Society's ChildS


Corona

Holiday week, financial support for affected & taxes for rich: Putin lays out coronavirus emergency plan - and other Covid-19 updates

putin covid
© Sputnik / Konstantin Mikhalchevskii
Russians will get a week of paid leave and a boost to benefits for those most in need, while the wealthiest will have to pay more revenue taxes, the Russian president said as he presented his plan to deal with the coronavirus.

Speaking in a televised address on Wednesday, President Vladimir Putin announced a number of measures designed to support the Russian people and the national economy amid the increasingly serious threat of coronavirus in the country. He said there was no feasible way to keep the virus out, but that an efficient, coordinated effort to preempt and mitigate the damage will help protect people from the worst outcomes.

Week-long holiday

One of the immediate decisions taken by the government was to declare next week a long national holiday in Russia. Salaries for the days off will still be paid, Putin said. This is expected to help slow the spread of the coronavirus.

The president warned against underestimating the threat posed by the virus and said everyone should act responsibly.
Please, don't think like people often do: 'This cannot touch me.' It may touch anyone.
Constitution vote postponed

Russia will also postpone the national vote on constitutional amendments, which is currently scheduled for April 22. The package of constitutional amendments was tabled by Russia's president back in January and greenlit by legislators earlier this month.

Comment: Violating quarantine in Russia may result in up to seven years in prison, if new regulations are passed. Russian military specialists have arrived in Italy to help with the crisis there:
The convoy, composed of 22 trucks and other vehicles, set off for the northern Italian city of Bergamo early on Wednesday. The convoy, escorted by the Italian Carabinieri, has reached Florence, making a brief stop there, the Russian military says.


One hundred Russian military medics and disease specialists were airlifted to Italy over the weekend, landing at Pratica di Mare Air Base 30km (18.6 miles) from Rome. The team, deployed to help Italy in its fight against coronavirus, brought mobile laboratories, disinfection vehicles, coronavirus test kits, and other equipment to battle the disease.
How's that for optics? While the EU does nothing, help comes from Russia with love. Here's how the mayor of Bergamo described the situation to RT (keeping in mind that the public nature of the crisis will cause more people with serious illnesses to go to the hospital who otherwise might have received treatment elsewhere, thus contributing to overwhelming the system):
The healthcare system has been entirely overwhelmed by the outbreak, Gori told Il Messaggero on Wednesday, with everyone "working from 8am till we collapse exhausted in the evening."

"Too many people are arriving in hospitals late and in grave condition, requiring intubation in intensive care units," Gori said, adding that more than 300 people died last week in Bergamo region alone.
Many just can't make it to a hospital and die at home. Nearly all of them are elderly people with pneumonia and are Covid-19 cases that had slipped under the radar.
The mayor warned that it is "difficult... to intercept such people in time, and there is no room for everyone in the hospitals."
Extrapolating from Italy's Sismg mortality data, Bergamo province ordinarily experiences between 150 and 200 deaths per week around this time of year, with spikes of up to 300. There is no doubt some overlap between the Covid-related deaths this last week, and people who would have died regardless, but it does show that the region is experiencing more deaths among the elderly than usual, especially considering that only 8% of deaths in Italy on average are from respiratory illness.

Italy recorded 683 deaths over the last day, a dip from 743 the day before. Note that unlike Spain, Italy's death cases are "confirmed" by testing, although everyone who dies while testing positive counts as a covid-related death, even if the virus can't be identified as the cause of death. 99.2% of deaths have been in people with serious pre-existing conditions, and only 12% have listed the coronavirus as a direct cause of death.

Local French authorities have banned alcohol sales in Aisne, ostensibly to cut back on family violence. Spain officially overtook China's death toll with 3,434 reported deaths (again, Spain is not testing, so these are all guesses). Wuhan recorded zero new cases, and Hubei residents boarded trains in large crowds as restrictions were finally removed. India banned the export of hydroxychloroquine. London City Airport is closing under the lockdown. Prince Charles tested positive, suffering mild symptoms.

New Yorks governor says NYC will close some streets to cars, allowing them to be used by pedestrians, because people don't currently have enough space to adequately follow the new "social distancing" rules. Pennsylvania reversed the Covid-19 gun sale ban by classifying gun shops as "life-sustaining businesses". Trump's response to Romney testing negative was slightly amusing:


Here's UN Chief Guterres's take on the current situation:
"Global action and solidarity are crucial. Individual country responses are not going to be enough," Guterres said on Wednesday.

The secretary general said the Covid-19 crisis is unlike anything the UN has faced in its 75-year history and is pleading with the developed world to raise trillions of dollars to help poorer countries fight off the deadly viral scourge.

The UN is launching a $2 billion program to help the world's poor fight against the coronavirus pandemic.

Guterres has repeatedly called for aid from G20 nations this week as the global pandemic worsens and threatens to reach what he described as "apocalyptic proportions."

He also called for a ban on tariffs, quotas and other trade restrictions, as well as the waiving of sanctions which might impede countries from getting much needed food and medical supplies.

Guterres also suggested the G20 should create a mechanism for dealing with future pandemics, though he did not specify what form this would take. He said that a "two-digit" percentage of the global economy should be allocated to improving response to pandemics.

Meanwhile, the IMF and the World Bank have called for governments to suspend debt payments owed by the world's poorest nations to free up resources to fight the pandemic.
Sounds to us like he's exaggerating...

See also:


Attention

Los Angeles Mayor: Water, power will be shut off if you don't close up shop

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti
© Getty Images
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti threatened "non-essential" businesses Tuesday that if they do not obey the city's "stay at home" order to close during the pandemic crises, he will cut off their water and their electricity.

Speaking at his daily briefing, the mayor described his new enforcement initiative (via KTLA 5):
The mayor went on to announce the "business ambassadors program" — an effort to get nonessential businesses to close.

"This behavior is irresponsible and selfish," he said of those that remain open.

He said the Department of Water and Power will shut off services for the businesses that don't comply with the "safer at home" ordinance.

Neighborhood prosecutors will implement safety measures and will contact the businesses before issuing further action, according to Garcetti.

"The easiest way to avoid a visit is to follow the rules," he said.

Colosseum

Decadent like the late Roman Empire, the West is committing suicide through its irrational response to Covid-19

Colosseum and Arch of Constantine
© Getty Images / Marilla Sicilia / Archivio Marilla Sicilia / Mondadori PortfolioColosseum and Arch of Constantine during the Coronavirus pandemic (Covid-19). Rome (Italy), March 19th, 2020.
Many think Covid-19 is some kind of alien invasion that spells the end of the world. But the real threat to us is a much deadlier virus: a hatred of all the values that have underpinned our civilisation for centuries.

For years, I was puzzled as to why the Roman Empire ceased to exist and was replaced by communities that were uncivilized by comparison. How and why could mankind's progress reverse in this way? Recent experience has eliminated the mystery. No special devastating event was needed; the cause of Rome's demise was simply the loss of its people's desire to support their 'empire' and its underlying values. And as it was 1,500 years or so ago, so I fear it is now.

The Covid-19 crisis - specifically, the reaction to it - demonstrates that people have grown bored, detached, and easily impressionable by things that have nothing to do with the roots of their society. We are all - or too many of us - fin de siècle Romans now.

X

Greta Thunberg says she likely has coronavirus after traveling around central Europe

greta thunberg
Little Greta Thunberg has been pretty quiet lately. Perhaps her puppet masters have deemed her dispensable and no longer have a use for her. She's turned into more of a D-rate Instagram figure now, and she's used that platform to announce that she likely has Covid 19, due to a recent trip across Europe she took with her equally D-rate actor father, Svante.

Her post reads:
The last two weeks I've stayed inside. When I returned from my trip around Central Europe I isolated myself (in a borrowed apartment away from my mother and sister) since the number of cases of COVID-19 (in Germany for instance) were similar to Italy in the beginning. Around ten days ago I started feeling some symptoms, exactly the same time as my father - who traveled with me from Brussels. I was feeling tired, had shivers, a sore throat and coughed. My dad experienced the same symptoms, but much more intense and with a fever.

Comment: If she had it all. It could also be that Greta has been missing the spotlight in recent months and needed to find a way to make herself relevant again.

See also:


Putin

Coronavirus and why Russians are lucky to be led by Putin

putin
On Tuesday, March 24th, the following happened:

U.S.A. had the world's largest number of new coronavirus-19 cases: 10,168. The prior day, there were 33,546 cases; so, this 10,168 new cases were a 30% increase from the day before.

Russia had 71 new cases, up 19% from the prior day's 367.

Reuters bannered "U.S. has potential of becoming coronavirus epicenter, says WHO" and reported that,
The World Health Organization said on Tuesday it was seeing a "very large acceleration" in coronavirus infections in the United States which had the potential of becoming the new epicenter.
Over the past 24 hours, 85 percent of new cases were from Europe and the United States, WHO spokeswoman Margaret Harris told reporters. Of those, 40 percent were from the United States.

Asked whether the United States could become the new epicentre, Harris said: "We are now seeing a very large acceleration in cases in the U.S. So it does have that potential.

Comment: See also:


NPC

Devil in the details: Media jumps to blame Trump for death of man who self-medicated with FISH TANK CLEANER containing chloroquine

trump chloroquine
An Arizona man has died after consuming a substance used to clean aquariums - but is also found in a drug the US president said could treat Covid-19 - prompting the US media to hop aboard the Trump blame train, details be damned.

The Phoenix-area man and his wife - who survived - ingested a form of chloroquine used as a fish tank cleaner on Monday, reportedly after hearing President Trump mention the chemical on TV. Though the substance is similar to one used in an anti-malaria drug touted as a possible treatment for the coronavirus, the aquarium additive comes in a different form and is highly toxic to humans. But that hasn't stopped a spate of media outlets from casting blame on the president, insisting he encouraged the couple to guzzle down a lethal dose of a dangerous drug.

From NBC, to the Hill - which falsely claimed the man had taken a "malaria medication" - to ABC and beyond, much of the US press corps rushed to place the tragedy squarely on Trump's shoulders. Netizens soon pointed out the problem with that framing, however, shredding the news agencies for running with a "dishonest" narrative.

Comment: Here's another example of "truth in media". Note the headline and compare it to the first paragraph:
Arizona man dies after taking chloroquine for coronavirus

By Deena Beasley

March 23 (Reuters) - An Arizona man has died and his wife is in critical condition after they ingested chloroquine phosphate - an aquarium cleaning product similar to drugs that have been named by President Trump as potential treatments for coronavirus infection.

The couple, in their 60s, experienced immediate distress after swallowing the drug, an additive used at aquariums to clean fish tanks, according to Banner Health Hospital in Phoenix.

Chloroquine phosphate shares the same active ingredient as malaria drugs that President Trump has touted as possibly effective against COVID-19, the potentially life-threatening disease caused by the coronavirus.

On Saturday, Trump tweeted about the combination of hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin, saying it had "a real chance to be one of the biggest game changers in the history of medicine."

[...]



Bizarro Earth

HANTAVIRUS the next big killer... really? Twitter spreads groundless MASS PANIC as man in China dies from little-known disease

squirrel
© Reuters / China Photo ASW
Reports about a Chinese man dying from a rare illness at a time when the international community is struggling to stem the spread of Covid-19 has caused panic on social media. But should we be worried?

People around the world have been closely following the developments around the coronavirus pandemic that has seen hundreds of thousands being infected and claimed more than 16,000 lives. Now, they have been startled by more worrying news about a man in China dying from something called hantavirus.

China's state Global Times newspaper reported that a person from the southern Yunnan province died after testing positive for hantavirus. Since the incident took place while the man was traveling to another province by bus, some three dozen of his fellow passengers were tested for the disease as well.

Bizarro Earth

Multiple explosions at Iraq's Camp Taji housing US & Iraqi forces

taji base
© CC0
According to local reports, at least three explosions were heard at the Camp Taji military base north of Baghdad late Tuesday. The base houses both Iraqi and US forces.

A reporter with Sky News Arabic said on Tuesday night that three explosions had been heard at Camp Taji, an Iraqi military installation that also houses a large number of US troops.

​US forces at Taji have come under attack repeatedly this month, resulting in the deaths of several members of the US-led coalition in Iraq. While Washington maintains the attacks were carried out by Kataib Hezbollah, a Shiite militia in Iraq's Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), at the direction of Iran, Tehran has denied the accusations.

Comment: See also:


People 2

Coronavirus shutdowns: This is not sustainable

restaurant
© Lucy Nicholson/ReutersRaul Gonzalez, Jr., 53, stacks chairs at his Mambos Cuban restaurant in Glendale, Calif., which is being forced to close after 32 years due to the ongoing coronavirus outbreak, March 18, 2020.
Nor will people stand for it except as a temporary expedient.

Countries have experienced economic depressions before, but not usually as a matter of choice.

The nationwide coronavirus shutdowns over the past two weeks have ground parts of the country to a halt. We have probably never before in our history seen so much economic activity vaporize so quickly — within days or even hours. The Great Depression and the panics of the 19th century are the only possible analogues.

Goldman Sachs is forecasting a 24 percent drop in quarterly GDP. Morgan Stanley is anticipating a 30 percent decline.

These are the top-line numbers of a vastation that will throw millions out of work, stress families and blight personal lives, destroy the dreams of small-business owners, and bankrupt industries. This is a tale of human misery, not just of declines in the stock market and in GDP.

Comment: See also:


Bad Guys

Class war in the making? Coronavirus quarantines pit well-off hermits against serfs who supply them

Manhattan
© Reuters / Mike SegarDelivery workers wait to be summoned in otherwise-shut-down midtown Manhattan
Coronavirus has exposed stark divides in US society as the wealthy hole up in their homes and the poor are reduced to delivering their supplies in often-unsafe conditions. With mass layoffs underway, is class war imminent?

Coronavirus untouchables

New York warehouse workers at FreshDirect and Amazon - the two e-commerce giants emerging as the economic winners in the coronavirus epidemic for their near-monopoly on groceries and, well, everything else - tested positive for coronavirus last week, bringing into sharp focus the high-risk nature of their jobs. Along with gig economy workers - rideshare drivers, couriers, and food-service delivery people - and grocery clerks, the warehouse employees handling the surge in deliveries to pandemic shut-ins represent the "have-nots" of the new coronavirus caste system.

No job security, scant health insurance, and high likelihood of exposure to the virus - these jobs don't come with much to recommend them, but employers can squash any rebellion by dropping a hint that workers are lucky to have a job at all. With so many newly-unemployed ex-bartenders, ex-waiters, and ex-retail workers trying to sign up for benefits that state websites are crashing, no one wants to join the ranks of the newly jobless - ranks that the Trump administration hinted earlier this week could swell to 20 percent of the labor force by the time the pandemic subsides.

Comment: It has been said that when you lose everything, what have you got left to lose? At least in the interim, it seems that the authorities are wise to the need to reassure and placate the masses and there are murmurings of government handouts: