Covid-19

Governor says Texas is 'very close' to herd immunity. Health experts disagree

AUSTIN, Texas — Gov. Greg Abbott said Texas is "very close" to reaching herd immunity, an assessment that runs counter to recent comments by health experts and his own medical adviser. Speaking to Fox News on Sunday, Abbott touted the state's relatively low COVID-19 numbers. After dropping below 3,000 hospitalizations statewide on March 31 for the first time since June 17, the number of hospitalizations has hovered just above 2,800. "We absolutely are not declaring victory at this time," he said when asked about how numbers remain low despite his decision last month to lift the statewide mask ...

Trump CDC chief joins 'Big Ass Fans' -- which promotes controversial Covid-killing technology

Dr. Robert Redfield, former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has joined Big Ass Fans, lending his scientific credibility to a company division that says its ion-generating technology kills the coronavirus. The company charges $9,450 for a fan with technology that academic air quality experts question.

This story also ran on The Daily Beast. It can be republished for free.

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Pandemic hits 'critical point' as Europe deaths top one million

Europe passed the grim milestone of one million coronavirus deaths on Monday, as the World Health Organization warned that infections are rising exponentially despite widespread efforts aimed at stopping them.

The death toll across Europe's 52 countries, compiled by AFP from official sources, totalled at least 1,000,288 by 1830 GMT.

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In-person Oscars to feature bevy of A-list presenters

Film lovers tired of tedious Zoom-based Hollywood awards shows can rejoice -- producers of the glitzy in-person Oscars this month are bringing in the big guns, with Harrison Ford, Brad Pitt and Reese Witherspoon among an A-list lineup of presenters unveiled Monday.

The April 25 ceremony, to be primarily held at Union Station in downtown Los Angeles, comes as California accelerates its reopening after a year of Covid-19 closures, buoyed by a vast vaccination rollout, and will follow a glamorous "awards-show-as-a-movie" theme, the Academy said.

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Right-wing 'idiot' Ted Nugent humiliates himself with latest COVID-19 rant – and the internet can’t stop laughing

According to a report from the Journal of Musical Things, aging rocker Ted Nugent posted a video rant on his Facebook page pushing a long-debunked COVID-19 conspiracy theory that has critics of the conservative entertainer wondering if he is not very bright or just desperate for attention.

In the video , Nugent complained about his next tour being canceled due to COVID precautions, then ranted, "You know, I guess I would ask you — because I'm addicted to truth, logic and common sense — and my common-sense meter would demand the answer to why weren't we shut down for COVID one through 18? COVID-1 — and there was a COVID 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18 — COVID one through 18 didn't shut anything down but woah, COVID-19!"

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Wall Street CEOs cashed in big as the rest of the country reeled from the COVID crash: WSJ

According to a report from the Wall Street Journal, the median pay for an overwhelming majority of the top 300 CEOs on Wall Street kept rising during the COVID-19 pandemic that saw millions lose their jobs as businesses shuttered and the economy reeled.

While the U.S. government doled out COVID aid to unemployed Americans and offered COVID loans to businesses struggling to keep their doors open, CEOs saw a jump to $13.7 million last year, up from $12.8 million in median pay for the same companies a year earlier.

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Michigan MAGA lawmaker ignoring COVID crisis in her district to push Trump conspiracies: report

According to a report from the Daily Beast, the Michigan district represented by a newly-elected House Republican is still being ravaged by COVID-19 at one of the highest rates in the country and she is ignoring the damage it is doing while she rails Donald Trump-like about a stolen election and immigrants at the border.

As the Beast's Michael Daly, Rep. Lisa McClain (R-MI) won election as a Trump Republican and hasn't changed her ways despite his election loss to now-President Joe Biden.

In fact, as Daly points out, she spent the first few months after being elected attacking the election results.

"From the start, McClain's focus has been elsewhere. She was among those who continued to make groundless claims that the election had been stolen long after those claims were debunked by all the courts in the land," he wrote. "Her first big moment in Congress came in the wake of the Jan. 6 storming of the Capitol. She became one of three representatives from Michigan and 139 altogether who voted against certification."

Now, he notes she has joined the chorus of Republicans attacking Biden over the immigrants at the border while, at the same time, her district is being hammered by a particularly virulent outbreak of COVID-19.

Writing, "The entire mitten-shaped state has been exploding with new cases over the past fortnight, to a daily average of 72 new cases per 100,000—the highest infection rate in the nation. But the rates of hospitalization and deaths, as well as new infections, are all highest in The Thumb—which has considerably fewer medical resources than the urban areas," Daly added, "And yet The Thumb's new Trump-loving representative in Congress, rather than encouraging residents to mask-up in the face of a dire and unprecedented health crisis, is busy tweeting about what she describes as the true threat to Michigan: 'unaccompanied alien children' at the southwest border."

According to the report, when addressing the COVID outbreak in a town hall, she attempted to dismiss it in a Trump-like manner, with a woman who attended the town hall recalling that McClain made a bizarre analogy.

"The young woman, who asked not to be identified, was able to hear McClain make a bizarre comparison between COVID-19 and children who drown. According to her, COVID had killed less than 250 children, whereas 800 drown each year in America," the report states, adding McClain told the crowd, "We don't ban swimming pools."

As Daly wrote, "Not even Trump had compared dead kid stats in an effort to minimize the threat of a virus that has killed more than half a million Americans. McClain could get away with it in a rural realm that at that time had largely escaped the surges experienced by Detroit."

"The five counties generally considered to comprise The Thumb have now all reported more than 100 new cases per 100,000. The highest of those, St. Clair, reported 165, more than twice that of Michigan, more than three times that of New Jersey, and more than four times that of New York," the Beast report noted. "St. Clair also reported a 31 percent positivity rate in testing. Huron County was even higher, with 35.5 percent. Sanilac was 43.1 percent, and Tuscola 31.1 percent. Lapeer was lower, with 24.1 percent, but still markedly higher than Michigan as a whole, which was 16.5 percent."

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Thousands of low-level inmates released in pandemic could be headed back to prison

By Sarah N. Lynch WASHINGTON (Reuters) - For Kendrick Fulton, the COVID-19 pandemic opened the door to an unexpected opportunity to rebuild his life in Round Rock, Texas, after serving 17 years behind bars for selling crack cocaine. As officials scrambled last year to stem the spread of the coronavirus in prisons, the Justice Department let Fulton and more than 23,800 inmates like him serve their sentences at home. But as more people are vaccinated, thousands could be hauled back into prison to serve the remainder of their sentences, thanks to a little-noticed legal opinion issued by the Justi...

With vaccine authorization for young kids still months away, what should families who are partially vaccinated do?

CHICAGO — More than 20% of Illinoisans are fully vaccinated and able to resume some normal activities, but people with young children may be waiting a little bit longer. None of the authorized vaccine providers in the U.S. are approved for use in people younger than 16, but Pfizer on Friday requested authorization from the Food and Drug Administration for adolescents between 12 and 15. The trials for younger children, though, have just begun and are still months from such a request. Experts estimate that the vaccines may not be authorized for them until late this year or early 2022. Although c...

Florida anti-masker sentenced to 30 days after deliberately coughing on cancer patient

According to the Miami Herald, a Jacksonville, Florida woman who deliberately coughed on a brain cancer patient at a Pier One Imports has been sentenced, a year after the incident.

The incident, which went viral last year, was triggered after Debra Hunter visibly maskless, tried to return an item she didn't have in her possession. Heather Reed Sprague, the victim, confronted her, after which Hunter said, "I think I'll get real close to you. How about that?" Hunter then coughed in Sprague's face.

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Trudeau calls for Canada regions to tighten COVID restrictions

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Friday called on Canada's provinces to tighten public health measures as an accelerating vaccination program fails to keep pace with surging coronavirus infections.

"In several places in the country, stricter measures are needed to curb the spread of the virus," he told a news conference days after Ontario imposed a stay-at-home order and Quebec tightened restrictions.

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DeSantis takes legal action against the CDC -- but some legal experts believe it's a 'political stunt'

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) is pushing back against the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) extension of the pandemic-related "no-sail" order for cruise lines.

According to the Miami Herald, DeSantis has filed a lawsuit against the public health agency in an attempt to expedite cruise ships returning to sea. In a press conference held on Thursday, April 8, DeSantis was joined by Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody (R), U.S. Rep. Carlos Gimenez (R), and Miami-Dade County Commission Chairman Jose "Pepe" Diaz (R) as he explained his reason for taking legal action.

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Florida sues to end cruise ship COVID restrictions

The US state of Florida is suing the Biden administration to allow cruise ships to start sailing after a year-long moratorium on operations due to the coronavirus pandemic, the governor's office said Thursday.

Republican Governor Ron DeSantis, whose state relies heavily on tourism dollars, authorized the lawsuit against the sailing ban, calling the original order "unlawful."

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