Society's Child
A majority of U.S. adults (75%) said in a new LX/Morning Consult poll they'd likely get a coronavirus vaccine, if and when it passes clinical trials. But even as the number of confirmed cases and fatalities continue to climb in America, only 30% of respondents indicated they'd be in a rush to get an FDA-approved vaccine.
One in five respondents said they planned to be among the last Americans to get the vaccine (11%) or they wouldn't get it at all (9%).

The USNS Mercy arrives in Los Angeles on Friday, March 27, 2020.
Prosecutors charged a locomotive engineer who worked at the Port of Los Angeles with intentionally derailing a train at full speed near the Navy hospital ship Mercy because of suspicions over its activities surrounding COVID-19, according to a federal criminal complaint.
Eduardo Moreno, 44, of San Pedro, California, was charged with one count under a little-known train-wrecking statute that carries a maximum sentence of up to 20 years in the incident Tuesday, according to the 10-page criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles.
Moreno, who was held overnight, was turned over to FBI agents Wednesday morning. He was expected to make an initial appearance in federal court Wednesday afternoon.
Calling what students are paying to attend college courses "somewhere between egregious and obscene," the host of "Dirty Jobs" said that he predicts "one of the silver linings" from the coronavirus pandemic will be Americans' commitments "truly to learning" and that the crisis could "completely redefine" how people learn moving forward.
"When you look at Harvard, and when you look at William and Mary and Brown and MIT and some of these schools with $40 billion endowments...you start to realize, what are we really paying for?"
Ronald Whitted, 47, of Fort Worth, Texas, was arrested on charges of interference with child custody - court order. On or around March 17, Whitted allegedly fled the state with his 6-year-old son and was believed to have attempted to flee the country. Authorities also believed the child was in danger. The Hurst Police Department in Hurst, Texas, requested the assistance of the U.S. Marshals North Texas Fugitive Task Force to help locate Whitted and his son. Members of the task force quickly learned Whitted possibly traveled to Idaho and subsequently contacted the U.S. Marshals Greater Idaho Fugitive Task Force for assistance.
After being on the run for almost two weeks, the Greater Idaho Fugitive Task Force, comprised of members of the Community Action Team, tracked Whitted and his son to an apartment in downtown Coeur d'Alene. Task force members safely arrested Whitted late in the evening and safely recovered the missing boy.
This case was sparked by the Belgian East Flanders Federal Judicial Police (Federale Gerechtelijke Politie Oost-Vlaanderen) after more than 9 million pictures and videos of the abuse of thousands of children from around the world were found there during a house search.
The vast majority of this footage had never been seen in circulation before by law enforcement. Suspecting they were producing their own, the Belgian investigators launched Operation GARGAMEL together with Europol across Europe and beyond . The image and video data seized during this investigation has been used for Victim Identification Task Forces hosted by Europol through which 70 children and 30 suspects have been identified. The Belgian Federal Judicial Police succeeded in identifying 60 suspects (of which 24 in Belgium) and 40 victims, which brings the actual total to 90 suspects and 110 victims.
Some suspects have already appeared before court in a number of other countries. In Australia, a suspect was sentenced to 15 years in prison.
More arrests and rescues are expected globally as police in over 40 countries examine the intelligence packages compiled by Europol and information from the Belgian Federal Judicial Police.
'Paper of record' forced to correct same factual error twice in one week
The New York Times touts itself as a tireless purveyor of facts. One installment in its latest ad campaign reads: "Truth. It's hard to find." But the Times's recent coverage of the coronavirus pandemic suggests the so-called paper of record is itself struggling to find the truth.
The Times printed a correction on Tuesday to rectify its reporters' mischaracterization of a coronavirus study by the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM). It was the second time in four days the Times had published (and subsequently corrected) the same error.
The SCCM study estimated that as many as 1 million coronavirus patients could require ventilators over the course of the entire pandemic. The New York Times, among others, reported that the United States would need 1 million ventilators to adequately care for coronavirus patients. As it turns out, that's a pretty significant difference.
Comment: See also:
- The New York Times' insidious ongoing disinformation campaign on Russia and US elections
- Chinese Foreign Ministry announces plans to expel New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal reporters from country
- Bias virus hits New York Times as double standards infect coverage of Covid-19 lockdown measures in China and Italy
- Trump campaign is suing New York Times for libel regarding Russia story
- Trump Derangement Syndrome spreads: Republicans are 'actual demons,' 'zombies,' says New York Times Nobel Prize-winning columnist
According to Carlson, the Department of Homeland Security released 20,000 H-2B visas Wednesday for seasonal workers to take landscaping, food processing and tourism jobs -- while another 15,000 "bonus visas" are scheduled to be released in May.
"By law, the United States only has to offer 66,000 H-2B visas per year," the host said. "But [acting] Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf has used his discretionary powers to add 35,000 extra visas.

In this Sept. 1, 2015, photo, James O'Keefe, President of Project Veritas Action, waits to be introduced during a news conference at the National Press Club in Washington.
Facebook told The Washington Times that the video was removed by the company, which prohibits content about the coronavirus that could potentially lead to imminent physical harm.
Mr. O'Keefe, the founder of the hidden-camera sting group Project Veritas, had shared the video Tuesday through social media accounts including his personal Facebook page.
Comment: The fact of the matter is that the Veritas video is hardly groundbreaking. It's just run-of-the-mill journalism, interviewing people on the front lines and asking them what they think. These aren't experts, nothing in particular is being debunked. That Facebook would go so far as to censor this video says a lot about the climate surrounding the coronavirus hype. Anyone expressing any doubt about the official line, or even simply airing the comments of those who do, is eliminated.
See also:
- Bolsonaro questions need for COVID-19 lockdown, says deaths exaggerated for political purposes - UPDATE: Twitter CENSORS Brazilian president
- The US Census Bureau and social media - Working hand-in-glove to censor the Internet
- Censorship is the way that any dictatorship — and NO democracy — functions
- Blacklist Valley: How Big Tech reshapes politics by censoring conservative ideas
- Facebook censors explainer clip recalling when western media liked Soleimani - and demonetizes popular account for sharing it
- More hypocrisy and censorship disguised as advice for 'combating disinformation'

Different types of Kentucky bourbon, one of the many spirits being sold during the coronavirus. Alcohol sales have increased amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Hard liquors, including tequila and gin, as well as cocktails are the favorites among consumers. Sprits sales increased by 75 percent compared to the same dates in 2019. Beer is the next most popular drink, with purchases up by 66 percent, then wine, up 42 percent year-on-year.
Nielsen's vice president of beverage alcohol, Danelle Kosmal, predicted that we've probably seen the peak of consumer demand for alcohol. "I suspect that the week ending March 21st will feature the strongest growth rates that we will see during this consumer pantry-loading time," he told The Drinks Business.
Comment: Could this be one of the reasons behind another marked trend emerging from the lockdown? Hospital sees spike in severe child abuse cases; believed linked to stress from Coronavirus pandemic
See also:
- Alcohol: The deadliest drug
- So why aren't we talking about it? Alcohol is killing more people than the opioid epidemic
- The Australia-first study: Alcohol causes most overall harm of any drug
- Multiple studies show that alcohol is the real 'gateway drug'
- Pathway to alcohol addiction discovered
- The debate rages: Latest research contends no amount of alcohol is safe

Researcher Xinhua Yan works in the lab at Moderna in Cambridge, Maryland, on February 28, 2020. Moderna has developed the first experimental coronavirus medicine, but an approved treatment is more than a year away.
That's according to a $456 million order with Johnson & Johnson's Pharmaceuticals arm Janssen, which specified a "new vaccine asset for 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19)," Forbes found. It's the largest reported amount spent on a vaccine project to date, even though the pharma giant hasn't yet started any clinical trials as other firms have.
The deal was signed with the Health and Human Services Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR) on March 27, 2020. It followed another order, made as part of the same contract with Janssen, for $150 million on March 20, 2020, for a "new antiviral" for COVID-19.
A spokesperson from Johnson & Johnson didn't provide any more details on the specific order, but confirmed the $456 million award related to a collaboration with ASPR's Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), as announced in February. That work was built on previous contracts for developing countermeasures for other influenzas. The value of the coronavirus-specific work hadn't previously been revealed and is the largest known contract for a coronavirus vaccine to date.











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