Covid-19

‘Does quarantine not apply to senators?’: Ted Cruz blasted for Garland questions – and for going to DC after Cancun

U.S. Senator Ted Cruz is once again under fire, this time for traveling to Washington, D.C. to attend the Judiciary Committee's confirmation hearing of Biden Attorney General pick Merrick Garland, and for his line of questioning as well. The Texas Republican first came under fire for traveling to Cancun, Mexico last week while millions of his constituents were without electricity, heat, and running water.

Cruz returned on Thursday, after falsely blaming his children for his Mexican vacation (while leaving the family dog at home in a cold house.)

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The View’s Meghan McCain wants Biden to fire Dr. Fauci because she doesn’t know when she can get her vaccine

"The View's" Meghan McCain is angry that she doesn't know when she's going to get her vaccination while watching so many older people get theirs. During the previous administration, it was left up to the states to decide how to do the distribution of vaccines, but under President Joe Biden that has changed somewhat with vaccines being sent to public health centers and large-scale vaccine sites.

McCain argued that over the weekend Dr. Anthony Fauci refused to say whether someone could go hang out with friends and family after being vaccinated. In Israel, she said, they have a campaign called "get a shot, do a shot," saying they can go out drinking after getting their vaccine.

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Variants with the potential to be more transmissible raise COVID-19 questions, concern

Several coronavirus variants with the potential to be more transmissible have caused global concern over whether existing vaccines will still protect the world from a virus that is constantly mutating.

Here is what we know.

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UK's Boris Johnson to start lifting lockdown as vaccines reach one-third of adults

Prime Minister Boris Johnson is set Monday to start unwinding England's third and -- he hopes -- final coronavirus lockdown, as a quickening UK-wide inoculation drive relieves pressure on hard-hit hospitals.

In a statement to parliament, Johnson is expected to confirm the reopening of all English schools on March 8 in the first big step towards restoring normal life, nearly a year after he imposed the first stay-at-home order.

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A grim milestone of 500,000 dead

Stunningly, a year into coronavirus, we've reached 500,000 American deaths—and climbing, particularly since November.

That as many people as live in Miami, Atlanta, Omaha or Oakland, all gone in a single year, a disproportionate number of deaths—many avoidable—in the best medically equipped nation on the planet.

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'What a failure': MSNBC doctor tears up while announcing US COVID deaths passing 500,000

Sunday afternoon, MSNBC host Alex Witt interrupted an interview with the victim of racist violence to break the sad news that the COVID-19 death toll broke the 500,000 barrier in the U.S. -- which then led an MSNBC medical analyst to tear up while calling the U.S. government's response to the pandemic a "failure" that didn't need to happen.

Moments after it was reported that the death toll had hit 500,002, Witt told her audience, "We have very sobering moment we need to talk about and that's the fact that across this country we have now hit 500,000 dead Americans as a result of the COVID-19 virus. It's a stunning point to have reached it's not taken that long to reach the last 200,000 numbers."

Bringing in MSNBC medical contributor Dr. Kavita Patel -- whose eyes were already filled with tears -- she asked her for her thoughts.

"So many emotions creeping up," she replied. "500,000 -- that's about 1 in 67 Americans who have died and we probably could have prevented a good number of these."

"I think what's harder to imagine is, I was thinking about the 1918 pandemic and there were about 617,000 deaths," she continued as her voice trembled. "We thought surely our medicine has advanced, we'll never face anything like that and here we are: my children, my grandchildren, there are generations that will say what a failure in some ways our approach to this pandemic has been."

Watch below:


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Fauci says it is possible Americans will still be wearing masks in 2022

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. infectious diseases official Dr. Anthony Fauci said on Sunday that it is possible Americans will still be wearing masks in 2022, but that measures to stop the spread of COVID-19 would be increasingly relaxed as more vaccines are administered. Fauci made the comment during an interview on CNN. (Reporting by Michael Martina; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

Vaccinated Israelis allowed to go to theatres, sport centers and museums

Coronavirus vaccination in Israel - Two elderly people drink coffee at a coffee shop after Israel introduced incentives for people who have been vaccinated against Covid-19, as real-life data released by the country's health ministry indicated the Pfizer/BioNTech jab is highly effective. - Nir Alon/ZUMA Wire/dpa

Israel on Sunday introduced incentives for people who have been vaccinated against Covid-19, as real-life data released by the country's health ministry indicated the Pfizer/BioNTech jab is highly effective.

As of Sunday, Israelis who have had the required two doses are now allowed to visit sport centres, theatres, museums and hotels.

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Arizona man arrested for cursing and yelling 'get a job' at families standing in food distribution line

According to CBS 5 and Fox 10 Phoenix, a man in Maricopa County, Arizona was arrested on disorderly conduct charges after cursing and harassing people in line at a local school that was hosting a food distribution for struggling families.

"Maricopa County Sheriff Deputies say they were called to a food distribution event held at a Buckeye school Thursday after reports of a man, later identified as 46-year-old Ryan Bryson, who was reportedly 'yelling obscenities and degrading remarks to members of the community who were at the school for food distribution,'" reported Emma Lockhart on Friday.

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Trump administration approved export of millions of N95 masks as American workers cried for more

In the midst of a national shortage of N95 masks, the U.S. government quietly granted an exception to its export ban on protective gear, allowing as many as 5 million of the masks per month to be shipped overseas.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency issued the waiver in the final moments of Donald Trump's presidency last month, allowing a Texas company to export its products after it failed to secure U.S. customers, according to the FEMA letter obtained by KHN.

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AOC calls for investigation of Andrew Cuomo's disastrous handling of Covid outbreaks in nursing homes

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Friday joined a chorus of state and local officials demanding a probe of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo's catastrophic response to the coronavirus pandemic in the Empire State's nursing homes.

"I... stand with our local officials calling for a full investigation of the Cuomo administration's handling of nursing homes during Covid-19," the prominent Democratic lawmaker, who represents New York's 14th Congressional District, said in a statement released Friday.

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'I just ask God to help me': Texas funeral home crushed by death as US COVID toll nears 500,000

By Callaghan O'Hare and Maria Caspani HOUSTON (Reuters) - Sunday is traditionally a quiet day for Chuck Pryor's Houston funeral home, but on this Sunday in February, almost a year after the global pandemic reached Texas, the phone was still ringing. Pryor took the call: COVID-19 had taken yet another American life -- pushing the nation's death toll closer to the half-million mark -- and another grieving family required the services of the exhausted funeral director and his staff. "It's just mentally taxing," Pryor, 59, who runs a small funeral home business with his wife Almika, told Reuters e...

Fauci unloads on Trump: 'He did things that were terrible' when I contradicted him

Dr. Anthony Fauci unloaded on former President Donald Trump in an interview with the UK newspaper The Telegraph.

Throughout the interview, Fauci recounted how his former boss would routinely take bad advice on how to handle the novel coronavirus pandemic and would act out whenever anyone with expertise contradicted him.

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