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Covid-19

Unions are horrified at the mask mandate rollback — and fear workers' lives are at risk again

On May 13, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lifted the indoor mask mandate for people who say they are vaccinated. Individually, many of those who were vaccinated celebrated the news at what seemed like a step towards a pre-pandemic normalcy. Yet public health experts and unions alike were horrified.

This article first appeared in Salon.

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Anti-masker pleads guilty for calling for Iowa's governor be hanged or shot 'for treason'

According to KCRG, an Iowa man was arrested after he left a profane anti-mask voicemail for Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, demanding that she be hanged or shot "for treason."

"Harvey Hunter Jr., 48, pleaded guilty to second-degree harassment, accepting a plea agreement offered by Polk County prosecutors. In a written guilty plea, he said that he 'did threaten to commit bodily injury to a government official' in his Jan. 5 voicemail," said the report. "Prosecutors will recommend that Hunter serve a one-year term of probation, pay a fine, have no contact with the governor and undergo a mental health evaluation. His sentencing is set for next week."

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Death of anti-vax sheriff's deputy ruled 'in the line of duty': report

Denver Sheriff Elias Diggins has ruled that the death of a an anti-vax deputy who contracted coronavirus was "in the line of duty," 9 News reports.

The ruling will provide additional benefits to his survivors.

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Tipped workers still feeling the pandemic crunch

As the number of Covid-19 cases soared in Washington through the fall and winter, Tizoc Zarate waited tables at a local restaurant -- but struggled to put enough food on the table for himself and his girlfriend.

Zarate, 22, says he is angry about the health risks he faced, especially given the low pay -- and the lack of support from his bosses.

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Rebekah Jones accused Ron DeSantis of cooking the books — she now has whistleblower status: report

Florida's Office of the Inspector General on Friday told attorneys representing Rebekah Jones that she has officially qualified for whistleblower status, the Miami Herald reported Friday.

"Jones, who was responsible for building the COVID-19 data dashboard for the Florida Department of Health, was fired last year after raising concerns about 'misleading data' being presented to the public, according to the complaint, which was reviewed by the Miami Herald," the newspaper repored. "In the complaint, filed July 17, 2020, Jones alleged she was fired for 'opposition and resistance to instructions to falsify data in a government website.' She described being asked to bend data analysis to fit predetermined policy and delete data from public view after questions from the press — actions she claimed 'represent an immediate injury to the public health, safety, and welfare, including the possibility of death to members of the public.'"

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The United States is at the mercy of those who think they're God's elect

I'm going to try connecting things that don't at first seem related. They are the fight over a commission to investigate the January 6 insurrection; the disproportional number of covid deaths in states run by Republican governors; this week's shooting massacre in San Jose, Calif., and every other one like it; and, let's see, what else? Well, feel free at the end of this piece to add your own examples. There are plenty more.

All have in common the political concept that God divided the world between the elected and the unelected, that is, between His chosen and everyone else deserving of eternal damnation. (They deserve what's coming to them, in other words.) For the chosen, anything is possible. For God's enemies, God's law. All politics, all historical struggle over power and limited resources, can be seen through a lens in which everything begins with the chosen and ends with the chosen. It's a closed circuit—politically, religiously, economically and every way that matters. What's important for you to understand is this: it's impervious to democracy, morality, justice and the truth. If you want to keep this republic of ours, you've got to keep these people away from power.

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Anti-vaxxer rants about vaccines containing spermicide and killing everyone as school board meeting goes off the rails: report

Far-right activists took over a school board meeting in Nevada to push debunked conspiracy theories.

"During the Carson City School Board meeting on Tuesday evening, a number of citizens took over the public comment period to voice their opposition to students wearing face masks for the remainder of the school year, as well as the board's use of the word "equity" at a previous meeting," Carson Now reported Friday.

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Icelandic duo scale Everest despite Covid infection

Two Icelanders managed to climb Mount Everest despite having contracted coronavirus and even though Nepalese authorities insisted there have been no virus cases on the world's highest peak.

The two climbers, Sigurdur Sveinsson and Heimir Hallgrimsson, began coughing and suspected they had caught the virus as they reached around 7,000 meters (about 23,000 feet), they wrote in a message published Thursday in which they described their perilous descent to base camp.

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'No shame': Biden knocks Republicans touting COVID relief law they voted against

CLEVELAND (Reuters) - President Joe Biden on Thursday chided Republican lawmakers who voted against his $1.9 trillion economic stimulus and COVID-19 relief bill before lauding its benefits in their political districts.

Speaking at an event in Ohio, Biden drew laughter from the crowd when he held up a list with names of Republican lawmakers who he said had touted the law, called the American Rescue Plan, after it was passed with only Democratic support.

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US intelligence community acknowledges two theories of COVID-19 origin

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. intelligence community on Thursday acknowledged its agencies had two theories on where COVID-19 originated, with two agencies believing it emerged naturally from human contact with infected animals and a third embracing a possible laboratory accident as the source of the global pandemic.

"The U.S. Intelligence Community does not know exactly where, when, or how the COVID-19 virus was transmitted initially but has coalesced around two likely scenarios," the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) said, adding that the majority believes there is not "sufficient information to assess one to be more likely than the other."

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Seeking a pill to cure COVID: drugmakers eye alternative to vaccines

Prevention is better than cure -- but when it comes to Covid, what happens when people can't get the vaccine, don't want it, or they're immune suppressed and it fails to stop infection?

The hunt is on for a coronavirus treatment that can be taken as a pill soon after a confirmed positive, halting the disease in its tracks so that cases that might have been severe end up being nothing more than a bad cold.

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Chinese embassy in U.S. says politicizing COVID-19 origins hampers investigations

SHANGHAI (Reuters) -China's embassy in the United States said Thursday that politicising the origins of COVID-19 would hamper investigations, after U.S. President Joe Biden said the U.S. intelligence community is divided over where the virus emerged.

As the World Health Organization prepares to begin a second phase of investigations into the origins of COVID-19, China has been under pressure to give international investigators more access, amid several recent reports suggesting that it leaked from a laboratory specialising in coronavirus research in the city of Wuhan.

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Tennessee anti-vaxxer arrested after deliberately plowing car through vaccination site

On Wednesday, WSMV reported that a woman in eastern Tennessee was arrested after she drove recklessly through a drive-in COVID-19 vaccination site to protest the administration of the vaccine — nearly hitting several health workers in the process.

"Deputies arrested Virginia C. Brown, 36, of Greenback, TN, on Monday morning after she drove through a vaccination center set up at the Foothills Mall," reported Chuck Morris. "Deputies assigned to assist at the site saw a blue Chrysler SUV traveling at a high rate of speed through a closed cone course and through an enclosed tent with several Health Department and National Guard personnel working under the tent. The deputy observed the Chrysler SUV exit the tent and continue to drive recklessly through the cone course. A deputy was able to follow Brown after she drove through the site and arrest her. She was charged with seven counts of felony reckless endangerment."

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