Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Mexico’s coronavirus measures blasted by critics as too little, too late

Mexico has started taking more proactive measures against stemming the COVID-19 pandemic, but critics have warned that the nation of some 129 million has waited too long to prevent the crisis now unfolding in the United States.
As of Tuesday, Mexico had reported nearly 1,100 confirmed cases with at least 28 deaths, according to the latest statistics from Johns Hopkins University. But experts say those figures understate the true number of infections.
A commuter leaves the Chapultepec subway station wearing a face mask as a precaution amid the spread of the new coronavirus in Mexico City, Friday, March 27, 2020. 
A commuter leaves the Chapultepec subway station wearing a face mask as a precaution amid the spread of the new coronavirus in Mexico City, Friday, March 27, 2020.  (AP)
Last week Mexico banned nonessential government work as confirmed cases climbed, but they waited until late Monday to extend that ban to other business sectors and to bar gatherings of more than 50 people.
Furthermore, Mexico has done significantly less testing than many other countries, despite signs the disease may be far more advanced in Mexico than the limited testing shows.
"February and March is when we should have been testing everybody,” said Janine Ramsey, an infectious disease expert who works for Mexico's National Public Health Institute.
The Mexican government has defended its policies, saying that its health surveillance system gives it a good idea of how the epidemic is evolving and that health experts are charting the country's fight against the virus. Its focus now, it says, is keeping people at home to avoid a rapid spread that would overwhelm the health care system.
"We're making an energetic, emphatic, unmistakable call: Stay at home,'' said Hugo López-Gatell, the government's coronavirus spokesman. "It's urgent, it's our last opportunity to do it, and do it now."
Still, the federal call to stay home remains voluntary with no talk of penalties. And although Mexico and the U.S. agreed earlier this month to restrict traffic at their shared border, the ban applies only to people who cross for tourism, recreation or other nonessential activity.
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has maintained a relaxed public attitude despite the alarm sounded by his health officials.
"Coronavirus isn't the plague,'' he declared in a recent video message. And although he has met with people diagnosed weeks later with the virus, he hasn't been tested because he hasn't experienced symptoms, his spokesman said.
Many have said they couldn't comply with the government’s stay-at-home order because -- like more than half of Mexicans -- if they don't work, they don't eat. Others have said the government didn't appear to think coronavirus was a grave threat to Mexico. 
For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. But in others, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can lead to severe symptoms like pneumonia and also death.

Twitter ‘Mistakenly’ Suspends, Then Reinstates Iran’s Supreme Leader

Several Twitter accounts belonging to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei were suspended early Tuesday March 31, according to Al Arabiya English.
Khamenei maintained multiple accounts in various languages that would tweet to audiences that spoke English, Farsi, Russian, and Spanish.
After reinstating his accounts, a Twitter spokesperson responded to a NewsBusters inquiry, explaining that “These accounts were immediately reinstated. They were mistakenly caught in a spam filter.”
Al Arabiya English observed that “The majority of social media networks, including Facebook and Twitter, are banned in Iran.” Facebook, for example, was banned following protests that took place after Iran’s 2009 presidential election. The same coverage also remarked that “Despite the ban, many high-ranking Iranian officials have accounts and are active on Twitter,” including Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and Foreing Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. “Iranian activists have on numerous occasions called on Twitter to ban the accounts of regime officials as long as ordinary Iranians are denied access to the social media platform,” noted Al Arabiya English.
The hypocrisy of dictators being allowed to use Twitter while their common citizenst has been a popular subject as of late.
Sen. Ben Sasse (R-NE) and Congressman Mike Gallagher (R-WI) signed a letter earlier in March demanding that “access to social media platforms should be denied to government officials from countries that prohibit their own populations from accessing this very content.”
The letter focused on China, but took direct shots at Iran also: “Notably, many Iranian government officials enjoy verified Twitter accounts despite denying the Iranian public the opportunity to engage on your platform.”
The same letter did give due credit however for Twitter’s February 2020 crackdown on Iranian misinformation: “We applaud your 2018 decision to suspend more than 280 Iranian Twitter accounts that engaged in ‘coordinated manipulation,’ but urge you to consider whether that standard also applies to government officials from other totalitarian regimes.”
https://www.newsbusters.org/blogs/techwatch/alexander-hall/2020/03/31/twitter-mistakenly-suspends-then-reinstates-irans-supreme

UPDATE: LA County Sheriff Removed as Emergency Ops Director, Reverses Course on Gun Stores

UPDATE: LA County Sheriff Removed as Emergency Ops Director, Reverses Course on Gun Stores

Posted at 6:00 pm on March 31, 2020 by Jennifer Van Laar
After a unanimous vote at Tuesday morning’s Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors meeting, embattled Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva is no longer the county’s Director of Emergency Operations. The county’s Chief Executive Officer will now have that responsibility.
It was Villanueva’s second loss in as many days. On Monday, facing a federal lawsuit by numerous gun rights organizations and in light of an Advisory Memorandum issued by the Department of Homeland Security, the Sheriff reversed his orderdeeming gun stores non-essential. In his announcement he implied that he still believed he had the authority to order them closed.
“Although explicitly advisory in nature, nonetheless the federal memorandum is persuasive given its national scope….Based on this further input from the federal government, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department will not order or recommend closure of businesses that sell or repair firearms or sell ammunition.”
On Monday Plaintiffs in the federal lawsuit against Villanueva filed an application for a temporary restraining order, which will be unnecessary if Villanueva doesn’t change his mind again on the issue of whether gun stores are essential or non-essential. Perhaps with this instability in mind, one plaintiff, Firearms Policy Coalition, “said Tuesday it planned to continue seeking a judgement and permanent injunction in court so Villanueva and subsequent sheriffs would not be able to do anything similar in the future.”
Villanueva’s response to the Board of Supervisors’ vote naming the county CEO as Director of Emergency Operations was characteristically acidic and uninformed.
“This will impact public safety and public health,” Villanueva warned. “They’re going to reassign the job to a financial analyst, and not a first responder with experience managing natural disasters and man-made. We’re in the middle of a global public health crisis.”
County CEO Sachi Hamai said in an emailed statement to Fox 11 Los Angeles that the county’s emergency efforts are a collaborative, team effort.
“OEM is made up of highly skilled individuals who have trained extensively to lead emergency efforts for the county…This group works day in and day out on all aspects of emergency management including planning, preparedness, response, recovery and mitigation. They also maintain critical relationships with the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services and the Federal Emergency Management Agency.”
County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl said during the meeting that the change was not about Villanueva. “It’s really about the safety of the 10 million people in L.A. County. … He was not really elected to represent county residents. The five of us were.”
A few hours later, Villanueva issued a more tempered statement.
He said:
“I am committed to the public safety of all residents of Los Angeles County. I am still waiting for the Board of Supervisors and CEO to provide a transition plan. In the meantime, we will maintain our staffing at the County Emergency Operations Center until the county provides suitable replacements. We must work together to save lives.”
Villanueva’s displayed a complete unwillingness to be the leader that Los Angeles County needs at this time. Let’s hope the voters remember it.
<a href="/jenvanlaar/">Jennifer Van Laar</a>
Jennifer Van Laar is Deputy Managing Editor at RedState and founded Save California PAC. Follow her work on Facebook and Twitter. Story tips: jenredstate@protonmail.com 


Yale epidemiology professor accuses NY Times of 'journalistic malpractice' over report on Trump's virus-testing claim

An epidemiologist from Yale University slammed The New York Times over a report about a clash between President Trump and state governors and ongoing concerns about coronavirus testing.
The Times ran a story on Monday about audio it obtained of a recorded conference call with Trump and the governors and the president expressed how he had not “heard about testing in weeks" suggesting that it was no longer a problem to obtain testing kits on a state level. However, that apparently wasn't the case as Montana Gov. Steve Bullock told Trump that his state was "one day away" from not having any kits. Others were seeking more medical supplies for their states.
Gregg Gonsalves, an assistant professor of epidemiology at Yale, slammed the Times' report and its headline, "Trump Suggests Lack of Testing Is No Longer a Problem. Governors Disagree," calling out the article's co-authors, journalists Jonathan Martin and Maggie Haberman.
"This is journalistic malpractice. If we don't have scale-up of testing, we will be in lock-down for months & months. There is no debate on this, why frame it like there is one? Next: Trump says earth flat, scientists say otherwise," Gonsalves wrote, tagging Martin and Haberman in the tweet.
This is journalistic malpractice. If we don't have scale-up of testing, we will be in lock-down for months & months. There is no debate on this, why frame it like there is one? Next: Trump says earth flat, scientists say otherwise. @jmartNYT & @maggieNYT  https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/30/us/politics/trump-governors-coronavirus-testing.html?searchResultPosition=2 
6,057 people are talking about this

Martin responded to Gonsalves but dismissed his complaint.
"You’re picking the wrong fight, move along," Martin told Gonsalves.
The Yale professor fired back.
"Sorry Jonathan, I don't care how important you think you are, how important you think the @NYTimes is as a newspaper, but the political desk has been abysmal on this. I say this as someone who has worked on infectious diseases for 30+ years," Gonsalves reacted. "Your collective reporting on the political aspects of this have been off-the-mark. Everything is a Punch & Judy Show, and the real story of the absolute and continuing failure of the response to #coronavirus gets obscured in your reporting as "who's winning the day" in DC.
Sorry Jonathan, I don't care how important you think you are, how important you think the @NYTimes is as a newspaper, but the political desk has been abysmal on this. I say this as someone who has worked on infectious diseases for 30+ years. 1/
3,877 people are talking about this

He continued, "This is an emergency, act like it. It matters that you're failing, and it's not about a lowly reader trying to score points, but the fact that @NYTimes eliding, equivocating on the federal response has consequences for millions of people. So, get better. Tell us, why 4 months into this we STILL have insufficient number of tests--what happened politically that led us to this point, keeps us still incapable of rising to the task. Tell us why we have people with no relevant experience like Richard Epstein and Larry Ellison at the right hand of Jared Kushner who is at the left hand of the President? How a culture of amateurism, denigration of expertise took hold in this Administration."
"New York city, USA - April 22, 2012: Three yellow cabs pass in front of the New York Times headquarters in New York as thestreet light turns to green."
"New York city, USA - April 22, 2012: Three yellow cabs pass in front of the New York Times headquarters in New York as the street light turns to green."
"There are political stories abounding in this world-historical crisis and you surrender to the he-said-she-said variety of reporting, every time," Gonsalves scolded Martin. "I buried dozens of my friends during the height of the AIDS epidemic and we're all preparing for burials now of friends and family in this new pandemic. Don't you dare tell me to move on. Do your job. We are facing one of the greatest challenges in American history, largely due to political failures of the current Administration. Dig. Find out what is happening, the roots of the failures. Name names. You have the resources of one of biggest papers in the US."

https://www.foxnews.com/media/yale-epidemiology-professor-nytimes-of-journalistic-malpractice

Prince Harry’s Charity in Africa Accused of Widespread Torture and Rape

All over the world,  a number of charitable initiatives are sometimes involved in shady practices, especially in underdeveloped areas. Now i...