Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Covid-19

Coronavirus recovery would be quickest or slowest in these cities: analysis

Most U.S. states are starting to ease coronavirusrestrictionsin order to get the economy back up and running financially. If you are concerned (or just curious) of how quickly the recovery might be in your city from the coronavirus pandemic and the recession caused by the shutdowns, then a new report may give you some idea.Q1 2020 hedge fund letters, conferences and moreCoronavirus recovery depends on 2 factorsThis latest report comes from Moody’s Analytics, which studied the top 100 U.S. metro areas to determine the capability of coronavirus recovery in these cities, according to Yahoo News. ...

Keep reading... Show less

Right-wing activist killed in police raid becomes a martyr for anti-lockdown protesters

Right-wing activist Duncan Lemp, 21, was shot and killed in a pre-dawn police raid on March 12 in Potomac, Maryland. The shooting itself is under dispute -- it isn't known if Lemp was asleep in his bed or if he was carrying a rifle; no one's sure why the raid happened -- but what is known is that Lemp is now embraced as a martyr by some of the most extreme elements of the anti-lockdown movement.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump economic adviser blows off people having 'pity party' over 15 percent unemployment

Trump economic adviser Peter Navarro on Monday said that Americans shouldn't listen to anyone who's having a "pity party" for the more than 20 million people who lost their jobs last month.

Keep reading... Show less

CNN's Avlon rips apart Trump's 'amateur hour' administration that has led to over 75,000 pandemic deaths in the US

For his "Reality Check" segment on CNN's "New Day," John Avlon took a hard look at Donald Trump's administration that rewards loyalists and dumps those who displease the president and explained how it has exacerbated the coronavirus pandemic that has claimed over 75,000 American lives.

Keep reading... Show less

Why the military can use emergency powers to treat service members with trial COVID-19 drugs

Infectious disease has always been one of the military’s greatest threats. By its own estimates, the U.S. Army lost almost as many soldiers from the 1918 flu as died on the battlefields of the first World War.

Keep reading... Show less

What US states can learn from COVID-19 transition planning in Europe

After a rapid rise in coronavirus cases throughout Europe – particularly Italy and Spain – tough public health measures “flattened the curve.” That is, the spread of the virus slowed enough so fewer people would need treatment at the same time. Hospitals would not be overwhelmed; COVID-19 patients would do better. Now, two months after implementing some form of physical distancing, European governments are planning to reopen their economies.

Keep reading... Show less

Law firm fires Texas gun nut for posting insane rant about shooting people who ask him to wear face mask

A Dallas-based law firm administrative manager was fired recently after he posted a crazed rant about shooting people who ask him to wear face masks before entering businesses.

Keep reading... Show less

COVID survivors’ blood plasma is a sought-after new commodity

Diana Berrent learned she had tested positive for COVID-19 on a Wednesday in mid-March. Within a day, she had received 30 emails from people urging her to donate blood.Friends and acquaintances, aware of her diagnosis, passed along a pressing request from New York’s Mount Sinai Health System, one of the first centers to seek plasma, a blood component, to be used in a therapythat might fight the deadly disease. Berrent, 45, said she immediately recognized the need for the precious plasma — and the demand that would follow.“When I saw that email going around, I saw what was going to happen in th...

Keep reading... Show less

'It's one thing to survive the infection, but what's next?' Some COVID-19 patients need rehab to walk, talk and problem solve

CHICAGO — In front of enormous windows overlooking Lake Michigan, Gordon Quinn sat at a small white table at a rehabilitation hospital facing speech language pathologist Kate Webler.Only Webler’s eyes were visible from behind a mask, face shield and goggles. She asked Quinn to place a white plastic straw in his mouth, then suggested he sing “Happy Birthday” through it — an exercise meant to help him stretch and relax his vocal cords.Instead, Quinn began singing the Rolling Stones’ “You Can’t Always Get What You Want.” Webler laughed and urged him on.It was a moment of levity in an otherwise di...

Keep reading... Show less

Cheers and tears as Europe's kids go back to school

 Excited children greeted their friends and weary parents got used to early starts again as schools in several European countries reopened after a nearly two-month coronavirus break.

Keep reading... Show less

How California is protecting older veterans from the coronavirus

Dr. Vito Imbasciani has been at war with viruses since he was 5.Growing up near the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in New York, he contracted polio in 1952 and couldn’t walk for two months. In medical school in Vermont 30 years later, he witnessed AIDS steal the lives of otherwise healthy gay men.Now, Imbasciani, secretary of California’s Department of Veterans Affairs, and his staff are responsible for keeping the novel coronavirus away from the state’s eight veterans homes. California’s defenses are holding.The explanation, many say, lies in CalVet’s intense preparation, quick response,...

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's White House knew the coronavirus was coming -- and yet failed five critical tests: analysis

The arrival of COVID-19 has provided a nuclear-level stress test to the American health care system, and our grade isn’t pretty: at least 73,000 dead, 1.2 million infected and 30 millionunemployed; nursing homes, prisons and meatpacking plants that have become hotbeds of infection. The actual numbers are certainly far higher, since there still hasn’t been enough testing to identify all those who have died or have been infected.

By all accounts, a number of other countries have responded — and fared — far better.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump has lost control of the pandemic -- and now 'fear is subsuming his presidency': NYT reporter

With more White House staffers getting infected with COVID-19 every day, President Donald Trump is having a hard time convincing Americans that it is safe for them to go back to work.

Keep reading... Show less