Covid-19

Spend 'big,' Biden says in push for massive economic package

President Joe Biden sidestepped a divided Congress and went straight to the nation Tuesday with a primetime televised town hall in Wisconsin seeking support for his $1.9 trillion economic rescue package.

"Now is the time we should spending. Now is the time to go big," Biden told the live CNN audience in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

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Prominent scientists call on CDC to better protect workers From Covid

A prominent group of academics is pressing the Biden administration to move faster and take stronger action to protect high-risk workers from airborne exposure to the coronavirus, urging enforceable standards to help safeguard risky workplaces including health care, food processing and prisons. The researchers say that even though the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has acknowledged the virus can spread through tiny airborne particles, it needs to take “strong immediate” action to update its guidance to reduce the risk. “This is the opportunity now,” said David Michaels, a professor...

Rural hospital remains entrenched in Covid ‘war’ even amid vaccine rollout

Editor’s note: KHN wrote about St. James Parish Hospital in April, when it was experiencing its first surge of covid-19 patients. Ten months later, we checked in to see how the hospital and its staff were faring. This story also ran on The Guardian. It can be republished for free. The “heroes work here” sign in front of St. James Parish Hospital has been long gone, along with open intensive care unit beds in the state of Louisiana. Staffers at the rural hospital spent hours each day in January calling larger hospitals in search of the elusive beds for covid-19 patients. They leveraged personal...

Disparities persist in NYC distribution of COVID-19 vaccines: city data

New York City neighborhoods with the highest COVID-19 fatality rates have seen some of the lowest vaccination rates, and vice versa, according to data released by the city on Tuesday. East New York, Brooklyn, suffered from a COVID-19 death rate of 837 residents per 100,000, according to the Health Department. That compares to a median rate of about 419 for the entire city. But just 5% of East New York residents have gotten their first vaccinations — about half that of the citywide average — the new data showed. Mayor Bill de Blasio blamed the problem on hesitance by low-income New Yorkers and ...

Internment survivor George Takei breaks down the horror of the racist wave of attacks on Asians

Renowned actor and civil rights activist George Takei offered his analysis of the wave of racist attacks on Asians in America.

"A report from the Asian-American Bar Association of New York details the rise of violence against Asian-Americans in New York during the COVID-19 pandemic," MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell reported on Tuesday. "Across the country, there were more than 2,500 reports of anti-Asian hate incidents related to COVID-19 between March and September 2020."

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Rudy Giuliani needs to lawyer up over Georgia election meddling: state attorney

Appearing on MSNBC's " Morning Joe," the state attorney for Palm Beach said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) is likely off the hook for charges of tampering with Georgia's election results, but that former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani better get a lawyer quick.

Speaking with "Morning Joe" contributor Katty Kay, attorney Dave Aronberg claimed there was not enough evidence in the case against Graham -- who called Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to inquire about vote totals -- and it would probably be impossible to get an indictment, much less a conviction.

Giuliani, on the other hand, could be facing more legal peril in Georgia.

"Right now I think the most that the prosecutor can do is open a criminal investigation, but I don't think it's going to go anywhere," Aronberg stated. "Interestingly I think there is a great chance of filing charges against Rudy Giuliani because he made false statements to local and state governmental bodies. and the D.A. in Atlanta said that she is expanding her investigation to include the making of false statements."

"She didn't say Rudy by name, but we know who she was referring to," he continued. "When he went before the state Senate committee in Atlanta, which is in DA Willis' district, and said there are 10,000 dead people who voted or there are suitcases full of fake ballots that have been counted, that's the kind of stuff that can get you a pair of handcuffs. So, if you are Rudy Goilani, you might want to start to butt-dialing criminal defense lawyers because he might need them."

Watch below:


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After losing mother, grandmother and uncle to COVID-19, family tries to move forward

CHICAGO – The coronavirus had already taken her uncle and her grandmother. By the time Karina Reyes’ 47-year-old mother was hospitalized, Reyes and the rest of her family were all too familiar with planning a pandemic memorial. Doctors told Reyes and her brothers that their mother, Elvia Mendoza, was not getting better. “Does a miracle have to happen for her to live?” Reyes recalls asking a doctor. She said the doctor responded: “Honestly, I haven’t seen miracles happen when it comes to COVID.” People who care for their family members who contract the virus can end up paying for it with their ...

How to properly wear two masks — and other mask-fitting tips following recent CDC advice

New mask advice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — connected with a new study — focuses on making sure masks fit correctly to better prevent the spread of COVID-19. The CDC studied whether wearing two masks provided more protection than one and found that it did. The researchers found that wearing one mask — surgical or cloth — blocked about 40% of the particles coming toward the head that was breathing in. When a cloth mask was worn on top of a surgical mask, about 80% were blocked. Here is a look at the CDC’s advice and some tips on how to mask properly. DOUBLE MASK What t...

Here's how organized crime is exploiting COVID to seize power from governments around the world

On Monday, Foreign Policy reported that organized crime syndicates are poised to seize power from governments around the world, driven by their exploitation of the coronavirus pandemic.

"As the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic forces the global economy to its knees, preventing people from working and supporting themselves in places where governments are ill-equipped to pick up the slack, some of these emerging organized crime groups are already positioning themselves to swoop in and seize not only commercial but political control," reported Lindsey Kennedy and Nathan Paul Southern.

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In one US city, coronavirus vaccines for everyone 18 and over

Most countries are still only vaccinating the elderly and healthcare workers, but one US town hit hard by the coronavirus is already offering doses to everyone age 18 and over.

Central Falls -- with a population of 20,000 people in Rhode Island -- is home to a large Hispanic population, many of whom are undocumented migrants.

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A dark past clouds COVID vaccine for African Americans

Gary Jackson doesn't want the Covid vaccine even though the virus kills Black people at a starkly higher rate -- a daunting problem experts say the United States must confront in controlling its disastrous outbreak.

By some measures, African Americans have died from coronavirus at the highest rate of any group in the country. Yet they are also the most skeptical of getting the new vaccines, which have been shown to be safe and effective in trials.

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Jim Jordan argues 'cancel culture' is 'the number one issue for the country' despite pandemic

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) on Sunday said that so-called "cancel culture" is the "number one issue for the country" despite the deadly COVID-19 pandemic that devastated parts of the economy.

Fox News host Maria Bartiromo asked Jordan if cancel culture had gone too far after one of Donald Trump's attorneys faced public scorn over his appearance at the former president's second impeachment trial.

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WATCH: Rand Paul laughs out loud about not wearing a mask on the Senate floor

Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) defended his refusal to weak a face mask on the Senate floor by calling other senators "science deniers."

Paul made the remarks during an appearance on Full Court Press with host Greta Van Susteren.

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