Nov 9, 2020

COVID-19 Update

World
  • New Cases:   473,691 (⬆︎ .94%)
  • New Deaths:      5,841 (⬆︎ .46%)
USA
  • New Cases:   102,726 (⬆︎ 1.01%)
  • New Deaths          512 (⬆︎   .21%)



We can have only one POTUS at a time. Which is making us all pretty antsy.

At least we can look at what Biden's already doing and know that we should be getting back on track in a little over 10 weeks.

And this headline should tell us whatever we need to know about the gang of fuckups currently in charge of "the greatest country on the planet".


President-elect Biden announces coronavirus task force made up of physicians and health experts

"Physicians & health experts" - What the fuck were we thinking!?!

President-elect Joe Biden on Monday announced the members of his coronavirus task force, a group made up entirely of doctors and health experts, signaling his intent to seek a science-based approach to bring the raging pandemic under control.

Biden’s task force will have three co-chairs: Vivek H. Murthy, surgeon general during the Obama administration; David Kessler, Food and Drug Administration commissioner under Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton; and Marcella Nunez-Smith, associate dean for health equity research at the Yale School of Medicine. Murthy and Kessler have briefed Biden for months on the pandemic.

Biden will inherit the worst crisis since the Great Depression, made more difficult by President Trump’s refusal to concede the election and commit to a peaceful transition of power. The Trump administration has not put forward national plans for testing, contact tracing and resolving shortages in personal protective equipment that hospitals and health-care facilities are experiencing again as the nation enters its third surge of the virus.

“Dealing with the coronavirus pandemic is one of the most important battles our administration will face, and I will be informed by science and by experts,” Biden said in a statement. “The advisory board will help shape my approach to managing the surge in reported infections; ensuring vaccines are safe, effective, and distributed efficiently, equitably, and free; and protecting at-risk populations.”

The United States is recording more than 100,000 new coronavirus cases a day and, on many days, more than 1,000 deaths, a toll expected to worsen during the crucial 10-week stretch of the transition. It remains unclear whether Trump or his top aides will oversee and lead a robust response to the pandemic during the transition, which could further exacerbate the crisis Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala D. Harris inherit.

The 13-member task force also includes former Trump administration officials, including Rick Bright, former head of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, who, after being demoted, spoke out against the administration’s approach to the pandemic. Luciana Borio, director for medical and biodefense preparedness on Trump’s National Security Council until 2019, is also on the panel.

The group includes several other prominent doctors:
  • Zeke Emanuel, chair of the Department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy at the University of Pennsylvania.
  • Atul Gawande, a surgeon at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and a professor at Harvard Medical School who is a prolific author.
  • Michael T. Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.
  • Eric Goosby, global AIDS coordinator under President Barack Obama and professor of medicine at the University of California at San Francisco School of Medicine.
  • Celine R. Gounder, clinical assistant professor of medicine and infectious diseases at New York University’s Grossman School of Medicine.
  • Julie Morita, executive vice president of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a philanthropy focused on health issues.
  • Loyce Pace, president and executive director of the Global Health Council, a U.S.-based nonprofit organization dedicated to global health issues.
  • Robert Rodriguez, professor of emergency medicine at the UCSF School of Medicine.
  • Rebecca Katz, director of the Center for Global Health Science and Security at Georgetown University Medical Center, and Beth Cameron, director for global health security and biodefense on the White House National Security Council during the Obama administration, are serving as advisers to the transition task force.
Task force members will work with state and local officials to craft public health and economic policies to address the virus and racial and ethnic disparities, while also working to reopen schools and businesses, the transition team said in a news release.

Public health experts said Biden should use the transition to provide leadership as the pandemic continues through a deadly stretch and begin communicating a strong national message.

“Clearly from the election outcomes, half the country doesn’t believe we’re in a crisis,” said Kavita Patel, a fellow at the Brookings Institution who worked on health policy in the Obama administration. Biden and Harris “have an incredible platform that can be used for communication. The country needs clear daily briefings that we thought we’d get from the White House coronavirus task force. They have an incredible platform, if not an official platform.”

Biden plans to call Republican and Democratic governors to ask for their help in developing a consistent message from federal and state leaders, according to three Biden advisers who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about these matters. He will urge governors to adopt statewide mask mandates and to provide clear public health guidance to their constituents, including about social distancing and limiting large gatherings.

The task force will have subgroups that focus on issues related to the response, including testing, vaccine distribution and personal protective equipment, according to two people familiar with the plans who spoke on the condition of anonymity to reveal plans that were not yet public.

In his victory speech Saturday, Biden addressed challenges in bringing the pandemic under control.

“We cannot repair the economy, restore our vitality or relish life’s most precious moments — hugging a grandchild, birthdays, weddings, graduations, all the moments that matter most to us — until we get this virus under control,” Biden said. “That plan will be built on a bedrock of science. It will be constructed out of compassion, empathy and concern. I will spare no effort — or commitment — to turn this pandemic around.”

Yet the ambitious plans Biden laid out on the campaign trail are set to collide with political realities. That includes a deeply divided nation in which more than 71 million people voted for Trump and the possibility of having to navigate a Republican-controlled Senate disinclined to support a greater federal role in testing and contact tracing, among other responsibilities now left mostly to the states.

Biden’s most ambitious plans will require significant congressional funding. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has said he would like to pass new coronavirus relief measures during Congress’s lame-duck session, and Congress faces a Dec. 11 government funding deadline. Biden and his team are poised to begin engaging with congressional Democrats on their priorities.

Biden’s most ambitious plans include dramatically expanding testing and building a U.S. public health jobs corps to have 100,000 Americans conduct contact tracing. They also include ramping up production of personal protective equipment and implementing a vaccine distribution plan.

Murthy, who served as the 19th U.S. surgeon general, is a physician whose nomination was stalled in the Senate for more than a year because of his view that gun violence is a public health issue. Three months into the Trump administration, he was replaced as “the nation’s doctor” with more than two years left on his four-year term.

In 2016, he wrote a landmark report on drug and alcohol addiction, which put that condition alongside smoking, AIDS and other public health crises that previous surgeons general addressed. The report called the addiction epidemic “a moral test for America.” Murthy’s office sent millions of letters to doctors asking for their help to combat the opioid crisis.

The son of immigrants from India, he earned medical and MBA degrees at Yale before joining the faculty at Harvard Medical School, where his research focused on vaccine development and the participation of women and minorities in clinical trials.

After leaving his post as surgeon general, he wrote a book on loneliness and social isolation, including their implications for health, that grew out of his conversations with people in clinical practice and as surgeon general.

Several public health officials celebrated Nunez-Smith’s leadership role on the task force. Her research focuses on promoting health and health-care equity in marginalized populations, according to her Yale biography. She has also studied discrimination that patients endure in the health-care system — expertise that many said was welcome in an epidemic that is disproportionately affecting people of color.

Kessler was FDA commissioner from 1990 to 1997, during the George H.W Bush and Clinton administrations. He is well-known for his attempts to regulate cigarettes — an effort that resulted in a loss in the Supreme Court, which ruled that the agency did not have the authority. That prompted Congress to pass a law, enacted in 2009, that explicitly gave the agency that power.

Kessler, a pediatrician and lawyer, worked at the FDA to accelerate AIDS treatments and on food and nutrition issues. He oversaw the FDA’s development of standardized nutrition labels and notably ordered the seizure of orange juice labeled “fresh” because it was made from concentrate. He has written several books on diet, mental illness and other topics, and has served as dean of the medical schools at Yale and UCSF.

Nov 8, 2020

That 3rd Party Thing

Still waiting for a discussion on this one.

Trump lost in 4 critically close states by a total of 95,568 votes.
In those 4 states, Jorgensen got a total of 227,162 votes.





These's been no conversation that I've heard regarding how this little phenomenon materialized, and that surprises me a bit.

We have gotten a good bit of noise about how The Lincoln Project collected a shitload of money - enough to ensure their entry into the Big Media fray now that the dust is settling - while moving zero votes from Trump to Biden.

Maybe we're overlooking a successful attempt at moving "traditional" voters (ie: US Military) from Trump to Jorgensen, while ensuring a very important core group of voters stay away from those nasty mean libruls (?)

This would fit in with the slicing-n-dicing that's become a real hallmark of political marketing.

It's a slight variation on The Wheeler Dealers, where you just keep nudging 49% to one side, and 49% to the other side, while gaining some control over the 2% that will ultimately make the difference in who wins the big prize.

I love it and I hate it all at the same time.

Today's Pix

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⬇︎👁👃🏻👁⬇︎
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The Breakup



America Finally Breaks Up With Her Abusive Boyfriend

The end of the Trump administration unfolded on a Saturday morning. It was that last dump of votes from Pennsylvania that made his re-election a statistical impossibility. The president was, as he usually is, at his golf course when it happened. The whole thing was kind of surreal, and it felt like it was happening in slow motion, like falling off a horse or getting into a car accident.

I knew a Biden victory was coming. We all did. The math made a Trump win almost impossible. The writing was on the wall. Even Rupert Murdoch had admitted it was over. He had used the cover of the New York Post to send that message to his figurehead—the headline read “Ready, Set, Joe,” accompanied by a photo of a cheerful Joe Biden.

And if that wasn’t enough, Laura Ingraham had used her television program to very gingerly tell Trump it was over. But until the race was called, I had this nagging feeling like something could still go wrong, like 2016 could theoretically still happen again. I worried that networks wouldn’t call it, or Trump would cheat, or something would go horribly wrong maybe involving the Supreme Court or something. It was largely an anxiety and not a real concrete idea, but it still weighed on me.

Sorry - that's as far as could get because of the pay wall - but I think we get the idea.

Today's Beau

Justin King - Beau Of The Fifth Column

Money Quote:
"If you wanna protect the integrity of that office, then you have to keep others like him out of it."

COVID-19 Update

World
  • New Cases:   598,153 (⬆︎ 1.20%)
  • New Deaths:      7,445 (⬆︎   .60%)

USA
  • New Cases:   124,390 (⬆︎ 1.24%)
  • New Deaths:      1,031 (⬆︎   .43%)

Four days in row, we've been over 100,000 new cases - 5 days out of the last 9.

Winter is coming.




President Stoopid has yet to concede the election. That doesn't really matter from a legal standpoint, even though it's very likely that he's scrambling hard looking for the smarmspace© necessary for him to weasel thru a loophole. There are no loopholes in this one, and it's being reported that the marshals are well prepared to drag his fat dirty ass outa there if necessary.

Anyway, as Biden tries to move forward with a little thing we used to call "governance", he's sure to encounter what could be gale-force headwinds (as indicated in the 2nd paragraph below).


Biden has ambitious plans to curb the coronavirus
But they could face big hurdles in a divided country and Congress

His first order of business will be to call Republican and Democratic governors to urge them to adopt mask mandates and communicate the importance of social distancing
President-elect Joe Biden made his election bid a referendum on President Trump’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic. But as he inherits the worst crisis since the Great Depression — a raging pandemic on top of a teetering economy — his plans to turn that around are set to collide with new political realities.

The closeness of the results underscore voters’ deep divisions about how they think the virus should be handled. And depending on the outcome of two Senate runoff elections, it is possible Biden will have to navigate a Republican-controlled Senate disinclined to support a greater federal role in testing and contact tracing, among other responsibilities now left mostly to the states.

Ed Note: "The closeness of the results" - like Trump losing by 5 million votes is some kinda nail-biter. The only reason it was "close" is because we have a really stoopid fucking way of doing this shit. I wasn't close at all.

Headwind courtesy of the Press Poodles.

“It’s going to be very challenging for Biden to implement some of the ambitious pandemic preparedness and response plans he has,” said Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the Center for Infection and Immunity at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health.

Time is not on his side either, as the country surpassed 128,000 cases on Friday, setting a record for the third straight day, and more than 1,000 people a day are dying — a toll that is expected to grow in coming weeks as the weather turns colder and many Americans retreat indoors. Projections by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington suggest the worst stretch of the pandemic is likely to hit in mid- to late January, just around the time Biden would take office.

Biden is expected to announce a coronavirus task force Monday, signaling that the virus is his top and immediate priority, according to two people familiar with the plans, who also cautioned that the timing could change and who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the plans. Among its co-chairs are Vivek H. Murthy, surgeon general during the Obama administration, and David Kessler, Food and Drug Administration commissioner under presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton. Both have briefed Biden on the pandemic for months.

The surge is expected to continue unless Trump undertakes aggressive new measures against the virus in his final two months — a prospect considered unlikely since he has repeatedly claimed the country was “rounding the turn” on the pandemic, even as cases and hospitalizations climbed.

Even before the race was officially called Saturday, Biden made clear in a speech Friday night that addressing the public health and economic crises would be his top priority.

“I want everyone to know on day one, we’re going to put our plan to control this virus into action. We can’t save any of the lives lost — any of those that have been lost — but we can save a lot of lives in the months ahead,” Biden said.

Biden has laid out a far more muscular federal approach than Trump, saying he would urge state and local leaders to implement mask mandates if needed, create a panel on the model of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s War Production Board to scale up testing and lay out detailed plans to distribute vaccines to 330 million people after they are greenlighted as safe and effective.

He has also talked about unifying the country and restoring public trust in the federal government’s message.

He plans to launch some of those efforts immediately, calling Republican and Democratic governors during the transition to urge them to adopt mask mandates and to communicate the importance of social distancing to their constituents, according to three Biden advisers who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about these matters.

Biden’s goal, these people say, is to have people hear the same message from leaders at all levels of government and from members of both parties — something that has been lacking this past year as mask-wearing became a political flash point.

“Joe Biden has spent his career uniting Republicans and Democrats across the political spectrum in times of crisis,” Biden national spokesman Jamal Brown said. “Now, an historic record number of Americans have given he and Vice President-elect Harris a mandate to take immediate action to address the deadly pandemic that has killed nearly 240,000 of us. He believes wearing a mask is a patriotic duty, and is already taking the necessary steps to lead on day one.”

Several health experts, including some advising the Biden campaign, said it will be critical for him to have an effective communications strategy that targets not only his supporters, but also red-state officials and residents. Building consensus, not relying on federal mandates, will be the strategy, they said.

Some supporters predicted that Biden, who portrays himself as “Joe Lunchbucket” — not a member of the “coastal elite” — is in a good position to contact Trump supporters who may feel excluded and disrespected by Democrats, and distrustful of the election results. They also predicted that Biden will step up his emphasis on the economic pain caused by the pandemic.

Biden “needs to understand the split in this country,” said Walid Gellad, associate professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh. “He should spend the next three months trying to figure out how to convince the other side that is not aligned with him.”

Another thing that Biden can do without Congress is reverse Trump’s decision to withdraw from the World Health Organization — which has not yet been finalized — and begin holding briefings with government scientists and health experts, as he has repeatedly vowed to do. He also can implement mask mandates on all federal property.

But other aspects of his response will be more difficult in a fractured nation. Until there is a widely available vaccine — which is not expected until mid- to late 2021 — much of Biden’s plan depends on persuading people to change their behavior. That task looks considerably more difficult after Tuesday’s results, health experts said, especially because millions of Americans may not accept the election results as Trump spreads baseless conspiracy theories about voter fraud.

Much of Biden’s plan will also require money from Congress, including dramatically ramping up testing and contact tracing and providing schools and businesses with billions of dollars to safely reopen. Control of the Senate will hinge on the results of two runoff elections in early January in Georgia, once considered a conservative stronghold, which will determine whether Democrats achieve the control of Congress they sought to pass a massive stimulus bill that was a nonstarter for Senate Republicans.

With Trump sowing doubt about the election results, Biden officials are also preparing for Trump to block hundreds of Biden transition team members from gaining access to government resources as required by law. The Biden campaign has already spent months working with career civil servants in a process that happens every four years.

Biden also has a task force focused on the pandemic, made up of experts and people likely to take leading roles in the administration. That task force includes subgroups focused on issues such as testing, personal protective equipment and vaccine distribution, according to three people familiar with the plans.

Biden and his vice president-elect, Kamala D. Harris, received a briefing Thursday about the public health and economic crises from a team that includes Murthy and Kessler. The pair, who have briefed Biden on the pandemic since March, discussed the spike in cases along with other developments to help him with plans to “get the virus under control and get our economy fully open safely,” said a campaign official.

The Biden camp already has begun discussing possible candidates for jobs in health and science agencies, though campaign officials stress no decisions have been made.

Ron Klain, a senior Biden campaign adviser who served as the Obama administration’s Ebola “czar,” is expected to play a leading role in the covid-19 response in whichever White House job he ends up with. Jake Sullivan, a top policy adviser to Biden’s campaign, is also expected to be in line for a top job on health issues.

Murthy, the former surgeon general, is also expected to play a key role in the response. He is seen as a possible nominee to a high post, such as Health and Human Services Secretary, and is known as someone with a warm manner and good communications skills.

Among the names mentioned for FDA commissioner is Joshua Sharfstein, vice dean for public health practice and community engagement at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and principal deputy commissioner of the FDA during the Obama administration.

Biden has vowed to dramatically ramp up the country’s testing capacity and contact-tracing efforts, but both initiatives will require significant money from Congress — and prospects for Congress to deliver any new economic relief or a health-care spending package next year are highly uncertain.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) — who is likely to retain that title if Republicans keep their majority — said this week that he would like to pass new covid-19 relief measures during Congress’s lame-duck session. He designated money for small businesses, schools and hospitals and said funding for state and local governments — a major Democratic priority — could also be included. He also said more money might need to go toward testing, treatment and vaccine development and distribution.

“Clearly the coronavirus is not gone,” McConnell said at a news conference Wednesday in Kentucky. “In fact, we’ve got it worse now than we had in the spring. You can keep pumping money into the economy forever and it won’t solve the problem until we kill the virus.”

It is unclear whether Democrats will support McConnell’s plan. Pelosi had begun pivoting toward next year, when she hoped a Democratic Senate and Biden as president could deliver a much larger package, along the lines of the $3.4 trillion Heroes Act the House passed in May, which Biden endorsed.

Biden allies point to his ability to negotiate with McConnell during fiscal cliff negotiations when he was vice president but also note the political landscape has changed considerably since Trump took office.