Jan 16, 2021

On Joe's Plan

First: The national debt and the federal deficit are not IOUs that come due when our grandkids have kids and everybody goes bust trying to pay it all back.


Second: as Biden rolls out his plan to get us back in the game, we can expect the Republicans to rediscover their rabid convictions over fiscal conservancy - and who the fuck is anybody trying to kid on that one? Everybody knows that's what's coming and everybody knows they're still full of shit and everybody's still going to point at GOP hypocrisy like they've discovered something brand new about Republicans being assholes. 


On Thursday night, President-elect Joe Biden outlined the first portion of his administration’s two-step plan to contain the coronavirus and revive the struggling American economy. A key emphasis of his proposal is to give immediate, individual relief to Americans suffering in the pandemic-induced recession.

The so-called American Rescue Plan that Biden unveiled includes $1.9 trillion of relief spending. The proposal includes about a trillion dollars for extending unemployment benefits, rental aid, expanded child care assistance, direct payments of $1,400 to qualifying households, and more. It also includes $350 billion in aid to state and local governments whose budgets have been pummeled by the economic slowdown, and $20 billion to help distribute vaccines more quickly to Americans.


- snip -

Unemployment

Jobs numbers this month have shown, in more ways than one, that the labor market’s recovery is sputtering. The Labor Department announced last week that employers had cut 140,000 jobs in December, as COVID-19 surged around the country, leading to stricter shutdowns. On Thursday, Labor published data showing that 1.2 million people had applied for unemployment benefits last week, an increase of more than 300,000 over the week before.

Biden’s rescue plan seeks to ease the unemployment crisis with a number of immediate measures, including:
  • Increasing the $300-per-week unemployment boost, passed by Congress last month, to $400
  • Extending both regular unemployment and the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program, which offered help to independent contractors and others who don’t normally qualify. Last month, Congress extended both of these programs through mid-March. Biden’s proposal would further extend them through September.
$1,400 checks

Biden’s plan will give stimulus checks of up to $1,400 per individual or $2,800 per household. This amount, plus the $600 checks Americans received from the $900 billion stimulus package that President Trump signed last month, adds up to the $2,000-per-person promise Biden made while stumping for the Senate candidates in Georgia. But some progressive lawmakers, such as Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), are calling on Biden to include a full $2,000 in his plan. Ocasio-Cortez accuses him of stopping short of his pledge: “$2,000 means $2,000;” she told the Washington Post, “$2,000 does not mean $1,400.”


Child Care

The pandemic has perpetuated a child care crisis in America. Protective equipment and safety measures have increased operating costs for child care providers at the same time that their enrollment is declining because of contagion fears and the vast numbers of working parents who have lost jobs. Many providers face the prospect of closing permanently, which also could jeopardize parents’ ability to return to work as the economy improves.

Biden’s plan expands child care tax credits for one year, providing families up to $4,000 for one child and $8,000 for two or more, and adds another $15 billion to a child care block grant program to help families pay for care, prioritizing those who lost their jobs during the pandemic and are struggling to afford care. The plan also earmarks $25 billion in emergency funding to keep struggling child care centers afloat.

Evictions and rental assistance

Even as the pandemic has produced staggering job losses, it has also wrought a housing crisis, causing millions of tenants to fall behind on rent. Many such households have been able to stay put thanks to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s moratorium on evictions. In December, Congress extended that moratorium through the end of January. It also allotted $25 billion in rental assistance for tenants, since the moratorium doesn’t wipe out any back rent owed to landlords. A relief proposal outline provided by senior Biden administration officials notes, “While the $25 billion allocated by Congress was an important down payment on the back rent accrued during this crisis, it is insufficient to meet the scale of the need”—and it calls on Congress to allocate another $25 billion in assistance.

Were Congress to pass Biden’s proposal, it’s possible this doubling of rental relief would still be insufficient: In December, Moody’s Analytics predicted that rental debt in the US will have climbed to $70 billion by year’s end.

Tax credits

Biden’s proposal includes additional relief in the form of a one-year expansion of two tax credits that target low-income households. The first, the Earned Income Tax Credit, lets families below a certain income threshold reduce their tax liability, and grows larger for households with children. Biden proposes more than doubling the credit for childless adults - to $1,500 - and raising the income threshold for eligibility.

He’s also proposing to raise the Child Tax Credit to $3,000 per kid—and more for children under six. Biden wants to make the full credit refundable—meaning that if it brings a household’s tax liability below zero, the family will get a tax refund.

One element notably absent from Biden’s rescue plan is student loan forgiveness or forbearance. This summer, the education department suspended student loan payments and the accrual of interest on federal student loans. That forbearance is slated to expire January 31.

Biden has previously promised to extend the forbearance in the first days after his swearing-in. In a call with reporters on Thursday, administration officials said forbearance was still a priority for the president-elect, and that Biden would address the issue directly in the next phase of his recovery plan. They also reiterated Biden’s desire to make good on his promise to forgive up to $10,000 in student debt. Transition officials have expressed hope that the package will garner bipartisan support, so it can pass the Senate with 60 votes.


The inevitable bullshit about "how ya gonna pay for all that, libtard?" is going to pop up, and we have to countervail it with something like "we'll pay for it with the yacht money we gave away to all those rich legacy pukes - they'll just have to postpone their gratification for a little while."

Needs work, but you get the idea. 

"Paying for it" is a red herring to begin with, so maybe a better way of rebutting would be just to point out that paying for their 2nd or 3rd yacht shouldn't be up to pensioners and school kids.

COVID-19 Update

World
New Cases:   761,446 (⬆︎ .81%)
New Deaths:    14,885 (⬆︎ .74%)

USA
New Cases:   248,080 (⬆︎ 1.04%)
New Deaths:      3,805 (⬆︎   .96%)

Total Vaccinated: 10.6 million
Priority Population Vaccinated: 9.6%
Total Population Vaccinated:     3.2%




I don't know when I'll decide it's time to stop posting these daily updates, but I'm sure as fuck looking forward to it.


Biden Pledges Federal Vaccine Campaign to Beat a Surging Coronavirus

Facing looming shortages and rising infections, the president-elect promised mobile vaccination sites, National Guard troops and a federal push to increase vaccine production.

President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr., racing against a surge in coronavirus cases and the emergence of a new variant that could worsen the crisis, is planning a vaccination offensive that calls for greatly expanding access to the vaccine while using a wartime law to increase production.

In a speech on Friday in Wilmington, Del., Mr. Biden told Americans that “we remain in a very dark winter,” allowing, “the honest truth is this: Things will get worse before they get better.”

“I told you,” he said, “I’ll always level with you.” But he also tried to offer hope for an end to a pandemic that has taken nearly 390,000 American lives and frayed the country’s economic and social fabric.

“Our plan is as clear as it is bold: get more people vaccinated for free, create more places for them to get vaccinated, mobilize more medical teams to get the shots in people’s arms, increase supply and get it out the door as soon as possible,” he said, calling it “one of the most challenging operation efforts ever undertaken by our country.”

He pledged to ramp up vaccination availability in pharmacies, build mobile clinics to get vaccines to underserved rural and urban communities and encourage states to expand vaccine eligibility to people 65 and older. Mr. Biden also vowed to make racial equity a priority in fighting a virus that has disproportionately infected and killed people of color.

“You have my word,” he declared, “we will manage the hell out of this operation.”

But the president-elect’s expansive vision is colliding with a sobering reality: With only two federally authorized vaccines, supplies will be scarce for the next several months, frustrating some state and local health officials who had hoped that the release of a federal stockpile of vaccine doses announced this week could alleviate that shortage.

Mr. Biden is clearly prepared to assert a role for the federal government that President Trump refused to embrace, using the crisis to rebuild the nation’s public health services and Washington’s money to hire a new health work force and deploy the National Guard. But many of his bold promises will be difficult to realize.

Even if Mr. Biden invokes the Korean War-era Defense Production Act, it may take some time to alleviate vaccine shortages. The law has been invoked already, to important but limited effect. His promises to build federally supported mass vaccination sites and develop new programs to serve high-risk people, including the developmentally disabled and those in jail, will work only if there are vaccines to administer.

“It won’t mean that everyone in this group will get vaccinated immediately, as the supply is not where it needs to be,” Mr. Biden conceded. But as new doses become available, he promised, “we’ll reach more people who need them.”

The vaccine distribution plan comes one day after Mr. Biden proposed a $1.9 trillion rescue package to combat the economic downturn and the Covid-19 crisis, including a $20 billion “national vaccine program.” The president-elect has said repeatedly that he intends to get “100 million Covid vaccine shots into the arms of the American people” by his 100th day in office.

Time is of the essence. With the number of deaths now up to nearly 4,000 a day, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sounded the alarm on Friday about a fast-spreading, far more contagious variant of the coronavirus that is projected to become the dominant source of infection in the United States by March, potentially fueling another wrenching surge of cases and deaths.

“I think we are going to see, in six to eight weeks, major transmission in this country like we’re seeing in England,” Dr. Michael T. Osterholm, the director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota and a member of Mr. Biden’s coronavirus advisory board. “If we can set up vaccine clinics faster and more efficiently, how many lives do we save?”

In some respects, Mr. Biden’s plan echoes the one outlined this week by Mr. Trump’s health secretary, Alex M. Azar II, who encouraged states to vaccinate those 65 and older. The Trump administration has also pledged to employ pharmacies to administer shots and to invoke the Defense Production Act when necessary.

When Mr. Azar announced Tuesday that the federal government was releasing a stockpile of vaccine doses, some state health officials expected to get more in their weekly shipments to help address soaring demand as the pandemic rages out of control.

But now, the states face a stark reality. That stockpile consisted only of vaccines earmarked for booster shots for people who had already received a first dose. That means the release of this pool will not expand inoculations to a new group of people. Federal officials have said second doses will be prioritized in the weekly shipments to ensure everyone can get a booster shot.

Gov. Kate Brown of Oregon, a Democrat, posted on Twitter that she had received “disturbing news” on Thursday evening: “States will not be receiving increased shipments of vaccines from the national stockpile next week, because there is no federal reserve of doses.” She added, “I am shocked and appalled that they have set an expectation on which they could not deliver, with such grave consequences.”

A senior administration official said on Friday that the government expected the two companies producing vaccines, Moderna and Pfizer, to supply eight million to 12 million vaccine doses a week to the public over the next several weeks — shipments that will then be divided among those getting their first and second shots. The two companies have deals with the federal government to supply a total of 200 million doses to the United States — or enough to fully vaccinate 100 million people — by the end of March.

The European Union is also struggling with shortages, amid news that Pfizer plans to halt production of its vaccine for weeks as it upgrades its manufacturing plant in Puurs, Belgium, to reach its goal of producing two billion doses this year — up from its earlier goal of 1.3 billion. The move will reduce deliveries to European Union member states as well as other countries.

The plan that Mr. Biden rolled out on Friday is part of a broader effort to use the current crisis to rebuild the nation’s crumbling public health infrastructure — long a goal of Democrats on Capitol Hill. As part of his stimulus package, he has also proposed increasing federal funding for community health centers and has called for a new “public health jobs program” that would fund 100,000 public health workers to engage in vaccine outreach and contact tracing.

“The details still have to be worked out, but this is really a critical recognition that state and local health agencies need to be shored up in a way that they haven’t been in decades,” Dr. Osterholm said.

But Dr. Marcus Plescia, the chief medical officer of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials, expressed caution about the idea, and urged Mr. Biden to consult with members of his group before creating a new corps of public health workers.

“We really would like to see him bring a few more people with some on-the-ground experience onto his team,” Dr. Plescia said. “One of the things about a federal jobs corps is, how do those people interface with the state public health departments? You need to really think through that.”

Mr. Biden’s bid to improve public health infrastructure recalls the approach that he and President Barack Obama took with the recession-ravaged economy they inherited in 2009, when Mr. Biden was the newly inaugurated vice president. Rahm Emanuel, Mr. Obama’s chief of staff at the time, said then that a serious crisis should never “go to waste” because it might provide “an opportunity to do things that you think you could not do before.”

In an interview on Friday, Mr. Emanuel, who went on to serve two terms as the mayor of Chicago, praised Mr. Biden for his plan to invest in such clinics — also known as federally qualified health centers, or F.Q.H.C.s.

“The F.Q.H.C. is singularly the best preventive health care for hard to reach communities,” Mr. Emanuel said, adding, that “what’s great about this investment that the president-elect is making is it is laying down a foundation” for a strong public health response to future crises.

Mr. Biden has long pledged to wage a far more aggressive federal response than Mr. Trump’s leave-it-to-the-states approach.

Also on Friday, Mr. Biden’s team announced that it intended to phase out Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administration’s fast-track vaccine initiative. Dr. David A. Kessler, a former head of the Food and Drug Administration who has been advising Mr. Biden on the pandemic, will lead the new administration’s effort to accelerate the development and manufacture of Covid-19 vaccines.

“OWS is the Trump team’s name for their program,” Jennifer Psaki, Mr. Biden’s spokeswoman, wrote on Twitter, using the program’s initials. “We are phasing in a new structure, which will have a different name than OWS.”

Today's Tweet


Republicans can't sell their shitty ideas to a majority of voters, so they have to pull some really shitty stunts to force those shitty ideas on us.

Jan 15, 2021

Today's QAnon Thing

NPR - 
Their Family Members Are QAnon Followers - And They're At A Loss What To Do About It

 

What They Wanted

Qult45 wants us to believe the Jan6 coup attempt was just a spontaneous thing, and it was  supposed to be peaceful, but some folks got a little carried away, and gee whiz, why are you libtards always being so divisive?

Fuck that shit.


Federal prosecutors offered an ominous new assessment of last week’s siege of the U.S. Capitol by President Donald Trump’s supporters on Thursday, saying in a court filing that rioters intended “to capture and assassinate elected officials.”

Prosecutors offered that view in a filing asking a judge to detain Jacob Chansley, the Arizona man and QAnon conspiracy theorist who was famously photographed wearing horns as he stood at the desk of Vice President Mike Pence in the chamber of the U.S. Senate.

The detention memo, written by Justice Department lawyers in Arizona, goes into greater detail about the FBI’s investigation into Chansley, revealing that he left a note for Pence warning that “it’s only a matter of time, justice is coming.”

“Strong evidence, including Chansley’s own words and actions at the Capitol, supports that the intent of the Capitol rioters was to capture and assassinate elected officials in the United States government,” prosecutors wrote.

A public defender representing Chansley could not be immediately reached for comment. Chansley is due to appear in federal court on Friday.

The prosecutors’ assessment comes as prosecutors and federal agents have begun bringing more serious charges tied to violence at the Capitol, including revealing cases Thursday against one man, retired firefighter Robert Sanford, on charges that he hurled a fire extinguisher at the head of one police officer and another, Peter Stager, of beating a different officer with a pole bearing an American flag.

In Chansley’s case, prosecutors said the charges “involve active participation in an insurrection attempting to violently overthrow the United States government,” and warned that “the insurrection is still in progress” as law enforcement prepares for more demonstrations in Washington and state capitals.

They also suggested he suffers from drug abuse and mental illness, and told the judge he poses a serious flight risk.

“Chansley has spoken openly about his belief that he is an alien, a higher being, and he is here on Earth to ascend to another reality,” they wrote.


The Justice Department has brought more than 80 criminal cases in connection with the violent riots at the U.S. Capitol last week, in which Trump’s supporters stormed the building, ransacked offices and in some cases, attacked police.

Many of the people charged so far were easily tracked down by the FBI, which has more than 200 suspects, thanks in large part to videos and photos posted on social media.

Michael Sherwin, the Acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, has said that while many of the initial charges may seem minor, he expects much more serious charges to be filed as the Justice Department continues its investigation.

Today's Tweet



And there it is: "...thank you - but fuck you for bein' there."

Today's Video

Couple of 'em actually. Work-related. All god's critters just trying to get by.






COVID-19 Update

World
New Cases:   759,688 (⬆︎ .82%)
New Deaths     15,512 (⬆︎ .78%)

USA
New Cases:   234,419 (⬆︎   .99%)
New Deaths:      4,142 (⬆︎ 1.05%)

Total Vaccinated USA: 11.1 million (3.4%)

OVER 2 MILLION DEAD



We'll be dealing with some pretty serious PTSD-type problems - and other fallout - for a good long time after this monster has been beaten.


Coronavirus is driving these nurses to quit: ‘I realized my voice was too small to fix things’
They are scared for their safety, many say


After five years, Kami Cayce worked her last shift as a nurse in September.

For the 27-year-old Texan, the decision to leave seemed inevitable after a tumultuous year turned upside down by the coronavirus.

After initial stay-at-home orders, Cayce’s workplace, Baylor Scott & White Medical Center, resumed non-emergency and elective surgeries at rates even higher than before covid-19. Cayce says her workload increased dramatically while concerns about coronavirus were still top of mind.

“Nurses were forced to work above capacity while understaffed. Because of the increased volume of surgeries, patients would sometimes wait for a room for up to 10 hours after surgery,” said Cayce, a post-operation recovery nurse. She said the influx was required to make up for income lost when elective surgeries were being canceled.

Then a patient admitted overnight tested positive for covid-19 the next day.

Cayce says nurses who cared for the patient weren’t contacted immediately and found out only when they returned to work and heard from fellow nurses the evening. “They were not told to quarantine and were not offered testing to determine if they had contracted” the coronavirus, Cayce said. “They were expected to continue working normally with no extra precautions.”

“It was tough and is still tough to not be there helping. There’s a lot of feelings of guilt, but not enough to go back into an abusive system,” she added.

Throughout the United States, nurses have left — or are considering leaving — their jobs over coronavirus concerns and fears for their own safety.

Baylor Scott & White’s policy is that “caregivers are notified when a patient they have been in contact with tests positive for covid-19,” spokeswoman Julie Smith wrote in a statement to The Lily, adding that they are offered “the proper protection,”

She said that “less than 1 percent of our patient-facing employees who have had an exposure to a covid-positive patient have themselves tested positive.”

National Nurses United, the largest union and professional association of registered nurses in the country, did not respond to a request for comment on the current working conditions nurses are facing. But many of its 150,000 members are involved in campaigns speaking out against the conditions.

This month alone, nurses at the University of California at Los Angeles and the University of California at Irvine held a news conference to protest their hospitals’ use of waivers in an effort to get around state laws guaranteeing nurse-to-patient staffing ratios. Nurses at Sutter Coast Hospital in Crescent City, Calif., voted to unionize. Nurses at Carondelet St. Mary’s and St. Joseph’s hospitals held a honk-a-thon in Tucson to draw attention to how overworked they are — including now having to care for three, instead of two, intensive care patients at a time.

The financial pressure on hospitals related to the downturn in elective and other non-covid procedures has also resulted in hundreds of nurses being laid off. In Minnesota alone, about 275 nurses have lost their jobs as hospitals downsized, said Rick Fuentes, spokesman for the Minnesota Nurses Association.

“At a time when we need every bed, every body to care for not just covid patients, but all the other patients, we’re taking them away. These were highly skilled and experienced nurses that were forced to go elsewhere because their specialties were taken away and they were no longer able to care for the patients and families in their community,” Fuentes said.

Other nurses say their concerns about a strained health-care system during the pandemic have only exacerbated existing problems. This, paired with the trauma of everything they have seen, has made continuing to work in the profession untenable for many.

Intensive care unit nurse Sandra Kirkby, 41, quit her job at the Chandler Regional Medical Center in Chandler, Ariz., in July. Arizona has been a consistent hot spot for the virus.

“It was not an easy decision to leave after 15 years of identifying as an ICU nurse,” she said. “I’ve advocated for patients to both physicians and hospital administration for 15 years. I’ve been active in process movements and trying to fix things. I realized that system is so beyond broken, and that after several mergers, working for a now-huge corporation, there was nothing I could do to fix it and offer my patients the best care.”

In April and May, as New York City dealt with a surge in cases, she worked at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn.

“After the death I witnessed in NYC — much of it unnecessary if the hospital system wasn’t overwhelmed — I couldn’t put myself through that anymore. I couldn’t clock in and go through motions for a paycheck,” she said. “I realized my voice was too small to fix things.”

Since leaving, Kirkby started a blog called MsMindful to help educate people about covid-19. She’s also gone back to school to get a family nurse practitioner license.

In Central Texas, Cayce is still struggling with guilt over leaving as the pandemic wages on. She’s still not sure whether she will continue to work as a nurse in a non-hospital setting or start over in a new career.

After the year she has had, she still considers herself lucky.

“I am privileged to be able to take a year off to figure that out.”

Jan 14, 2021

COVID-19 Update

World
New Cases:   746,394 (⬆︎ .81%)
New Deaths:    16,445 (⬆︎ .83%) 💥 New Record!

USA 
New Cases:   236,462 (⬆︎ 1.01%)
New Deaths:      4,098 (⬆︎ 1.05%)





It’s okay if you skipped resolutions in 2021. Cut yourself some slack, experts say.

The new calendar year historically signals a fresh start, as illustrated by the custom of setting resolutions to become better versions of ourselves. But as 2020 has given way to 2021, bringing with it the uncertainty, anxiety and fear many Americans had been desperate to leave behind, experts say it’s fine if you jettisoned traditional resolutions this year.

“There are times where we’re in flux, and it won’t be so easy to come up with solutions that will stick, and I think this is one of those times,” said Wendy Wood, a social psychologist and author of “Good Habits, Bad Habits.”

Instead, Wood and other experts are encouraging people to modify their approaches to goal-setting this year and prioritize self-compassion.

About 40 percent of adults in the United States, or 140 million people, make New Year’s resolutions each year, said University of Scranton psychology professor John Norcross, citing data from multiple studies he has co-authored. While resolutions are often phrased positively, Norcross said, they nevertheless create expectations for behavior, which can become a burden.

Try setting micro-goals, or tasks that you know you could probably achieve, Dattilo said. Although the accomplishment may be “low-hanging fruit,” you can still experience the benefit of dopamine, the reward neurochemical, she noted.

“Don’t underestimate the value of these small wins because they add up over time” and can help keep you motivated, she said. “If you’re waiting until the end to achieve that ultimate goal, it’s really unlikely that you’re going to get there unless you have set yourself up for success along the way.”

It also may be beneficial to set resolutions that could have a positive impact on people other than yourself, or goals that reduce burdens, such as resolving to limit time spent watching the news, Norcross said. Those types of resolutions are “far less common in the United States,” he added.


What if you just want to survive 2021? “It’s a reasonable goal,” Dattilo said. “We don’t want to put a lot of added pressure on ourselves to ultimately just end up feeling disappointed again because we didn’t meet a particular goal,” she added. “Let yourself off the hook, give yourself permission to just experience without the added pressure to change or perform.”

Taylor agrees. “It’s okay to say, ‘I just kind of want to get through the day.’ Maybe this year the goal is, ‘Let me find a little bit of stability, a little bit of calm, a little bit of peace, and let’s go from there. Let’s get ready for 2022.’ ”

Andrea Brown, executive director of the Black Mental Health Alliance, said the organization decided to forgo posting about resolutions for 2021 and is instead encouraging people, particularly those in Black and other marginalized communities, to focus on self-care. People of color have not only been disproportionately impacted by the events of 2020, they are also historically unaccustomed to taking the time to care for themselves, Brown said.

“The real road to recovery for the Black community and other marginalized communities is really embracing the practice of radical self-care,” said Brown. She likens this form of self-care to the instruction parents get on airplanes to put on their own oxygen masks before helping their children.

Brown notes that the process is individual and goes deeper than getting your hair done or treating yourself to a manicure. “It is, ‘I am, above all else, taking care of myself spiritually, psychologically, mentally, physically.’ ” If a person starts there, “then maybe next year you’ll really be ready for resolutions,” she said.

However you choose to set goals this year, experts emphasized the importance of being kinder and more forgiving to yourself if you don’t meet them. “It’s a tough time out there,” Norcross said. “Just cut yourself some slack.”

There is also no reason to think you needed to come up with resolutions at the beginning of the year, experts said. “It doesn’t really feel like 2020 has ended, so it’s kind of hard to see where that demarcation point is,” Dattilo said. “Maybe we need to pick a different month or a different event that sort of symbolizes the transition that we often associate with New Year’s Eve or New Year’s Day.”

Brown urged people to “dare to do something different” this year. “The last 11 months, everything has changed.”

Jan 13, 2021