Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

Covid-19

Utah man arrested for vowing 'civil war' against local mayor if COVID-19 lockdown didn't immediately end

A man in Utah has been arrested for vowing to start a "civil war" in Salt Lake City unless its mayor agrees to end lockdown policies that were designed to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

Keep reading... Show less

Anti-lockdown protest organizer in Michigan is selling ‘juice’ supplements as a coronavirus cure

According to an exclusive report by the Daily Mail, the organizer of a Michigan lockdown protest has claimed that nutrition supplements that he takes can beat coronavirus. The Daily Mail also reports that Garrett Soldano is also a national marketing director for Juice+, a controversial supplement company that was once endorsed by O.J. Simpson.

Keep reading... Show less

Ex-FDA chief flabbergasted by Georgia: It’s like they found all the riskiest businesses and decided to open those first

Former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb on Tuesday told CNBC that he didn’t understand Georgia’s plan to start re-opening businesses in the state.

Keep reading... Show less

Here's why the United States depends on China for emergency medical supplies

With so many critical health care products now made offshore that supplies could not meet surging demand as the coronavirus overwhelmed hospitals, America’s attention has again turned to the atrophied state of domestic manufacturing.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump White House wants to shield employers from lawsuits if they make employees sick by forcing them back to work

President Donald Trump wants to see Americans sent back to work as quickly as possible -- but he apparently also doesn't want those workers to sue their employers if they happen to get sick from COVID-19 while doing so.

Keep reading... Show less

Gov. DeSantis task force to restart Florida economy looks to overcome 'psychology of fear'

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A Republican Party-dominated task force assembled by Gov. Ron DeSantis began looking Monday at how to reopen Florida’s economy, even as cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, continue to rise and fears persist about a spike in cases if society returns to normal too quickly.“We need to get the economy back in a safe way,” DeSantis said, and “give people (the) confidence they’re going to be able to participate in the economy.”Coronavirus cases in Florida surpassed 27,000 on Monday, and the death toll topped 800. Social distancing has kept many residents in ...

Keep reading... Show less

Trump shows zero remorse when confronted with the consequences of his inaction on COVID-19

When President Donald Trump was confronted with the direct and dangerous consequences of his own actions of Monday, he immediately began boasting about his fan base and refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing.

Keep reading... Show less

How South Korea flattened the coronavirus curve with technology

As countries around the world consider how best to reopen their countries, it’s worth considering how South Korea has been able to “flatten the curve” and even hold parliamentary elections without resorting to lockdowns.

Keep reading... Show less

States are putting prisoners to work manufacturing coronavirus supplies

Under pressure from the coronavirus pandemic, states are turning to prisoners for support.

Keep reading... Show less

How much coronavirus testing is enough? States could learn from retailers as they ramp up

As states develop plans to restart their economies, the big fear is that coronavirus cases will surge again. To keep the pandemic under control, strategic testing systems will be needed, and they will need to be scaled up fast.

Keep reading... Show less

Coronavirus deaths greater where Fox News viewers watched 'Hannity' more than Tucker Carlson, study says

CHICAGO — A new study published by the University of Chicago’s Becker Friedman Institute for Economics makes a claim that will strike many as incendiary: “Greater viewership of ‘Hannity’ relative to ‘Tucker Carlson Tonight’ is strongly associated with a greater number of COVID-19 cases and deaths in the early stages of the pandemic,” says the paper.The working paper is called “Misinformation During a Pandemic,” and it derives from the authors’ finding that Carlson and Sean Hannity, the two most popular hosts on the right-wing Fox News Network, initially treated coronavirus very differently.“Ca...

Keep reading... Show less

The inside story of how the Bay Area got ahead of the COVID-19 crisis

Sunday was supposed to be a rare day off for Dr. Tomás Aragón after weeks of working around-the-clock.Instead, the San Francisco public health officer was jolted awake by an urgent 7:39 a.m. text message from his boss.“Can you set up a call with San Mateo and Santa Clara health officers this a.m., so we can discuss us all getting on the same page this week with aggressive actions, thanks,” said the message from Dr. Grant Colfax, director of San Francisco’s Department of Public Health.“Will do, getting up now,” Aragón responded.It was March 15, two days before St. Patrick’s Day, a heavy part...

Keep reading... Show less

He's a 30-something Ironman athlete -- but COVID-19 nearly killed him

MINNEAPOLIS — The COVID-19 mystery of Ben O’Donnell, a 30-something Ironman athlete, remains as baffling today as it did March 10 — when Minnesotans learned the state’s first coronavirus case needing intensive care was someone in his prime.State health investigators were perplexed, given the virus’ history of hitting the sick and elderly the hardest.Minnesotans lost hope, because being young and healthy were not surefire shields against COVID-19.“It made everything a lot more real,” said Haley Kramer, an intensive care nurse who treated O’Donnell, “because he was me, he was my husband, he was ...

Keep reading... Show less