The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by The Romulan Republic »

While Ontario and Quebec are struggling, British Columbia Canada has done a very fine job thus far of controlling COVID-19:

https://cbc.ca/news/canada/british-colu ... -1.5522122
B.C.'s provincial health officer announced 29 new coronavirus cases in the province on Saturday, bringing the total to 1,203.

That represents the lowest number of new cases announced this week, but Dr. Bonnie Henry advised the risk remains "very high for us in B.C."

"We are in the thick of it and we must hold our line," she said.

"I don't think I'm ready to say anything is a win yet. But every day we have been bending that curve is a good thing."

Three more people have died from the disease, bringing the total number of deaths to 38. Twenty-three outbreaks have been recorded in long-term care homes, up one from Friday.

There are currently 149 people hospitalized, with 68 people in intensive care. A total of 704 people in the province have recovered.

Henry said B.C. is now in that crucial, two-week period where officials could get a greater understanding of how orders and physical distancing measures are working.


On Saturday, Henry also announced the creation of the COVID-19 strategic advisory committee, which has been in development since January and will facilitate research related to COVID-19 in B.C. The province has also contributed $2 million in funding to the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research located in Vancouver.

The committee will include Dr. Perry Kendall, B.C.'s former provincial health officer who retired in 2018.

Henry said B.C. is part of at least 25 initiatives around the world working toward a vaccine for COVID-19.


Asymptomatic spread and hopes for summer
Henry responded to growing concerns that people who are asymptomtic may be the primary spreaders of the virus — saying that so far, the literature and understanding of how COVID-19 spreads remains largely unchanged.

"I've always said that that's not the major driver of this ... the vast majority of transmission happens we know when people are sick," she said.

Henry also commented on hopes that, like other viruses, COVID-19 could fade or taper off during the summer as a result of increased UV light and warmer temperatures.

B.C. outdoor wear companies change gears, start making protective gowns for health-care workers
"What we're hoping is that, yes, this wave will subside … with the measures that we're taking," she said.

"We need to watch that carefully, we don't know for sure that that's how this virus will behave."

Henry said the province is coordinating with the federal government on repatriation flights bringing Canadians back from abroad, and that some are set to arrive in the coming days.

She emphasized the importance of travellers arriving from abroad to follow a federal order to self-isolate for 14 days.

"We had some concerns that the strength of the response at all the airports and land border crossings were not strong enough … yet, so we want to look at how we can support the federal agencies in making sure that everyone is aware of the requirements coming back."

What you need to know about COVID-19 in B.C. on April 4, 2020
Of the cases, there are now:

554 in the Vancouver Coastal Health region.

424 in Fraser Health.

76 in Vancouver Island Health.

128 in Interior Health.

21 in Northern Health.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Michelle Ghoussoub
@MichelleGhsoub

Michelle Ghoussoub is a journalist with CBC News in Vancouver. She has previously reported in Lebanon and Chile. Reach her at michelle.ghoussoub@cbc.ca or on Twitter @MichelleGhsoub.
The graphs show that BC has pretty much flattened the curve. Active cases have actually started to decline.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by ray245 »

Ziggy Stardust wrote: 2020-04-04 04:26pm I can't find a list online of the members of Sage, but the two leaders of the group (Whitty and Vallance) are both physicians, the former with a wealth of expertise in public health. I don't know who the other members of the group are so impossible to validate how many of them are "mathematical modellers and behavioural scientists". And the article doesn't actually provide any evidence of what Horton is saying, Horton is just claiming that this is true. I won't go on a tangent about why I distrust Horton himself, but even setting that aside the article should be taken with a huge grain of salt until any evidence is actually presented.

The fact is that public health experts were (and continue to be, to some extent) divided on the best way for governments to respond to this pandemic. The information we have had on Covid-19 has changed over time as it spreads, and there is still a good deal of heterogeneity in the way it attacks different populations that we don't understand. There are plenty of different paradigms for public health policy even in the best of times, and this isn't the best of times. Differences of opinion and approach across a broad field of science isn't new or unprecedented, even in times of crisis. The idea that there is one camp of "public health experts" that is a separate camp from "mathematical modellers and behavioural scientists" is absurd. Mathematical modeling has been an integral part of epidemiology and public health since the 1950s.
Fair enough. The issue is it pays off to be safe than sorry with a novel virus, and I will very much prefer not to be part of the herd immunity experiment, as it is a matter of pure luck if I get it and there is a chance I might get severely affected by it.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

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Linkypoo
Facing coronavirus pandemic, Trump suspends immigration laws and showcases vision for locked-down border

Arelis Hernández, Nick Miroff 8 hrs ago

SAN ANTONIO — President Trump has used emergency powers during the coronavirus pandemic to implement the kind of strict enforcement regime at the U.S. southern border he has long wanted, suspending laws that protect minors and asylum seekers so that the U.S. government can immediately deport them or turn them away.

Citing the threat of “mass, uncontrolled cross-border movement,” the president has shelved safeguards intended to protect trafficking victims and persecuted groups, implementing an expulsion order that sends migrants of all ages back to Mexico in an average of 96 minutes. U.S. Border Patrol agents do not perform medical checks when they encounter people crossing into the country.

Homeland Security officials say the measures are necessary to protect U.S. agents, health-care workers and the general public from the coronavirus. Tightening controls at the border and preventing potentially infected populations from streaming into the United States minimizes the number of detainees in U.S. immigration jails and border holding cells.

At a time when much of the nation is locked down, they say, strict border controls are an essential public health response, as each unmonitored crossing potentially exposes U.S. communities to what Trump has called an “invisible enemy.”

“Our nation’s top health-care officials are extremely concerned about the grave public health consequences of mass uncontrolled cross-border movement,” Trump said last month in announcing new immigration restrictions.

The border with Mexico and the huge steel barrier the president is building there — still under constant construction during the crisis — remain key campaign issues for the president. During White House briefings on the pandemic, Trump has repeatedly brought up his border wall project, unprompted, and has touted construction progress, overstating the number of miles crews have completed as he says he is fulfilling his 2016 campaign promise.

Trump has for years assailed U.S. immigration laws as too lenient, and the global pandemic has allowed the president to drop many of the policies and legal protections he calls the “worst immigration laws ever.” In their place, he has created a pilot test for the impact of the more draconian measures he has long advocated.
The most immediate impacts are that migrants who illegally cross the U.S. border are no longer taken to border stations where they would have the chance to file a claim for humanitarian protection and access to U.S. immigration courts, and some unaccompanied minors who typically would receive protection and shelter also are being turned away.

“We are appalled at the way things are being handled,” said Linda Rivas, director of the Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center in El Paso.


Some migrant advocates say they worry Trump will be slow to lift the emergency measures once the coronavirus outbreak is no longer a crisis.

“The border has always been a symbol in his larger worldview about dangers coming from the outside,” said Andrew Selee, director of the Migration Policy Institute in Washington. “The coronavirus may go away, but there’s a chance you could see these measures stay in place long after epidemic begins to recede.”

Illegal crossings plunge

In the past 10 days, illegal crossings along the Mexico border have plunged nearly 40 percent, returning to the lowest levels of Trump’s presidency, according to preliminary tallies by ­senior Customs and Border Protection officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the trends publicly.

Citing the emergency declaration from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Homeland Security officials have bypassed court-ordered due process protections for minors, asylum seekers and others as they return border-crossers to Mexico as quickly as possible. The migrants taken into custody now are tallied as “encounters” rather than “apprehensions,” and they are “expelled” from the country rather than formally deported.

CBP officials say their marching orders are to turn migrants around as fast as possible to minimize the risk of exposure to the virus. After running quick background checks on criminal records, agents gather the migrants’ biometric info at open-air field stations before loading them into vans and taking them to Mexico.

Under normal circumstances, underage migrants who arrive without a parent receive protection under U.S. anti-trafficking laws; they are typically routed to Department of Health and Human Services shelters until they can be safely placed with family members or guardians. Under Trump’s emergency orders, minors are being swiftly removed from the country, some of them flown back to Central America. Those who arrive with a grandparent or adult sibling are deported as part of a family group, despite the U.S. government’s insisting for years on a strict definition of family that is limited to biological parents and their minor children.

On Thursday, CBP did not refer any children to shelters overseen by HHS’s Office of Refugee Resettlement, the first time in recent memory that has occurred, according to the ORR.

Asylum seekers — those who say they are fleeing persecution in other countries — would normally get to make their case in court. Some of them would be allowed to stay in the United States, some would wait in Mexico, and some would be sent to other countries to claim asylum there. It was this category of migrants that drove a historic surge at the border last year, and there is now an even greater likelihood that these migrants will be deported back to the countries they are fleeing, or turned away without due process.

Asked to clarify the circumstances under which the emergency health orders — known as Title 42 — are applied, CBP declined to respond, saying the information would be used to bypass the nation’s immigration enforcement efforts.

“If specific circumstances guaranteeing exemptions from Title 42 expulsion were to be made public, they would be exploited by human smugglers,” said Matthew Dyman, a CBP spokesman.

According to an internal memo obtained by ProPublica, migrants would be ineligible for the expulsion orders if they “make an affirmative, spontaneous and reasonably believable claim they fear being tortured in the country they are sent back to.”

In those instances, agents must seek the approval of their supervisors before taking an asylum seeker back to a Border Patrol facility, according to the new rules, dubbed “Operation Capio.”

“This is an anomaly,” said one CBP official who was not authorized to speak publicly about the measures. “The norm is not applicable in this environment under these circumstances.”

Selee said the administration might be slow to lift the emergency measures even after the pandemic subsides. Governments around the world that have struggled with a surge of asylum claims could use the pandemic as a “back door” to toughen immigration laws and implement other restrictions, he said, “because it’s harder to question a health rationale.”

When he announced the new restrictions last month, Trump cited the threat of “mass global migration that would badly deplete the health-care resources needed for our people.” Mexico has confirmed fewer than 1,500 positive cases of the virus so far, less than 1 percent of the number in the United States, but testing there is not widely available. Many countries have seen major spikes in coronavirus cases just weeks after discovering their first few, as has happened in the United States.

“Every week, our border agents encounter thousands of unscreened, unvetted and unauthorized entries from dozens of countries. And we’ve had this problem for decades,” Trump said. “In normal times, these massive flows place a vast burden on our health-care system, but during a global pandemic, they threaten to create a perfect storm that would spread the infection to our border agents, migrants and to the public at large. Left unchecked, this would cripple our immigration system, overwhelm our health-care system, and severely damage our national security.”

Despite the recent drop in crossings, CBP officials and border agents say they fear a rush on the border if Mexican hospitals are overwhelmed, especially in the large border cities such as Ciudad Juárez and Tijuana that are home to millions of people, many of whom work in cramped assembly plants. The economic damage from the pandemic is likely to trigger millions of layoffs in Mexico and Central America, potentially creating new emigration pressures.

Encouraged to leave

U.S. and Mexican authorities say they are cooperating closely to secure the border. In an extraordinary step, Mexico is accepting the return of adults and families from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador who are “expelled.”

The Mexican government said it will accept those returns on a case-by-case basis, but in practice, it is taking back virtually everyone from those three nations in addition to Mexican nationals, CBP officials say. The four countries account for more than 85 percent of unlawful border-crossers into the United States.

U.S. and Mexican border authorities also have limited the traffic at the international bridges to essential travelers and commerce. Humanitarian groups have been urging migrants to leave border camps and relocate to areas with better sanitary and health conditions.

Mexican nationals and those expelled from the United States in recent days have been quickly loaded onto buses and taken to other Mexican states, advocates and attorneys say. It is unclear whether the people were encouraged or forced to board the buses, but Sister Norma Pimentel of Catholic Charities said it is part of a broader campaign by Mexican immigration officials to clear the border.

“There is an interest from the Mexican government to encourage people to leave and tell them it’s best they go,” Pimentel said.

Migrants said they are worried about the coronavirus outbreak but do not feel like they have many options. They do not want to leave the border area and miss appointments once U.S. immigration courts resume operations — whenever that happens. They said they fear Mexican authorities will coerce primarily Central American migrants to board buses without knowing where they are headed.

In Ciudad Juárez, migrants enrolled in the Migrant Protection Protocols program — known as “Remain in Mexico” — are continuing to arrive at U.S. ports of entry in the wee hours of the morning, unaware that their hearing dates have been rescheduled because court has been suspended.

Rivas, of El Paso’s Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center, said migrants are risking exposure waiting on bridges, where social distancing is impossible. Asylum seekers cannot be assured of a new hearing without walking to the bridge because authorities have not collected addresses or created a system to serve legal documents or notices to migrants waiting in Mexico, she said.

“That’s absurd,” Rivas said. “They’re given a piece of paper and told to go away.”

Everyone — sick children, asylum seekers with disabilities, and migrants in protected groups who are entitled to relief — is being rejected at ports of entry after the federal government effectively shut down the border to immigrants, Rivas said.

Juárez’s shelters are at high risk for spreading the coronavirus, she said, and attorneys are having to navigate life-or-death decisions with their clients.

“We are going in blindfolded as we try to advocate because Border Patrol is unclear about their criteria,” Rivas said.

Physician Hannah Janeway of the Refugee Health Alliance has been working closely with shelters to prepare for the virus, but the conditions and tight quarters will make stopping the spread nearly impossible. The shelter spaces are difficult to keep clean, residents might not have regular access to showers, and space for quarantining high-risk migrants is limited. The local Mexican health system also is taxed.

"We created this situation at the border where there are thousands of people in these shelters waiting for their numbers to be called,” she said. “If people get sick in the shelters, their deaths are going to be our faults. They are in these conditions that will ultimately lead them to their deaths or severe disability. And why? Because they were scared enough to leave the only country they knew, to seek refuge.”

arelis.hernandez@washpost.com
nick.miroff@washpost.com
Miroff reported from Washington.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

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If you need hand sanitizer:

https://www.froggysfog.com/sanitizer.html#page=1

Use coupon code (good as of 4/4/2020):
WEBSP

for a couple bucks off

This is 1 gallon of hand sanitizer made to WHO standards from 80% alcohol starting feedstock.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Anyone who thinks those new border policies are temporary is delusional. They will never be lifted, or not until Trump is removed from power.
"I know its easy to be defeatist here because nothing has seemingly reigned Trump in so far. But I will say this: every asshole succeeds until finally, they don't. Again, 18 months before he resigned, Nixon had a sky-high approval rating of 67%. Harvey Weinstein was winning Oscars until one day, he definitely wasn't."-John Oliver

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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by mr friendly guy »

https://www.vox.com/2020/4/4/21208109/c ... s-new-york
New York is in dire need of ventilators. China just donated 1,000.
After Trump couldn’t assure New York the federal government would send ventilators, China sent a supply.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) announced on Saturday that the Chinese government is helping “facilitate a donation” of 1,000 ventilators to his state, and said they would arrive at JFK Airport later in the day.

“We finally got some good news today,” the governor tweeted as he made the announcement. New York is the US state hardest hit by the coronavirus pandemic, with 113,704 cases and over 3,560 deaths confirmed as of April 4. It’s also facing a serious shortage of necessary equipment to protect Covid-19 patients and health care workers alike.

The donation comes two days after Cuomo announced New York had just six days left of ventilators in their state stockpile, and was coordinated by the Chinese government and businessmen Jack Ma and Joe Tsai, according to Cuomo’s tweet. Soon after sharing news of the donated machines, Cuomo tweeted Oregon Gov. Kate Brown (D) is also sending a shipment of 140 ventilators to New York.

The announced shipments come one day after President Donald Trump said he couldn’t assure New York that they would get the ventilators they badly need, saying the federal government has more states to worry about.

“No. They should’ve had more ventilators at the time. They should’ve had more ventilators, they were totally under-serviced,” Trump said Friday in response to a question from ABC’s Jon Karl. “We happen to think [Cuomo’s] well-served with ventilators, we’re going to find out. But we have other states to take care of.”

Cuomo, on the other hand, does not think Trump and the federal government are doing enough to help New York as their protective and health care equipment shortage has gotten increasingly dire. FEMA has sent about 4,000 ventilators to New York as of Wednesday, according to the New York Times. When the agency sent 400 ventilators to New York last month, Cuomo said it was not enough at a March 24 press conference.

“What am I going to do with 400 ventilators when I need 30,000?” Cuomo said. “You pick the 26,000 people who are going to die because you only sent 400 ventilators.”

Other governors have asked for thousands of ventilators and received a few hundred; Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker asked the federal government for 4,000 ventilators and received about 400 as of this week.

More recently, Cuomo had adopted the position that New York is essentially on its own — and that it will ensure it doesn’t just rely on the federal government for assistance. Cuomo added he did not think the federal government would deny New York ventilators if it had them stockpiled, but he is concerned there’s not enough equipment to go around for all the states.

“I don’t think the federal government is in a position to provide ventilators to the extent the nation may need them,” Cuomo said on Thursday. “I know that the ventilator ability is just a problem for everyone — you have 50 states competing for it, you have the federal government trying to buy it. Our attitude here is we’re on our own; I will ask the federal government if we get to that point. I’ll do whatever I have to do to get ventilators from the federal government, but that’s why we’re also taking all those extraordinary measures ourselves.”

The state’s ventilator stockpile is shrinking, and Cuomo signed an executive order on Friday that would allow New York state officials to seize ventilators from health care facilities that aren’t using them and give them to hospitals. He also called on New York companies to start manufacturing other basic protective equipment for doctors and nurses on the front lines of the coronavirus fight, and said the state would help companies pay for manufacturing costs.

So far, however, New York appears to be finding more luck working with the Chinese government and other individual states to procure ventilators than it has with Trump and the federal government.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

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MKSheppard wrote: 2020-04-04 06:57pmThis is 1 gallon of hand sanitizer made to WHO standards from 80% alcohol starting feedstock.
EDIT: Froggy's apparently has a smell, and they don't come with a hand pump. FYI.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by mr friendly guy »

Golfing is an essential service in Florida.
https://www.heraldtribune.com/news/2020 ... lf-courses
Coronavirus Florida: Lockdown doesn’t close golf courses

By Greg Hardwig, USA Today Network
Posted Apr 2, 2020 at 1:08 PM
Golf is an “essential recreation activity provided the proper social distancing is followed and that would mean only one person per cart”

This content is being provided for free as a public service to our readers during the coronavirus outbreak. Sign up for our daily or breaking newsletters to stay informed. If local news is important to you, consider becoming a digital subscriber to the Sarasota Herald-Tribune.

***
The Golf Capital of the World is still open.

That’s despite Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis issuing an executive order Wednesday closing all nonessential businesses for 30 days beginning at 12:01 a.m. Friday to battle the spread of the coronavirus.

The Florida State Golf Association posted that it did receive clarification from the Governor’s office that golf was approved, despite it not being clear in the list of examples of essential outdoor activity in the executive order.

RELATED: What are essential services and businesses in Florida during lockdown?

“We have received a communication from the Governor’s Chief of Staff that golf would be considered an essential recreation activity provided the proper social distancing is followed and that would mean only one person per cart,” South Florida PGA Section, which includes courses in Collier and Lee counties, stated in an emailed release Wednesday.

“It is also our understanding that the current order does not change county and/or city orders that are already in place throughout Florida.”

See our complete coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

The executive order limited essential activities, as far as recreational activities, consistent with social distancing guidelines “such as walking, biking, hiking, fishing, hunting, running, or swimming.”
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Sadly, you could probably make an argument that this is in the best interests of Floridians. Closing down the golf courses would piss off Trump, and then the medical aid might stop coming like clockwork to Florida.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by Zaune »

One could also make an argument that golf carries a fairly low COVID-19 transmission risk compared to most sports because it's no-contact and doersn't require locker rooms. Unless they're making the 19th hole an official part of the rules, anyway.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by bilateralrope »

Jacinda Ardern says she wants country out of lockdown as soon as possible - but we're still not at halftime
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says New Zealand has made a "good start" of lockdown with 3000 less coronavirus cases than one model expected at this point - but it is still too early to know if four weeks will be enough.

Ardern has also hit back at criticisms the lockdown was too harsh on the economy - saying a good health outcome from the crisis was crucial to a good economic one.

As the number of confirmed and probable cases crossed over 1000 on Sunday afternoon Ardern said modelling she had seen early on in the crisis showed the number could have been four times higher at this point, had serious measures not been taken.

"On the eve of our lockdown, modelling projected we had the potential to face as many as 4000 cases this weekend. We're instead at just over a thousand. Those 3000 fewer cases shows the difference that cumulative action can make: 3000 fewer people sick with Covid-19; 3000 fewer people passing the virus on to others and then to others and then to others," Ardern said.

"We need to get to halftime and perhaps a bit beyond that to see the full gains of the lockdown. But we have made a good start, and the decisions that we've made to date have made a difference."

Ardern said "intensive planning" was being done for whenever New Zealand moved out of lockdown, but the exact exit criteria was still being worked on.

When it was worked out she expected to publish it so businesses and Kiwis would know whether or not the country was likely to extend its four-week lockdown or end it.

"I do expect to be quite transparent around that, because people need to know what it is we're looking for, and as we have been transparent with the alert levels as they stand," Ardern said.

Key indicators would be case numbers and rates of community transmission, Ardern said, but officials were working on a more complicated criteria, and enough testing across the the country would be needed so that the Government was sure things were safe.

Director General of Health Ashley Bloomfield said the current positivity rate for tests - about 1 per cent - were very encouraging. New Zealand was still gaining about the same amount of cases every day despite massively increasing the amount of tests.

"I think the key things we'll be looking for are the number of new cases, and especially as that testing has ramped up. We've seen the positivity rate drop at the same time; we haven't been finding more cases. So if you think, yesterday, we had around 50 new cases with around 3,000 tests done, you know, that's a positivity rate of just over 1 percent, whereas when our test numbers were lower, it was around 3 percent, which is the level, say, of a South Korea."

Bloomfield said a "surveillance plan" of more aggressive testing was being ramped up.

Ardern did not give a clear timeframe for when Kiwis would know exactly whether the lockdown would be extended or not, but said the signs would be relatively clear.

"If you see, for instance, an exponential growth in cases, then, obviously, that will send a signal to New Zealanders. We haven't seen that. But there are other signs that we need to look for to make sure that we have wrested control back of Covid-19."

She said evidence from Google and the low number of arrests seemed to suggest the lockdown was going well, but there were still some she would "charitably describe as idiots" breaking the rules.

Ardern also used the press conference to hit back at any criticism of the lockdown as ruinous economically.

She said the best way to save the economy was to fight the virus as hard as possible.

"A strategy that sacrifices people in favour of, supposedly, a better economic outcome is a false dichotomy and has been shown to produce the worst of both worlds: loss of life and prolonged economic pain," Ardern said.

National on Sunday called for more businesses to be allowed to open up if they could prove they could operate safely.

"Our economy has already faced unprecedented devastation since the Government closed it down, we should be doing all we can help revive it and protect businesses and jobs," economic development spokesman Todd McClay said.

"To date the decision making has been too arbitrary and there are too many inconsistencies. For instance, allowing dairies to open but not local butchers or greengrocers, agriculture to continue but not forestry, cigarettes to be manufactured but community newspapers cannot be printed."

"If a business proves it can operate safely, provide contactless selling and ensure physical distancing then they should be able to operate."
Sounds like the lockdown here is working.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by loomer »

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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by MKSheppard »

DAILY HEIL
There are fears of a breakdown in law and order in New York as the city's key agencies feel the brunt of the coronavirus.

The NYPD has reported that up to a sixth of its force, or around 6,500 members called out sick towards the end of last week and the numbers are not expected to improve over the coming days.

Things are even worse at the FDNY with the number of those having to stay at home because of the disease even higher.

One in four members of its EMT paramedic team, about 4,000 people, are currently having to stay off work.

Among firefighters as a whole, around 17 percent are off on sick leave.

The combined number of FDNY firefighters and paramedics no longer able to work is around 3,000 according to NBC4.

The huge shortfall in those working on the front line of the emergency services comes as the city is expected to enter its worst week so far, as the numbers of deaths are expected to continue to rise as the virus takes hold.

The absence of key emergency response workers comes at a crucial time for the city as the coronavirus has led to an all-time high in the sheer number of 911 calls coming in with new records being set almost every day over the last week.

To put in some perspective, a 'busy day' would normally consist of around 4,000 calls, however last Monday the FDNY had to deal with more than 6,500.

FDNY Deputy Commissioner for Public Information Frank Dwyer called the volume of calls received over a three day period the 'largest in our history.'

Residents are now being advised not to call 911 unless the symptoms they are experiencing are severe or not related to the COVID-19 disease.

The grim outlook also applies to hospital too with facilities stretched to the limit on staffing, bed and equipment.

Over at the NYPD the virus has hit just as hard with one in six, or about 18 percent, either sick or quarantined.

The presence of the disease has added a whole new level of stress and anxiety to the work of officers with every arrest or interview having the potential to be infected by the virus.

'It's a stressful job at the best of times,' the police commissioner, Dermot F. Shea last week. 'Right now, I don't think you can imagine a worse point of time.'

Officers are falling sick in areas that endure some of the highest crime rates including the Bronx, Washington Heights and Harlem.

Some precincts reported up to a third of their members were unable to report for duty, according to the New York Times, and there are no guidelines that dictate exactly what should be done.

Emergency protocols for those used after a terror attack or even a hurricane are different to what is occurring now with the emergency lasting several weeks and sickening hundreds more each day.

One thing that has made the work of city cops slightly easier is the absence of any events or large gatherings which they would normally have to patrol.

Rape, robbery and assault crimes have dropped significantly compared to the days before the lockdown was implemented.

'Nobody's on street and that's really helping us,' Shea said.

According to data released by the NYPD for the last month, between March 16 and March 22, there was a 17 percent drop in major felonies while grand larceny was down 31 percent and misdemeanor assaults by 21 percent when compared to the same time last year.

Although many city streets remain quieter with all but essential businesses open, shops along some of the more wealthier streets, including parts of Fifth and Madison Avenues in Manhattan and the trendy Soho neighborhood, have boarded up their shop windows just incase there is civil unrest.

The wealthy businesses had already been ordered closed along with bars and restaurants as part of the shelter in place protections but they are now taking further steps to secure their property and products.

The rows of boarded up buildings are a stark reminder of the newly unemployed workers who lost their jobs after the scale of the outbreak forced stores, bars and restaurants to shut their doors for the foreseeable future.

The NYPD is reporting a 75 percent increase in burglaries of commercial premises compared with the same time last year.

The increase has coincided with the dates when the city ordered bars and restaurants to close and for other nonessential businesses to shut up shop.

'We knew with the closing of many stores that we could see an increase and, unfortunately, we are,' said NYPD Chief of Crime Control Strategies Michael LiPetri to the Wall Street Journal.

There has been an increase in the number of supermarkets and eateries being burgled.

At the NYPD, the lack of personal protective equipment which has affected hospital workers across the country may also have exposed police officers to the virus unnecessarily.

According to the Times, some officers say that a shortage of masks and gloves is likely behind the rapid rise in infections.

One detective who eventually had to call out sick with coronavirus symptoms told how he was given an N95 protective mask and a couple of disinfectant wipes which were to last him several days.

The masks are really only supposed to be once before being thrown away.

The NYPD was forced to beg the government to send more masks for officers, only for the White House to turn it into a publicity stunt with the catchy name 'Operation Blue Bloods' and then boast about its own response.

On Monday, NYPD Chief of Department Terence Monahan had sent a desperate email to the White House pleading for more protective gear.

Shortages of masks have left officers at an increased risk of contracting the infection, as they are left with no choice but to make house calls across the city without any protective equipment.

The city's cops sacrificing their own health during the pandemic in order to protect New York residents.

'It's so disappointing given the fact that we are revered as the best in the world,' one detective said.

'It's a damn shame that a city like New York that is the epicenter of the coronavirus and the financial capital of the world can't afford a $3 mask,' said another officer working in the south Bronx.

On Friday, Police Commissioner Shea revealed that two more NYPD officers died of coronavirus.

School Safety Agent Luis Albino died Friday after spending 20 years with the department.

Auxiliary Police Lt. Pierre Moise, who joined the force in 1994 and worked in Brooklyn, also passed away.

The number of coronavirus cases in the U.S. surpassed 300,000 on Saturday, an increase of more than 32,000 from the day before, as the pandemic continued to exact a grim toll on the nation.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by madd0ct0r »

Fincial Times is calling for...

Socialist progressive economics????
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https://www.ft.com/content/7eff769a-74d ... tlhomepage


If there is a silver lining to the Covid-19 pandemic, it is that it has injected a sense of togetherness into polarised societies. But the virus, and the economic lockdowns needed to combat it, also shine a glaring light on existing inequalities — and even create new ones. Beyond defeating the disease, the great test all countries will soon face is whether current feelings of common purpose will shape society after the crisis. As western leaders learnt in the Great Depression, and after the second world war, to demand collective sacrifice you must offer a social contract that benefits everyone.

Today’s crisis is laying bare how far many rich societies fall short of this ideal. Much as the struggle to contain the pandemic has exposed the unpreparedness of health systems, so the brittleness of many countries’ economies has been exposed, as governments scramble to stave off mass bankruptcies and cope with mass unemployment. Despite inspirational calls for national mobilisation, we are not really all in this together.

The economic lockdowns are imposing the greatest cost on those already worst off. Overnight millions of jobs and livelihoods have been lost in hospitality, leisure and related sectors, while better paid knowledge workers often face only the nuisance of working from home. Worse, those in low-wage jobs who can still work are often risking their lives — as carers and healthcare support workers, but also as shelf stackers, delivery drivers and cleaners.

Governments’ extraordinary budget support for the economy, while necessary, will in some ways make matters worse. Countries that have allowed the emergence of an irregular and precarious labour market are finding it particularly hard to channel financial help to workers with such insecure employment. Meanwhile, vast monetary loosening by central banks will help the asset-rich. Behind it all, underfunded public services are creaking under the burden of applying crisis policies.

The way we wage war on the virus benefits some at the expense of others. The victims of Covid-19 are overwhelmingly the old. But the biggest victims of the lockdowns are the young and active, who are asked to suspend their education and forgo precious income. Sacrifices are inevitable, but every society must demonstrate how it will offer restitution to those who bear the heaviest burden of national efforts.

Radical reforms — reversing the prevailing policy direction of the last four decades — will need to be put on the table. Governments will have to accept a more active role in the economy. They must see public services as investments rather than liabilities, and look for ways to make labour markets less insecure. Redistribution will again be on the agenda; the privileges of the elderly and wealthy in question. Policies until recently considered eccentric, such as basic income and wealth taxes, will have to be in the mix.

The taboo-breaking measures governments are taking to sustain businesses and incomes during the lockdown are rightly compared to the sort of wartime economy western countries have not experienced for seven decades. The analogy goes still further.

The leaders who won the war did not wait for victory to plan for what would follow. Franklin D Roosevelt and Winston Churchill issued the Atlantic Charter, setting the course for the United Nations, in 1941. The UK published the Beveridge Report, its commitment to a universal welfare state, in 1942. In 1944, the Bretton Woods conference forged the postwar financial architecture. That same kind of foresight is needed today. Beyond the public health war, true leaders will mobilise now to win the peace.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by ray245 »

madd0ct0r wrote: 2020-04-05 09:02am Fincial Times is calling for...

Socialist progressive economics????
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/7eff769a-74d ... tlhomepage


If there is a silver lining to the Covid-19 pandemic, it is that it has injected a sense of togetherness into polarised societies. But the virus, and the economic lockdowns needed to combat it, also shine a glaring light on existing inequalities — and even create new ones. Beyond defeating the disease, the great test all countries will soon face is whether current feelings of common purpose will shape society after the crisis. As western leaders learnt in the Great Depression, and after the second world war, to demand collective sacrifice you must offer a social contract that benefits everyone.

Today’s crisis is laying bare how far many rich societies fall short of this ideal. Much as the struggle to contain the pandemic has exposed the unpreparedness of health systems, so the brittleness of many countries’ economies has been exposed, as governments scramble to stave off mass bankruptcies and cope with mass unemployment. Despite inspirational calls for national mobilisation, we are not really all in this together.

The economic lockdowns are imposing the greatest cost on those already worst off. Overnight millions of jobs and livelihoods have been lost in hospitality, leisure and related sectors, while better paid knowledge workers often face only the nuisance of working from home. Worse, those in low-wage jobs who can still work are often risking their lives — as carers and healthcare support workers, but also as shelf stackers, delivery drivers and cleaners.

Governments’ extraordinary budget support for the economy, while necessary, will in some ways make matters worse. Countries that have allowed the emergence of an irregular and precarious labour market are finding it particularly hard to channel financial help to workers with such insecure employment. Meanwhile, vast monetary loosening by central banks will help the asset-rich. Behind it all, underfunded public services are creaking under the burden of applying crisis policies.

The way we wage war on the virus benefits some at the expense of others. The victims of Covid-19 are overwhelmingly the old. But the biggest victims of the lockdowns are the young and active, who are asked to suspend their education and forgo precious income. Sacrifices are inevitable, but every society must demonstrate how it will offer restitution to those who bear the heaviest burden of national efforts.

Radical reforms — reversing the prevailing policy direction of the last four decades — will need to be put on the table. Governments will have to accept a more active role in the economy. They must see public services as investments rather than liabilities, and look for ways to make labour markets less insecure. Redistribution will again be on the agenda; the privileges of the elderly and wealthy in question. Policies until recently considered eccentric, such as basic income and wealth taxes, will have to be in the mix.

The taboo-breaking measures governments are taking to sustain businesses and incomes during the lockdown are rightly compared to the sort of wartime economy western countries have not experienced for seven decades. The analogy goes still further.

The leaders who won the war did not wait for victory to plan for what would follow. Franklin D Roosevelt and Winston Churchill issued the Atlantic Charter, setting the course for the United Nations, in 1941. The UK published the Beveridge Report, its commitment to a universal welfare state, in 1942. In 1944, the Bretton Woods conference forged the postwar financial architecture. That same kind of foresight is needed today. Beyond the public health war, true leaders will mobilise now to win the peace.
Turns out you need massive social trauma across all levels of society before people realise the need for socialistic measures.

I hope the generation after us do not make the same mistakes we did.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by Highlord Laan »

Bold of you to assume the Trumpenfurer and his drooling primate supporters won't fuck it all up on purpose because murrika.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by MKSheppard »

5 April 2020 Update:

Image

Looks like both Spain and Italy are seeing the delayed effect of quarantine measures kicking in, as cases plateau and in some cases decrease.

Meanmwhile, the US continues to track EXTREMELY closely overall with Spain.

EDIT: Holy shit, NYC is at 87.78 deaths per million! It's so far off it breaks the chart!

Image
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by aerius »

By the way, domestic animals are a potential transmission vector.
https://www.avma.org/resources-tools/an ... e/covid-19
While two dogs (Hong Kong) and two cat (one in Belgium and one in Hng Kong) living with people diagnosed with COVID-19 have been reported to have been infected with SARS-CoV-2, other dogs and cats also living with infected people remain uninfected. New research articles have been posted to open-access sites on an almost daily basis that describe preliminary results suggesting some domestic animals can be experimentally infected with SARS-CoV-2 and may transmit the virus to other animals in an experimental setting or mount a viral-specific immune response when exposed to SARS-CoV-2. However, caution should be taken to not overinterpret results described in such articles, some of which may report on data from a very small number of animals or provide only preliminary results, and not extrapolate those results fo the potentisl for SARS-CoV-2 to naturally infect or be transmitted by companion animals kept as pets. To date the CDC has not received any reports of pets or other animals becoming sick with COVID-19 in the United States. Infectious disease experts and multiple international and domestic human and animal health organizations continue to agree there is no evidence at this point to indicate that pets, under natural conditions, spread COVID-19 to other animals, including people.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by The Romulan Republic »

I'd wait for more evidence before declaring domestic animals a threat of transmission. We've already had issues with people abandoning or even killing their pets out of fear, and to my knowledge the evidence of transmission by pets is extremely limited. The last sentence of your own link confirms this.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by Captain Seafort »

MKSheppard wrote: 2020-04-05 09:59am5 April 2020 Update:

Looks like both Spain and Italy are seeing the delayed effect of quarantine measures kicking in, as cases plateau and in some cases decrease.

Meanmwhile, the US continues to track EXTREMELY closely overall with Spain.

EDIT: Holy shit, NYC is at 87.78 deaths per million! It's so far off it breaks the chart!
Even those numbers might be underestimates since weekends seem prone to recording false/misleading plateaus/troughs.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by ray245 »

Highlord Laan wrote: 2020-04-05 09:22am Bold of you to assume the Trumpenfurer and his drooling primate supporters won't fuck it all up on purpose because murrika.
Well it is possible, but when those supporters are unemployed and have no other alternative to turn to, they might chance their tune. Bear in mind that many of Trump's supporters are not necessary those that are unemployed, but more so of those who have a job, but feel their income and social status are being threatened by globalism and migrants.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by chimericoncogene »

aerius wrote: 2020-04-05 10:43am By the way, domestic animals are a potential transmission vector.
https://www.avma.org/resources-tools/an ... e/covid-19
My understanding is that they can carry the virus, but cannot really get seriously infected enough that they can spread the disease. It is really of very very little concern, more of academic interest at this point than anything, especially since everyone has much bigger problems to worry about (i.e. catching COVID from the guy next to you).
MKSheppard wrote: 2020-04-05 09:59am 5 April 2020 Update:

Image

Looks like both Spain and Italy are seeing the delayed effect of quarantine measures kicking in, as cases plateau and in some cases decrease.

Meanmwhile, the US continues to track EXTREMELY closely overall with Spain.

EDIT: Holy shit, NYC is at 87.78 deaths per million! It's so far off it breaks the chart!

Image
Thanks for making these graphs, Shep. Good comparisons.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by ray245 »

Boris Johnson is now in Hospital.
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Re: The Walls Come Down: No Travel Betwen US and Europe for 30 Days

Post by The Romulan Republic »

ray245 wrote: 2020-04-05 06:31pm Boris Johnson is now in Hospital.
I was honestly trying to feel sorry for him, and then I remembered "heard immunity", and I just couldn't.
"I know its easy to be defeatist here because nothing has seemingly reigned Trump in so far. But I will say this: every asshole succeeds until finally, they don't. Again, 18 months before he resigned, Nixon had a sky-high approval rating of 67%. Harvey Weinstein was winning Oscars until one day, he definitely wasn't."-John Oliver

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