Society's ChildS


Eye 1

New outbreak of BIRD FLU sees thousands of chickens culled in coronavirus-stricken China

Chicken
© Pxfuel
As China grapples with the rampant Wuhan coronavirus, another sickness has broken out in the country: the deadly H5N1 bird flu.

The outbreak took place at a farm near Shaoyang city, in China's central Hunan province, the country's Ministry of Agriculture announced on Saturday. 4,500 of the farm's 7,850 chickens have died from the illness, and local authorities have culled nearly 20,000 birds to contain its spread.

H5N1 is an avian flu virus that causes severe respiratory disease in birds, and is contagious to humans. No human victims have yet been reported, but the World Health Organization (WHO) states that more than 350 people have died from the virus since it first spread to humans in Hong Kong in the late 1990s.

H5N1 is a far deadlier virus to those who contract it. Nearly 60 percent of H5N1 patients die after contracting the sickness, compared to two percent of Wuhan coronavirus (2019 nCoV) patients thus far.

Comment: Could there be a repeat of the 2009 pandemic in the offing? See also: Stop the spread: US restricts foreigners coming from China as virus fear increases


Smoking

Smoking to be banned at all train stations, platforms in the Netherlands

Train station smoking ban in Netherlands
© Zachary Newmark/NL TimesPassengers board a Brussels-bound train at Amsterdam Centraal, 9 May 2018.
Smoking will soon be forbidden at all train stations across the Netherlands, according to national railway NS. The organization is working with railroad infrastructure firm ProRail to expand the existing smoking ban to include platforms and other station facilities.

Smoking facilities on the platforms will be removed in October. ProRail previously said it would dismantle all areas where passengers may smoke by midway through 2021.

Tobacco products will also no longer be sold at NS-owned shops, namely Kiosk and StationsHuiskamer, beginning April 1. The tobacco ban will be in place at these 136 sales points. The NS holds the rights to several AH to Go franchises located at the train stations. In total, the NS operates about 270 shops.

"In addition, NS will no longer close new contracts with tenants who want to sell tobacco at the station," the NS said in a statement.

No Entry

Stop the spread: US restricts foreigners coming from China as virus fear increases

Quarantine workers
© Chinatopix via APQuarantine workers in protective suits check identity documents as tourists from the Wuhan area walk off of a chartered plane taking them home from Bangkok at Wuhan Tianhe International Airport, January 31, 2020.
The United States on Friday declared a public health emergency and took drastic steps to significantly restrict entry into the country because of a new virus that hit China and has spread to other nations.

President Donald Trump has signed an order that will temporarily bar foreign nationals, other than immediate family of U.S. citizens and permanent residents, who have traveled in China within the last 14 days. The new restrictions, which take effect at 5 p.m. EST on Sunday, were announced by Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, who is coordinating the U.S. response.
"It is likely that we will continue to see more cases in the United States in the coming days and weeks, including some limited person-to-person transmissions. The American public can be assured the full weight of the U.S. government is working to safeguard the health and safety of the American people."
Americans returning from China will be allowed into the country, but will face screening at select ports of entry and required to undertake 14 days of self-screening to ensure they don't pose a health risk. Those returning from Hubei province, the center of the outbreak, will be subject to up to 14 days of mandatory quarantine.

Comment: See also:


Attention

Trans-identified children need therapy, not just 'affirmation' and drugs: Why I resigned from Tavistock

tavistock clinic transgender
Over the past five years, there has been a 400 percent rise in referrals to the Tavistock Centre in north London, the only National Health Service (NHS) clinic in Britain that treats children with gender-identity developmental issues. During this period, there also has been an abrupt shift in the composition of the children seeking treatment. Formerly, a significant majority of patients had been young male-to-female children. Now, a significant majority are biological females who claim to have a male gender identity, often following the rapid onset of gender dysphoria in their teenage years.

We do not fully understand what is going on in this complex area, and it is essential to examine the phenomenon systematically and objectively. But this has become difficult in the current environment, as debate is continually being closed down amidst accusations of transphobia. As I argued in a May, 2019 presentation before the House of Lords, this de facto censorship regime is harming children.

Airplane

Airline removes gas mask-wearing passenger after he panics travelers

Gas mask
© ThePlatypusesTXAn unidentified man wearing a gas mask is seen aboard an American Airlines flight from Dallas to Houston, Jan. 30, 2020.
American Airlines removed a mysterious gas mask-wearing man from a Houston-bound flight and rebooked him on another plane after passengers became panicked, airline officials said.

The presence of the man, whose gas mask completely hid his face, unnerved many of those on board Flight 2212 from Dallas to Houston as they waited to take off Thursday evening, passenger Joseph Say told Houston ABC station KTRK.

"I had a seat in the back," Say said. "I looked up and saw a guy coming onto the plane wearing a full gas mask, which was kind of odd. He didn't have a filter though -- which I thought was even more strange."

"Immediately, people start talking in the back of the plane," said Say. "You couldn't see his face. You couldn't identify any features on him. People were worried he had sneaked something on board and that he had the mask for his own safety."

Bad Guys

Protesters storm New York subway & vandalize stations to protest increased police presence

protests subway New York anarchists antifa
© Reuters / Caitlin OchsDemonstrators protest an increased police presence in the subway system at Grand Central in the Manhattan borough of New York City, January 31, 2020.
Subway stations across New York City's five boroughs faced delays during Friday rush hour after hundreds of protesters gathered for a mass action over a plan to ramp up police presence in terminals and crack down on fare-skippers.

The demonstrations kicked off on Friday afternoon and saw throngs of protesters - many clad in masks and carrying banners - descend upon stations throughout the city, scrawling anti-police slogans on walls and destroying MetroCard and OMNY readers used to pay fares. Social media was awash in photos and videos of the event, showing demonstrators as they filled subway stations with signs and placards.

In several terminals, protesters jumped turnstiles and used bike locks and chains to prop open emergency exits, encouraging commuters to evade fares.

Comment: Vandalizing and destroying public property. That's the way to make the case that the transit system is over-policed?

Antifa plans massive anti-cop action in NY subways, push for free transit, ending police presence


Health

Coronavirus' deadliest day in China, WHO declares international health emergency, countries close borders - UPDATES

virus
© REUTERS/Ahmed Yosri
China has suffered its deadliest day since the coronavirus outbreak began, with 38 related deaths recorded. The World Health Organization (WHO) is set to discuss declaring a global health emergency.

Record fatalities

Thirty-eight new deaths in China were reported over the last 24 hours, marking the deadliest day since the outbreak began in Wuhan. The virus has now spread to every region in China, killing 170 nationwide.

The number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus in China has jumped to 7,711, while an additional 81,000 people are under observation.

Comment:

UPDATE February 1st 2020 @ 18:25
CET

RT reports that, as of January 30th, the WHO has declared the coronavirus a "public health emergency of international concern":
WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called the coronavirus "a previously unknown pathogen, which has escalated into an unprecedented outbreak" at a press conference on Thursday, but said the WHO was not recommending restrictions of trade or travel with China, where the virus originated.

Tedros pointed out that the declaration was "not a vote of no confidence in China," but made out of concern for other countries, with "weaker" healthcare systems.

China's response to the outbreak has been "very impressive," the WHO chief added. "So is China's commitment to transparency and to supporting other countries."

"China is actually setting a new standard for outbreak response."


While the majority of coronavirus cases have been registered in China, the WHO confirmed there were 98 confirmed cases elsewhere in the world - including eight cases of direct transmission in Germany, Japan, Vietnam and the US.

The "vast majority" of cases outside of China have either traveled to Wuhan or been in contact with someone who has, the WHO officials noted.

"The only way we will defeat this outbreak is for all countries to work together in a spirit of solidarity and cooperation," Tedros said. "We are all in this together, and we can only stop it together."

Coronavirus is the unofficial name of the pathogen, which the WHO is referring to by its interim name, 2019-nCoV. The condition caused by it is being called "2019-nCoV acute respiratory disease."

The virus first appeared in Wuhan, in China's Hubei province, on December 31. Since then, it has infected at least 8,130 people in China, at least 100 of whom have died. The 2019-nCoV appears to be closely related to the SARS vector, which infected 8,100 people across 17 different countries in 2003, killing 774.

The much faster pace of coronavirus infections, however, has the WHO and public health officials in China very concerned.
On January 30th the first case of direct transmission was confirmed in the US by the CDC:
The first US case of person-to-person coronavirus transmission has been recorded in Chicago, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Illinois officials confirmed.

The new patient is the husband of a Chinese woman who brought the infection over from Wuhan, officials said Thursday at a press briefing. His wife is being held in isolation at a local hospital.

"Despite the case that we are reporting the first instance of person-to-person transmission in the United States, it is important to note that these two individuals were in close contact," said Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.

Messonnier called the outbreak "a very serious public health situation" and added that "Moving forward, we can expect to see more cases, and more cases means more potential for person-to-person spread."


Patients in the five 2019-nCoV cases previously confirmed in the US all contracted the infection in China. As of Wednesday, the CDC was monitoring an additional 160 people across 36 US states. Of those, 68 have tested negative for the virus, while the results for the remaining 92 are still pending.

Thursday's revelation means the US is now the fifth confirmed country with a direct transmission case of the virus.

"Although the numbers outside China are still relatively small, they hold the potential for a much larger outbreak," said World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, calling the continued rise in the number of infections and direct transmission "most deeply disturbing."
A Trump official makes the bizarre claim that the outbreak could be good for the US economy - which probably reflects the desperate state the US economy is in. And the official will likely be sorely disappointed when:
US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said on Thursday the deadly coronavirus outbreak that has claimed the lives of 213 and infected almost 10,000 people globally could boost the US economy.

"I think it will help to accelerate the return of jobs to North America - some to US, probably some to Mexico as well," Ross said in an interview on Fox News.

He acknowledged the downside, saying, "I don't want to talk about a victory lap over a very unfortunate, very malignant disease."


And yet he does anyway.


Ross added that businesses need to take the risk into account and consider the virus when reviewing supply chains.

Later, the US Commerce Department said in a statement: "As Secretary Ross made clear, the first step is to bring the virus under control and help the victims of this disease."

The commerce department's spokesperson added: "It is also important to consider the ramifications of doing business with a country that has a long history of covering up real risks to its own people and the rest of the world."


Typical projection from a US official.


The statements have been criticized by some economists and politicians, with Democrat congressman Don Beyer tweeting that Ross' reaction to a "disease killing hundreds is to talk about ways to make money off it."

"Somehow they always find a way to be worse," he added.

White House trade advisor Peter Navarro said on Thursday that Washington will not make tariff concessions to Beijing, explaining that the tariffs are in place because China "engages in massive unfair subsidies."

This week, the World Health Organization declared a global emergency as China's coronavirus spread to 18 other countries.

Analysts say the virus could hurt China's economy. It has already forced global companies including tech giants, auto makers, and retailers to temporarily shut down in China after the authorities extended the Lunar New Year holiday and imposed major travel bans across the country.
China not only identified the virus in record time at the beginning of the outbreak but now it's developed a test that can detect the virus in under 15 minutes:
Experts from a tech company based in Wuxi in eastern China's Jiangsu Province, working with the National Institute for Viral Disease Control and Prevention, developed the rapid nucleic test kit in just ten days, according to the Xinhua news agency.

The test takes between eight and 15 minutes to produce a result and is currently being mass-manufactured at a rate of 4,000 kits per day, with the city government in Wuxi exploring efforts to boost production even further.


China is really demonstrating its capabilties throughout this high profile outbreak:



The first batch of kits has reportedly already been deployed to the frontlines at the epicentre of the outbreak, Wuhan, in Hubei province.
RT reports on January 31st are that two members of the same family in the UK have tested positive:
The two patients in England are receiving "specialist NHS care," Chief Medical Officer for England Professor Chris Whitty said, stressing that the UK has "robust infection control measures" in place to respond to the deadly virus.

"The NHS is extremely well-prepared and used to managing infections and we are already working rapidly to identify any contacts the patients had, to prevent further spread."


Let's hope the outbreak is mild because the underfunded NHS has been struggling with the flu outbreaks in recent years.


According to Whitty, the UK is working closely with the WHO to ensure that the country is "ready for all eventualities" regarding the health crisis.

The World Health Organization (WHO) declared on Thursday that the epidemic constitutes a global health emergency, noting that the virus has infected people who had not traveled to China.

Originating in the Chinese city of Wuhan, the new coronavirus has claimed at least 213 lives - all in China - and spread to nearly twenty countries.

Governments have been scrambling to stop the spread of the virus. Countries across Asia, Europe and the Americas have suspended direct flights to Chinese cities, hoping that restricted travel could help prevent further infections. Several states, including Russia, Japan and the US, have also issued travel advisories for China.
And again the US is using the outbreak as an opportunity to be as beligerent as it can towards China, this time issuinh what Beijing calls a "truly mean" travel warning - bearing in mind the WHO haven't called for restrictions on travel, yet:
"The World Health Organization urged countries to avoid travel restrictions, but very soon after that, the United States did the opposite," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said in a statement. "It's truly mean."

Earlier on Friday, the US State Department issued its highest-level travel warning, advising citizens: "Do not travel to China due to novel coronavirus." The warning also advised those currently in China to "consider departing using commercial means."

The US warning came a day after the World Health Organization labeled the outbreak of the SARS-like Wuhan coronavirus a "public health emergency of international concern." Since the virus broke out in Wuhan - a city of 11 million people - last month, it has spread to every region of China and at least 25 other countries, killing at least 213 people and infecting just under 10,000, mostly in China.

The US is not the only country advising its citizens to avoid China. Britain, Germany, Russia, Japan and others have all issued their own travel warnings, and China's neighbors have locked down their borders. Singapore banned all arrivals and transfers from travelers from Chinese airports. Mongolia banned all arrivals from China by air, train and road. Vietnam suspended all tourist visas for Chinese citizens and foreigners who have been in China in recent weeks, and Russia closed its far east border with China.

At least seven major airlines, including Air France, KLM, British Airways, American Airlines and Lufthansa, have all stopped flying to mainland China, and several governments, including the US, Britain and Japan, have chartered flights to evacuate their citizens from the Wuhan area.
On February 1st China responded to the actions taken by the countries noted above:
Beijing has lashed out at countries fanning fears of the novel coronavirus — which so far claimed 259 lives — insisting that its response against the deadly disease goes far beyond standards accepted worldwide.

"We have adopted the most comprehensive and strictest prevention and control measures, and many of them go far beyond the requirements of the International Health Regulations," Foreign Minister Wang Yi assured while speaking with his Indian counterpart Subrahmanyam Jaishankar on Saturday.

"China's efforts are [aimed at] not only protecting the health of its own people, but also safeguarding the health of people worldwide. Governments and the World Health Organization have given full recognition to this."

The death toll from the previously unknown virus has risen to 259 overnight — all registered in China — with almost 12,000 confirmed cases elsewhere in the world.

Beijing "does not agree with the approach adopted by individual countries to create tension or even panic," the minister pointed out, reminding that the World Health Organization (WHO) "did not approve of travel or trade restrictions on China."



Biohazard

Fear in the age of coronavirus: Chinese no longer welcome in other countries

airport passengers coronavirus
© Agence France-PressePassengers wearing face masks queue at the immigration counter upon arrival at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport 2, on Jan 29, 2020.
Hong Kong suspends travel from China. Schools in Europe uninvite exchange students. Restaurants in South Korea turn away Chinese customers.

As a deadly virus spreads beyond China, governments, businesses and educational institutions are struggling to find the right response. Safeguarding public health is a priority. How to do that without stigmatising the entire population of the country where the outbreak began is the challenge.

With the death toll reaching 170 and the roster of cases climbing above 7,700, worries are growing. Many global companies with operations in China have asked workers to stay home. Airlines are curtailing flights to the nation. Several countries have begun evacuating citizens from the most stricken zone around the city of Wuhan.

Comment: It's a sign of the times that sensible precautions against a unknown disease are railed against, yet hysterical reactions are applauded. A lot of it seems to be a mix of reasonable conclusions and deep-seated prejudice. China is rightfully worried about this toxic brew even as it strains to meet its domestic emergency.



Star of David

Freedom of speech? Abby Martin banned from speaking at US university for refusing to sign pro-Israel pledge

Abby martin
© Abby MartinAbby Martin is an outspoken critic of Israel’s apartheid government and anti-Palestinian policies.
Former teleSUR presenter and creator of The Empire Files Abby Martin was blocked from delivering a keynote speech at Georgia Southern University for refusing to "sign a contractual pledge to not boycott Israel" to comply with the anti-Boycott, Divest and Sanctions state law.

"After I was scheduled to give a keynote speech at an upcoming Georgia Southern conference, organizers said I must comply with Georgia's anti-BDS law," Martin tweeted on Friday.

Since 2014, 28 states, among those Georgia, have adopted anti-boycott laws, including five executive orders issued by governors.

"I refused and my talk was canceled. The event fell apart after colleagues supported me." Martin is an outspoken critic of Israel's apartheid government and anti-Palestinian policies.

Comment: Abby Martin has been championing the cause of Palestine for years. How is it that Georgia Southern University was unaware of that? Or did the pro-Israeli groups on campus set her up in the hopes of making an example of her? They are not above such tactics.


X

Proposed Missouri book ban could jail librarians for loaning 'inappropriate' content

Public Library
© St. Louis Post-Dispatch via AP, FILEChildren look for books at the Ferguson Municipal Public Library in Ferguson, Mo., Nov. 26, 2014.
Librarians and free speech advocates are fighting back against a proposal in the Missouri House of Representatives that would ban certain books from the state's libraries with the threat of a misdemeanor charge.

Missouri House Rep. Ben Baker introduced the bill, dubbed the "Parental Oversight of Public Libraries Act," in January that calls for the creation of a panel made up of non-library workers who will determine the removal of "age-inappropriate sexual material," from their local branch.

Libraries that don't comply will lose their funding. Library employees providing material deemed inappropriate would be hit with a misdemeanor charge and liable for a $500 fine or a maximum jail sentence of a year, according to the bill's current language.

Cynthia Dudenhoffer, the president of the Missouri Library Association, said she was shocked when she first heard about the bill and said it was unnecessary. Each of the state's library systems, which account for a total of 365 branches, already have their own protocols in place to determine which materials are allowed for their younger members.

Comment: See also: Telling it like it is: Drag Queen destroys Drag Queen Story Hour and woke culture