in the 1960s, though today it causes nothing more serious than a common cold. In fact, there are four coronaviruses responsible for an estimated 20 to 30 per cent of colds. ......... all four of these viruses began to infect humans in the past few centuries and, when they did, they probably sparked pandemics.

Is the universe conscious? It seems impossible until you do the maths The question of how the brain gives rise to subjective experience is the hardest of all. Mathematicians think they can help, but their first attempts have thrown up some eye-popping conclusions ...... the “unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics”. Physicist Eugene Wigner coined the phrase in the 1960s to encapsulate the curious fact that merely by manipulating numbers we can describe and predict all manner of natural phenomena with astonishing clarity, from the movements of planets and the strange behaviour of fundamental particles to the consequences of a collision between two black holes billions of light years away.......... if we are to achieve a precise description of consciousness, we may have to ditch our intuitions and accept that all kinds of inanimate matter could be conscious – maybe even the universe as a whole.



Scientists know ways to help stop viruses from spreading on airplanes. They’re too late for this pandemic. how easily viruses spread from person to person on airplanes, the novel coronavirus has decimated global aviation. ........... It is a problem of biology, physics and pure proximity, with airflow, dirty surfaces and close contact with other travelers all at play. ........... passengers can still breathe in tiny floating droplets from a coughing passenger seated nearby — before the air carrying those droplets can be vented out of the cabin and filtered. .......

covid-19 is largely spread from one person to another through droplets, such as when people cough or sneeze. ...... Such relatively large droplets, brimming with viruses, generally travel only a limited distance before being pulled down by gravity, sort of like ping-pong balls falling back to the table after being whacked. ........ That is why social distancing guidelines have emphasized the six-foot distance and call for incessant hand-washing, to avoid picking up fallen droplets and bringing them to your face. ....... coronavirus has become airborne in some hospital settings, including during intubation to help breathing. ........ coronavirus can spread by air through “normal breathing,” not just via droplets from coughing ........ was detected in the air beyond six feet from sick people. ..........

...... The company said it tested its “Fresh Lav,” which uses automated ultraviolet lights to kill 99.9 percent of germs in lavatories “after every passenger use” ....... “You’re sitting there and the guy right behind you sneezes. . . . All the filters in the world aren’t going to help you,” Brenner said. “I think the lamp would potentially deal with that.” ............ What takes longer is conclusively proving the long-term safety for people exposed to the light, a type of radiation known technically as far-UVC light. Traditional ultraviolet lights are used to clean water supplies and sanitize operating rooms, but only when no people are under them, because they can cause cancer and eye damage.





China’s coronavirus blues clouds hopes for Labour Day holiday spending spree The government has extended the annual break to give an extra shot in the arm for the economy after months of lockdown ....... But with still more uncertainty ahead, the country’s consumers might not be in the mood to splurge, observers say

The coronavirus won’t kill globalisation, but might just change global business for the better Look out for changes to industrial policies as governments realise the need to prioritise sectors such as medical supplies, to meet domestic needs in time of crisis ...... While companies will push to diversify supply chains and pay more attention to ESG factors, their preference for globalisation – and the profits it brings – won’t change



"These are good people..."

Posted by Alex Romanovich on Friday, May 1, 2020

पूर्व ब्रिटिश आर्मी क्याप्टेन गंजविर राईका नाति, मेजर सुर्जमान राई र फूलमाया राईको छोरा पूर्व इण्डियन आर्मीका मेजर ...

Posted by Tek Gurung on Friday, May 1, 2020

Video Blogging The Pandemic

English

Posted by Paramendra Kumar Bhagat on Friday, May 1, 2020
Posted by Paramendra Kumar Bhagat on Sunday, April 26, 2020








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Coronavirus News (69)
We Will All Be Wearing Hijab Now
The Medicine Men Of Yesterday
What Could Work In India
Defunding WHO: A Crime Against Humanity
The Virus Asks For Out Of The Box Thinking


Coronavirus News (69)



Amazon, Whole Foods, Instacart Workers Organize a Historic Mass Strike On May 1st, frontline workers at some of the biggest corporations in the country will lead a mass strike action, asking customers to boycott Amazon, Instacart, Whole Foods, and Target.
Government orders 100,000 new body bags as Trump minimizes death toll Federal coronavirus response documents obtained by NBC News suggest that the president's optimism about "Opening Up America" is at odds with dire warnings from inside his administration.
ILO: As job losses escalate, nearly half of global workforce at risk of losing livelihoods The latest ILO data on the labour market impact of the COVID-19 pandemic reveals the devastating effect on workers in the informal economy and on hundreds of millions of enterprises worldwide.
Coronavirus will bankrupt more people than it kills — and that's the real global emergency
Raghuram Rajan is the 21st-century Manmohan Singh that Congress needs The way Manmohan Singh pushed economic reforms in 1991, Raghuram Rajan is the crisis manager Indian economy needs today.
प्रचण्डलाई भेटेलगत्तै माधव नेपाललाई भेटिन् चिनियाँ राजदूत यान्छीले

Expert report predicts up to two more years of pandemic misery

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 ........ "The idea that this is going to be done soon defies microbiology." ....... Osterholm has been writing about the risk of pandemics for 20 years and has advised several presidents. He wrote the report along with Harvard School of Public Health epidemiologist Marc Lipsitch, who is also a top expert on pandemics; Dr. Kristine Moore, a former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention epidemiologist who is now medical director for CIDRAP; and historian John Barry, who wrote the 2004 book "The Great Influenza" about the 1918 flu pandemic. ......... "The length of the pandemic will likely be 18 to 24 months, as herd immunity gradually develops in the human population" .........

pandemic infections don't tend to die down in the summer, like seasonal flu does

........ "Because of a longer incubation period, more asymptomatic spread, and a higher R0, COVID-19 appears to spread more easily than flu" ..........

government officials should stop telling people the pandemic could be ending and instead prepare citizens for a long haul.

......... Scenario 1: The first wave of Covid-19 in spring 2020 is followed by a series of repetitive smaller waves that occur through the summer and then consistently over a one- to two-year period, gradually diminishing sometime in 2021 ........... Scenario 2: The first wave of Covid-19 is followed by a larger wave in the fall or winter and one or more smaller waves in 2021. "This pattern will require the reinstitution of mitigation measures in the fall in an attempt to drive down spread of infection and prevent healthcare systems from being overwhelmed," they wrote. "This pattern is similar to what was seen with the 1918-19 pandemic." ............... Scenario 3: A "slow burn" of ongoing transmission. "This third scenario likely would not require the reinstitution of mitigation measures, although cases and deaths will continue to occur." ...........

States and territories should plan for scenario 2, the worst-case scenario

......... they are surprised by the decisions many states are making to lift restrictions aimed at controlling the spread of the virus. .........

some states are choosing to lift restrictions when they have more new infections than they had when they decided to impose the restrictions. "It is hard to even understand the rationale"

.......... A vaccine could help, the report said, but not quickly. "The course of the pandemic also could be influenced by a vaccine; however, a vaccine will likely not be available until at least sometime in 2021"


U.S. drops to 45 in ranking of countries based on freedom of the press The report calls out Trump as a ‘media-bashing enthusiast’ ........
Experts predict ‘significant COVID-19 activity’ in US for up to 2 years
Abu Dhabi receives world's lowest tariff for mega solar farm project Abu Dhabi Power in talks with EDF, Jinko to install the solar farm that will be larger than 4,200 soccer pitches ........ that would supply power at what could be record-low prices. ....... the 2-gigawatt solar project, one of the world’s largest. ...... The UAE, like Saudi Arabia and other oil producers in the Gulf, is pushing harder into renewables to diversify its energy supply and reduce its reliance on crude. .........

a price of 1.35 cents per kilowatt-hou

....... The project will more than double Abu Dhabi’s solar generating capacity to 3.2 gigawatts.




Study: Masks Fail to Filter Virus in Coughing COVID-19 Patients — About that mask recommendation... A small study from South Korea cast doubt on the ability of surgical or cotton face masks to effectively prevent dissemination of COVID-19 coronavirus from the coughs of infected patients. ........ Median viral loads did not differ significantly when comparing coughing samples of COVID-19 patients without a mask, with a surgical mask, and with a cloth mask, suggesting these masks were ineffective at filtering SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19 .......... Citing concern about asymptomatic and pre-symptomatic spread of COVID-19, the CDC recommended late Friday night that all Americans should wear cloth masks in public. ........... swabs from the outside of the mask were positive for SARS-CoV-2, while most swabs from the inside of the mask were negative ......... particles 0.04 to 0.2 μm "can penetrate surgical masks." For the coronavirus responsible for SARS, particles were estimated to be within that range at 0.08 to 0.14 μm .......... The finding reinforces the importance of hand hygiene after touching the outside of masks ....... the study didn't examine actual transmission of COVID-19 illness nor whether the masks "shorten the travel distance of droplets during coughing." ....... Whether face masks decrease transmission from asymptomatic individuals with COVID-19 or those who are not coughing needs further study



Trump supports Michigan protesters, says Gov. Whitmer should 'give a little'
नयाँ पार्टीलाई पुरानै चुनौती मधेसमा राजनीति गर्नु भनेकै आन्दोलन गर्नु, निर्वाचन जित्नु र सत्तामा जानुजस्तो बुझिन्छ । मधेसी राजनीतिमा सामाजिक रूपान्तरण आन्दोलनको एजेन्डा बन्नु त परै जाओस्, बहसको विषयसम्म बन्न सकेको छैन, जुन नयाँ पार्टीलाई एउटा चुनौती हो ।
स्वार्थै-स्वार्थको गठजोड, को-कति पानीमा ? दुई वर्षअघि पार्टी एकता गर्दा जेट विमान हाँकेको दाबी गर्ने नेताहरु गन्तव्यमा नपुग्दै ‘फोर्स ल्यान्डिङ’ गर्नुपर्ने वा दुर्घटनामा पर्ने अवस्थामा आइपुगेका छन् । उनीहरु सवार डुंगा पद, सत्ता, शक्ति र स्वार्थले प्वाल पारिरहेको छ ।
Tesla's Elon Musk Rants Again, Calls Lockdowns Forcible Imprisonment And 'Fascist'
Multiple armed men storm Michigan statehouse; unfazed Gov. Whitmer extends emergency through May 28



Trump administration draws up plans to punish China over coronavirus outbreak The Trump administration is formulating a long-term plan to punish China on multiple fronts for the coronavirus pandemic, injecting a rancorous new element into a critical relationship already on a steep downward slide. ........ The effort matches but goes far beyond

an election campaign strategy of blaming Beijing to distract from President Donald Trump's errors in predicting and handling the crisis, which has now killed more than 60,000 Americans.

......... various tools, including sanctions, canceling US debt obligations and drawing up new trade policies, to make clear to China, and to everyone else, where they feel the responsibility lies. ........ senior officials pushing to find out whether the virus escaped into the public from a laboratory in Wuhan, China ........ he told reporters at the White House that China does not want to see him get reelected because the US is "getting billions" from the country thanks to their trade deal. ........

Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the weight of evidence suggests the virus was of natural origin.

........ fury that the virus destroyed an economy seen as Trump's passport to a second term. ......... an already fragmented geopolitical environment already shaken by their rivalry that has been thoroughly fragmented by the pandemic. ........ In response to building pressure, China has launched a propaganda effort to distract from its own culpability, including blaming US soldiers for importing the pathogen .......... In the extreme circumstances of the pandemic, China has the capacity to hit back at the United States making it "irresponsible" to drive too hard too early .......... With the US afflicted by shortages of personal protective equipment, medical devices, biologic drugs and Chinese-made pharmaceuticals, it is vulnerable to short-term disruption in established supply chains amid a pandemic that has infected more than a million Americans. ......... new Chinese export controls that have prevented US medical supplies from getting to the US. In private, US officials are irate, but in public Pompeo used delicate language. ......... Trump says that the process of ushering Beijing into the world economy in an effort to avoid a clash between the dominant power, the US, and China, the rising one — known as the Thucydides Trap — has been a disaster. ........... "This is the natural way to go. It's the only way to go. It is pretty much the main campaign theme" ........

Both Trump and Xi are the most aggressive, nationalistic leaders of their two nations in decades

......... "They have only one objective: to try to shirk responsibility for their own epidemic and prevention and control measures and divert public attention" ......

The heated rhetoric over the virus threatens to unleash a chain reaction of mistrust and tension that worsens tensions between the US and China exacerbated by Trump's trade war, territorial flashpoints including in the South China Sea and the global US campaign against the Huawei communications giant.

......... "But I think you would be hard pressed to find a political leader in Asia or Europe who does not believe

this anti-China push by the Trump administration is an entirely a political move. They are trying to deflect blame for the catastrophic incompetence of the administration."







Thursday, April 30, 2020

Coronavirus News (68)

U.S. Coronavirus Death Toll Is Far Higher Than Reported, C.D.C. Data Suggests Total deaths in seven states that have been hard hit by the coronavirus pandemic are nearly 50 percent higher than normal for the five weeks from March 8 through April 11 ....... probably killing more people than the reported statistics capture. ....... In New York City, the home of the biggest outbreak, the number of deaths over this period is more than three times the normal number. (Recent data suggests it could have reached six times higher than normal.) ........ hospital admissions for a major type of heart attack fell by 38 percent in nine major U.S. hospitals in March. ......... Coronavirus is clearly killing more U.S. residents directly than any hurricane has, but it is also changing lives in ways that may also contribute indirectly to increased deaths — by overloading the health care system and discouraging people from seeking care. ........



What if immunity to covid-19 doesn’t last? Researchers say people can catch mild, cold-causing coronaviruses twice in the same year.
Here's who's still waiting for stimulus money
Georgia reports more than 25,600 coronavirus cases, 1,095 deaths. Here’s a breakdown by county
More than 80 percent of hospitalized covid-19 patients in Georgia were African American, study finds
AstraZeneca teams up with Oxford University to develop coronavirus vaccine — first results from human trials expected in June or July
US weekly jobless claims hit 3.84 million, topping 30 million over the last 6 weeks
Up to 60 bodies found in four trucks outside Brooklyn funeral home
Donald Trump's not-so-secret plan for his life after leaving the White House "It seems much more likely -- maybe inevitable -- that once he leaves office, Trump will continue to tweet and call in to cable news shows. Perhaps he will even attend political rallies, which is the part of the job he seems to enjoy most..... "There is no reason to think -- none at all -- that he will discontinue his penchant for weighing in on American politics on an hourly basis. There is every reason to think that he will vigorously attack any Republican who was disloyal to him during his administration. Or retroactively criticizes his tenure. Or runs in opposition to one of his preferred candidates. Or jeopardizes any of his many and varied interests." .......... "OAN, based in San Diego, made its first splash in the opening weeks of the Trump campaign, when the channel became the first to carry Trump's campaign speeches live and in full -- a decision followed quickly by the owner's directive that other candidates' rallies not be given the same treatment, according to internal emails." ...... It's not much of a leap to imagine ex-President Trump becoming a co-owner in OANN after vacating the White House. And using his profile and legion of dedicated fans to boost its profile as a true Trumpian alternative to Fox News. Right? ..... One thing is for sure: Donald Trump isn't going to be gone from your TV screens anytime soon.

No Testing, No Treatment, No Herd Immunity, No Easy Way Out We need to start preparing for a darker reality. ............. The world economy entered free fall. And even for those who do not have a sick relative or a mortgage that can’t be paid, the isolation imposed by social distancing has begun to take a heavy psychological toll. ........ because some people who have COVID-19 don’t seem to show any symptoms, I wondered whether the disease might be far more widespread than the initial data suggested, raising the prospect of the United States’ reaching herd immunity without mass casualties. ............ About one in seven New Yorkers who were administered the test were found to have antibodies to the virus. .........

the true fatality rate could be a little less than 1 percent.

........... there’s no easy way out of social distancing. .........

Even if the virus has a fatality rate of a little less than 1 percent, this means that letting it spread through the population of the United States would cause about 2 million deaths.

........ so long as we can’t rule out that millions would die in the United States alone, plans to brave the virus by going back to normal remain in the realm of the stupid or the sociopathic. .............

patients who took hydroxychloroquine were actually more likely to die than those who did not.

........ the study concludes that remdesivir “was not associated with clinical or virological benefits.” .......... We won’t get to herd immunity in the near future. A miracle drug is not in sight. The only way to restart the economy, then, is to put a highly effective system in place to test millions of people, trace their movements, and quickly quarantine those who might have been infected. ..........

It now seems less likely than ever that the United States will do what is necessary to reopen the economy without causing a second wave of deadly infections.

........ America is also behind on test and trace. ...... But implementing such a system requires two things the United States sorely lacks: widespread trust in the government and a coordinated response from the White House. ........... Viruses don’t respect state lines. ........

the president has doubled down on culture wars and quack cures.

............... Early last week, Trump fanned the flames of the irresponsible protests against stay-at-home orders that are now being staged in cities across the country. A few days later, he vowed to “suspend immigration” to the United States. Then he suggested that scientists look into the possibility of injecting patients with bleach............

And for all the ingenuity shown by individual governors, the absence of a coordinated federal strategy may prove impossible to overcome.

...........

COVID-19 is too deadly to let it rip through the population. An effective cure is not in sight. And the federal government is incapable of formulating a coherent pandemic response.



Coronavirus News (67)

Coronavirus may lurk deep in lungs after patients recover, study suggests Postmortem of woman finds she had undetected traces in lungs after testing negative three times and being discharged from hospital ...... As WHO investigates why some recovered patients test positive again, the medical community works to assess any lasting effect on the body



Shift in mindset needed so US can work with China to tackle coronavirus pandemic and other global issues Instead of containment and conflict, the US and China need to engage constructively, accept intractable differences, and move towards co-leadership on global issues from climate and hunger to nuclear proliferation ...... most countries – including the United States – were simply unprepared, even as the viral threat became well known. ........ Imagine how the world would celebrate if the US and China were to announce a coordinated and continuing leadership through a fully funded and staffed World Health Organisation. The WHO could then disseminate its research on the make-up and spread of the virus, profile of the most vulnerable, most effective mitigation techniques, medical supplies, hospital facilities and staff required, and work necessary to rapidly develop and distribute a vaccine. ......... Stockpiles could quickly be built up and accessed via global supply chains.

If that model were in place when Covid-19 hit, the human and economic losses are likely to have been a fraction of what they will be.

........... Instead of working with China, we find ourselves doing the opposite ........ China’s economy, though slowed by the trade war, continues to grow significantly faster than America’s, fuelled by urbanisation, a rapidly growing middle class and a rising services industry. .......... The Belt and Road Initiative is generating substantial goodwill and economic opportunities, with China’s trade with Africa now nearly four times larger than the US’. China is positioned to succeed, given its advances in renewable energy, high-speed rail, 5G, advanced computing and artificial intelligence. ......... Every year, it adds a population of graduating scientists, technology specialists, engineers and mathematicians several times larger than the comparable US graduate pool. In nearly every way, containment has failed. ........ What we need is a return to constructive engagement that would lead to collective global leadership. For this, the US needs another fundamental mindset shift. There needs to be acceptance on both sides – particularly the US – that each country’s model is rooted in its unique history and culture. ............ .....Unlike the US, where citizens expect some sense of control while selecting leaders through elections, China selects its leaders through merit, ongoing performance reviews and examinations.

China has no popular election above local-government level but popular support for the government is among the highest globally

............. China still has among the most peaceful records of any major country in terms of involvement in foreign wars. ..... China has proven it has no interest in exporting its governance model. ........ Such is the unchangeable nature at the core of the US and Chinese models. If the two powers can accept what cannot be changed – and cannot be expected to change – the doors would begin to open for cooperation, which we need desperately. ......... Dealing with the pandemic jointly would be a great start. Many other global issues stand to benefit enormously, such as climate change, clean air and water, hunger, refugee crises and nuclear proliferation.


Fact check: Hilton CEO shatters Trump's testing conspiracy theory while sitting beside him
Coronavirus was 'not manmade or genetically modified': U.S. spy agency contradicted conspiracy theories floated ........ all available evidence suggests the coronavirus originated in animals in China late last year and was not manipulated or made in a laboratory. .......

“The Intelligence Community (IC) also concurs with the wide scientific consensus that the COVID-19 virus was not manmade or genetically modified”

......... Trump, who has heaped blame on China for the global pandemic, on Thursday said he believes China’s handling of the disease is proof that Beijing “will do anything they can” to make him lose his re-election bid in November. ....... More than 3.21 million people have been infected by the novel coronavirus globally, and 227,864 have died ........ Trump talked tough on China and said he was looking at different options in terms of consequences for Beijing over the virus. “I can do a lot,” he said, without providing details.


Michigan's Whitmer proposes GI bill-style free college for coronavirus essential workers
'Survival': Tenants, landlords brace for largest rent strike in decades "If banks are getting bailed out and corporations are getting bailed out, why aren't poor people getting bailed out?" one activist asked. ....... "Rent is the last thing I want to think about during this crisis, and being evicted is the last thing I want to worry about." ........ "The reason why our campaign is called 'Food Not Rent' is because we're actually telling folks to choose your survival, choose your life, over paying your rent at this point." ........ "We're in a moment where politically impossible things are possible, and a rent strike is not just about canceling rent for the crisis" ..........

"It's about, like, opening up a whole new world of social housing."

........ "We don't go back to go back to a world with 92,000 homeless New Yorkers and half our state can't afford to pay their rent." ...... More than 43 million households are renters ....... Housing advocates fear mass evictions without government intervention. More than 30 states have moratoriums on evictions during the outbreak, but some will expire in the next month. Other states, like Colorado, have no such mandate, which has left evictions to courts and local governments .........

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is also a Democrat, has signaled no willingness to cancel or freeze rents.

.......... In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, barred evictions through the end of May. Tenants must notify landlords within seven days of failing to pay and provide documentation proving that they were affected by the pandemic. ......... She said some of the members of her organization didn't get stimulus checks from the CARES Act because of their immigration status or have been unable to access unemployment benefits — and others are having to choose to potentially expose themselves to the virus by continuing to work. ......... The legislation calls for 90 days of rent forgiveness for residential and commercial tenants if they lost their work or businesses because of the pandemic, as well as a 90-day suspension of some mortgage payments.


Why the government makes it hard for Americans to get unemployment benefits The system is dysfunctional. It was designed that way. .......... In Florida, for example, the previous Republican governor, Rick Scott, created a congested unemployment system that was nearly impossible to use so that the unemployment numbers would remain artificially low. ...........

the “gap between the promise of public programs and the reality of their design” has been uniquely exposed by this pandemic.

......... we need to completely rethink “how we administer the safety net in the United States.” ......... The guiding principle in most states is that people don’t need to be on unemployment and that there are plenty of jobs available. So they’ve built in processes to try to get people off it quickly. And most states designed their systems with something like 3 or 4 percent unemployment in mind, so they don’t have the capacity to deal with much more than that. ......... “For too long, administrative processes have been designed to prevent claimants from incorrectly receiving benefits, rather than ensuring that those in need get help.” That’s an assumption, or a value judgment, built into our model of social welfare that all but guarantees it won’t work well for the people who need it. .......... We’re fixated on fraud and abuse, which is extremely low in social welfare programs — something like 1 to 2 percent of cases. And even then, it’s not what people mean when they think of “fraud and abuse.” It’s mostly people making mistakes because they didn’t understand eligibility rules .......... 20 to 30 percent of people are unable to access these programs even when they’re clearly eligible for them .............. this is about trumping up these accusations in order to undermine programs they fundamentally don’t believe in,

just as a lot of Republicans disingenuously complain about voting fraud as a cover for depressing voting numbers

. ............... We’re in a moment where a lot of people, all at once, are trying to seek help from the government and are actually seeing what it’s actually like when you try to do that. People paid into unemployment, they qualify for unemployment, and it’s completely not their fault that they lost their jobs. But we’ve built this system that makes it almost impossible to get help. ......... they should also be required to report how many people they’re failing to reach. ....... we need some quick, easy things the government can do, like increasing SNAP benefits. No one needs to do anything. It just gets loaded on your card and it’s super effective in terms of the return on investment and economic activity.


One $1,200 stimulus check won’t cut it. Give Americans $2,000 a month tax-free to fire up the economy Emergency Money for the People Act covers what the CARES Act missed ........ Every American age 16 and older who earns less $130,000 per year will receive this money. ........ will provide almost every American $2,000 per month until employment levels reach pre-coronavirus levels. ........ These payments will be guaranteed for a minimum of six months, continuing until the U.S. employment rate reaches pre-coronavirus levels. .........

Consumer spending makes up roughly 70% of U.S. gross domestic product, so how will our small businesses survive if their customers don’t have money in their pockets? The old strategies have failed us. This is an unprecedented crisis, and it is time for government to respond in an unprecedented way.

........ realizing that not everyone has a bank account or a permanent home address, the money will be made available in more ways, with payments coming through direct deposit, check, pre-paid debit card, or mobile money platforms such as Venmo, Zelle, and PayPal. ......... these payments will not count as income for any families that are eligible for income-based state or federal government assistance programs such as Medicaid or SNAP, and people who have no earnings, were or currently unemployed would also be eligible for assistance. .......... Members on both sides of the aisle in Congress and President Donald Trump must come together in the fourth COVID-19 relief package to expand direct support for our people. The Emergency Money for the People Act will provide more money for more Americans and should be signed into law immediately. ............ U.S. Representative Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) is a member of the House Appropriations Committee.




Hong Kong's protesters are being used to further their own ruin