Saturday, August 8, 2020

8-8: a pious Trumpian, pants unzipped

Voice of OC

…Earlier this week, a wave of OC elementary schools applied for waivers that would allow them to reopen classrooms. The waiver process became available Monday, after Gov. Gavin Newsom’s July order requiring schools to do online learning if their respective counties are on the state watchlist, like OC, for virus case and hospitalization trends. 

But the state’s reporting system glitched and there’s a backlog of up to 300,000 test results that haven’t been reported to counties yet, said Dr. Mark Ghaly, secretary of the state Department of Health and Human Services. 

“That failure led to inaccurate case numbers and case positivity rates,” Ghaly said at a Friday news conference….

 

Falwell Placed on Leave From Liberty [University]

Executive committee of board acts after president [Jerry Falwell Jr.] posts photograph of himself with his pants unzipped with a woman who is not his wife.

—Inside Higher Ed

Live Coronavirus Updates: Here’s the Latest

The fall is days away, and Covid-19 is surging. The Chronicle is tracking developments across higher ed here. Read on for daily live updates and information.

CHE


Official: California fixed glitch that backlogged COVID data -- A technical glitch that has plagued the data system the state relies on to make decisions about reopening businesses and schools has been fixed, but it could take up to 48 hours to get the numbers updated, California’s top health official said Friday. Amy Taxin and Janie Har Associated Press Dustin Gardiner and Catherine Ho in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Taryn Luna in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 8/8/20

 

California colleges can reopen with a ton of restrictions, limited dorms, online classes -- As California colleges and universities reopen this fall they must adhere to strict limits on in-person classes and greatly restrict dorm and campus life, state public health officials said Friday in long-awaited guidance for how campuses can operate amid a surge in COVID-19 cases. Teresa Watanabe, Nina Agrawal in the Los Angeles Times$ Beau Yarbrough in the Orange County Register -- 8/8/20

College admissions scandal: Rick Singer’s employee to plead guilty to racketeering -- A woman employed by William “Rick” Singer, the Newport Beach consultant at the heart of the college admissions scandal, has agreed to plead guilty to conspiring to commit racketeering. Matthew Ormseth in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 8/8/20


Russia continues to meddle in the election to aid President Trump, intelligence officials said.

NYT


When Covid-19 Hit, Many Elderly Were Left to Die

Warnings had piled up for years that nursing homes were vulnerable. The pandemic sent them to the back of the line for equipment and care.

NYT

Trump antagonizes GOP megadonor Adelson in heated phone call
Trump chided the Las Vegas mogul [Sheldon Adelson] — a financial linchpin of his reelection effort — for not spending more. And now, he might not.

Politico

 

The Wedge Issue That’s Dividing Trumpworld

A group of social conservatives wants the president to embrace anti-transgender issues to reverse his sagging poll numbers. Some Trump advisers think it’s political suicide.

Politico

We've been warned that recent numbers have been dubious.
The state/county should have the numbers straightened out within a couple of days.

Our impressive Incompetence Exceptionalism

      These graphs were provided by Kevin Drum of Mother Jones this morning:

     It is noteworthy that, though only one Western nation has worse deaths-per-million numbers than the U.S. (namely, the UK), Covid deaths in all Western nations are very much in decline, with the U.S. the exception, where Covid deaths are clearly ascendent.
     The upshot: people aren't dying much anymore in other Western nations. But they're dying at a rate of over 1,000 per day in the U.S.
     Drum seems to include Latin America as among Western nations. Accordingly, Argentina and Mexico are two Western nations with death-per-million numbers better than ours (in the U.S.) that are, however, seeing a definite ascendency in Covid deaths. Mexico's situation looks mighty grim: they've already lost 50,000 people and the death rate keeps going up. Argentina could (but likely won't) turn things around before they see truly awful death numbers. So far, they suffered only about 4,400 deaths.
     We've got it especially bad in the U.S. (worse than Mexico): already a huge number of deaths (160K) and an increasing death rate. That points to many more American deaths in future. So we really stand out.
     Owing to a stunning lack of national leadership—permitting a stunning level of irrational pandemic skepticism among ordinary Americans, especially Trumpians—we have a huge catastrophe on our hands, while most other Western nations do not
     American exceptionalism, I guess. American incompetence exceptionalism.
     Again, in the U.S., it's a catastrophe grounded in incompetence. We should feel very ashamed. And angry. But that's not what we're witnessing. It's pretty alienating, among other things.
     America, the irrational, the clueless. The hopeless?
     Hang on, it's gonna get worse!

A DISTURBING FACT:

     The number of deaths thus far reported for Covid-19 in the U.S. is 162,000 (or maybe 161,347). That number is likely to get much higher.
     That number is greater than the number of deaths of Americans in these wars combined:

 

World War I: 116,516

Korean war: 36,516

Gulf War: 294

Iraq war: 4,497

Afghanistan: 2,216

 

Total: 160,039


It's a time for outrage.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...