Society's ChildS

Bulb

Florida man with coronavirus says drug touted by Trump saved his life

Rio Giardinieri Trump
A Florida man diagnosed with coronavirus claims he was saved from certain death by an anti-malaria drug touted as a possible treatment by President Trump.

Rio Giardinieri, 52, told Los Angeles' Fox 11 that he struggled with horrendous back pain, headaches, cough and fatigue for five days after catching COVID-19, possibly at a conference in New York.

Doctors at the Joe DiMaggio Children's Hospital in South Florida diagnosed him with the coronavirus and pneumonia and put him on oxygen in the ICU, he told the outlet.


Handcuffs

Ars Technica reporter's plan to rape children busted during sting operation

peter bright pedophile
Ars Technica bio of convicted pedophile Peter Bright
A former reporter for Conde Nast-owned Ars Technica was convicted of trying to engage in sex with minors and faces a mandatory minimum of 10 years in prison.

Peter Bright, 39, a tech reporter and editor for Ars Technica, was arrested in a public park during a sting operation in May 2019 after reaching out to an FBI agent posing as the mother of a 7-year-old girl and 9-year-old boy.

"Over the course of hundreds of chat communications, Bright discussed with the undercover agent Bright's plan to meet the minors to engage in sexual activity," according to the FBI. He asked for photos of the children and said he intended to rape the girl, the feds said.

Bad Guys

Influenza update: 23,000 US deaths, more children, 18-49 year olds hospitalized than during 2009 H1N1 pandemic

children influenza
© Joe Raedle/Getty Images
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released its U.S. Influenza Surveillance Report for the week ending March 14, with the total deaths this season at 23,000 and the highest number of children and people age 18-49 requiring hospitalization since the 2009 H1N1 pandemic.

"Hospitalization rates for school-aged children (5-17 years) are higher than any recent regular season but remain lower than rates experienced by this age group during the pandemic," the report said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released its U.S. Influenza Surveillance Report for the week ending March 14, with the total deaths this season at 23,000 and the highest number of children and people age 18-49 requiring hospitalization since the 2009 H1N1 pandemic.

Comment: Here we have yet another story that demonstrates how phony the current COVID-19 fear pandemic is. The masses living in relatively easy times and knowing little of the real hardships experienced by past generations have become easily manipulated to embrace hysteria and authoritarianism.


Heart - Black

Hospital sees spike in severe child abuse cases; believed linked to stress from Coronavirus pandemic

child abuse
© Tinnakorn jorruang, Shutterstock
Doctors at Cook Children's Hospital say they believe the stresses from the coronavirus pandemic are linked to six cases of severe child abuse seen at the hospital just this week.

Cook Children's says it typically sees that many such cases over the course of a month.

All of the children admitted this week were under 4 years old.

"We knew an increase in abuse was going to occur, but this happened faster than we ever imagined," said Christi Thornhill, director of the Trauma Program, the CARE team and Fostering Health at Cook Children's. "I mean this happened in a week and these are really bad abuse cases."

Comment: The social implications of worldwide quarantines have had very little discussion in the media. So many people who have been barely able to make ends meet are now without money, food, or social contact. Stress is poorly delt with in the West, and our current lockdown is magnifying it by untold numbers.


Arrow Down

Coronavirus 'pandemic' is not helping the environment

Protestors London
© Getty Images/Ollie MillingtonProtestors from the Green Anti-Capitalist Front (GAF) on February 28, 2020 in London.
While the short-term benefits from the global Covid-19 lockdown may be valuable, the long-term effects will be disastrous.

Numerous commentators have extolled the positive effect that the global Covid-19 shutdown is having on the environment. Air quality has greatly improved in areas where there has been a 'lockdown', fish have returned to Venice's canals, and satellite observations from the European Space Agency have revealed a drastic drop in pollution over Europe. As Graham Dockery has noted elsewhere on RT, this is an impact that Greta Thunberg and other environmentalists could only dream about.

But don't cheer too loudly: in the longer term, the kind of societal shutdown that we have seen in China and across Europe and America triggers a global recession that will be a disaster for the environment. Economic activity has slumped. Stock market values have plummeted. Many businesses are simply running out of cash and a significant proportion of them will collapse. In the UK, for example, well-known stores like Carphone Warehouse and Laura Ashley have already succumbed, as has a regional airline, Flybe. Those businesses were already in trouble, but stronger companies will soon be in trouble, too.

Governments are offering enormous sums in grants and loan guarantees to protect businesses and workers. When the dust has settled, and those bills must be paid, will there really be such an appetite โ€” let alone the money โ€” to pursue climate-change policies?

Comment: The Earth is a carbon-based planet. Greenhouse gasses have little to no affect on climate change - they are part of a natural cycle. As the coronavirus 'pandemic' deprives our liberty and restricts daily life of its pace and rewards, climate-change fanatics can take 'a breather.'


Star of David

Despite coronavirus, IDF continues raids in West Bank

Israeli officers
© AP/Majdi MohammedIsraeli border officers patrol the village of Azzun near the West Bank city of Qalqilya.
Palestinian Prime Minister Muhammad Shtayyeh on Sunday announced a partial lockdown of the West Bank for the next two weeks, in an attempt to stop the spread of the coronavirus that has seen more than 59 people infected.

Despite the number of coronavirus patients being much lower in the Palestinian Authority (PA) than in Israel, where the number of those infected exceeds the one-thousand threshold, Ramallah still opted to introduce a series of strict measures that include the closure of banks, public offices, and governmental institutions as well as severe limitations on movement; with the public expected to stay indoors unless seeking essential services such as food and medication.

In addition, those coming from abroad have been asked to quarantine themselves for 14 days and the PA promised penalties including fines and imprisonment for those who breach the instructions.

Palestinians Staying Afloat But Seeking Help

According to Ibrahim Melhim, a Palestinian Authority spokesman:
"At this stage, we are focusing on precautionary measures to contain the spread of the virus. Although we have the medical teams, it will [definitely] not be enough [if the situation continues to deteriorate], especially given the fact that we have a shortage of medicine and medical equipment."
But they will need financial assistance too. On Thursday, Israeli Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon signed a decree allowing the transfer of some $33 million of Palestinian taxpayers' money to the PA in a bid to keep their medical system afloat.

Comment: "At the same time, Israel continues to operate in the Palestinian Territories as if there is no coronavirus crisis." What does this tell us about what Israel thinks it knows?


Blackbox

Best of the Web: An Analysis of the Covid-19 Response: Weighing up the Threat From the Virus, and the Threat From the Reaction

The scales of justice
© Fotolia
Would you consider the shutting down of an entire national economy for a disease such as the Black Death, which between 1347-1351 killed an estimated 60% of the population in the areas where it spread, to be a proportionate response? What about for a virus which carries โ€” at the very most (see below) โ€” a mortality rate of 1.4% for those who contract it?

Such decisions should be weighed in the balances. In the left-hand side, there is the number of people who could die from the illness, the burden this will place on the health care system and other vital services, and the consequent misery and devastation this will cause to individuals, to families, to businesses, and to society at large. In the right-hand side, there is the possibility of economic collapse, with the mass job losses, destruction of businesses, and extreme poverty this would bring for many.

For something like the Black Death, it is something of a no-brainer. If you don't shut down everything very quickly, not only will people start dropping dead like flies, but the economy you are attempting to save will soon have nobody to work in it. If you were foolish enough to try to keep your economy running during such a situation, you'd end up with the worst of both worlds: almost no people and almost no economy.

But what about the virus with a 1.4% (maximum) mortality rate for those who get it? How do the scales balance out there?

For some, even asking this question smacks of callousness, since it seems to them that what we are being asked to do is equate people with commerce and money. Well, perhaps there are some who do indeed see it in those terms, and somehow come to the conclusion that making money is more important than human beings. I am most assuredly not one of them. Yet it's actually nothing to do with people vs money at all. It's actually all about people, since shutting down an entire economy, or thereabouts, is bound to have massive effects on large numbers of people.

Corona

Corona around the world: Russia cases jump, vaccine in the works

Soldiers in Uzbekistan coronavirus
Soldiers in Uzbekistan urge people to stay home due to the coronavirus crisis.
The global death toll from the coronavirus has topped 15,000 with more than 350,000 infections confirmed, causing mass disruptions as governments continue to try to slow the spread of the new respiratory illness.

Here's a roundup of developments in RFE/RL's broadcast countries.

Romania

Romania on March 23 reported a steep increase in the number of confirmed coronavirus cases and deaths during the previous 24 hours, as President Klaus Iohannis implored the public to observe self-isolation to slow the spread of the outbreak.

Romania's Strategic Communication Group, the crisis body that deals with the outbreak, said 143 new cases have been confirmed, bringing the total to 576 -- a 45 percent single-day increase -- with three new deaths inside the country, bringing the total to five.

All those who died were elderly people who had previous health conditions.

Seven Romanians have so far been killed by the infection abroad -- six in Italy and one in Spain.

In a live televised address on March 23, Iohannis appealed to Romanians to avoid leaving their homes unless absolutely necessary.

Romania has been under a state of emergency due to the outbreak since March 16.

Comment: Germany is reporting over 4k new cases and a total death toll of 86. (Note that most countries seem to be underreporting total cases, partly as a result of not doing comprehensive testing, and over-reporting deaths.) But their public health chief is saying their "curve" is already flattening, i.e. exponential growth is flattening off. Spain reported 4.5k new cases and 462 deaths (again, they're not actually testing). A couple who tried to flee lockdown in the woods ended up getting hypothermia. Netherlands: 545 new cases, 34 deaths. Lombardy workers are threatening to strike after the government has so far failed to shut down factories. UK says their death toll has jumped to 233. All jury trials in England and Wales are on hold. After implementing a test self-isolation for a day, India has grounded all domestic flights. Oh, and Merkel tested negative.

The Russian WHO bureau chief tells RT that Moscow acted effectively before Covid-19 was classified as a pandemic. In response to the accusation that Russia's low numbers suggest they are hiding data, she added:
"Pneumonias, where [the] causative agent has not been conclusive are all tested for coronavirus as well. If we had a massive infection, we would see also deaths rising and incidents rising," she said. "There is no significant difference" to previous years.


"We don't exclude the possibility that there are some missed cases that might start a chain of infection," she explained. "That is why there is a massive information campaign going on by the government and the WHO" to explain the risks of the coronavirus and how to mitigate it through social distancing and proper personal hygiene.
Motivational posters reminiscent of the Soviet area have popped up to encourage builders of Moscow's new coronavirus hospital. People over 65 in Moscow will be paid to self-isolate (excepting Putin!). The Russian vaccine in development has reportedly passed its first stage, and is expected to be ready in 11 months.

After the U.S. Senate failed to pass the relief bill, U.S. stocks further crashed and the Asian market dropped too. Moody's says Asia's $32 trillion corporate debt bubble may pop. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard says U.S. unemployment may reach 30%. The IMF is warning that the resulting recession could be worse than that of 2009. Meanwhile the ultra-rich are going yachting.

Over at Voltaire Network, they're pointing out that Covid-19 is spreading mainly in regions previously affected by malaria back in 2013-2017.
malaria italy
Malaria cases
covid italy
Covid cases
The WHO chief warns that the pandemic is "accelerating": "It took 67 days from the first reported case to reach the first 100,000 cases, 11 days for the second 100,000 cases and just four days for the third 100,000 cases," he said.

A new term has cropped up for those who ignore the "authorities'" pandemic pronouncements: covidiots. But there's more than one breed of covidiots. First are those who don't listen to authorities strictly out of their own selfishness and disregard for others, generally those people of low intelligence with no capacity for empathy. Then there are those who mindlessly believe everything the "authorities" tell them and self-righteously shame other people for not being good little sheep. In the middle are those who think and act carefully and don't get sucked into the mindlessness of either side. Unfortunately those are rare. Hopefully there will be more of them after this global crisis! Some examples of the above phemomena: See also:


Books

Lefty professors worry about new scrutiny as COVID-19 virus forces classes online

harvard dorms evacuated coronavirus
© Maddie Meyer/Getty ImagesStudents move out of dorm rooms on Harvard Yard on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. on March 12, 2020. Due to the risk from the coronavirus, all classes will be moved online for the rest of the spring semester.
As the pandemic caused by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) forces college and university lectures online, left-wing academics in the United States are apparently nervous about the possibility that what they are teaching may be publicized by "right wing sites," Campus Reform reports.

Conservatives and others have long criticized the nation's institutions of higher learning for what they say is academia's radical bent and have tried to bring accountability to the field. But those efforts to make what professors say in the lecture halls public have been met with often fierce resistance by schools that invoke privacy rights and even copyright laws to keep lectures offline.

Left-wing academics have been sharply critical of websites such as Turning Point USA's Professor Watchlist, which aggregates media reports on individual professors, and Canary Mission, which tracks professors and students it deems anti-Semitic.

Comment: Turn about is fair play, isn't it? The Left has been very free in exposing and deplatforming views it finds offensive. It's about time they were subject to the same scrutiny.


Bullseye

Bombshell ruling in MH17 trial: Dutch prosecutors ordered to produce US satellite data allegedly showing BUK missile being fired

judge Hendrik Steenhuis mh17 trial
© Peter Dejong/The Associated PressPresiding judge Hendrik Steenhuis sits at the centre of a panel at the start of the trial of four men charged with murder over the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 on March 9, 2020, in Amsterdam.
The presiding judge in the trial of murder in the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 on July 17, 2014, has dropped a bombshell at the end of his 45-minute presentation in court in The Netherlands on Monday morning.

Reading from a prepared script, Judge Hendrik Steenhuis ordered the Dutch prosecutors and the Dutch-led Joint Investigation Team, which has provided the evidence for the murder charges, to report to the court whether US satellite data, allegedly showing the launch of a BUK missile to bring down the aircraft, have been provided to the investigation. The judge's order also requires the prosecutors to explain whether the American satellite evidence can now be released to the court and to the lawyers representing Oleg Pulatov, one of the four men accused in the firing of the missile.

Comment: Possible checkmate for the West?