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Covid-19

'America is failing the test': Paul Krugman issues dire warning about COVID-19 as cases surge in multiple states

Even though the COVID-19 pandemic hasn't been in headlines as much over the last two weeks, the disease is still killing roughly 1,000 Americans a day and many states are seeing surges in cases.

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Elon Musk reopened his Tesla factory in defiance of county orders -- then an outbreak happened

Last months, Tesla CEO Elon Musk openly defied stay-at-home orders in Alameda County in order to reopen his car factory in Fremont, California. The oppositional billionaire, who had been skeptical of public health recommendations — and who previously dismissed the pandemic as "dumb" —first filed a lawsuit for injunctive relief; then threatened to take his factory to another state; then called Alameda County's interim health officer "ignorant." Musk even said he was willing to be arrested for the noble "cause" of restarting production.

And what did that get him? According to a new report by the Washington Post, a coronavirus outbreak in the factory.

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Critics cry foul as GOP refuse to provide additional COVID-19 aid for suffering communities

"Communities of color can't wait for you to slow walk more coronavirus aid."

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Europe demands better pandemic plan as Moscow exits lockdown

Europe's most powerful countries urged the European Union to better prepare for the next pandemic after chaotic responses to the coronavirus, as Moscow emerged from lockdown despite Russia still being in the grip of a surging epidemic.

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New coronavirus may have emerged in summer 2019: study

A surge in hospital visits and internet searches related to COVID-19 symptoms from the Chinese city of Wuhan suggests the coronavirus may have been circulating since August 2019, according to a preliminary study by researchers at Boston University and Harvard.

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National Guard soldiers test positive for coronavirus in the wake of DC protests

According to a report from McClatchy, some members of the D.C. National Guard who responded to protests and unrest in the area this week have now tested positive for coronavirus.

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Eiffel Tower will reopen to public on June 25 following COVID-19 lockdown lift

The Eiffel Tower, one of the most visited sites in Paris, will reopen to the public on June 25 more than three months after shuttering in France's coronavirus lockdown, its operators said on Tuesday.

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'Angry' Trump is headed for defeat and can't afford to lose more GOP support: columnist

In his column for Bloomberg, longtime political observer Jonathan Bernstein stated that Donald Trump is on the road to defeat in November as he watches members of his own party -- as well as military leaders -- turn on him at the same time recent polls show him falling behind former Vice President Joe Biden who is expected to be the Democratic nominee.

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COVID-19’s deadliness for men is revealing why researchers should have been studying immune system sex differences years ago

When it comes to surviving critical cases of COVID-19, it appears that men draw the short straw.

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States are making it harder to sue nursing homes over the coronavirus, and that’s a bad idea

The coronavirus has devastated nursing homes across the country, killing tens of thousands of vulnerable older Americans. Nursing homes did not cause the pandemic, but poor infection control, inadequate staffing and sluggish mitigation allowed the virus to spread.

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Trump is facing 'political death' without enough time to turn the country around before the election: conservative

According to conservative columnist Matt Lewis, Donald Trump will likely be ousted in November due to devastating unemployment numbers that will still not have rebounded due to the coronavirus pandemic that was botched by his administration.

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Why the US is experiencing a coronavirus plateau

When epidemiologists talked about "flattening the curve," they probably didn't mean it this way: the US hit its peak coronavirus caseload in April, but since that time the graph has been on a seemingly unending plateau.

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Shutdowns prevented 60 million coronavirus infections in the United States: report

A new study reveals that roughly 60 million Americans were saved from novel coronavirus infections as a result of the shutdown orders implemented throughout the United States during the pandemic. That means about 18% of the country's population avoided a coronavirus infection as a result, likely reducing the death toll by six or seven figures.

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