Society's ChildS

Attention

Health workers call for caution over 5G roll-out in Brussels in open letter to government

5G tower Belgium
Some 400 doctors and 900 health care workers have signed an open letter to the government, urging them to exercise caution regarding the roll-out by Proximus of a forerunner of the next generation of mobile data, known as 5G.

The six-page letter goes out under the name of the Hippocrates Electrosmog Appeal.

Last week, Proximus began to test its "5G Light" version of the new generation in 30 communes around Belgium, the timing of which the organisation criticises.

"Even though it could be a simple coincidence, this seems indecent to us at a time when the people are fighting to overcome a human drama which concerns us all. At the same time, consumer organisations have been quick to publish articles claiming that the technology is not dangerous," the authors write.

Comment: And here we thought that Belgium would not be inflicting 5g on its people.

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Alarm Clock

CDC: Average age of COVID-19 deaths in US is 75 years old

emergency responders
© AP File Photo: Beth Bennett via South Florida Sun-Sentinel
The average age of Americans who died from COVID-19 between February 1 and May 2 is 75, according to an analysis of a provisional data set published by the Centers for Disease Control's National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) on Wednesday.

The data set published by NCHS, Provisional COVID-19 Death Counts by Sex, Age, and State, include key demographic information for the 44,016 COVID-19 deaths for which information has been "received and coded" as of May 6, the date of publication.

The NCHS notes that "Data during this period are incomplete because of the lag in time between when the death occurred and when the death certificate is completed, submitted to NCHS and processed for reporting purposes. This delay can range from 1 week to 8 weeks or more."

According to Worldometer, 74,190 COVID-19 deaths have been reported in the United States as of Wednesday, so information on at least 30,000 of these deaths has not yet been received and coded by NCHS.

Attention

US facing significant meat shortages caused by the lockdown while it's increasing pork exports to China

food dumping
© Twitter/IceAgeFarmerEuthanized cattle in US being dumped as reported by IceAgeFarmer on Twitter
Meatpackers and livestock producers in the United States have spent at least a year adjusting to the surge in business to China, which has faced a severe pork shortage in the wake of its battle against African swine fever.

But now, as the United States is on the brink of its own meat crisis due to the coronavirus pandemic, American pork supplies are being shipped off to China at a breakneck pace, creating the perfect recipe for additional U.S.-China tensions.

For some American consumers, the optics of this situation might be poor given how the virus originated in China late last year. But record U.S. meat exports to China have been the plan all along, to satisfy both China's needs and to lift U.S. business.


Comment: Actually, the virus probably originated in the US: CDC suddenly shuts down US Army's Fort Detrick bioweapons lab due to 'lapses in safety'


Comment: The food shortages have led to Costco limiting meat purchases to 3 items per person, and Wendy's fast food restaurants have taken burgers off the menu.


You can hear more up to date information on the food shortages on Ice Age Farmers podcast:


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Pistol

Georgia family demands arrest after vigilantes shoot, kill son 'while jogging'

Shooting of Ahmaud Arbery
© Daily Mail
The parents of a black man slain in a pursuit by two white men armed with guns called for immediate arrests Wednesday as they faced the prospect of waiting a month or longer before a Georgia grand jury could consider bringing charges.

A swelling outcry over the Feb. 23 shooting of Ahmaud Arbery intensified after a cellphone video that lawyers for his family say shows the killing surfaced online Tuesday. Following the video's release, a large crowd of demonstrators marched in the neighborhood where Arbery was killed, and the state opened its own investigation, which the governor and attorney general pledged to support. The men who pursued Arbery told police they suspected he had committed a recent burglary.


Arbery's mother, Wanda Cooper Jones, told reporters Wednesday she believes her 25-year-old son "was just out for his daily jog" in a neighborhood outside the port city of Brunswick. She hasn't watched the video.

"I saw my son come into the world," Jones said. "And seeing him leave the world, it's not something that I'll want to see ever."

Key

Individual choice - the key to economic recovery

ManMask
© Getty ImagesThe Absurdity
As pressure builds on states to open, many governors are starting to ease lockdown orders. That decision is not purely a public health matter but a public policy matter with interlaced issues of law, finance, and medicine. Congress and states must decide how legally to restart an economy in a world saturated by the coronavirus. With expensive recovery measures and a federal deficit projected at more than $30 trillion by the summer, we face a real possibility of a lost generation due to crippling debt and chronic unemployment. So this means businesses and institutions will need to operate in a way that is sustainable instead of just symbolic.

The legal challenge here is to open up the country fully when we cannot reasonably expect any vaccination program until next year, according to most experts. Thus, in the interim, our best hope may be an ancient legal doctrine that extends back to Roman law in the sixth century. "Volenti non fit injuria" means "no wrong is done to one who consents," and it became the solid foundation for what we know today as "assumption of risk." The doctrine encapsulates the concept of personal responsibility and choice. Thus, any economic opening precisely requires not liability but choice.

Arrow Up

Indications US jobless totals will be worse than the Great Depression

Needs a job
© AFP/Getty Images North America/Spencer Platt
We are entering an even Greater Depression than the 1930s, with hundreds of millions thrown out of work across the world. Capitalism is a broken, unstable system that is beyond repair - but there are alternatives.

Ninety-one years after the start of the Great Depression (capitalism's worst downturn until now), we are entering an even Greater Depression. The 1930s were so awful that leaders of capitalist economies ever since have said they had learned how to avoid any future depressions. All promised to take the steps needed to avoid them. Those promises have all been broken. Capitalism remains intrinsically unstable.

That instability is revealed in its recurring cycles, recessions, downturns, depressions, crashes, etc. They have plagued capitalism wherever it has settled in as the prevailing economic system. Now that the whole world's prevailing economic system is capitalism, we suffer global instability. To date, capitalist instability has resisted every effort (monetary and fiscal policies, Keynesian economics, privatization, deregulation, etc.) to overcome or stop it. And now it is here yet again.

Comment: A sinister and calculated financial tsunami has begun, its devastating effects could last - well who knows! The maddening thing is: it was always avoidable.

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Bizarro Earth

Coronavirus fears overshadow ramp ceremony for Canadian military members killed in helicopter crash

Canada ramp ceremony
A nation already struggling with the emotions of a pandemic lockdown, a horrific plane crash in Iran and the worst mass shooting in its history grieved again on Wednesday as it honoured the victims of Canada's worst military tragedy in more than a decade.

Canadians from coast to coast to coast watched as the six Armed Forces members killed in last week's helicopter crash off the coast of Greece were welcomed home in a special ramp ceremony at Canadian Forces Base Trenton in Ontario.

The crash, whose cause remains under investigation, represents the largest loss of life in one day for the Canadian Armed Forces since six Canadian soldiers were killed in a roadside bombing in Afghanistan on Easter Sunday 2007.

Reminders of COVID-19 were everywhere as the ceremony began, from the sparse crowd outside CFB Trenton to the masks and physical distancing of the victims' families, military personnel and government leaders on hand.

Newspaper

Fear to tell truth, smoke & mirrors, writing not for readers but for other journalists - How UK press got to be the LEAST trusted

newspaper salesman UK
© Getty Images / In Pictures / Richard Baker
Trust in the written press in Britain is the lowest in 33 European countries. That's hardly surprising seeing how so many journalists have become mere stenographers for, or lackeys of, the Establishment power elites.

Just when you think the reputation of the UK media couldn't sink any lower, it just did. An annual survey undertaken by EurobarometerEU, across 33 countries, puts the UK at the bottom, with a net trust of -60. Yes that's right, minus 60. It's a fall of 24 points since last year. Just 15 percent of Brits trust their print media. But it's not the only survey showing a similar trend.

Attention

Tanzania suspends laboratory head after coronavirus tests return positive on disguised non-human samples

Tanzania's Health Minister Ummy Mwalimu
© THE CITIZEN | NMGTanzania's Health Minister Ummy Mwalimu.
Tanzania has suspended the head of its national health laboratory in charge of testing for the coronavirus and ordered an investigation, a day after President John Magufuli questioned the tests' accuracy.

Magufuli said on Sunday the imported test kits were faulty as they had returned positive results on a goat and a pawpaw โ€” among several non-human samples submitted for testing, with technicians left deliberately unaware of their origins.

He did not say where the kits had been imported from or why the authorities had been suspicious of the results.

Catherine Sungura, acting head of communications at the ministry of health, said in a statement on Monday the director of the laboratory and its quality assurance manager had been immediately suspended "to pave way for the investigation".

Arrow Down

Welcome to the post-Covid future: Face masks, elbow bumps, and the end of freedom

elbow bumps
© Getty Images / Furkan Abdula / Anadolu Agency
The question as to what our future will look like post-Covid is becoming a frightful thing to contemplate. And this goes beyond health fears. Will humanity emerge from the current emergency with its honorable customs intact?

Dr David Nabarro, a professor at Imperial College London and special envoy to the World Health Organization (WHO), has made a startling announcement: There is no guarantee that a vaccine against the coronavirus will "appear at all," he said, and even if it does, it may not pass all the "tests of efficacy and safety." That comment should give us more than just pause; it should give us outright alarm.

Currently, there are highly influential individuals, not least of all Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, who argue that we'll only get back to some semblance of normalcy when everyone has had their vaccine shot. Gates - who is heavily invested in pharmaceutical companies - went so far as to say that "mass gatherings," which could mean anything from a funeral to a football match, may not return "at all" without a universal vaccine. Now we're being duly informed that such a day may never arrive.

Before we convert our homes into bunkers and our communities into no-go zones, we desperately need a Plan B. There is no way we can continue proclaiming, at least with a straight face, that we're members of a healthy and robust society if, at the same time, we're forced to endure endless lockdowns and quarantines behind surgical masks. Although some short-term social distancing may be a reasonable method of defeating Covid-19, such a strategy cannot last forever.

In defense of custom and common sense

In mankind's past battles against a long line of enemies, an unspoken rule took precedence, which is that people continued with their regular customs and traditions for as long as humanly possible. To halt the normal flow of life when confronted by an adversary was considered an admission of defeat. In our present fight against an invisible virus, however, the old rules of engagement have been rewritten. Unity and solidarity are no longer looked upon as invaluable assets; in fact, they've become potentially deadly liabilities. We would be foolish to think this attitude, borne out of understandable fear, will not have long-term repercussions.

Comment: The stated goal of the various guidelines for social distancing, masks, and so forth were to 'flatten the curve' and stop the hospital system from being overwhelmed. However, we know the virus isn't as deadly as was originally thought and that hospitals aren't being overwhelmed, so why are government officials and various talking heads continuing to insist that we keep these guidelines that don't work, have negative unintended consequences, and aren't necessary?

Could it be that those at the top want to keep people in a perpetual state of fear so they can continue to strip away people's rights and freedoms little by little until they control every aspect of people's lives? Was this never really about 'flattening the curve' and really about 'flattening the people'?