Monday, May 25, 2020

COVID-19


While the U.S. has reported more cases and deaths than any other country, the method for counting COVID-19 deaths varies by state. In testimony before the Senate earlier this month, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert, said the actual number of people who've died as a result of the pandemic is "almost certainly" higher than what's been counted.

Such data has been the basis for how quickly states are beginning to open up and return to a sense of normalcy. But government officials in a number of states are facing questions about how open and honest they're being about how the virus is impacting their state.

"Accurate, complete and timely information is the best way to understand, respond to and limit the impact of the virus on both health and the economy," Dr. Tom Frieden, who ran the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention under former President Barack Obama, told NBC News.

"This helps to set realistic expectations on how the pandemic will affect people's lives and to inform the required changes in behavior to prevent the spread of the virus," he added.

Slide 1 of 50: Indy Car driver Charlie Kimball rides his bicycle down the main straightaway at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Sunday, May 24, 2020, in Indianapolis. The Indianapolis 500 was postponed because of the coronavirus pandemic. The race will instead be held Aug. 23, three months later than its May 24 scheduled date. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

Next Slide


1/50 SLIDES © Darron Cummings/AP Photo
Indy Car driver Charlie Kimball rides his bicycle down the main straightaway at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, on May 24, in Indianapolis. The Indianapolis 500 was postponed because of the coronavirus pandemic. The race will instead be held Aug. 23, three months later than its May 24 scheduled date. 

Georgia officials have apologized and corrected what was described as a "processing error" that wrongly showed a downward trend in the number of new daily infections in the state, making it appear as if new infections had dropped every day for two weeks. The error was at least the third in three weeks, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.
Georgia was among the first states to launch its reopening. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, said the state on Tuesday recorded its the lowest number of hospitalized patients since it began tracking such data in early April.
In the neighboring state of Florida, which has also moved expeditiously in reopening swathes of its economy, several data-related controversies also have brewed.
According to internal emails obtained by the Tampa Bay Times, state officials directed a top Florida Department of Health data manager earlier this month to remove data from public view that showed Florida residents had reported coronavirus-associated symptoms before cases were officially announced. The emails showed that the data manager, Rebekah Jones, had complied with the order but said it was the "wrong call."
Jones was taken off her role maintaining the state's coronavirus dashboard one day after that directive. She told a local CBS affiliate that she refused to "manually change data to drum up support for the plan to reopen" Florida. Last week, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, said Jones was under "active criminal charges" for cyberstalking and cyber sexual harassment.
Meanwhile, Florida officials last month stopped releasing the list of coronavirus deaths being compiled by the state's medical examiners, which had at times shown a higher death toll than the total being published by the state. State officials said that list needed to be reviewed as a result of the discrepancy.
A spokesman for the state Health Department said the medical examiners had a different method for reporting deaths and that it was untrue "that deaths have been hidden."
"The government has one mission; academics and scholars have a very different mission," Dr. Dean Hart, an expert on viral transmission and former Columbia University professor who has run for the New York State Assembly as a Democrat told NBC News.
"As a scientist, I'm looking for the truth, the heck with who it hurts politically," he added.
Amid reopening in Arizona, the state Department of Health Services cut off a team of Arizona State and University of Arizona experts who provided pandemic modeling specific to the state, saying it was no longer needed as the state preferred to use a federal model. After a backlash, the Health Department reinstated the team, though it's unclear whether state officials are using the local universities' work in their decision-making.
Since that dust-up, Arizona State released new data showing infections and hospitalizations in the state could soar this summer.
The CDC and at least 11 other states have been combining the results of viral tests showing active infections with the results of antibody tests, which show whether someone had been infected in the past. While boosting a state's total testing number, health experts have said that practice does not give a proper picture of how the virus is spreading, the Associated Press reported.
The CDC announced it planned to separate the data and some of those states have stopped doing so or committed to change course, CNN reported.
In New York City, the hardest-hit locale in the nation, local officials last week released COVID-19 data are broken down by zip code after pressure to go beyond the county-by-county totals that had previously been shown. Such information made it easier to understand which communities were being most affected by the virus.

The top issue nationally related to the publication of specific coronavirus data involving nursing home cases and deaths, where state and local officials have faced intense scrutiny over the collection and release of such information. The virus has hit nursing homes exceptionally hard — a result of both their residents' vulnerability and policies states and localities have put into place.

In one such example, Arizona officials argued this month they should not reveal the names of facilities with outbreaks because it could give those nursing homes a stigma and could lead to discrimination against them. The argument was made in response to a lawsuit from Arizona news outlets demanding the state provide information on COVID-19 cases in nursing homes and other data.

In Pennsylvania, state officials released such data last week after weeks of delay and in the face of significant pressure.
The federal government, on the other hand, plans to publish such information by the end of May.

Hart said more information on nursing homes could paint a clearer picture of what happened specifically in New York with the spread of COVID-19. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, has come under fire for his administration's March order that nursing homes must accept coronavirus patients. That order was reversed earlier this month.
The group Frieden now leads as president and CEO, Resolve to Save Lives, released a list of suggested criteria to adjust social distancing measures based on key indicators that he believes should be available in every city, state, and country. Those indicators include case-count trends and health system and testing capacity to create an alert index for a specific area's level of risk.
He said much would be improved if the CDC would provide and explain the meaning of such data, adding though "much more information is available, it has not been standardized, validated, and presented in clear and compelling ways."


Saturday, May 23, 2020

before you vote


The US president is widely considered to be among the most influential world leaders, if not the most powerful, primarily due to the economic and military strength of the United States. The US was a British colony for approximately 170 years before attaining its independence on July 4, 1776. Since independence, the US has had 45 presidents, four of whom have been assassinated while still in office. In order to be president, one must be at least 35 years of age, have been born in The United States, and he an inhabitant of the state that they wish to represent. 
How Many Presidents Have There Been?
1. George Washington1789-1797. VA. First President of the United States of America. 
2. John Adams1797-1801. MA. First Vice-President of the United States of America. 
3. Thomas Jefferson1801-1805, 1805-1809. VA. Author of the Declaration of Independence. 
4. James Madison , 1809-1812, 1813-1814, 1814-1817. VA. Co-founded the Democrat-Republican Party (with Jefferson)
5. James Monroe1817-1825. VA. Creator of the "Monroe Doctrine", which prevented further European colonization in America. 
6. John Quincy Adams1825-1829. MA. Involved in the Adams-Onís Treaty, which acquired Florida. 
7. Andrew Jackson1829-1832, 1833-1837. NC or SC. considered the first "commoner" to become president. 
8. Martin van Buren1837-1841. NY. First president born after the independence of the USA. 
9. William Henry Harrison1841. VA. Shortest-serving president of all time. 
10. John Tyler1841-1845. VA. First president to serve without being elected. 
11. James K. Polk1845-1849. NC. Expanded the US through the Mexican-American War. 
12. Zachary Taylor1849-1850. VA. Had more than four decades of military experience. 
13. Millard Fillmore1850-1853. NY. Last member of the Whig Party to serve as president. 
14. Franklin Pierce1853, 1853-1857. NH. Pro-slavery politics known as one of the catalysts for the Civil War. 
15. James Buchanan1857-1861. PA. The only president to never marry.
16. Abraham Lincoln1861-1865, 1865. KY. Led the country during the Civil War and pushed for the abolition of slavery. 
17. Andrew Johnson1865-1869. NC. Had no formal education. 
18. Ulysses S. Grant1873-1875, 1875-1877. OHLed the Union to victory during the Civil War. 
19. Rutherford Birchard Hayes1877-1881. OH. Led the country through the end of Reconstruction. 
20. James A. Garfield1881OH. Second president (after Lincoln) to be assassinated. 
21. Chester A. Arthur1881-1885. VT. Known for renovating and redecorating the then-dilapidated White House.  
22. Grover Cleveland1885, 1885-1889. NJ. Known for his use of the presidential veto. 
23. Benjamin Harrison1889-1893. OH. Known for the Sherman Antitrust Act, which outlawed monopolies. 
24. Grover Cleveland1893-1897. NJ. Only president to serve two non-consecutive terms. Both the 22nd and 24th president. 
25. William McKinley1897-1899, 1899-1901. NY. President during the Spanish-American War. 
26. Theodore Roosevelt1901-1905, 1905-1909. NY. First president to win a Nobel Peace Prize. 
27. William H. Taft1909-1912, 1912-1913. OH. Only president to serve on the Supreme Court after his presidency. 
28. Woodrow Wilson1913-1921. VA. President during World War I. 
29. Warren G. Harding1921-1923. OH. Often regarded as one of the worst-rated presidents due to corruption and scandals. 
30. Calvin Coolidge1923-1925, 1925-1929. VT. Known as "Silent Cal" for his quiet demeanor. 
31. Herbert Hoover1929-1933. IA. President during the Great Depression. 
32. Franklin D. Roosevelt1933-1941, 1941-1945, 1945. NY. Served more terms than any other president. 
33. Harry S. Truman1945-1949, 1949-1953. MO. Established the Marshall Plan to help re-establish Western Europe. 
34. Dwight D. Eisenhower1953-1961. TX. Known for the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956. 
35. John F. Kennedy1961-1963. MA. First Roman Catholic president. 
36. Lyndon B. Johnson1963-1965, 1965-1969. TX. Known for "the Great Society, which included health care and civil rights.
37. Richard M. Nixon1969-1973, 1973-1974. CA. The first president to resign from office. 
38. Gerald R. Ford1974-1977. NE. Shortest time in office for a president who did not die in office. 
39. Jimmy Carter1977-1981. GA. Created the Department of Education and the Department of Energy. 
40. Ronald Reagan1981-1989. IL. Notable for conservative economic policies "Reaganomics".
41. George H.W. Bush1989-1993. MA. Known for his foreign policy and impact on global politics. 
42. Bill Clinton1993-2001. AK. Ratification of NAFTA occurred while in office. 
43. George W. Bush2001-2009. CT. President during the 9/11 terrorist attacks. 
44. Barack Obama2009-2017. HI. First African-American president. 
45. Donald Trump2017-2020. NY. Richest president of all time. 
Conflicts of interest
Before being inaugurated as president, Trump moved his businesses into a revocable trust run by his eldest sons and a business associate.[169][170] According to ethics experts, as long as Trump continues to profit from his businesses, the measures taken by Trump do not help to avoid conflicts of interest.[171] because Trump would have knowledge of how his administration's policies would affect his businesses, ethics experts recommend that Trump sell off his businesses.[170] while Trump said his organization would eschew "new foreign deals", the Trump Organization has since pursued expansions of its operations in Dubai, Scotland, and the Dominican Republic.[171]
Multiple lawsuits have been filed alleging that Trump is violating the Emoluments Clause of the United States Constitution, which forbids presidents from taking money from foreign governments, due to his business interests; they argue that these interests allow foreign governments to influence him.[171][172] Previous presidents in the modern era have either divested their holdings or put them in blind trusts,[169] and he is the first president to be sued over the emoluments clause.[172] According to The Guardian, "NBC News recently calculated that representatives of at least 22 foreign governments – including some facing charges of corruption or human rights abuses such as Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Turkey and the Philippines – seem to have spent funds at Trump properties while he has been president."[173] On October 21, 2019, Trump mocked the Emoluments Clause as "phony".[174]
In 2015, Trump said he "makes a lot of money with" the Saudis and that "they pay me millions and hundreds of millions."[175] And at a political rally, Trump said about Saudi Arabia: "They buy apartments from me. They spend $40 million, $50 million. Am I supposed to dislike them? I like them very much."[176]
In December 2015, Trump said in a radio interview that he had a "conflict of interest" in dealing with Turkey and Turkish president Tayyip Erdoğan because of his Trump Towers Istanbul, saying "I have a little conflict of interest because I have a major, major building in Istanbul and it's a tremendously successful job ... It's called Trump Towers – two towers instead of one ... I've gotten to know Turkey very well".[177][178]