Friday, September 25, 2020

One of Peggy Hall's pals: about half a bubble off plumb

     You remember Peggy Hall, right? She's the New Agey Saddleback College adult education instructor and YouTuber who is on an anti-mask crusade. See "Brainwashing, eh?" (7-4-20).
     Well, she's in the news again owing to a conversation she had a week ago with one of her pals, a gun-toting OC doctor:

O.C. doctor waves gun in anti-mask video, says concealed weapons are better protection 
—LA Times 
Former(?) Saddleback College adult ed
instructor Peggy Hall — anti-masker
     A local physician caused a stir last week when he appeared in a video waving a handgun and saying he’d rather people carry concealed weapons than wear face masks to guard against the coronavirus. 
     Dr. Jeff Barke, a Newport Beach family medicine physician who serves as board chairman of a charter school in the city of Orange, has been a vocal opponent of mask wearing and has appeared at rallies to reopen schools and businesses. 
     In a video interview recorded Sept. 16, Barke is featured in a virtual sit-down talk with Peggy Hall, a devout anti-masker who started the mask-opposition website the Healthy American in May
     In the 38-minute split-screen conversation — which Barke posted on his website, “Rx For Liberty,” and on YouTube, but which has since been removed — the pair discuss their views on mask wearing (and shaming), police protests and a “spiritual battle” being waged in America. 
     About 25 minutes into the interview, Barke describes treating COVID-19 patients with the controversial antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine, a treatment regimen touted by President Trump that has drawn criticism from at least one scientific study published by the medical journal Lancet. At that point, he pulls out a 9-millimeter handgun. 
Sig Sauer P365
     
“I live in Orange County, so I carry this wherever I go,” he says, identifying the weapon as a Sig Sauer P365 and touting his training as an Orange County sheriff’s reserve deputy. “This is what I carry when I’m out in public to protect others and protect the public. 
     “I’d rather see somebody carrying a concealed [weapon] than masking up,” the physician continues
     “I think that’s better for the public than anything.” 
     Institutions and officials with whom Barke has associated in the past wasted no time backing away from the physician’s statements and claims, including Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian, to which Barke has claimed having admitting privileges. 
     In a Sept. 18 statement made via Twitter, Hoag Hospital officials admonished what they called “radical” views expressed by Barke regarding the coronavirus, mask wearing and use of hydroxychloroquine. The statement indicated the physician was not an employee of the Newport Beach facility and did not hold admitting privileges there. 
     Officials further indicated the facility actively promotes masking and other CDC recommendations. 
     Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairwoman Michelle Steel — who appointed Barke in March 2019 to serve on the board’s Emergency Medical Care Committee responsible for reviewing ambulance services and first-aid practices — on Thursday distanced herself from the video and the physician’s mask-wearing stance
     “I believe he exercised poor judgment in showing a weapon like that in one of his videos,” Steel said in a media briefing. “I don’t agree with Dr. Barke’s comments about wearing masks. This board doesn’t agree with those comments.” 
     Steel endorsed and supported the physician in his 2006 run for the Los Alamitos Unified School Board, where he served until 2018 and has had close associations with his wife, Mari, who serves as vice president on the Orange County Board of Education. 
Board of Supes Chair
Michelle Steel: Barke booster
     
In May 2019, Steel recommended Barke for a seat on the Rossmoor Community Services District, a community council for his unincorporated Orange County neighborhood, praising him as a “bright and innovative thinker and a team player.” 
     Sgt. Dennis Breckner of the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, where Barke has served as a reserve deputy since 2011, said volunteers often receive concealed weapons permits from the department when they sign up. 
     “In general, we’d issue a [concealed-carry permit] to a reserve deputy because it’s likely they could run into a situation where they’d need to exercise either some defense or some powers,” Breckner said. 
     Barke currently serves as board chair for Orange County Classical Academy, a new public charter school that barely won approval from the Orange Unified School District Board of Education and opened Aug. 20. 
     It’s unclear whether Barke carries a concealed weapon with him on the school campus. He declined Thursday to comment on the video or its repercussions. 
     Breckner said he had no problem with a concealed-carry permit holder bringing a weapon onto a school campus. 
     “My personal opinion is, if my kids are going to a private school and I’m a person who’s morally and ethically sound, and a guy with an AK-47 starts blasting away at kids, it would sure be nice for that concealed weapon guy to put one in his head,” he said. 
     A more definitive statement on the importance of face masks as protection during a pandemic came from CDC Director Robert Redfield on Sept. 16 — the same day Barke recorded his interview with Hall — who declared before a U.S. Senate panel face masks are “the most powerful public health tool we have.” 
     “We have clear scientific evidence they work, and they are our best defense,” Redfield said. “I may even go so far as to say this face mask is more guaranteed to protect me against COVID than when I take a COVID vaccine.”

9-25: OC Officials Won’t Release Coronavirus Outbreaks at Schools; Peggy Hall's doctor friend suddenly discusses personal safety and guns—but why?

OC Officials Won’t Release Coronavirus Outbreaks at Schools, While Concerns Persist on School Reopenings 
—Voice of OC 
     Orange County Health Care Agency officials won’t disclose coronavirus cases at schools and are instead leaving that decision up to school districts as many classrooms are slated to begin reopening. 
      “When they get to a point where they can confirm and decide what direction they can take, then it will be incumbent upon the schools and the Department of Education to communicate that,” said Dr. Margaret Bredehoft, the Deputy Director of Public Health for the agency, at a media briefing Thursday, which was not open to the public. 
     Meanwhile, concerns from teachers and parents are mounting — from decreased instruction time to fears of virus spikes — while some districts are seemingly ignoring the concerns…. 

—OC Reg 
     The City Council will reconvene in a special meeting Friday to decide whether to extend the Thursday curfew into the weekend. 

—OC Reg 
     Jeff Barke says his 9-millimeter gun offers more protection against COVID-19 than a face mask. “I’d rather see somebody carry a concealed than masking up.” 
     [Evidently, Saddleback College’s own Peggy Hall has championed this guy. I’m told that she’s been let go by the college. I have no confirmation of that. UPDATE: near as I can tell, there's no truth to this rumor.] 

Video shows O.C. sheriff’s deputies fatally shooting Black man, sparking protests -- The fatal shooting of a Black man by two Orange County sheriff’s deputies during an altercation in San Clemente, captured on video, spurred a protest and the arrest of several activists who blockaded a street on Thursday. Richard Winton in the Los Angeles Times$ Erika I. Ritchie, Sean Emery in the Orange County Register -- 9/25/20

California’s Deadliest Spring in 20 Years Suggests COVID Undercount -- The number of excess deaths varied across the state from March through July. Central Valley and Southern California counties tended to have higher rates of excess deaths. Phillip Reese California Healthline via Capital Public Radio -- 9/25/20

Trump’s escalating attacks on election prompt fears of a constitutional crisis -- President Trump reiterated Thursday that he may not honor the results should he lose reelection, reaffirming his extraordinary refusal to commit to a peaceful transition of power and prompting election and law enforcement authorities nationwide to prepare for an unprecedented constitutional crisis. Philip Rucker, Amy Gardner and Annie Linskey in the Washington Post$ -- 9/25/20

Fox News poll: Biden leads in Nevada, Pennsylvania, Ohio -- The polls conducted among likely voters showed Biden with an 11-point lead over Trump in Nevada, where 52 percent of respondents said they wanted the former vice president to be elected. In Pennsylvania, 51 percent supported Biden and 44 percent supported Trump. In Ohio, 50 percent supported Biden and 45 percent supported Trump. Matthew Choi Politico -- 9/25/20 

Dire consequences for California if climate change unaddressed, report warns -- More than 500,000 Californians could die prematurely and the state could lose $4.5 trillion in the next 50 years if rising climate temperatures go unchecked, a new congressional report warns. Tal Kopan in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 9/24/20 

—WashPo 
As American growers harvested summer crops, the migration of seasonal farmworkers who were infected with the virus represented a growing health and humanitarian crisis. 

—Politico 
After more than four years of nonstop voter fraud claims and insinuations that he might not accept the election results, the president isn't keeping his intent a secret. 
     Following his defeat in the 2016 Iowa caucus, Donald Trump accused Ted Cruz of cheating and said the results should be nullified. 
     After winning the presidency that fall, Trump insisted, without evidence, that there was “serious voter fraud” in three states he lost to Hillary Clinton. Now, running behind Joe Biden in the polls, the president complains the outcome will be “rigged.” 
     After more than four years of nonstop voter fraud claims, insinuations that he might not accept the presidential election results and at least one float about delaying the November election, it’s no secret. Trump’s refusal to commit to a peaceful transition of power this week — and his choice not to walk back his remarks Thursday in the face of widespread unease — merely broadcasts his strategic intent in terms both parties can understand. 
     As a result, Republicans can no longer truthfully deny that Trump may be unwilling to leave office in the event he is defeated. And Democrats must now confront the possibility they may not have the power to stop him.  

—Inside Higher Ed 
County-level data reveal a varying picture that sometimes challenges the idea of colleges as COVID-19 hot spots -- but often reinforces it. 

—Inside Higher Ed 
     The public health agency in Boulder County, Colo., on Thursday issued an order further restricting the behavior of college-aged people in the county, home to the University of Colorado at Boulder. The order from Boulder County Public Health, which took effect yesterday at 4 p.m. MST, forbids gatherings "of any size" among 18- to 22-year-olds within the county and requires residents of 36 off-campus facilities (mostly fraternities and sororities) to remain in place for two weeks. 
     "A gathering is defined as more than one individual coming together or being physically near each other for any shared and common purpose, including socializing or participating in any activity together including but not limited to shopping, dining, or exercising," the order stated. 
The county's order follows on the university's decision Monday to begin two weeks of remote instruction Wednesday, which itself followed the announcement of a recommended stay-at-home period it began last week. 

—CHE

Today's OC Covid numbers: 282 new cases; 22 new deaths

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...