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Biohazard

Coronavirus Pandemonium: China no Longer Testing For Antibodies - They're Just Guessing Numbers


Comment: Which means, if anything, the numbers of people with actual Coronavirus are being overestimated...


Global panic sets in as China moves the diagnostic goal-posts
coronavirus sign
In Hubei Province, China, where the 'new' virus was first diagnosed, and where the vast majority of the cases have occurred, it's no longer considered necessary to test for the presence of CV antibodies before diagnosing the disease.

Let's say that again.

The epicentre of the so-called new virus outbreak is currently diagnosing new cases of the disease without testing for the virus.

Instead they are relying on 'clinical diagnosis', which is defined as [our emphasis]:
"The estimated identification of the disease underlying a patient's complaints based merely on signs, symptoms and medical history of the patient rather than on laboratory examination or medical imaging."

Comment: The WHO and most governments took their cue from China. When they observed how seriously the Chinese were taking it, they followed suit. Which is interesting in itself.

But the likely reason why China acted 'out of an abundance of caution' is because their 'top experts' at the BSL-4 biolab in Wuhan city goofed up and accidentally released a virus they had been fiddling with in order to produce some form of Coronavirus vaccine.


Violin

'Trolling of the highest order': Russian communists FURIOUS after Lenin's birthday chosen as date for major public vote

lenin
© Global Look Press / ZUMAPRESS.com / Evgeny Sinitsyn
He died almost a century ago, but they still haven't gotten around to burying him. So, it's fair to say Vladimir Lenin still casts a long shadow on the Russian political scene.

For obvious reasons, Russia's Communist Party has made itself the protector of the Bolshevik leader's legacy and it tends to react sensitively to any perceived slight. Now many of its members are up in arms over plans to hold a forthcoming national vote on Lenin's birthday.

When the date for the general ballot on changing the constitution was announced, most Russians were simply happy to have a day off work. However, Communists quickly realized that April 22 happens to coincide with the 150th birthday of their revered icon. Now, they're not entirely convinced that the clash is purely coincidental.

Brick Wall

Project Veritas: ABC News' David Wright identifies as 'a socialist' - UPDATE

david wright ABC news
© Twitter / @WrightUps
Senior ABC News correspondent David Wright accused his own network of denying President Donald Trump "credit" for his administration's accomplishments and revealed that he's a "socialist," according to an undercover video captured by Project Veritas.


Comment: While the big news of this Project Veritas release is that Wright said that he's a socialist (gasp!), the real news here is what he had to say about the state of the news in general and his network in particular. News is just another form of entertainment at this point, with the mighty clicks and views dictating the slant of everything important. This isn't exactly stunningly new information, but it's interesting to hear it from someone on the inside who "feel(s) really bad about it".

See also: UPDATE 02/26/20: Fox News reports that ABC's David Wright has (predictably) been suspended, though not fired, for his unguarded remarks to an undercover Project Veritas reporter:
Wright was disciplined after higher-ups at ABC News reviewed footage in which Wright describes himself as a "socialist" and appears to criticize the network for the way in which it chooses to present the news.

The veteran reporter expounded at length on his political views. "I would consider myself a socialist, like I think there should be national health insurance," he said. "I'm totally fine with reining in corporations, I think they're too many billionaires, and I think there's a wealth gap - that's a problem."

In the hidden video that Project Veritas said was filmed in New Hampshire during its primary's coverage, Wright, 56, also called President Trump "a d---" while simultaneously complaining that Trump is sometimes not given "credit for what things he does do."

Wright did not respond to Fox News' request for comment. A rep for ABC News told Fox News he would be reassigned after serving his suspension.

"Any action that damages our reputation for fairness and impartiality or gives the appearance of compromising it harms ABC News and the individuals involved," the rep said. "David Wright has been suspended, and to avoid any possible appearance of bias, he will be reassigned away from political coverage when he returns."



Alarm Clock

Life expectancy 'flatlines' after 10 years of austerity, report says

old person
Life expectancy in England has ground to a halt for the first time in a century, according to a landmark report.

Professor Sir Michael Marmot, a leading expert on public health, said the widening gap between the rich and poor is to blame.

His 172-page report said life expectancy in England has barely improved in the last decade - the first time in more than 100 years it has failed to significantly increase for a 10-year period.

And for those in the poorest areas it has actually declined - by almost a year for women living in the North East.

Comment: The Guardian writes:
Austerity has taken its toll over the last 10 years in all of these areas, says Marmot in a foreword to the report. "From rising child poverty and the closure of children's centres, to declines in education funding, an increase in precarious work and zero hours contracts, to a housing affordability crisis and a rise in homelessness, to people with insufficient money to lead a healthy life and resorting to food banks in large numbers, to ignored communities with poor conditions and little reason for hope ... Austerity will cast a long shadow over the lives of the children born and growing up under its effects."
See also:


Star of David

Rashid Khalidi takes on the 'hegemonic narrative' of Jewish nationalism in personal new book

Rashid Khalidi

Rashid Khalidi
There was an urgency about Rashid Khalidi when the dean of Palestinian-American historians addressed a jam-packed crowd at the prestigious Politics & Prose bookstore in DC, Feb. 10. He told us he was taking off the academic gloves in his new book, The Hundred-Years' War on Palestine. "This book is more personal," he said. It draws on his illustrious family's more than hundred years' experience witnessing and directly confronting the "colonial invasion" of his country, continuing to this day in his own work as an academic truth-teller.

A questioner challenged Khalidi as to whether he was faithful to the historian's duty of "objectivity." He replied, "The fact is there is a hegemonic narrative about Israel and Palestine, which takes the Western, pro-Zionist perspective. Eighty percent of what is said about the issue in the U.S. sticks to the hegemonic narrative. It's not my job to repeat that narrative. Besides, historians, in fact, usually advance an argument or thesis. They don't just say, 'On the one hand or on the other hand.' "

Comment:


Heart - Black

MSM's anti-Sanders venom has them digging through archives & smearing veteran American reporter (because Russia!)

Ed Schultz Bernie sanders RT interview
© RT
Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders speaks with RT’s late anchor Ed Schultz for an exclusive interview in 2016.
Mainstream outlets are so determined to derail Bernie Sanders' campaign, they've dug up a 2016 interview of his wife with RT's late host Ed Schultz - shot before the "collusion" was a thing - to smear both as Russian stooges.

A clip of the Democratic presidential hopeful's wife Jane Sanders complaining on RT America about the unfairness of closed primaries - in which only registered Democrats can vote for the party's nominee - was trending on Wednesday morning, boosted by smug blue-checks crowing some variation on "I told you so."

Yoda

Pro-Assange rally held outside jail holding whistleblower Chelsea Manning, hactivist Jeremy Hammond, to protest 'same web of corruption'

protest assange manning prison us
© Morgan Artyukhina
Activists protested outside the Virginia jail holding whistleblower Chelsea Manning on Wednesday
Activists protested outside the Virginia jail holding whistleblower Chelsea Manning on Wednesday, as the judge in the extradition hearing for WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange in London rejected pleas to intervene in Assange's treatment in Belmarsh Prison.

For nearly a year, former US Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning has been detained in Federal Detention Center Alexandria. Manning is not charged with a crime, but rather, she is being held in contempt of a federal grand jury for refusing to answer questions about her relationship with Assange. The whistleblower insists she answered their questions during her 2013 trial for having stolen classified US government documents and given them to WikiLeaks to publish, and that asking them again is an attempt to entrap her.

Wolf

'Tigers' and 'wolves' duke it out in court: Russian armored car maker sues biker association leader over trademark

(L) VPK-39272 Volk armored vehicle (R) Night Wolves President Alexander Zaldostanov (aka, the Surgeon)
© Wikipedia / Vitaly V. Kuzmin; Sputnik / Aleksandr Galperin
(L) VPK-39272 Volk armored vehicle/ Vitaly V. Kuzmin; (R) Night Wolves President Alexander Zaldostanov (aka, the Surgeon)
AMZ, the defense firm that makes the Tigr, one of Russia's modern armored cars, can't call their latest project 'Wolf' because Russia's largest biker club, the 'Night Wolves' owns the trademark. So AMZ is taking them to court.

Arzamas Machine-building Plant (AMZ) wants to call their latest armored car 'Wolf,' but they've hit a surprising road bump: the 'Night Wolves' have had the trademark for the word since 2000. Their leader, Aleksandr 'Surgeon' Zaldostanov, has personally owned it for 13 years now. So now, the Russian manufacturer has taken 'Surgeon' to intellectual property court, claiming he isn't using the trademark.

AMZ has been supplying Russia with its top-of-the-line Tigr armored car (or 'tiger' in Russian) for nearly fifteen years now. The Tigr protects its crew from gunfire, shrapnel from nearby grenades and artillery, and even mines. But time doesn't stand still, and AMZ has been working on an upgrade for its 'tiger': the Volk (or 'wolf' in Russian). The Volk is faster, better armored, and more powerful than the Tigr, and, unlike its predecessor, it's modular: the army can quickly convert it into an armored truck or an APC, if necessary. The new version is just about ready, but AMZ can't sell a vehicle called 'Volk' because the trademark belongs Zaldostanov.

Comment: See also:


Health

Tehran cancels prayers as Coronavirus cases spike, two more officials come down with virus - plus other worldwide developments

tehran qom hospital
© AP
A medic moves a patient in a ward dedicated to people infected with the coronavirus at Forqani Hospital in Qom, the most affected region in Iran, on February 26.
Iran has canceled Friday Prayers in Tehran over the coronavirus outbreak, state media report, as the authorities confirmed that infected cases in the country spiked by more than 100.

Health Ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour said on February 27 that the number of deaths linked to the coronavirus outbreak in Iran has increased by seven to 26 over the past 24 hours -- the highest death toll outside of China, where the disease emerged in December.

A total of 245 people had tested positive for the virus -- an increase of 106 on the previous day, Jahanpour told a news conference, adding that the large number of new cases came from more labs now testing for the virus.


Comment: That brings the death rate to just over 10%, still 5x more than it should be, given stats from China. That suggests there could be over 1000 cases, not the 245 so far confirmed.


More than 82,000 people in about 40 countries have been infected with the new coronavirus, mainly in China. COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the virus, has killed more than 2,700 people globally.

The Middle Eastern country has become the main hot spot of the virus in the region, where more than 350 cases have now been reported. Many of those cases have been linked to travelers who had gone to the Islamic republic for religious visits.

As governments ramped up measures to battle a looming global pandemic, Iranian authorities announced domestic travel restrictions for people with confirmed or suspected infections, and placed curbs on access to major Shi'ite pilgrimage sites.

In affected areas, school closures will be extended for three days, and universities for another week starting from February 29, Health Minister Saeed Namaki told a news conference.

State TV later reported Friday Prayers in Tehran had been called off, and semiofficial news agencies quoted officials as saying the prayers would also be canceled in other cities.

Comment: Masoumeh Ebtekar, Iranian vice president for women and family affairs, has contracted the virus, as has Mojtaba Zonnour, head of Iran's Parliamentary Security and Foreign Relations Commission. Germany's health minister says his country is facing the beginning of an epidemic (there are 18 confirmed cases):
Spahn claimed earlier that "detection and containment" efforts in Europe were working to hold back the spread of the virus, but an explosion of cases in northern Italy and at least 13 other European countries have forced him to reevaluate the situation. At his last press conference on Tuesday, Spahn admitted "it could get worse before it gets better."

Tracking the 'infection chains' - noting the previous travel and social encounters of the infected - is vital to understanding the spread of the illness. Thus far, the majority of patients in Germany were found to have recently traveled from Italy or China, or had contact with travelers.

"The infection chains are partially no longer trackable, and that is a new thing," Spahn said on Tuesday. "Large numbers of people have had contact with the patients, and that is a big change to the 16 patients we had until now where the chain could be traced back to the origin in China."
Italy saw its death toll rise to 14, with 528 total cases (100 more than the previous day). Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio, however, says that the "infodemic" is more damaging to the country than the virus:
"The epidemic of misleading information will do more damage to Italy than the risk of the virus epidemic itself," Di Maio told reporters Thursday. "We have gone from an epidemic risk to an 'infodemic' one."

The spread of "misleading" reports damages not only the fragile economy of the country — that has seen three recessions in just over a decade — but also the reputation of its scientific community, the minister added.

Italian scientists are "addressing the situation brilliantly," while the media scare blows the situation out of proportion, he argued. So far, the outbreak affects only 0.089 percent of the country's population, including infected and quarantined, the official explained.

"Without wanting to play things down, there are just over 10 towns and cities involved in Italy at the moment," Di Maio said. "If our children go to school in most cases it means that foreigners can come here as tourists and investors."
The first American case of local transmission turned up in California (the individual had no known contact through travel of exposure to someone already infected). But in China, deaths are declining (29 new deaths reported today, lower than previous daily figures). One Chinese city is offering over $1k rewards for self-reporting symptoms in order to help stop the spread of the virus.

See also:


Eye 1

Protesters hurl stones at police during second night of riots against migrant camps in Lesbos

Protest
Scores of angry Greeks clashed with police on Wednesday night as violent protests continued over plans to build a new detention center for irregular migrants on the island of Lesbos, with dozens reported injured.

The Greek government plans to build new camps for refugees in response to overcrowding on Lesbos and four neighboring islands, Samos, Chios, Leros and Kos. Local residents were enraged with the news and used stones, sticks and fire to express their anger. The Greek police used tear gas and rubber bullets against the demonstrators on Wednesday night as rioting entered its third consecutive night.

The protesters targeted several locations, including a military camp near Pagani village on Lesbos, where police officers sent to Lesbos are housed.

Comment: See also: