Cover for No Agenda Show 1722: This Actually Happened!
December 19th, 2024 • 3h 10m

1722: This Actually Happened!

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0:00
Adam Curry, John C.
0:02
Dvorak.
0:02
It's Thursday, December 19, 2024.
0:04
This is your award-winning Gilmore Nation Media
0:06
Assassination Episode 1722.
0:09
This is no agenda.
0:12
Bangin' eggnog and broadcasting live, almost live, from
0:17
the heart of the Texas show country, here
0:18
in FEMA Region No.
0:19
6.
0:19
Evening and morning, everybody.
0:21
I'm Adam Curry.
0:22
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I'm here
0:24
avoiding the spike protein.
0:27
I'm John C.
0:28
Dvorak.
0:28
This is Crackpot and Buzzkill.
0:30
In the morning.
0:32
Yes, everybody.
0:33
Welcome to Episode 1722.
0:36
A best of, but we're here to get
0:40
you ready for it, as I am traveling
0:42
to my sister for the holidays.
0:46
This is something different.
0:49
Well, not really different, but something that I
0:51
think is timely, this one.
0:54
They're all timely.
0:55
We did a climate change once, kind of
0:58
an evergreen timely.
1:00
Yeah, yeah.
1:00
But this particular one, which Strokey Bill put
1:04
together for us in two parts, takes us
1:07
all the way back to the very beginning
1:09
of COVID.
1:11
Actually comes in with, I believe it starts
1:15
with the testing.
1:17
And man, remember that testing?
1:21
Yeah, and we talked about the spinning it,
1:23
spin it up.
1:24
How many of those kits do you still
1:26
have?
1:26
How many of those test kits do you
1:28
still have at the house?
1:29
Well, these are the kits that came in
1:30
later.
1:31
I have probably two or three cases of
1:33
them.
1:34
Because they always give them away.
1:36
They're giving them away free.
1:37
And when you order a batch from the
1:38
government or from your local pharmacy, they give
1:40
you five or six of them.
1:42
Yeah.
1:43
And they're useless, but they're kind of decorative.
1:45
Well, I mean, just look at now.
1:46
I mean, Tina and I take ivermectin weekly.
1:50
Well, you know, it was hydroxychloroquine that was
1:54
the first obscure drug that came into the
1:56
conversation.
1:57
Oh, that's right.
1:57
That's right.
1:57
I forgot.
1:58
Don't forget that.
1:59
Hydroxychloroquine.
2:01
As soon as Trump mentioned it, it was
2:03
verboten.
2:03
Because this was the era, we have to
2:05
always remember, it's kind of hard to, but
2:08
it's all I have to remember because it's
2:09
so long ago, that whatever Trump did, they
2:12
did the opposite.
2:13
Yep.
2:14
So Trump suggests ivermectin.
2:16
I'm sorry, he suggests hydroxychloroquine.
2:18
And so it's bad.
2:19
Yeah.
2:20
And then ivermectin came into the conversation later,
2:22
and it became bad too.
2:25
Horse-paced.
2:26
What are you doing, you crazy people?
2:28
So this particular best of, warning, trigger warning,
2:33
you could get all mad all over again
2:35
in listening to it, because you just hear
2:38
how crazy it was and what we lived
2:41
through.
2:41
And congratulations if you're listening to this episode,
2:43
because you lived.
2:44
You lived through it.
2:45
You probably lived through it with us.
2:47
So let's get started right now with part
2:49
one of the best, if there's such a
2:51
thing, of COVID.
2:55
CBS2 has learned that an army of NYPD
2:58
officers will fan out across the city this
3:01
weekend to make sure that people are wearing
3:03
masks and maintaining social distance.
3:06
CBS2's Marcia Kramer has this exclusive story.
3:11
You might say it's no more Mr. Nice
3:14
Guy.
3:14
The NYPD will be out in force at
3:17
parks, beaches, and playgrounds this weekend to make
3:20
sure New Yorkers don't get up close and
3:22
personal with each other, that everyone observes social
3:25
distancing.
3:27
We're past the point of warnings.
3:28
This is a dangerous situation.
3:30
NYPD Chief of Department Terrence Monaghan telling me
3:33
that New Yorkers drawn out of their homes
3:35
by the expected sunny skies and warm temperatures
3:38
this weekend will see a large police presence,
3:41
1,000 cops all five boroughs to keep
3:44
New Yorkers safe by trying to stop the
3:46
spread of COVID-19.
3:48
Barbecues with large gatherings of people together, organized
3:52
sports events, people hanging together trying to drink
3:56
or something along those lines.
3:58
We will be breaking these up.
3:59
We will be actively involved.
4:02
People who are just walking together, exercising on
4:05
a blanket with their family, those aren't people
4:08
we're going to bother.
4:09
They don't have a mask, we'll give them
4:10
masks.
4:11
Will you really arrest people?
4:12
If they confront us, if it becomes an
4:15
incident, yes, we will.
4:17
If it has to be, yes.
4:19
I hope it never comes to that, though,
4:20
Marsha.
4:21
People should understand just how dangerous a virus
4:23
this is.
4:24
We will shut you down.
4:26
We will cite you.
4:27
And if we need to, we will arrest
4:29
you, and we will take you to jail,
4:32
period.
4:34
There should be nothing unambiguous about that.
4:37
Don't make us treat you like a criminal.
4:40
But if you act like a criminal and
4:42
you violate the law and you refuse to
4:45
do what is necessary to save lives in
4:47
the city in the middle of a pandemic,
4:50
we will take you to jail, period.
4:53
Mayor Lightfoot facing criticism tonight after getting her
4:56
hair done.
4:58
A photo surfaced of the mayor with a
5:00
hairdresser, but she appeared to ignore social distancing
5:03
efforts, standing right next to them for the
5:06
picture.
5:06
When asked about that photo today, this is
5:08
what the mayor had to say.
5:09
I'm the public face of this city.
5:12
I'm on national media, and I'm out in
5:15
the public eye.
5:16
And, you know, I'm a person who I
5:20
take my personal hygiene very seriously.
5:22
As I said, I felt like I needed
5:24
to have a haircut.
5:26
I'm not able to do that myself, and
5:28
so I got a haircut.
5:31
Do you want to talk more about that?
5:32
Part of the criticism came from the fact
5:34
that the mayor had called on people not
5:36
to go out and get their hair done,
5:38
and one of her Stay Home, Save Lives
5:41
PSAs.
5:42
Necessary for new members to function properly in
5:45
the society they are being inducted into are
5:48
all imbued at this time.
5:51
Repetition is typical, as its use helps hammer
5:55
the spell home.
5:56
The wearing of masks may be required.
6:00
Masking has traditionally played an important role in
6:03
rituals of this kind, enabling and hastening the
6:06
suppression of ego to help facilitate a death
6:09
of the old identity before the identification with
6:12
and manifestation of a new one.
6:15
Disguised under a mask and hidden away, the
6:18
initiate is more easily able to transcend the
6:21
self, pushed further toward that invisible line between
6:24
the physical and spiritual realms.
6:26
I'm sure you've seen it in a number
6:28
of polls.
6:28
There's a huge difference between Democrats and Republicans
6:31
over whether or not they think it's necessary
6:34
to wear a mask in public.
6:35
Do you have any sense as to why
6:37
that would be?
6:38
No sense as to why that would be.
6:39
That's the choice of the American public.
6:41
It's the choice of the individual as to
6:42
whether to wear a mask or not.
6:44
But again, I'd praise the extraordinary work of
6:47
this administration in distributing those masks and ensuring
6:49
healthcare providers get them.
6:51
The idea of shutting everybody down is a
6:54
new idea that was developed in the 2006
6:57
Bush administration provisional plan on pandemics based on
7:03
a high school student's science project.
7:05
So the idea that this is the way
7:08
to go, shutting everything down, is not true.
7:12
It's not scientifically true.
7:13
It may be superior, but we don't know
7:16
yet.
7:16
So it may just be that when we
7:18
go back to masks and social distancing in
7:20
the world, there will be no uptick in
7:23
the cases.
7:23
So this idea of a second wave may
7:26
never happen.
7:26
Now, we will have some upticks, some little
7:28
outbreaks, but the idea will be to isolate
7:32
and contain those outbreaks.
7:35
While this lockdown has been going on, I
7:39
know from communications to me and Gaz and
7:42
Jamie at davidite.com, I know from all
7:47
the postings on the internet, not just in
7:49
Britain, but around the world in America, that
7:52
while this lockdown has been going on, 5G
7:58
masks are being rolled out at a very
8:02
rapid rate.
8:04
In the same period of this lockdown, something
8:06
like another 21 towns and cities have been
8:08
opened in Britain to 5G.
8:12
5G is being rolled out all over the
8:18
world at a very great rate of knots.
8:21
This is a time where everything is supposed
8:22
to be stopped.
8:23
Yeah, and they're still building towers overnight.
8:26
Yes, because that's considered essential work.
8:31
Do you think that Dr. Fauci played a
8:34
part in COVID-19 then?
8:36
Do you think that he should be held
8:38
accountable or responsible or criminally responsible for the
8:42
corruption with COVID-19 or even tracing back
8:46
as far as 30 plus years?
8:48
Oh, absolutely.
8:49
He should be held criminally responsible all the
8:52
way back to the spread of HIV-AIDS
8:57
through the country.
8:58
At the same time, he did the same
9:01
thing he's doing now in COVID-19, that
9:03
is, prevent the use of therapies like hydroxychloroquine
9:08
or low-dose type 1 interferon alpha or
9:12
any number of natural things, prevent people from
9:17
doing the appropriate testing.
9:19
The FDA didn't do the appropriate serology testing
9:23
that would have shown that, in fact, the
9:27
virus had been through this country earlier than
9:30
thought and we may have actually had, in
9:32
many places, a natural herd immunity that isn't
9:36
occurring with the lockdown and that people are
9:40
being prevented from, even if they were exposed,
9:45
from getting the disease with prophylactic measures.
9:48
That's preventative measures like hydroxychloroquine.
9:51
And all the same time, promoting drug use
9:55
in research and clinical trials, which he's also
9:58
doing a similar thing to what he did,
10:01
what he directed to be done in the
10:04
case of the XMRVs.
10:06
That's fraudulent studies that show that a drug
10:11
works when it really doesn't work and how
10:13
they manipulate the study design in order to
10:18
drag it out.
10:20
And then, because we're not developing a natural
10:23
herd immunity, the amount of disease and death
10:27
that's being caused while he's promoting measures that
10:33
not only don't work but have caused literally
10:37
the devastation of our economy and we won't
10:40
even be able to count the number of
10:42
deaths from people who couldn't get adequate care
10:45
for things like cancer and cardiovascular disease, just
10:49
simple care for things that have nothing to
10:51
do with COVID-19.
10:53
As we come on the air tonight, coronavirus
10:55
infections are still growing in much of the
10:57
country.
10:58
Just as we're learning, there is now a
11:00
more powerful mutant strain of the virus that
11:03
is even more difficult to treat.
11:06
There are now more than 20,000 new
11:08
confirmed cases every day here in the United
11:10
States.
11:10
And while cases are declining in the New
11:12
York City area, the epicenter of the crisis,
11:15
elsewhere, the rate of infection is rising.
11:18
Still, 44 states are moving forward with lifting
11:20
restrictions.
11:21
And tonight, President Trump is acknowledging those moves
11:24
to reopen could lead to even more deaths,
11:27
telling reporters today that Americans should, quote, think
11:29
of themselves as warriors.
11:32
COVID-19 remains a threat, but there's a
11:34
drive to get out, to get back to
11:36
normal.
11:36
Well, AHS says there's now an app that
11:39
could help.
11:40
Providing this information voluntarily is crucial to our
11:43
work to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
11:46
Alberta Trace Together is the first contact tracing
11:49
app available in North America.
11:51
Every time users pass one another, their phones
11:53
record the encounter using Bluetooth.
11:56
Encrypted data will be stored on the phone.
11:58
Now, if one of those users tests positive
12:00
for COVID-19, the user can upload their
12:03
interactions to AHS, and a contact tracer would
12:06
call the numbers the phone registered, telling them
12:09
to self-isolate.
12:10
Like bringing a camera into focus, these techniques
12:13
give us a far clearer picture that help
12:16
us to inform our actions going forward.
12:18
Now, the app stores only phone numbers, no
12:20
locations.
12:21
It doesn't use GPS.
12:23
But tracking still raises privacy questions.
12:26
Alberta's privacy commissioner says she has been involved
12:28
and she supports enhanced contact tracing.
12:31
In a statement, she adds, In my view,
12:33
Alberta Health has chosen a less intrusive approach
12:36
in deploying this app.
12:38
President Trump is lashing out against a new
12:40
advertisement by a Republican-led group called the
12:43
Lincoln Project calling out his mismanagement of the
12:45
coronavirus pandemic.
12:47
The one-minute ad is titled, Morning in
12:49
America.
12:51
Spin on Ronald Reagan's 1984 campaign slogan.
12:57
There's morning in America.
12:58
And under the leadership of Donald Trump, our
13:02
country is weaker and sicker and poorer.
13:06
And now, Americans are asking, if we have
13:10
another four years like this, will there even
13:13
be an America?
13:15
That morning in America ad spelled M-O
13:17
-U-R-N-I-N-G.
13:19
In a series of angry tweets posted just
13:22
after midnight Tuesday morning, Trump attacked the makers
13:26
of the ad, singling out George Conway, longtime
13:28
Trump critic, husband of White House counselor Kellyanne
13:31
Conway.
13:32
Trump tweeted, I don't know what Kellyanne did
13:35
to her deranged loser of a husband, Moonface,
13:38
but it must have been really bad, Trump
13:40
tweeted.
13:41
CBS's Mola Lenghi is going to lead us
13:42
off tonight in New York City.
13:44
Mola?
13:45
Well, Nora, while deaths in New York are
13:46
down significantly from their peak just a few
13:48
weeks ago, we're still losing more than 200
13:51
people a day to this virus.
13:53
So many that bodies are being stored in
13:55
makeshift morgues, like those white refrigerator trucks that
13:58
you see behind me there.
13:59
And that is why there is so much
14:01
hope in this experimental new vaccine that could
14:04
be ready by this fall.
14:07
Well, we certainly hope so.
14:09
I want to put up a quote from
14:10
Governor Cuomo in New York, which sort of
14:13
had some surprising information in it.
14:16
He said 66% of the people who
14:19
were in new cases were at home, which
14:22
is shocking to us.
14:23
He said, this is a surprise.
14:24
Overwhelmingly, the people were at home.
14:25
We thought maybe they were taking public transportation
14:28
and we've taken special precautions.
14:29
But actually, no, these people were literally at
14:32
home.
14:32
66% of the new cases.
14:34
How does that happen?
14:37
Well, generally speaking, patients report, and this has
14:40
been well established, better and safer behaviors than
14:43
reality.
14:43
So people report that they may be staying
14:45
at home.
14:46
But in fact, we know 600 people got
14:48
the infection during pretty harsh sheltering conditions in
14:51
the New York area.
14:52
How did that happen?
14:53
That means they got the infection during the
14:55
extreme measures.
14:56
So we know the drivers of this infection.
14:59
We know what they are.
15:00
They're mass gatherings.
15:01
They're travel.
15:01
They're people working in confined areas.
15:04
They're people with direct contact.
15:07
And we know that 20% of those
15:08
admissions to the hospital were in nursing homes.
15:12
We're seeing now in meatpacking areas, those that
15:14
work in confined areas, especially with high-risk
15:16
individuals.
15:17
That is one of our major battles, is
15:20
dealing with the outbreaks in these challenged areas.
15:24
Yeah.
15:24
All right.
15:25
We'll talk to you again soon.
15:26
Dr. Marta McCary, thank you very much.
15:28
Good to have you here tonight.
15:30
Right now in the United States, people should
15:32
not be walking around with masks.
15:35
You're sure of it?
15:35
Because people are listening really closely to this.
15:38
Right now, people should not be walking.
15:39
There's no reason to be walking around with
15:41
a mask.
15:42
When you're in the middle of an outbreak,
15:45
wearing a mask might make people feel a
15:48
little bit better, and it might even block
15:50
a droplet.
15:51
But it's not providing the perfect protection that
15:55
people think that it is.
15:56
And often, there are unintended consequences.
16:00
People keep fiddling with the mask, and they
16:02
keep touching their face.
16:04
And can you get some schmutz sort of
16:06
staying inside there?
16:07
Of course, of course.
16:08
But when you think masks, you should think
16:10
of health care providers needing them and people
16:13
who are ill.
16:13
And a 56-foot billboard called the Trump
16:17
Death Clock has been unveiled in Times Square
16:20
here in New York.
16:22
The billboard was created by the Oscar-nominated
16:24
filmmaker Eugene Cherecki.
16:26
So the Trump Death Clock is a billboard
16:28
that hangs over Times Square.
16:30
And what it shows is an estimate of
16:31
the number of U.S. COVID-19 deaths
16:33
that resulted from the president and his team's
16:36
failed response to the coronavirus outbreak.
16:39
Thanks to Dr. Fauci and leading epidemiologists, we
16:42
now know that had the mitigation guidelines been
16:44
put into effect just one week earlier, on
16:47
March 9th instead of March 16th, 60%
16:50
of U.S. COVID-19 deaths would have
16:52
been prevented.
16:53
That's an incredible number.
16:54
And on behalf of all those who needlessly
16:57
lost their lives to this failed leadership in
17:00
a pandemic, we need a symbol, a symbol
17:02
that cries out not only for accountability, but
17:05
also for more responsible and responsive stewardship going
17:08
forward.
17:09
At the time of this broadcast, the Trump
17:12
Death Clock stands at 46,485 and growing.
17:18
This is the New York City Police Department.
17:20
Nonessential gatherings of any kind have been prohibited
17:24
by the governor and the mayor.
17:27
This gathering is unlawful, and you are ordered
17:30
to disperse.
17:31
If you fail to disperse immediately, you are
17:34
subject to arrest.
17:36
In my lifetime, this will be the greatest
17:39
economic hit.
17:41
But you don't have a choice.
17:42
People act like you have a choice.
17:44
People don't feel like going to the stadium
17:48
when they might get infected.
17:50
You know, it's not the government who's saying,
17:52
okay, just ignore this disease.
17:55
And, you know, people are deeply affected by
17:59
seeing these deaths, by knowing they could be
18:01
part of the transmission chain.
18:03
And, you know, old people, their parents, their
18:06
grandparents could be affected by this.
18:09
And so you don't, you know, you don't
18:11
get to say, ignore what's going on here.
18:16
There will be the ability, particularly in rich
18:19
countries, to open up if things are done
18:22
well over the next few months.
18:24
But for the world at large, normalcy only
18:28
returns when we've largely vaccinated the entire global
18:33
population.
18:35
And so, you know, although there's a lot
18:37
of work on testing, a lot of work
18:39
on drugs that we're involved with, you know,
18:41
trying to achieve that ambitious goal, which has
18:45
never been done for the vaccine, that rises
18:48
to the top of the list.
18:50
All right, what do we got here?
18:52
We've got, oh, look at this.
18:54
Look closely at this.
18:56
That's a restaurant that's using mannequins to fill
18:59
out the half-empty dining room.
19:00
What's the story behind this one, Ash?
19:03
This is the Inn at Little Washington in
19:06
Washington, Virginia.
19:07
It's no ordinary restaurant.
19:10
It's a Michelin three-star restaurant.
19:13
To get a table here, it is very
19:15
coveted.
19:15
So rather than leave them open, the owners
19:17
of the restaurant said, let's put in the
19:19
mannequins.
19:19
Very well-dressed, I may add.
19:21
Three-piece suits, ties, hats, nice dresses for
19:24
the ladies.
19:25
The company is a little lifeless.
19:27
But by the way, the tasting menu, tasting
19:31
menu is 248 bucks.
19:33
So I hope you get more than fried
19:34
chicken and fish and chips.
19:36
Yeah, I want a mannequin.
19:38
That's what I want.
19:40
On Capitol Hill, House Democratic leaders have unveiled
19:44
a massive 1,800-page coronavirus relief package
19:48
worth $3 trillion.
19:50
The so-called HEROES Act would fund expanded
19:54
unemployment benefits through January 2021, send most U
19:58
.S. adults another one-time $1,200 stimulus
20:01
check, and provide $1 trillion in assistance to
20:05
hard-hit state, local, and tribal governments.
20:08
It would also expand SNAP food benefits, fund
20:11
hazard pay for frontline workers, increase funding for
20:14
COVID-19 testing, and provide $25 billion in
20:19
funding to the U.S. Postal Service.
20:21
The bill would not expand Medicare to cover
20:24
millions of newly uninsured Americans, nor does it
20:27
provide for rent and mortgage relief or recurring
20:29
cash payments to U.S. households.
20:32
The bill would expand the Paycheck Protection Program
20:35
to bail out corporate lobbyist firms.
20:38
Climate activists say the bill also fails to
20:41
close loopholes for big polluters.
20:43
Greenpeace USA tweeted, quote, Fossil fuel CEOs will
20:47
be rejoicing that Congress has once again left
20:50
the door wide open for handouts to struggling,
20:54
mismanaged oil and gas corporations.
20:57
Do you agree that stimulus should move forward?
20:59
There's been some Republicans who suggest that...
21:01
I don't know.
21:02
It depends.
21:03
It's certainly not the package that I saw
21:04
today.
21:05
Basically, if you look at that package, what
21:06
they want more than anything else is it's
21:09
a voting package.
21:10
They want to be able to make sure
21:11
that Republicans can't win an election by putting
21:14
in all sorts of mailing ballots.
21:18
Now, that's the problem with mail-in ballots.
21:21
Are they going to dump a whole pile
21:22
of ballots on your desk just before the
21:25
election?
21:25
So the problem with the mail-in ballots,
21:27
it's subject to tremendous corruption.
21:31
Tremendous corruption.
21:32
Cheating.
21:34
And so I'm against it.
21:35
And if you look at the bill that
21:37
Nancy Pelosi is putting in, it has a
21:39
lot to do with elections.
21:40
And we're not going to lose elections because
21:43
of that.
21:43
Tonight, the FBI and federal cybersecurity agents are
21:47
warning that hackers linked to the Chinese government
21:50
are trying to steal research on coronavirus vaccines
21:53
and therapies.
21:54
The FBI says the potential theft could jeopardize
21:58
the treatment of patients here in the U
21:59
.S. Here's CBS Chief Justice and Homeland Security
22:03
correspondent Jeff Begay's.
22:04
While the coronavirus was sweeping across parts of
22:07
China in January, U.S. officials say Chinese
22:10
hackers were already focused on the United States,
22:13
trying to steal research from universities and pharmaceutical
22:16
companies that were working on a cure.
22:18
John Demers is the assistant attorney general for
22:21
national security.
22:22
The Chinese for years have targeted biomedical research,
22:26
and there's nothing more important than COVID-19
22:28
research right now in that field.
22:30
The hacking charges ratcheted up tensions over the
22:33
virus between the U.S. and China.
22:35
What should have been stopped at the source,
22:36
which was China.
22:38
But it's not just China.
22:40
Iran is also on the attack.
22:42
Researchers at the cybersecurity company Recorded Future say
22:46
the Iranian state targeted an executive at Gilead
22:49
Sciences, the manufacturer of the promising coronavirus treatment
22:53
drug Remdesivir.
22:55
But Demers said China is desperate to be
22:58
first with the vaccine.
22:59
You call this a holy grail of information
23:03
that these foreign hackers are going after?
23:06
There's nothing more important right now than these
23:08
treatments, and perhaps most significantly for China for
23:11
geopolitical value to be able to say that
23:15
they were the first to develop a vaccine.
23:18
Tonight in a statement, Chinese officials said the
23:20
accusations were without evidence.
23:23
But U.S. officials say anyone working on
23:26
a vaccine should be on hyper alert.
23:29
Margaret.
23:30
Yeah, go ahead, please.
23:33
Many times that the U.S. is doing
23:36
far better than any other country when it
23:39
comes to testing.
23:40
Yes.
23:40
Why does that matter?
23:42
Why is this a global competition to you
23:44
if every day Americans are still losing their
23:47
lives and we're still seeing more cases every
23:50
day?
23:51
Well, they're losing their lives everywhere in the
23:53
world.
23:54
And maybe that's a question you should ask
23:56
China.
23:57
Don't ask me.
23:58
Ask China that question.
24:00
OK, when you ask them that question, you
24:02
may get a very unusual answer.
24:04
Yes.
24:04
Behind you, please.
24:08
Sir, why are you saying that to me
24:10
specifically?
24:11
I'm telling you, I'm not saying it specifically
24:13
to anybody.
24:14
I'm saying it to anybody who would ask
24:16
a nasty question like that.
24:17
That's not a nasty question.
24:18
Please go ahead.
24:18
Why does it matter?
24:20
OK, anybody else?
24:22
Please go ahead in the back, please.
24:23
I have two questions.
24:24
No, it's OK.
24:25
But you pointed to me.
24:26
I have two questions, Mr. President.
24:28
Next, please.
24:29
You called on me.
24:31
I did, and you didn't respond.
24:33
And now I'm calling on the young lady
24:35
in the back, please.
24:36
I just wanted to let my colleague finish.
24:37
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much.
24:40
Appreciate it.
24:40
Thank you very much.
24:42
There's an approach called the RNA vaccine that
24:47
people like Moderna, CureVac, and others are using,
24:52
that in 2015, we'd identified that as very
24:56
promising for pandemics and for other applications as
25:01
well.
25:02
And so if everything goes perfectly with the
25:06
RNA approach, we could actually beat the 18
25:08
months.
25:09
We don't want to create unrealistic expectations.
25:13
The efficacy of vaccines in older people is
25:16
always a huge challenge.
25:18
It turns out the flu vaccine isn't that
25:21
effective in elderly people.
25:23
Most of the benefit comes from younger people
25:25
not spreading it because they're vaccinated.
25:29
And that benefits, on a community basis, the
25:32
elderly.
25:32
Here, we clearly need a vaccine that works
25:36
in the upper age range because they're most
25:39
at risk of that.
25:41
And doing that so that you amp it
25:43
up so it works in older people and
25:45
yet you don't have side effects.
25:48
If we have 1 in 10,000 side
25:52
effects, that's way more, 700,000 people who
25:58
will suffer from that.
25:59
So really understanding the safety at gigantic scale
26:04
across all age ranges, pregnant, male, female, undernourished,
26:09
existing comorbidities, it's very, very hard.
26:13
And that actual decision of, okay, let's go
26:16
and give this vaccine to the entire world,
26:19
governments will have to be involved because there
26:22
will be some risk and indemnification needed before
26:26
that can be decided on.
26:29
Taking on coronavirus in hard-hit communities of
26:31
color.
26:32
Join Don Lemon and Van Jones with Dr.
26:34
Regina Benjamin and Robert Smith, plus messages of
26:37
hope from Mario Lopez, Samuel L.
26:39
Jackson, and more.
26:40
The Color of COVID, live tomorrow at 10
26:42
on CNN.
26:43
And now on to the frauds.
26:45
Let's start with Pennsylvania Health Secretary Rachel Levine,
26:49
who weeks ago ordered nursing homes to admit
26:51
COVID-positive patients.
26:54
Well, while thousands of residents saw their loved
26:57
ones and family members die, Levine quietly extracted
27:00
her own mother out of harm's way, reportedly
27:04
moving her from a nursing home to a
27:06
hotel.
27:07
My mother requested, and my sister and I
27:10
as her children complied, to move her to
27:12
another location during the COVID-19 outbreak.
27:15
My mother is 95 years old.
27:17
She is very intelligent and more than competent
27:20
to make her own decisions.
27:22
I'd rather have her mother be Health Secretary
27:24
of Pennsylvania, frankly.
27:25
Do you mean a fully approved vaccine for
27:28
everyone, the full public, or a partially approved
27:31
vaccine with emergency use?
27:33
No, we're looking for a full vaccine for
27:35
everyone that wants to get it.
27:37
Not everybody's going to want to get it.
27:39
But we're looking at a full vaccine.
27:41
Is that a correct statement?
27:42
Yeah, we'll...
27:44
So the answer is yes, we're working for
27:47
a fully approved vaccine, but we'll also use
27:49
the tools we have.
27:50
For instance, emergency use authorization, as appropriate.
27:53
We use all of our regulatory tools to
27:56
bring vaccine available for the entire American population
27:59
by January.
28:00
Okay, and then Mr. President, can you just
28:02
clarify, why are some of you wearing a
28:04
mask and why are some of you not
28:06
wearing a mask?
28:07
We've all been tested, I've been tested, we've
28:09
all been tested, and we're quite a distance
28:11
away and we're outdoors, so I told them,
28:14
I gave them the option, they could wear
28:15
it or not.
28:16
So you can blame it on me, but
28:17
I gave them the option, we could wear
28:19
it or not.
28:19
The President, and he said it again today,
28:21
we need to move ahead, whether we're ready
28:24
or not in the direction of opening up.
28:27
Yes, he did, Judy, and the President proves
28:30
once again, he's not actually strategic or tactical
28:33
in his political fights that he engages in.
28:37
He's visceral, he's instinctive.
28:41
You should always, if you're going after somebody
28:42
politically, go after somebody who's a lot weaker
28:45
than you are politically or less popular.
28:47
I mean, Democrats won five consecutive presidential elections
28:50
running against Herbert Hoover because he was there
28:54
in the Depression and unpopular as a Republican
28:56
President.
28:57
But he picked Anthony Fauci, Dr. Fauci.
29:00
David mentioned he's been there since the Reagan
29:02
years, but not only that, in a presidential
29:05
debate when George H.W. Bush was asked
29:08
to cite a contemporary American hero, he cited
29:11
Dr. Anthony Fauci.
29:13
The Food and Drug Administration halted a coronavirus
29:15
testing program promoted by billionaire Bill Gates and
29:18
Seattle health officials pending reviews.
29:21
The program sought to send test kits to
29:23
the home of people both healthy and sick
29:25
to try to bring the country to the
29:27
level of testing officials say is necessary before
29:29
states can begin safely reopening.
29:32
The program, which has already gone through thousands
29:34
of tests, found dozens of cases that had
29:36
previously been undiagnosed.
29:39
The Seattle Coronavirus Assessment Network said on its
29:41
website that the FDA has asked it to
29:44
pause testing while it receives additional authorizations, but
29:47
maintained its procedures are safe.
29:49
Every player, unless they're from the same household,
29:52
has to bring their own tennis balls so
29:55
that you don't touch other people's tennis balls
29:57
with your hands.
29:59
You can kick their balls, but you can't
30:01
touch them.
30:04
I'm going to blush, sorry.
30:06
Of course, if you're playing with someone in
30:09
your household, you can't touch those tennis balls.
30:14
To avoid confusion between whose balls are whose,
30:20
you can use a marker, like a Sharpie,
30:22
to mark out, to put an X, or
30:23
put someone's initials on them.
30:24
The P4 lab at the Wuhan Institute of
30:27
Virology has come under scrutiny as a potential
30:30
source of the virus.
30:31
According to an NBC report, a hazardous event
30:34
may have happened at the lab in October
30:36
last year.
30:38
Three people familiar with the matter told NBC
30:40
that U.S. intelligence agencies are reviewing an
30:43
unofficial report on cell phone location data.
30:46
The report found there was no cell phone
30:48
activity around the high-security part of the
30:50
P4 lab between October 7th and 24th last
30:54
year.
30:55
The report suggests there may have been a
30:57
hazardous event there sometime between October 6th and
31:01
11th that required the lab to be closed
31:03
during that time.
31:05
The report talks about images from October 14th
31:08
to 19th last year showing no outbound traffic
31:11
from the lab.
31:12
It suspected a roadblock was set up to
31:14
prevent cars and people coming and going.
31:17
This is in contrast to satellite images from
31:19
August to October 6th, which show a lot
31:22
of activity.
31:23
The next instance of activity was on October
31:25
25th.
31:27
U.S. Senator Tom Cotton also spoke about
31:30
the data in an interview with Fox News.
31:32
Cotton said normally thousands of mobile phones are
31:35
in use around this area.
31:37
Wuhan has about the same population density as
31:40
New York.
31:41
He adds the sudden drop in cell phone
31:42
usage is likely an indicator of when the
31:45
virus first began spreading.
31:47
He said we could get to the bottom
31:48
of it a lot faster if the Chinese
31:51
regime was more transparent.
31:53
U.S. intelligence officials say the evidence is
31:55
not enough on its own.
31:57
They are still investigating.
31:59
I mean, there's a real possibility that the
32:01
convention does not happen or it happens in
32:03
a virtual sense.
32:04
Is that correct as of today?
32:06
Well, first of all, our convention has to
32:08
happen because we are not officially nominating Joe
32:12
Biden in order to take Donald Trump.
32:14
So our convention is happening.
32:15
There is business that has to happen.
32:18
Now, when it comes to what our convention
32:20
is going to look like, I can guarantee
32:23
you that our convention will ensure that the
32:26
safety first, whether it is our delegates, the
32:29
people of Milwaukee, or all of those involved
32:31
in a convention, we will make sure that
32:34
they are safe, whatever that looks like, and
32:36
that they vote for our nominee.
32:38
With summer right around the corner, New Jersey
32:41
announced this week that beaches would be open
32:43
by Memorial Day weekend with some restrictions.
32:46
The openings are weeks behind other coastal states
32:49
like Georgia and Florida, but as one of
32:51
the states hardest hit by the COVID-19
32:53
pandemic, local officials say they are proceeding cautiously.
32:57
At exactly 10 a.m. yesterday, barriers that
33:00
had been blocking the boardwalk and beach in
33:02
Seaside Heights, New Jersey, were pushed aside.
33:04
An announcement made it official.
33:06
These beaches are now officially open.
33:09
Once again, these beaches are now officially open.
33:12
It's a sign that things are returning to
33:14
normal in this quintessential Jersey Shore town, sort
33:17
of.
33:17
We're looking to see how we deal with
33:19
the social distance, and that's going to be
33:21
our test today.
33:22
Tony Voss is the mayor of Seaside Heights.
33:25
After nearly two months of being closed because
33:27
of COVID-19, visitors can now walk and
33:29
ride bikes on the boardwalk, provided they heed
33:32
the rule of six feet between groups of
33:34
people.
33:35
On the beach, there's no swimming or sunbathing,
33:38
but the public can walk, fish, and even
33:41
surf.
33:42
Mayor Voss says it's just the first phase
33:44
of Seaside Heights' reopening.
33:45
I'm optimistic that this is a good first
33:48
step.
33:49
Obviously, I would love to see everything open.
33:52
I would love to see a swimming and
33:53
so forth, but we have to recognize that
33:56
we have to take this in steps.
33:58
Seaside Heights is one of more than three
34:00
dozen communities along the Jersey Shore grappling with
34:03
how best to reopen.
34:05
In neighboring Seaside Park, beaches are already open
34:08
to sunbathers, provided beachgoers keep their distance.
34:11
These are unprecedented times.
34:13
We know things are hard right now.
34:15
You're stuck inside with nothing to do.
34:17
You might be going out of your mind.
34:19
Just wanting to do something.
34:21
Anything.
34:22
But now, more than ever.
34:24
More than ever.
34:25
More than ever.
34:26
It's time to think about how your choices
34:28
affect others.
34:30
So please, please.
34:31
Please.
34:33
Don't start a podcast.
34:35
Just don't do it.
34:37
Don't do it.
34:37
You might feel like it's a productive use
34:39
of your time right now.
34:40
You've probably already got a USB mic and
34:43
a spare room ready to go.
34:45
And your mate Dave's got some interesting opinions.
34:47
But we're here to tell you.
34:49
He doesn't.
34:50
He really doesn't.
34:51
He's a fuckwit.
34:52
We don't need your true crime exclusive, which
34:56
is just you reading Wikipedia articles to your
34:58
housemate.
34:59
We don't need your minute-by-minute breakdown
35:01
of every episode of Parks and Rec.
35:03
What are you going to do?
35:04
Send everyone in your contact list a mail
35:05
-chip newsletter?
35:06
And force them to mark you as spam
35:08
instead of unsubscribing?
35:10
Because they're scared to hurt your feelings?
35:12
We're in the middle of a pandemic!
35:13
Look, it's pretty straightforward.
35:15
Just don't start a podcast.
35:17
Make some pasta from scratch like everyone else
35:19
and just shut up.
35:21
The greatest gift you can give your fellow
35:22
human beings right now.
35:24
Right now.
35:25
Right now.
35:26
Is to shut the fuck up.
35:27
Shut the fuck up.
35:29
Come on.
35:30
Do it.
35:32
Don't start a podcast.
35:39
What's your reaction to the president saying that
35:41
he's now taking hydroxychloroquine?
35:45
Are you concerned?
35:47
Well, first let me say how happy I
35:48
am about your new baby.
35:50
How lovely.
35:51
Oh, thank you.
35:52
Wyatt.
35:53
How perfectly named.
35:55
We all know why that is.
35:57
And congratulations.
35:58
And as you now are a father, you
36:01
see how important it is to keep the
36:03
world safe for the children.
36:05
For the children.
36:06
As far as the president is concerned, he's
36:12
our president.
36:13
And I would rather he not be taking
36:15
something that has not been approved by the
36:18
scientists, especially in his age group and in
36:22
his, shall we say, weight group.
36:24
What is morbidly obese, they say.
36:26
So I think it's not a good idea.
36:31
Does this make medical sense?
36:33
Yes.
36:33
Listen, people have got to separate politics from
36:36
the practice of medicine.
36:37
He everything he said was absolutely accurate.
36:40
It has been around for 40 years.
36:42
It's been prescribed hundreds of millions of times
36:44
for malaria.
36:45
I personally have prescribed it hundreds of times
36:48
for malaria, hundreds of times for rheumatic diseases.
36:51
I've never seen one adverse side effect.
36:54
I can't say that of Tylenol.
36:55
I can't say that of aspirin.
36:57
Now, every medication has risk.
36:59
That's just the way it is.
37:00
But in a otherwise healthy person with maybe
37:04
a rheumatic condition or to prevent malaria, it's
37:07
a very safe medication.
37:08
Do not confuse it with chloroquine.
37:10
That's different than hydroxychloroquine.
37:13
Different medicines.
37:14
So the FDA put out a warning about
37:16
both hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine.
37:19
They said this morning in April that it
37:22
can cause dangerous abnormality in heart rhythm and
37:25
virus patients.
37:26
Said about both of them.
37:27
And that only in hospitals should it be
37:30
used and in clinical trials.
37:32
This is not being used in a hospital
37:33
and not being used as a clinical trial.
37:35
That's the FDA standard.
37:37
Doctors are entitled to do anything they want
37:41
with a medication.
37:42
They take on a certain degree of liability.
37:44
They do when they do that different than
37:46
when something is FDA approved.
37:49
We use off label medication all the time.
37:52
Some of our more common prescribing is off
37:54
label, not FDA approved.
37:56
Now this is for not a hospital setting,
37:59
not a COVID setting.
38:00
It's being used for prophylaxis.
38:03
Doctors take it themselves for prophylaxis.
38:05
They prescribe it for patients for prophylaxis.
38:07
But the FDA says that there's no evidence
38:09
that that works.
38:09
No, because that study's not been done yet.
38:12
They're talking about the treatment of COVID.
38:14
In the treatment of COVID.
38:16
No, preventatively, there's no study that shows that
38:18
that works.
38:20
The president is doing this to prevent, unless
38:22
he's had coronavirus and he's lying about it.
38:25
Doctors can prescribe it prophylactically.
38:28
I know many doctors are doing it.
38:29
I know many doctors that are taking it
38:31
themselves, because there's some evidence that it might
38:33
be prophylactic and it is so safe.
38:36
So they feel like rather than do nothing,
38:38
they'd rather do the hydroxychloroquine, not the chloroquine,
38:42
which does have cardiac side effects.
38:44
Look, the studies on hydroxychloroquine and the cardiac
38:47
effects have yet to be washed out.
38:50
Exploring the unintended consequences of a safety-first
38:53
culture through the lens of a quarantine was,
38:56
to me, a really interesting rumination.
38:59
Because we can be a safety-first country,
39:03
but only for very, very, very short periods
39:05
of time.
39:06
And then we're reminded that the chief goal
39:10
of living is not to merely stay alive.
39:13
At least not for most people.
39:15
And then this fascinating conversation starts to unfold.
39:18
So that's a long way of saying that
39:20
for the last 60 days or so, I've
39:23
seen a lot, a lot of conversation right
39:28
around a couple topics that I love.
39:30
Specifically, homeostatic risk, compensatory risk, risk equilibrium, and
39:35
all the subconscious things we do to maintain
39:38
our own illusory relationship with the illusion of
39:43
safety.
39:44
I mean, did you change your mind on
39:45
herd immunity?
39:47
No.
39:49
I don't know what you mean by that.
39:51
Herd immunity is just a thing.
39:54
Herd immunity or population immunity is what, you
40:00
know...
40:01
But for a period in March, the government
40:04
appeared to be pursuing a strategy of mitigating
40:07
the spread of the virus, allowing Cheltenham races,
40:11
for example, to go ahead between March the
40:12
10th and March the 13th, allowing it to
40:14
spread naturally, to allow the development of some
40:17
herd immunity.
40:19
Was that a mistake?
40:21
I don't know.
40:23
I'm not quite sure whether that really was
40:25
the strategy.
40:26
I think that at the time, it was
40:29
difficult to imagine.
40:32
I mean, we weren't sure by what levels
40:38
of compliance with various social distance measures were
40:41
possible.
40:42
Was that why you didn't model full lockdown
40:45
until the middle of March?
40:48
I think it was very hard.
40:49
I don't think anybody looked at it.
40:51
It wasn't just myself.
40:53
I don't think anybody...
40:54
I mean, we all looked at a range
40:56
of different measures, some of which were very
40:58
stringent.
41:00
But it was, you know, it's difficult to
41:03
say, you know...
41:05
But it was difficult to imagine just how...
41:07
In some sense, it was difficult to imagine
41:10
just how easy the lockdown was, if you
41:12
see what I mean.
41:13
You see two families who've suffered losses inside
41:15
nursing homes, and they're looking for accountability, and
41:19
they'd like to see justice.
41:21
For example, I've recently interviewed a family of
41:24
three siblings.
41:24
They've had two nursing home losses within a
41:27
few weeks of one another on two separate
41:29
floors in the same facility here in Albany.
41:32
They felt so much solace when you got
41:34
up and talked about Matilda's loss.
41:36
They said, great, we're protected.
41:38
Like, our loved ones are going to be
41:39
okay because of Matilda's loss.
41:41
And then their loved ones passed away because
41:44
they couldn't get the testing.
41:45
So they're looking for accountability, and they feel
41:47
that they were failed.
41:49
What's the comment to that?
41:51
Yeah, the comment is this.
41:52
And I have those conversations all day long
41:54
with people who have lost people, right?
41:56
We lost 139 people yesterday in hospitals.
42:02
Who is accountable for those 139 deaths?
42:07
How do we get justice for those families
42:10
who had 139 deaths?
42:13
What is justice?
42:15
Who can we prosecute for those deaths?
42:19
Nobody.
42:20
Nobody.
42:22
Mother Nature, God, where did this virus come
42:26
from?
42:27
People are going to die by this virus.
42:30
That is the truth.
42:32
Older people, vulnerable people are going to die
42:37
from this virus.
42:39
That is going to happen.
42:41
Despite whatever you do.
42:44
Because with all our progress as a society,
42:47
we can't keep everyone alive.
42:49
Despite what everything you do.
42:53
And older people are more vulnerable.
42:59
And that is a fact.
43:01
And that is not going to change.
43:04
And look, to me, the really difficult conversations
43:09
for me are my son was 40 years
43:13
old.
43:15
He was not a senior citizen.
43:16
Did not have a comorbidity.
43:19
And got this virus because he was an
43:22
essential worker and doing the right thing.
43:24
And had an aneurysm.
43:28
I thought young people were fine.
43:31
And he was doing the right thing as
43:33
an essential worker.
43:34
There's a randomness to this virus that is
43:42
inexplicable.
43:44
Just everything we possibly can to make sure
43:46
people have a good time, but it's safe.
43:47
Kelly Jones is a manager at the Palazzo
43:49
Gentlemen's Club in South Austin.
43:53
He says their employees, along with dancers and
43:55
entertainers in the industry, have had it tough.
43:58
A lot of people don't know that our
43:58
entertainers are actually independent contractors, much like hairdressers.
44:02
So they had a lot of issues collecting
44:03
unemployment.
44:04
They work on cash tips, like a lot
44:06
of other people in the service industry.
44:07
So they're struggling as well.
44:09
A lot of them have families and kids.
44:10
They're trying to make sure that they have
44:11
arrangements for childcare, for putting food on the
44:13
table.
44:14
And now they'll be back to work Friday.
44:15
But with a long list of safety protocols
44:17
in effect, that includes how many people can
44:19
get into this building.
44:20
Which normally holds close to 300 people.
44:23
We're going to have to cut that down
44:24
to comply with the governor's order of 25
44:26
percent capacity.
44:28
Going to be back to the old days
44:29
with hand clickers, making sure what our capacity
44:31
is.
44:32
We're going to have to have barriers around
44:33
our stages so that our customers have social
44:35
distancing from the entertainers.
44:37
As far as private dances go, they're going
44:39
to have to maintain that six-foot division
44:42
between them.
44:43
But of course, they're also a bar and
44:44
serve food.
44:45
We're going to have to go to plasticware
44:46
instead of nice metal knives and forks.
44:48
Paper napkins, place mats, plastic cups.
44:51
Bartenders and our staff are going to make
44:53
sure that we follow hand washing policies.
44:54
Our employees definitely are wearing masks.
44:56
Including the entertainers.
44:58
So we're encouraging them to be creative, find
44:59
something they like that maybe goes with their
45:01
outfits.
45:01
And they'll also have employees specifically designated for
45:04
constantly cleaning the place.
45:05
And while it won't be a full house
45:07
inside by any means, they're just glad to
45:09
get business moving again.
45:10
Aside from the fact that most believe that
45:15
this president has botched this crisis from the
45:17
get-go.
45:18
And this will be known in history worldwide
45:21
as a human catastrophe that he could have
45:25
prevented.
45:26
And he's trying to deflect at all times.
45:29
And Willie and Mike, he's tweeting again all
45:32
sorts of crazy things.
45:34
Once again, tweeting conspiracy theories about Joe, falsely
45:38
accusing him of murder.
45:39
Talking about the death of a young staffer
45:42
in his congressional office years ago.
45:45
And calling him dangerous to walk the streets.
45:48
And I'll just say, I'll take a point
45:50
of personal privilege here.
45:51
That's sick.
45:53
Donald, you're a sick person.
45:55
You're a sick person.
45:57
To put this family through this.
45:59
To put her husband through this.
46:01
To do this just because you're mad at
46:02
Joe because Joe got you again today.
46:05
Because he speaks the truth.
46:07
And he speaks plainly about your lack of
46:10
interest and empathy in others.
46:12
And your lack of ability to handle this
46:14
massive human catastrophe.
46:16
The fact that you've made it worse.
46:18
And that you make it worse every day.
46:20
And that you won't even wear a mask
46:22
to protect people from your germs.
46:25
But the germs you're spreading on Twitter.
46:27
First of all, Twitter, you shouldn't be allowing
46:29
this.
46:29
And you should be taking these tweets down.
46:32
And you should be ashamed of yourself.
46:34
You'll be hearing from me on this.
46:36
Because this is BS.
46:38
But Donald, you're a sick person.
46:40
You're really a cruel, sick, disgusting person.
46:44
And you can keep tweeting about Joe, but
46:46
you're just hurting other people.
46:47
And of course, you're hurting yourself.
46:50
Willie, why don't you take final thoughts.
46:52
I'm done.
46:52
A professor at Case Western Reserve University in
46:55
Cleveland has been arrested over his alleged financial
46:58
ties to China.
47:00
This just days after the FBI sounded the
47:02
alarm on China's attempts to steal coronavirus research.
47:05
A professor at the University of Arkansas was
47:07
arrested on similar charges last week.
47:10
And then in January, Harvard's chemistry chief was
47:13
charged with failing to disclose that he, too,
47:15
was being paid by the Chinese Communist Party.
47:18
Two weeks ago, Senator Tom Cotton told us
47:20
that the CCP was trying in many ways
47:22
to steal medical data from the United States
47:25
to try and come up with a vaccine
47:26
for COVID-19 before the United States.
47:29
After several weeks of being stuck inside, thousands
47:32
have flocked here to Bolivar Peninsula to make
47:35
the most of their time while out.
47:37
I've been in quarantine, and I need to
47:39
get out and party.
47:41
Go Topper's Jeep Weekend.
47:43
What's better than beach and a few drinks
47:45
and Jeeps?
47:46
Man, I can't get any better than that.
47:47
In full swing at beaches on Bolivar Peninsula.
47:51
This event comes at a time where beaches
47:53
across the state are reopening following the coronavirus
47:57
pandemic.
47:58
And beachgoers like Chelsea Collier are still taking
48:01
precautions to stay safe.
48:03
Wash them hands for 20 seconds and keep
48:06
them clean with their Germ-X.
48:08
Totally.
48:09
Come down and have a good time.
48:10
You have a good time, there's no issues.
48:12
But when you start acting silly, like the
48:15
sheriff said on a previous interview, we've got
48:17
a jail that's got a whole lot of
48:18
empty holes.
48:19
The sheriff's office have made at least 63
48:21
arrests so far in connection to Jeep Weekend.
48:24
As for the enforcement of social distancing, they
48:27
say it's challenging to enforce.
48:29
I mean, you can't.
48:31
It's just, it's not possible to do that
48:35
on this beach with the amount of people
48:36
that we have here.
48:38
It's just, we can't do that.
48:39
The additional presence of law enforcement has been
48:42
a welcoming sight for beachgoers, given the history
48:46
of this event.
48:47
May 5th, we announced a wear a mask
48:50
in public campaign.
48:52
And we asked people to submit videos that,
48:56
and we would pick the winner by vote
48:58
of the people.
49:01
And the winner would become a public service
49:03
announcement.
49:04
We had over 600 submissions.
49:08
Isn't that amazing?
49:09
The competition is still open, and we're going
49:13
to show you now five of the runner
49:16
-ups.
49:17
United we stand, and divided we fall.
49:20
We mask up not just to obey the
49:22
law, but to obey the laws of nature.
49:25
We hope for immunity in our community.
49:27
We pray for normality in this calamity.
49:29
We want hope.
49:31
I mask up not because I fear getting
49:33
sick, but because I fear getting you sick.
49:36
I mask up because days, weeks, or months
49:38
of hot breath and acne bumps is better
49:40
than knowing my wife will soon have to
49:42
raise a fatherless son.
49:45
Mask up.
49:47
Senator, also, I think you know that this
49:50
whole thing started in Wuhan.
49:53
And you know that many people call this
49:55
the Wuhan virus or the Chinese virus.
49:58
Kamala Harris has had enough.
49:59
She has a resolution that's going to work
50:01
its way through the Senate to ban the
50:03
phrase Wuhan virus.
50:05
And she calls it anti-Asian.
50:08
Your feeling on this?
50:10
Well, I object to that resolution, Brian.
50:13
First off, Wuhan is just a city.
50:14
It's not even a people.
50:16
I guess she's going to have to call
50:19
out Lyme disease for being anti-Connecticut, or
50:21
maybe Legionnaire's disease for being anti-veteran, Zika,
50:25
since Zika is a forest in Africa.
50:26
But this political correctness run amok covers a
50:30
more serious point.
50:31
The Democrats want to wave their arms and
50:34
say that this is racist or xenophobic.
50:36
And that's because they don't have an answer
50:39
for China's rise and the threat that China
50:42
poses to us.
50:43
Joe Biden, as we said, has been weak
50:44
on China for 30 years.
50:46
So they want to have politically correct distractions
50:48
to distract people from his terrible record on
50:51
China.
50:52
We can't let that happen.
50:53
Would requiring masks across the board help?
50:57
Is that even, is that feasible?
50:59
Craig, I'm going to say this for the
51:00
benefit of your family.
51:02
I know you have young kids from my
51:03
family and for all Americans.
51:05
We should make masks mandatory in public.
51:08
Just like we ban indoor smoking because you
51:11
know what?
51:11
Nobody should, you shouldn't have to breathe somebody
51:13
else's that can't smoke.
51:14
I shouldn't have to breathe exhaled COVID-19
51:16
in somebody's breath.
51:18
Nobody should.
51:18
And so we should institute mandatory masks in
51:22
public when you can't guarantee social distancing.
51:25
That means retail stores.
51:26
That means public transportation, workplaces.
51:28
That's absolutely where we should be headed.
51:30
Makes no sense why we're not already there.
51:33
We're encouraging it.
51:34
People are flouting the rules.
51:37
A security guard at a retail outlet in
51:39
Michigan died trying to encourage a customer to
51:43
wear a mask.
51:43
They shot him because they didn't like the
51:45
way in which it was trying to be
51:47
enforced, that policy.
51:48
We need to not put the onus on
51:51
security guards at local outlets to enforce this
51:54
policy or to encourage Americans to abide by
51:57
it.
51:57
It's all in our best interest that we
51:59
wear masks.
52:00
The evidence is overwhelming.
52:02
We just need governors to do their job.
52:04
The idea of a bioterrorist attack is kind
52:07
of the nightmare scenario because they're a pathogen
52:10
with a high death rate would be picked.
52:12
Now, the good news is I'm not trying
52:14
to depress you.
52:15
It's tough enough right now.
52:17
Most of the work we're going to do
52:19
to be ready for pandemic two, I call
52:22
this pandemic one.
52:24
Most of the work we'll do to be
52:25
ready for that are also the things we
52:27
need to do to minimize the threat of
52:30
bioterrorism.
52:32
You panicked about the market, panicked about COVID,
52:35
panicked about the ventilators, panicked about the PPE,
52:38
panicked about ever going out again, panicked if
52:40
we ever get back to normal.
52:42
Joseph, you didn't panic about anything.
52:44
What good is it?
52:44
Why not help people keep their head?
52:48
A hundred thousand people died, Joe, and all
52:51
you did was try to help your friend,
52:53
the president.
52:54
That's what you did every single morning on
52:57
this show.
52:59
Every single morning on this show, you abused
53:01
your position, Joe.
53:04
I'm trying to help investors keep their cool,
53:07
keep their heads.
53:08
And as it turned out, that's what they
53:10
should have done.
53:12
That's what they should have done.
53:13
They should have kept their heads.
53:15
If they had listened to you, Andrew, we're
53:17
supposed to be at about 8,000.
53:18
I wasn't arguing to go sell your stocks,
53:20
Joseph.
53:21
I was arguing about people's lives.
53:23
We understand.
53:24
People's lives.
53:25
Andrew, it's a global pandemic.
53:27
Do the news.
53:27
I'm begging you to do the news.
53:29
It's a global pandemic.
53:30
I'm begging you, please.
53:41
Greetings.
53:41
My name is Dr. Tony Fauci, and I
53:44
am here to present some good news at
53:46
a time of great stress as we struggle
53:48
to contain the COVID-19 outbreak.
53:52
I'm excited about the opportunity to shine some
53:54
light on one of the many young people
53:57
who have stepped up and helped us throughout
53:59
this difficult time.
54:00
The 24th annual Webby Awards will honor Avi
54:04
Schiffman as the 2020 Person of the Year
54:07
in recognition of his creation of ncov2019.live
54:12
to track the spread of COVID-19 across
54:15
the world.
54:16
As we collectively navigate the severe impact of
54:20
COVID-19, including the difficult but critical calls
54:24
for nationwide social distancing, the Internet has become
54:28
the lifeblood of people looking for accurate information
54:31
about the novel coronavirus and the necessary steps
54:35
to combat it.
54:36
Since launching the site on December 29th, Schiffman's
54:40
tracking tool has been an invaluable resource that
54:44
sounded the alarm on the virus and its
54:46
spread, notably calling attention to its severity long
54:50
before it was broadly recognized.
54:53
At a time when the spread of misinformation
54:55
can be so detrimental to our efforts, the
54:58
site has provided over 600 million visitors with
55:02
accurate real-time data.
55:03
Schiffman has helped people around the globe understand
55:07
COVID-19 and the necessity to upgrade current
55:11
healthcare systems and the importance of measures to
55:15
flatten the curve.
55:16
For having the foresight to track the global
55:19
spread of COVID-19 and for creating an
55:23
essential website to provide real-time data about
55:27
the virus to people everywhere, it is my
55:29
great privilege to honor Avi Schiffman as the
55:33
2020 Webby Person of the Year.
55:36
The president will sign an executive order concerning
55:38
social media as he escalates his feud with
55:41
Twitter.
55:42
Here's Peter Alexander.
55:43
Ahead of today's scrubbed launch, President Trump touring
55:46
NASA's campus striking an uplifting note.
55:49
It's a great achievement for our country and
55:51
our country's number one.
55:53
Members of the president's family traveling with him
55:55
wearing masks.
55:56
The first lady earlier seen wearing her mask
55:58
aboard Marine One.
56:00
Their visit coming the very day the country
56:02
marks that tragic milestone, 100,000 lives lost
56:06
to the coronavirus.
56:07
And today the president hosted New York Governor
56:09
Andrew Cuomo at the White House.
56:11
It was about how do we supercharge the
56:14
reopening, especially in New York, which has been
56:16
hardest hit.
56:18
No drama there, but the president is escalating
56:20
another battle with Twitter after the company for
56:23
the first time posted fact-check labels on
56:26
a pair of the president's tweets about mail
56:28
-in ballots.
56:29
President Trump accusing Twitter of interfering in the
56:31
2020 presidential election and today threatening to strongly
56:35
regulate or close them down.
56:36
A president has no authority to shut down
56:39
a private company, and the First Amendment limits
56:41
the government's ability to regulate free speech.
56:45
Meantime, some top Republicans are telling President Trump
56:47
to knock it off as he again today
56:49
pushed a debunked conspiracy theory.
56:51
That former Republican congressman and Morning Joe host
56:54
Joe Scarborough had something to do with the
56:56
death of an aide in 2001.
56:59
Laurie Klausutis died after an abnormal heart rhythm
57:01
caused her to collapse and hit her head
57:03
in Scarborough's Florida office.
57:05
Scarborough was in Washington at the time.
57:08
Republican Congresswoman Liz Cheney.
57:10
We're in the middle of a pandemic.
57:11
He's the chief, the commander in chief of
57:13
this nation, and it's causing great pain to
57:16
the family of the young woman who died.
57:18
As for SpaceX, late tonight the president tweeted
57:21
that he plans to fly back to Florida
57:22
on Saturday for the next scheduled launch.
57:25
Lester.
57:39
Amazon has transformed its operations in response to
57:42
COVID-19 to protect employees and keep packages
57:45
flowing.
57:46
Amazon has transformed its operations in response to
57:49
COVID-19 to protect employees and keep packages
57:51
flowing.
57:52
The company is keeping its employees safe and
57:55
healthy while still delivering those packages to your
57:58
doorstep.
57:58
The company is keeping employees safe and healthy.
58:18
It spent $800 million on increased wages and
58:21
overtime pay during the pandemic.
58:23
It has spent $800 million on increased
58:25
wages
58:37
and overtime pay during the pandemic.
58:44
Every single one of Amazon's workforce of nearly
58:47
a million people has played a critical role
58:49
in making these changes happen.
58:50
I hope that they feel that passion that
58:53
we have for safety.
58:54
So they can stay safe and healthy while
58:56
you do too.
58:57
Look, the president today, you know, with these
58:59
with these retweets, one, so many viewpoints, he
59:02
comments, you know, with a columnist saying that
59:05
this is about social control as opposed to
59:08
medical reality.
59:09
Another one equating masks to silence, slavery and
59:15
social death.
59:18
Obviously, this is shocking.
59:21
I mean, and completely false when it comes
59:24
to so many viewpoints.
59:26
Yeah, the piece that the president retweeted could
59:31
have been written by a Russian bot.
59:32
It's essentially disinformation.
59:34
The irrefutable concept is that universal masking, having
59:40
the entire country wear a mask in public
59:42
would have dramatically reduced the death rate in
59:46
this country.
59:47
It's not up for debate.
59:49
It's just science.
59:50
But the president has an irreconcilable conflict of
59:53
interest.
59:54
And the conflict of interest is this.
59:56
He's running for president during a pandemic.
59:59
And some of the things that one would
1:00:01
need to do to suppress the pandemic run
1:00:04
counter to his election chances.
1:00:07
He needs to make things look like the
1:00:09
country is returning to normal.
1:00:11
And wearing a mask is decidedly abnormal, but
1:00:13
it saves lives.
1:00:15
So he not only does he not promote
1:00:17
universal mask wearing, he then promotes essentially negative
1:00:22
comments about it.
1:00:23
It's it's maddening.
1:00:25
You know, I've lost family members to covid.
1:00:29
You know, my colleagues at work have lost
1:00:31
family members.
1:00:32
And pretty soon everyone in this country is
1:00:35
going to know somebody who has lost somebody
1:00:37
to this virus.
1:00:38
And to think that the president of the
1:00:40
United States would not promote the simple public
1:00:43
health measure of wearing masks is insane.
1:00:47
I mean, Andrew Cuomo has been glorified by
1:00:49
media despite policies with respect to nursing homes
1:00:53
that caused to a number of tragic deaths,
1:00:55
whereas Ron DeSantis has instituted pretty successful policy
1:00:59
if you look at their numbers.
1:01:00
So what's going on here?
1:01:01
Ron DeSantis is not doing what he needed
1:01:03
to do two weeks ago to protect Florida
1:01:06
seniors.
1:01:06
Been a remarkable show of leadership by Governor
1:01:09
Cuomo in recent days.
1:01:10
He's providing hope.
1:01:11
And Governor Ron DeSantis is finally, finally, maybe
1:01:15
too little too late issuing a stay at
1:01:17
home order.
1:01:18
Cuomo has become a kind of acting president.
1:01:20
Governor DeSantis should have absolutely acted a lot
1:01:23
quicker, not only for the retired people.
1:01:26
Cuomo, everything Trump isn't honest, direct, brave.
1:01:30
In the case of Governor DeSantis of Florida,
1:01:32
he's going exactly the opposite way from what
1:01:34
the experts, the people on the front lines
1:01:37
indicate ought to be done.
1:01:39
Governor Cuomo has become a national leader and
1:01:41
not just the leader of New York.
1:01:42
No stay at home order from Governor Ron
1:01:44
DeSantis.
1:01:44
Why bother, right?
1:01:45
I'm sure Florida will be fine.
1:01:47
He is conveying incredible strength in the face
1:01:49
of this pandemic.
1:01:50
Act like you give a damn.
1:01:52
I've seen you referred to a little bit
1:01:53
recently as the love gov.
1:01:55
And I'm wondering if that's bleeding into your
1:01:56
demeanor at all.
1:01:57
Massive crowds swarming cities across the country are
1:02:00
choosing social justice over social distancing.
1:02:03
I could be dead tomorrow if I walk
1:02:05
on the streets.
1:02:06
But an urgent health warning from officials.
1:02:09
There's no question there's a danger this could
1:02:11
intensify the spread of the coronavirus just at
1:02:15
a point when we were starting to beat
1:02:17
it back profoundly.
1:02:18
How many super spreaders were in that crowd?
1:02:21
How many young people went home and kissed
1:02:23
their mother?
1:02:24
Hello or shook hands with their father.
1:02:27
But these demonstrators see in America infected with
1:02:29
injustice, too.
1:02:31
Are you worried about your safety?
1:02:34
Yes.
1:02:34
But the answer is that I'm worried about
1:02:36
my safety to both of those viruses.
1:02:38
Late today, the first comprehensive study on stopping
1:02:41
the virus found physical distancing three feet or
1:02:44
more is most important, even more than wearing
1:02:47
a mask.
1:02:48
And with tear gas flying, the risks even
1:02:51
greater.
1:02:52
Tear gas makes people cough, sneeze, their eyes
1:02:54
water.
1:02:54
And when that happens, the respiratory droplets that
1:02:57
carry the virus can travel further, meaning they
1:02:59
can infect a lot more people.
1:03:01
Public health and prosperity now jeopardized.
1:03:04
This restaurant owner's reopening was put on hold.
1:03:07
I worked for two months every day to
1:03:10
reposition ourselves for this to happen.
1:03:14
In South Florida, businesses were expecting to see
1:03:17
Miami Beach reopen today.
1:03:19
That's now been postponed because of the protests
1:03:21
as officials everywhere wait to see if cases
1:03:23
of the virus surge in the next two
1:03:25
weeks.
1:03:25
I can't tell you how many people have
1:03:28
been in touch with me today and tonight
1:03:30
and last night to say some form of
1:03:33
the following which we would have laughed at
1:03:35
five years ago.
1:03:37
The Russians must be having a good old
1:03:40
time looking at television images of the United
1:03:44
States.
1:03:45
Death toll of a 100,000, a pandemic
1:03:49
not at all under control, and now city
1:03:53
streets aflame in more cities tonight than we
1:03:56
can list.
1:03:57
Yeah, I've lost count of the number of
1:03:58
times you and I, Brian, have talked about
1:04:00
this very concept that the number one goal
1:04:04
of the Russian government is not to get
1:04:06
a certain person in the rather to sow
1:04:09
discord and chaos.
1:04:11
Now, it helps if the person in the
1:04:14
White House is unable to calm the nerves
1:04:17
of the nation, is unable to get peace
1:04:20
and calm restored in our cities through his
1:04:23
behavior, through trust, through his relationships and his
1:04:26
statements.
1:04:27
So yes, our adversaries are studying this right
1:04:30
now.
1:04:30
Some of them are actually pleased that we
1:04:32
are more divided than ever, and I'm very
1:04:35
troubled that we could be in for a
1:04:37
very long hot summer if this isn't quashed.
1:04:40
April Williams is a professor of communications and
1:04:43
media at the University of Michigan, and she
1:04:46
says the Karen meme resurged with a vengeance
1:04:49
last month.
1:04:50
A woman named Karen was denying that COVID
1:04:54
-19 was real, became ill, and unfortunately she
1:04:58
passed away.
1:04:59
And one of the things that I'm seeing
1:05:01
is people saying, look, this is peak Karen
1:05:04
behavior.
1:05:06
It seems so wasteful, but some American dairy
1:05:09
farmers are dumping milk, like the 56,000
1:05:12
pounds produced by farm owner Mark Muller in
1:05:14
northeast Wisconsin.
1:05:16
You put all that labor and work into
1:05:17
the milk, and you hate to see it
1:05:19
go down the drain when you know that
1:05:20
there's people starving in the world and in
1:05:22
our country even.
1:05:24
We hate to throw things away.
1:05:25
Despite strong demand for milk as consumers stay
1:05:28
home amid the coronavirus pandemic, dairy cooperatives that
1:05:31
oversee marketing and shipping logistics are asking some
1:05:35
farmers to dump milk.
1:05:37
Supply chain disruptions due to the outbreak are
1:05:40
preventing farmers from getting their products to the
1:05:42
markets.
1:05:43
With schools and restaurants closed, milk processors have
1:05:46
to shift to selling to retail grocers instead
1:05:49
of wholesalers.
1:05:50
That creates logistical and packaging challenges.
1:05:53
What's more, trucking companies are scrambling for drivers
1:05:56
as some who fear the virus have stopped
1:05:59
working.
1:06:00
Overseas dairy markets have dried up, and it
1:06:02
doesn't help that milk is highly perishable.
1:06:05
Some farmers say they will be paid for
1:06:07
the milk they dump, but payments for all
1:06:09
co-op members will take a hit from
1:06:11
lost revenues.
1:06:13
Today is a day of good news.
1:06:15
We have one of the lowest hospitalization rates
1:06:21
since this began.
1:06:23
And really good news, we have the lowest
1:06:26
death rate.
1:06:27
It's down to 35.
1:06:29
I've been asking all the experts who will
1:06:32
talk to me what is the lowest that
1:06:36
number can go.
1:06:38
And when it gets this low, it's really
1:06:40
a question of what they're attributing as the
1:06:44
cause of death.
1:06:45
In other words, you have people who are
1:06:48
gravely ill, who are going to die of
1:06:54
something, and if they get the COVID virus,
1:06:57
they attribute it to the COVID virus.
1:06:59
But there is a number.
1:07:03
When it gets down this low, it's really
1:07:06
a question of what that hospital certifies as
1:07:10
a cause of death.
1:07:12
So we'd like to see nobody die in
1:07:15
the state of New York ever.
1:07:20
Where is the president in a time of
1:07:22
national emergency?
1:07:25
Hiding.
1:07:26
Hiding in a security bunker, watching his shows,
1:07:30
afraid, alone.
1:07:33
Not a leader.
1:07:34
Supposing you brought the light inside the body.
1:07:36
Not a president.
1:07:38
Just a scared, incompetent.
1:07:41
Within a couple of days, it's going to
1:07:42
be down to close to zero.
1:07:44
Embarrassment.
1:07:46
You know that.
1:07:48
Those who have worked with him know that.
1:07:50
The former defense secretary, James Mattis, accusing President
1:07:53
Trump of being a threat to the Constitution.
1:07:55
Our allies know that.
1:07:58
And our enemies know that.
1:08:00
Everyone knows that.
1:08:03
It's time for a competent president.
1:08:06
Let's elect one.
1:08:12
Defending Democracy Together is responsible for the content
1:08:15
of this advertising.
1:08:16
A vaccine, either by the end of this
1:08:19
calendar year or in the first few months
1:08:22
of 2021.
1:08:24
So that's the thing that makes me feel
1:08:26
confident that the process is really on track.
1:08:29
And that's good news.
1:08:31
Again, in the context of never being able
1:08:33
to guarantee success, things are clearly going in
1:08:37
the right direction.
1:08:38
That's very promising.
1:08:39
Very promising indeed.
1:08:40
And once there is a vaccine, how often
1:08:43
do you think we would need it?
1:08:45
Would it be like getting the flu shot
1:08:46
every year?
1:08:47
You know, we don't know that right now.
1:08:49
We're going to take it one step at
1:08:50
a time.
1:08:51
The first thing we want to do is
1:08:53
to determine if it's safe and if it
1:08:56
protects.
1:08:56
How long that protection lasts.
1:08:59
We're going to have to obviously observe that.
1:09:02
And that's the reason why when you make
1:09:04
a vaccine, it isn't the end of the
1:09:06
game.
1:09:06
You have to keep following and see how
1:09:08
long the duration of the protection is.
1:09:11
We hope it's substantial.
1:09:14
But if it isn't, you can always give
1:09:15
a boost.
1:09:16
So right now, step one, let's just prove
1:09:19
that it's safe and effective.
1:09:21
And then we'll go on from there.
1:09:23
Right.
1:09:23
So, OK, so people in the media, a
1:09:26
lot of them are not very good at
1:09:27
math and they're very prone to groupthink as
1:09:29
they as the cannabis thing taught me.
1:09:31
But there's something even worse than that.
1:09:33
Right.
1:09:33
And people call it Trump derangement syndrome.
1:09:36
I don't like to call it that because
1:09:38
that to me suggests there aren't good reasons
1:09:41
to be mad at Trump.
1:09:42
I call it orange man bad.
1:09:44
Right.
1:09:44
Because that puts you in on the joke
1:09:47
a little bit.
1:09:47
Right.
1:09:48
That, you know, Donald Trump does have lots
1:09:50
of issues, but there's orange man bad syndrome
1:09:53
going on.
1:09:54
And Donald Trump got blamed for this early
1:09:56
on.
1:09:57
And, you know, he didn't.
1:09:58
The government didn't prepare.
1:09:59
Right.
1:09:59
He shut the borders.
1:10:00
But then the government didn't really prepare in
1:10:02
February and early March.
1:10:04
And then it panicked.
1:10:05
But what people realized in the media, consciously
1:10:07
or not, was they could beat him up
1:10:09
with this.
1:10:10
They could beat him over the head with
1:10:11
it because his normal style is to bluster
1:10:14
and to bluff and to mock people.
1:10:16
And that does not work when they're when,
1:10:19
you know, when you have these death counts
1:10:20
every day.
1:10:21
Right.
1:10:21
So they realized they could embarrass him and
1:10:25
they have been doing it nonstop ever since.
1:10:28
But the flip side of embarrassing him means
1:10:30
you have to constantly talk about how terrible
1:10:32
this is.
1:10:33
Now, I mean, that's that's I know that's
1:10:36
quite a charge.
1:10:37
I mean, what makes you think they really
1:10:39
want them to to get covid?
1:10:42
Because money, money, it's I think it's at
1:10:45
least twenty nine thousand dollars per per patient.
1:10:48
And then you have to think you are
1:10:50
also charging supplies and more supplies, more supplies.
1:10:53
That's just like a bonus money.
1:10:55
But what do the but the residents aren't
1:10:58
getting that.
1:10:58
Right.
1:10:59
I mean, why?
1:11:00
Well, that's the thing.
1:11:01
And I actually had a I've went at
1:11:05
it with a lot of residents already.
1:11:07
And they're they're order followers.
1:11:10
You talk about psychological warfare.
1:11:12
Psychological warfare isn't just lying to you.
1:11:15
It's not just propaganda as we would normally
1:11:16
think of it.
1:11:17
Psychological warfare is changing the way you interpret
1:11:20
information so that you and I can be
1:11:23
looking at the exact same set of data
1:11:25
and we would come to wildly different conclusions
1:11:27
on it.
1:11:28
So, for example, with this virus right now,
1:11:31
this pandemic, you're looking at the Chinese regime's
1:11:34
handling of the virus.
1:11:35
We're both looking at the we're looking at
1:11:36
the exact same data.
1:11:38
Now, do you interpret it as being a
1:11:40
sign?
1:11:41
Oh, the Chinese regime did all it all
1:11:43
it could in its power.
1:11:44
It took very strong measures to ensure that
1:11:47
the virus didn't spread and the rest of
1:11:49
the world is just being unfair to it.
1:11:51
Or do you think the Chinese regime lied
1:11:53
to the world?
1:11:53
The Chinese regime arrested doctors, disappeared journalists and
1:11:58
these types of things.
1:11:59
If you were following only the information the
1:12:02
CCP was releasing and some of the organizations
1:12:04
that support the CCP, what they were saying,
1:12:06
you would view it in line of the
1:12:08
CCP's pro-CCP viewpoint.
1:12:11
If you were following all the real data,
1:12:14
for example, their cover-ups, their lying to
1:12:16
the world, their manipulation of data and numbers,
1:12:20
you would understand, okay, they were misleading the
1:12:22
world.
1:12:23
They were very dishonest about it.
1:12:25
And no, absolutely, they did not handle it
1:12:27
well.
1:12:28
The idea that they handled it well, you
1:12:30
would only believe that if you believed all
1:12:32
of the lies they were telling the world,
1:12:34
most of which have been exposed.
1:12:36
All right, well, let's get into it.
1:12:38
Veena, what has you fired up this week?
1:12:41
Well, I've been following this JK Rowling controversy,
1:12:44
and it all started with a tweet she
1:12:45
made.
1:12:46
Actually, it started with this headline, creating a
1:12:48
more equal post-COVID-19 world for people
1:12:51
who menstruate.
1:12:52
JK took issue with the word people being
1:12:55
used.
1:12:56
Maybe she was trying to be funny, but
1:12:57
she hinted that the publication should have stuck
1:13:00
with using the word women.
1:13:01
Some fans pointed out that there are lots
1:13:03
of those who menstruate who don't identify as
1:13:06
women.
1:13:06
And then things got a little messy, lots
1:13:08
of tweets back and forth.
1:13:09
And at one point, JK fired back with,
1:13:12
my life has been shaped by being female,
1:13:14
and I don't think it's hateful to say
1:13:15
so.
1:13:16
It's 2020.
1:13:18
Releasing these kind of statements online is not
1:13:20
a good look.
1:13:21
And hasn't she been accused of transphobic stuff
1:13:24
in the past?
1:13:26
Um, yeah.
1:13:26
Last year, she was criticized for supporting a
1:13:29
woman who was fired after saying that trans
1:13:31
women weren't real women.
1:13:33
Sis, read the room.
1:13:35
There are so many conversations right now about
1:13:38
equality, justice, and racism.
1:13:40
Is it any surprise that this story is
1:13:42
blowing up right now?
1:13:43
Exactly.
1:13:44
It's Pride Month, too.
1:13:45
And this week, Daniel Radcliffe, Harry Potter himself,
1:13:48
reacted with an essay advocating for trans lives.
1:13:51
I thought he addressed the whole thing really
1:13:53
well.
1:13:54
And I liked how he expressed his hopes
1:13:56
that people don't lose their love for the
1:13:58
books themselves or forget the valuable lessons that
1:14:00
they learned from them.
1:14:02
I have not read the books.
1:14:03
I have not seen the movies.
1:14:04
Don't come at me.
1:14:06
Okay, Maya, get out of here.
1:14:08
What?
1:14:09
Well, I did watch the movies.
1:14:11
And seeing Daniel advocate for what he believes
1:14:13
in is so inspiring.
1:14:15
And also, I loved how he signed his
1:14:17
letter as Dan.
1:14:19
Definitely had a big major glow up.
1:14:21
Only you would notice such a small detail,
1:14:24
Sean.
1:14:24
Do we think this will have a long
1:14:25
-lasting impact on her career?
1:14:27
I think that this will diminish the amount
1:14:29
of respect that J.K. Rowling has acquired
1:14:32
over the years.
1:14:32
But her writing is just so exceptional and
1:14:35
renowned that I don't think the hype's ever
1:14:37
going to die down.
1:14:38
What about a month or so or two
1:14:40
or three ago when people were saying, you
1:14:43
don't really need to wear a mask?
1:14:45
Well, the reason for that is that we
1:14:46
were concerned, the public health community, and many
1:14:49
people were saying this, were concerned that it
1:14:52
was at a time when personal protective equipment,
1:14:55
including the N95 masks and the surgical masks,
1:14:59
were in very short supply.
1:15:02
And we wanted to make sure that the
1:15:03
people, namely the healthcare workers, who were brave
1:15:07
enough to put themselves in harm ways to
1:15:10
take care of people who you know were
1:15:12
infected with the coronavirus and the danger of
1:15:16
them getting infected, we did not want them
1:15:18
to be without the equipment that they needed.
1:15:22
So there was non-enthusiasm about going out
1:15:24
and everybody buying a mask or getting a
1:15:26
mask.
1:15:27
We were afraid that that would deter away
1:15:29
the people who really needed it.
1:15:31
Now we have masks.
1:15:33
We know that you don't need an N95
1:15:34
if you're a person, ordinary person, in the
1:15:37
street.
1:15:38
We also know that simple cloth coverings that
1:15:42
many people have can work as well as
1:15:44
a mask in many cases.
1:15:46
So right now, unequivocally, the recommendation is when
1:15:51
you're out there, particularly if you're in a
1:15:53
situation where there's active infection, keep the distance
1:15:57
physically and wear a mask.
1:15:59
So although there appear to be some contradiction
1:16:01
of you were saying this then and why
1:16:03
you're saying this now, actually the circumstances have
1:16:06
changed.
1:16:07
That's the reason why.
1:16:09
The gentleman yields back.
1:16:10
I want to announce that in accordance with
1:16:12
what I said this morning, the attending physician
1:16:15
of the House has said that it is
1:16:17
imperative for the health and safety of people
1:16:20
in this room that members wear masks.
1:16:25
I would greatly prefer that all presence simply
1:16:28
uphold the decorum of the committee by complying
1:16:30
with reasonable safety standards that are recommended by
1:16:33
the attending physician and are respectful of all
1:16:35
the occupants of this room.
1:16:37
I have been greatly lenient today.
1:16:39
However, I will tell you now that anyone
1:16:42
who is not wearing a mask will not
1:16:44
be recognized to speak, period.
1:16:47
Who seeks recognition?
1:16:49
Mr. Chairman.
1:16:51
The Ms. Escobar is next.
1:16:52
Mr. Chairman.
1:16:53
Ms. Escobar is next.
1:16:54
Mr. Chairman, a point of parliamentary— Ms. Escobar
1:16:56
is recognized.
1:16:58
Ms. Escobar— Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
1:16:59
McClintock has tried repeatedly to make his point.
1:17:03
Repeatedly.
1:17:04
Ms. Escobar has the time.
1:17:07
Mr. Chairman.
1:17:07
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
1:17:08
No, no, it's our side.
1:17:09
You just had a Democrat speak.
1:17:11
It's our turn.
1:17:11
Ms. Escobar has the time.
1:17:13
Ms. Escobar— No, he doesn't.
1:17:16
Ms. Escobar has the time.
1:17:17
Mr. Chairman.
1:17:18
Mr.— Ms. Escobar has the time.
1:17:19
I think Mr. Lew just spoke.
1:17:22
It's Republicans' turn and Mr. McClintock has tried
1:17:25
now for several minutes to be recognized on
1:17:27
a point of order.
1:17:28
There is no point of order, but who
1:17:30
seeks recognition to speak?
1:17:31
Mr. Chairman, I seek recognition for a point
1:17:33
of parliamentary inquiry.
1:17:35
This gentleman will state his point of parliamentary
1:17:37
inquiry.
1:17:37
I would like the chairman to cite the
1:17:39
House rule requiring members to wear masks in
1:17:43
House proceedings.
1:17:44
If we had such a vote, I don't
1:17:46
recall it.
1:17:47
If we have such a vote, I will
1:17:49
vote against it, but I will be happy
1:17:52
to abide by it if the House so
1:17:55
decides.
1:17:56
Until then, I would like you to cite
1:17:59
me that rule since I obviously used that
1:18:01
vote.
1:18:02
The chair's authority to enforce the preservation of
1:18:04
order and decorum during committee proceedings derives from
1:18:08
the speaker's enforcement authority under Clause 2 of
1:18:10
Rule 1.
1:18:11
And with testing—you know, testing is a double
1:18:14
-edged sword.
1:18:16
We've tested now 25 million people.
1:18:21
It's probably 20 million people more than anybody
1:18:26
else.
1:18:27
Germany has done a lot.
1:18:28
South Korea has done a lot.
1:18:30
They call me.
1:18:31
They say, the job you're doing—here's the bad
1:18:33
part.
1:18:33
When you do testing to that extent, you're
1:18:37
going to find more people.
1:18:38
You're going to find more cases.
1:18:39
So I said to my people, slow the
1:18:42
testing down, please.
1:18:45
They test, and they test.
1:18:47
We got tests, and people don't know what's
1:18:49
going on.
1:18:49
We got tests.
1:18:50
We got another one over here.
1:18:52
The young man's 10 years old.
1:18:55
He's got the sniffles.
1:18:56
He'll recover in about 15 minutes.
1:18:58
That's a case.
1:19:00
Add up to it.
1:19:00
That's a case.
1:19:02
That's a case.
1:19:08
Today I want to talk about a peculiar
1:19:10
aspect of quantum measurements that you may have
1:19:13
heard of.
1:19:14
It's that the measurement does not merely reveal
1:19:17
a property that previously existed, but that the
1:19:21
act of measuring makes that property real.
1:19:24
So, when Donald Trump claims that not testing
1:19:27
people for COVID means there will be fewer
1:19:30
cases rather than just fewer cases you know
1:19:33
about, then that demonstrates his deep knowledge of
1:19:36
quantum mechanics.
1:19:39
Surges in cases of coronavirus are not linked
1:19:42
to recent protests such as the Black Lives
1:19:45
Matter, George Floyd, and police protests.
1:19:48
Not even more people leaving their homes during
1:19:50
the warm weather explains the surge of new
1:19:52
coronavirus cases.
1:19:54
This is according to findings of USA Today,
1:19:56
an analysis of counties nationwide.
1:19:59
For now, surges seem to be most intense
1:20:02
in counties that had avoided the worst outbreaks
1:20:05
earlier this year.
1:20:06
The analysis found no single cause seems to
1:20:09
explain why some places have seen spikes while
1:20:12
others have not.
1:20:13
The report cites one health expert as saying
1:20:15
the virus is still out there and the
1:20:17
strategy for fighting it has not changed.
1:20:20
Will any White House officials be at the
1:20:22
rally tomorrow?
1:20:23
There'll be several White House officials at the
1:20:24
rally.
1:20:25
And will those officials, will you be there
1:20:27
for example?
1:20:28
I will be there.
1:20:29
Will you and other White House officials be
1:20:31
wearing masks at the rally?
1:20:32
It's a personal choice.
1:20:34
I won't be wearing a mask.
1:20:35
I can't speak for my colleagues.
1:20:36
And why won't you wear a mask?
1:20:38
Is it sort of a personal political statement?
1:20:40
Is it because the president would be disappointed
1:20:42
in you if you don't wear a mask?
1:20:44
It's a personal decision.
1:20:46
I'm tested regularly.
1:20:48
I feel that it's safe for me not
1:20:49
to be wearing a mask and I'm in
1:20:51
compliance with CDC guidelines which are recommended but
1:20:53
not required.
1:20:54
This is not a mask.
1:20:55
This is confidence.
1:20:57
It's for getting out and working anywhere other
1:21:00
than home.
1:21:01
This is not a mask.
1:21:03
This is solidarity.
1:21:05
It's for opening the door to a friend
1:21:07
and keeping the doors open to your favourite
1:21:10
places.
1:21:12
This is not a mask.
1:21:14
This is a sign of love.
1:21:17
It was sold with plenty of promise.
1:21:20
That is Australia's ticket.
1:21:21
A ticket to freedom.
1:21:23
So we can get back to the things
1:21:25
we love.
1:21:26
But so far the $1.5 million app
1:21:29
has hardly helped.
1:21:31
There haven't been new contacts identified through the
1:21:33
use of the COVID app.
1:21:34
Victoria, New South Wales, South Australia and Tasmania
1:21:37
yet to pick up a single close contact
1:21:40
from the app who hadn't already been identified
1:21:43
by contact tracers.
1:21:45
And in Queensland and Western Australia not one
1:21:48
confirmed case had downloaded the app.
1:21:51
The COVID-19 app is not working as
1:21:53
we hoped it would because too few people
1:21:55
have downloaded it.
1:21:56
Other states say tracing has been easier because
1:21:59
cases have been in hotel quarantine.
1:22:01
But in Victoria the virus is spreading in
1:22:04
the community and of the 568 cases confirmed
1:22:08
since the app was launched just over 30
1:22:12
had downloaded it.
1:22:13
It will help protect you.
1:22:15
It will help protect your family.
1:22:17
The UK government's not convinced that apps are
1:22:21
the right tool.
1:22:22
No country currently has a functioning track and
1:22:24
trace app.
1:22:26
I can't speak to those comments.
1:22:29
Australia's app doesn't notify users, only state governments,
1:22:33
when someone has been in contact with a
1:22:35
patient.
1:22:36
And Nine News has been told in some
1:22:38
cases the app didn't gather any data at
1:22:41
all.
1:22:41
The federal government is adamant the app is
1:22:43
working, insisting the country's low case numbers is
1:22:46
limiting how effective the app could be and
1:22:48
says it will be more useful as more
1:22:50
restrictions are lifted and more people stand around
1:22:53
each other.
1:22:54
Good evening from New York.
1:22:55
I'm Chris Hayes.
1:22:56
Right now, right this moment, there are Americans
1:22:59
who are alive and who are healthy who
1:23:02
will be dead by the fall.
1:23:03
And there are Americans who already died who
1:23:05
did not have to.
1:23:07
All because of the failures of our government
1:23:08
and more specifically the President of the United
1:23:11
States.
1:23:11
There is no other conclusion you can reach
1:23:13
at this point.
1:23:15
At this point there's nothing left to say
1:23:16
but that Donald Trump has gotten Americans killed
1:23:18
and is going to get even more Americans
1:23:21
killed in unfathomable numbers.
1:23:23
We've heard of this extensively.
1:23:25
The spike in cases is not coming with
1:23:28
a spike in deaths, sadly enough.
1:23:29
That's the one thing you look at because
1:23:31
that's a big worry.
1:23:33
Well, this is going to sound counterintuitive to
1:23:35
those who are trying to avoid another shutdown
1:23:38
because the plan that the mayor is floating,
1:23:41
he mentioned it last night on his Facebook
1:23:43
Live, actually involves a 35-day shutdown followed
1:23:48
by an extended period of lessons learned.
1:23:51
You remember the shutdown, the schools, parks and
1:23:54
businesses fully closed and churches were reluctant to
1:23:57
meet for fear of spreading the COVID-19
1:23:59
virus.
1:24:00
We all stayed home and only traveled to
1:24:02
essential businesses for food and supplies.
1:24:04
Well, if I understand the mayor, under this
1:24:06
proposal we can expect more of the same.
1:24:09
But coming out of the shutdown will be
1:24:11
different, he hopes, now that we've seen what
1:24:13
happens when people let their face masks down
1:24:16
and gather shoulder to shoulder in large numbers.
1:24:19
We're going to come out after 35 days.
1:24:23
Everybody's going to wear their face masks when
1:24:25
they're around other people.
1:24:26
Everybody's going to social distance.
1:24:28
Nobody's going to go out when they're sick.
1:24:30
Everybody's going to get tested.
1:24:31
We could do that.
1:24:33
We could come out, be in orange and
1:24:35
just stay in orange.
1:24:36
And if you look at this chart, that
1:24:37
also enables us to open up schools in
1:24:39
the fall.
1:24:40
Yeah, he's talking about our current stage four
1:24:42
orange on the city's COVID chart.
1:24:45
Everyone is struggling to find a way to
1:24:46
get our school kids back in the classroom.
1:24:48
The mayor sees this plan as one possibility,
1:24:52
but it would have to start pretty soon.
1:24:54
And just how long would we be in
1:24:56
this extended period of our best behavior?
1:24:59
Well, according to the mayor, until a vaccine
1:25:03
is available for everyone, it'll be that long.
1:25:06
I doubt seriously that any vaccine will ever
1:25:11
be 100% protected.
1:25:12
The best we've ever done is measles, which
1:25:15
is 97 to 98% effective.
1:25:18
If only, say, 70, 75% of Americans
1:25:22
are willing to get the vaccine, and it's
1:25:24
only, say, I think you just said 70,
1:25:26
75% effective, is that going to get
1:25:28
us to herd immunity?
1:25:31
Unlikely.
1:25:31
And that's one of the reasons why we
1:25:33
have to make sure we engage the community,
1:25:36
as we're doing now, to get community people
1:25:39
to help us, for people to understand that
1:25:43
we are doing everything we can to show
1:25:45
that it's safe and that it's effective.
1:25:47
And it's for the good of them as
1:25:48
individuals and in society to take the vaccine.
1:25:53
So we have a lot of work to
1:25:54
do, because as you well know, we've spoken
1:25:56
about this intensively in the past, there is
1:25:59
a general anti-science, anti-authority, anti-vaccine
1:26:02
feeling among some people in this country, an
1:26:06
alarmingly large percentage of people, relatively speaking.
1:26:10
The serious child abuse emergency room visits are
1:26:14
up 35% during the lockdown.
1:26:17
Now, let me tell you what that means.
1:26:19
This is very important.
1:26:21
Somebody who brings in their child to the
1:26:23
emergency room, that's not because they smacked them
1:26:26
around and gave them a black eye.
1:26:28
I'm saying this with sadness.
1:26:31
These emergency room visits are for children who
1:26:34
the parents think they might have killed them.
1:26:36
They're unresponsive.
1:26:37
They have multiple broken bones.
1:26:38
These are the most serious 35% increase
1:26:42
in child abuse, and that's directly due to
1:26:45
the lockdown.
1:26:46
And I'll explain why.
1:26:47
Because when you lose your job, the correlation
1:26:51
of amount of child abuse found in a
1:26:53
home is directly correlated for lower socioeconomic group,
1:26:57
unemployment, alcohol abuse.
1:26:59
This is markedly increasing during the lockdown when
1:27:02
we know that almost half of people making
1:27:05
$40,000 a year or less lost their
1:27:07
jobs.
1:27:08
By far more than people like you and
1:27:10
I.
1:27:10
And so when these people have children and
1:27:13
the schools are closed, and there's a tremendous
1:27:15
amount of stress in the household, we know
1:27:19
that the emergency room visits are going way
1:27:21
up.
1:27:21
And that's only part A.
1:27:22
Part B is that, do you know where
1:27:24
the number one place that child abuse is
1:27:27
noticed by an outside person?
1:27:30
The school.
1:27:31
You close the schools, you have no visibility
1:27:34
on the overwhelming majority of child abuse.
1:27:38
So this is creating a really a catastrophic,
1:27:42
sad, and simply unspoken harm to the children.
1:27:47
You realize, by the way, I didn't mention
1:27:49
in that, and this is in the article,
1:27:51
that when children go to school, that's the
1:27:53
number one place where people with children with
1:27:56
need glasses are detected.
1:27:58
Children that need hearing aids.
1:28:00
I mean, the schools are- The kids,
1:28:02
the school lunch program.
1:28:03
For some kids, it's the best meal they
1:28:04
get all day.
1:28:06
When you shut schools, you're really, and there's
1:28:11
no risk to the children.
1:28:12
Again, there's zero risk to the children.
1:28:15
You are directly harming children.
1:28:18
I don't understand how people who claim to
1:28:20
be so focused on children, teachers, teachers unions,
1:28:25
I think it's really outrageous.
1:28:27
This will go down as the most heinous
1:28:30
misapplication of public policy in modern America.
1:28:36
Hospitals on healthcare workers, paramedics and doctors and
1:28:39
nurses, it's really taking a toll on the
1:28:41
nation and the healthcare system in general.
1:28:43
Especially with the increased number of hospitalizations and
1:28:47
cases, it puts a strain during July, which
1:28:50
is a very important time of the year
1:28:51
because we tend to see more deaths in
1:28:54
the month of July because of the new
1:28:56
healthcare professionals that are entering the residency program.
1:29:00
So we've got a lot to do.
1:29:01
It comes down to simple- Wait a
1:29:03
minute.
1:29:03
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, stop, stop, stop.
1:29:05
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
1:29:07
You're about to make something really important point
1:29:09
about masks.
1:29:10
But what did you tell me?
1:29:11
You just said that in the month of
1:29:13
July, you see death rates increase because you've
1:29:15
got new students or medical professionals coming online.
1:29:20
Sure.
1:29:21
So yes, July is when, yes, July is
1:29:24
typically the month where we have people who
1:29:27
pay doctors, they graduate medical school and they
1:29:29
enter residency.
1:29:30
So sometimes we tend to see increase in
1:29:33
the rate of medical errors and deaths.
1:29:36
That's something that is well known in the
1:29:38
medical field.
1:29:40
So that just goes to show you, we
1:29:41
have the burden of this virus with new
1:29:44
doctors on board.
1:29:45
Of course, they're always being supervised by professional,
1:29:48
well-trained doctors.
1:29:49
But something to keep in mind is simple
1:29:51
measures of protecting yourself so you don't have
1:29:53
to enter the hospital, not only because it's
1:29:55
July, but we also have another holiday that
1:29:57
we're approaching, 4th of July next week.
1:30:00
We don't want to see a remake of
1:30:02
increasing the number of cases like we did
1:30:04
with Memorial Day.
1:30:05
But again, just simple measures of wearing your
1:30:07
mask, a facial cloth covering, physical distancing, avoiding
1:30:11
crowds, and keeping your hands washed and clean
1:30:14
until we get a vaccine.
1:30:15
That's the only way to eradicate this virus.
1:30:18
So it appears that 90% of the
1:30:22
hospital or of the beds that's possibly available
1:30:26
for COVID patients is occupied.
1:30:28
Well, that's actually not accurate.
1:30:30
What it means is the current phase that
1:30:33
the hospital is in has a 90%
1:30:36
occupancy for that particular phase.
1:30:39
According to NMED Hospital, COVID-19 patients only
1:30:42
make up about 6% of all current
1:30:44
patients.
1:30:45
NMED released this statement in WIFF News 4
1:30:47
regarding the numbers, saying in part, when our
1:30:50
census dropped significantly at the beginning of the
1:30:52
COVID-19 outbreak, we appropriately reduced the number
1:30:55
of staff beds we report.
1:30:56
The fact that our occupancy is high means
1:30:58
we are doing a good job of matching
1:31:00
our resources to the level of demand during
1:31:03
this crisis.
1:31:04
Of course, you just heard McMaster mention how
1:31:06
we need and want more people to start
1:31:08
wearing masks and social distancing here in South
1:31:11
Carolina.
1:31:11
The people of Anderson County reiterating that same
1:31:15
idea.
1:31:15
Josh, I'm sure you would like to talk
1:31:17
to this lady because she's very pleasant.
1:31:21
Well, trying to get a hold of anyone
1:31:24
in this office is just ridiculous.
1:31:27
Yes, I have some questions about town.
1:31:30
Are people and businesses in Grants Pass supposed
1:31:35
to wear masks?
1:31:36
Because they're not wearing masks over at the
1:31:40
little subway place up north of town.
1:31:44
You got a kid drawing your drink and
1:31:47
he's giving it because he can't wear a
1:31:48
mask.
1:31:49
I mean, aren't restaurant workers supposed to wear
1:31:52
masks?
1:31:52
And why isn't the guy up there at
1:31:56
the little pantry up north of town right
1:31:59
before you get on the freeway?
1:32:00
Why isn't he wearing a mask when he's
1:32:03
working while he's coughing?
1:32:06
Are masks required at people who work?
1:32:08
Because maybe you better get out and do
1:32:10
your goddamn job.
1:32:13
Some employees at a Whole Foods in Cambridge
1:32:16
wearing masks with a message, but the store
1:32:19
sent them home saying wearing those masks violates
1:32:22
the company's policy.
1:32:23
We are simply asking to support what they
1:32:26
say they support and really support each other.
1:32:30
That's really all it is.
1:32:31
It's basic.
1:32:32
It's simple.
1:32:33
Matter.
1:32:34
Black lives matter.
1:32:36
This Cambridge Whole Foods employee puts on a
1:32:38
Black Lives Matter mask while making a delivery
1:32:40
outside the River Street store.
1:32:43
Employees say they've chosen to walk out for
1:32:45
not being allowed to wear them.
1:32:47
They told us that we are violating dress
1:32:50
code and we stated to them that we're
1:32:52
allowed to wear brands that are industry affiliated.
1:32:55
Wednesday, Savannah Kinzer says seven employees were sent
1:32:58
home another 13 Thursday.
1:33:01
Whole Foods Market responding, saying in part, all
1:33:04
team members must comply with our longstanding company
1:33:07
dress code, which prohibits clothing with visible slogans,
1:33:10
messages, logos, or advertising that are not company
1:33:14
related.
1:33:14
The company says employees are offered compliant masks
1:33:17
and if they don't want to wear one,
1:33:19
they can't work.
1:33:21
Kinzer says she's run out of the 85
1:33:22
masks they've given out so far.
1:33:25
She says the face covering is not a
1:33:27
political statement.
1:33:29
We're going to continue this and we hope
1:33:31
to just normalize it and we hope that
1:33:33
it empowers other people, other stores to do
1:33:35
it too.
1:33:36
Because again, it's not about politics.
1:33:38
It's simply about inclusion and equity and making
1:33:43
sure that everyone feels welcome.
1:33:44
At Whole Foods.
1:33:47
Oh, brother.
1:33:49
You remember, I just forgot about flatten the
1:33:52
curve.
1:33:53
Flatten the curve, everybody.
1:33:54
Let's do it.
1:33:54
We can do it.
1:33:55
We can all work together.
1:33:56
Was it going to be two weeks to
1:33:58
flatten the curve?
1:33:59
Was it 10 days?
1:34:01
I think it started off as two weeks.
1:34:02
Yeah.
1:34:03
Oh man, it's unbelievable.
1:34:05
And I remember that Tina and I were
1:34:07
in Austin still in the other house and
1:34:10
I was glued to the TV and then
1:34:12
this flatten the curve came up and it
1:34:14
was just so obvious that this was not
1:34:16
going to be good.
1:34:17
It was not going to be a good
1:34:18
thing.
1:34:19
It was really bad.
1:34:21
It was unbelievable.
1:34:23
Okay.
1:34:23
You're still with us.
1:34:24
We appreciate it.
1:34:25
Of course, we will be thanking everybody who
1:34:28
supported this show and our next show.
1:34:30
We'll do that.
1:34:31
We'll do a double donation segment on the
1:34:33
next show as we usually do.
1:34:35
And what are you planning on doing while
1:34:38
I am traveling?
1:34:40
Well, I'll probably just lounge.
1:34:43
I don't know.
1:34:44
I just lounge.
1:34:45
Maybe I'll go shopping.
1:34:46
I'll not go shopping.
1:34:47
That's why I go shopping in real stores.
1:34:49
Real stores that you walk into.
1:34:51
I'll go shopping at the Macy's store in
1:34:54
San Francisco.
1:34:55
They're shutting it down.
1:34:56
And it's a big giant store in Union
1:34:58
Square.
1:34:59
They're shutting that one down?
1:35:00
They're shutting it down for good because Macy's
1:35:03
doesn't know what they're doing.
1:35:04
That was the only reason for going to
1:35:06
Union Square.
1:35:07
Well, now there's going to be no reason
1:35:09
to go.
1:35:10
So I'm going to go there and do
1:35:12
some shopping.
1:35:13
If I can see what there is, there's
1:35:14
really not much more than perfume there the
1:35:16
way I see it.
1:35:17
But I'll go shopping.
1:35:19
It'll be the last Christmas at Macy's.
1:35:21
Do you think they'll turn that into apartments
1:35:23
like they're doing in other malls?
1:35:25
Like other stores?
1:35:27
It's such a good place for retail.
1:35:29
But the place is kind of...
1:35:30
Clearly not.
1:35:31
That building was built for Macy's.
1:35:33
It was like a corner store.
1:35:35
I don't know what they're going to do.
1:35:36
That's horrible.
1:35:37
San Francisco's a mess.
1:35:39
That's right.
1:35:40
And now we have the new mayor who
1:35:42
I thought was kind of a...
1:35:44
He's a Democrat, but he's going to be
1:35:47
cracking down.
1:35:48
He's going to Trump-proof San Francisco.
1:35:50
Oh boy.
1:35:51
To protect the gay community, by the way,
1:35:53
from being deported.
1:35:54
That's what he said on television.
1:35:56
He's going to deport the gays?
1:35:58
Well, that's what they think Trump's going to
1:36:00
do.
1:36:01
So these people are nuts.
1:36:02
And so the Macy's, I'll go there and
1:36:04
then I'll feel bad about it.
1:36:07
So that's what I'm going to do while
1:36:08
you're gone.
1:36:09
And I do want to remind people that
1:36:11
since this is a donation segment, that if
1:36:13
they're going to...
1:36:15
Just thinking about this particular COVID moment.
1:36:20
Remember when that all happened and how the
1:36:23
show helped.
1:36:24
Helped the show.
1:36:26
Yes.
1:36:28
Noagendadonations.com, please.
1:36:29
Yes.
1:36:30
Noagendadonations.com.
1:36:30
Everyone's always saying we helped them during this.
1:36:33
And it would be great if you...
1:36:34
Yeah, I just want to remind everybody.
1:36:36
Good idea.
1:36:36
Now, let's go back to when the cops
1:36:39
were just swarming the cities because we had
1:36:42
to make sure everyone was wearing a mask.
1:36:43
Mask up.
1:36:45
Remember that?
1:36:45
Mask up.
1:36:46
Mask up.
1:36:46
Yeah, it was the worst.
1:36:47
Social distancing.
1:36:49
Stay away, slave.
1:36:49
Mask up.
1:36:50
Back to Strokey Bills.
1:36:52
Best if there is such a thing of
1:36:55
COVID.
1:36:57
You have been doing these for the past
1:37:00
month, which has put you in contact with
1:37:02
more people.
1:37:03
Have you been tested for coronavirus?
1:37:06
And if so, how frequently are you doing
1:37:08
that?
1:37:08
No, I have not been protected.
1:37:11
I have not been tested for the coronavirus
1:37:14
for two reasons.
1:37:15
One, I've had no symptoms, as my mother
1:37:19
would say, knock on wood.
1:37:21
And number two, I haven't wanted to take
1:37:23
anybody else's place in the process.
1:37:26
But it's not to say that people aren't
1:37:27
dying.
1:37:28
It is actually to say that people are
1:37:29
dying.
1:37:30
And people are dying related to an exposure
1:37:32
to a respiratory virus.
1:37:34
There's huge problems with our diagnostic tool here.
1:37:36
PCR is the tool that's been used globally
1:37:39
to determine if somebody has COVID or not.
1:37:42
And PCR stands for polymerase chain reaction.
1:37:45
It's an amplification technique for finding small amounts
1:37:49
of DNA.
1:37:50
It is a very big dilemma because the
1:37:52
presence of that DNA doesn't mean you're ever
1:37:54
going to get sick from that virus.
1:37:56
Most of us will have that DNA in
1:37:58
our bloodstream for a period of time as
1:38:00
we go into our genetic update.
1:38:02
As we're taking this virus in, we proliferate
1:38:04
the virus to get it into enough cells
1:38:06
in the body.
1:38:06
And then we reach homeostasis, where we've taken
1:38:08
in enough of that genetic information that we
1:38:10
stop making it.
1:38:11
Or we make tiny amounts of it.
1:38:14
And so that balance with that DNA has
1:38:16
nothing to do with whether we're in a
1:38:18
developed disease or not.
1:38:19
Again, most people exposed to COVID were asymptomatic
1:38:22
or mildly symptomatic.
1:38:25
And so the presence of the DNA has
1:38:27
nothing to do with whether that person is
1:38:28
going to die in the coming months.
1:38:30
Well, let's talk about vaccines.
1:38:31
The world is abuzz about vaccines as the
1:38:34
way in which we might ultimately get past
1:38:36
this and have a chance to go back
1:38:38
to something approaching normal life, where we can
1:38:41
all be back together again because this risk
1:38:43
won't be so high.
1:38:44
Where are we, Tony, with the vaccine efforts
1:38:47
that have been moving forward at unprecedented speed?
1:38:50
But of course, they are full of scientific
1:38:53
challenges.
1:38:54
Tell us about that.
1:38:55
Yeah, I think the first thing people need
1:38:57
to understand, that although timetables are given, whenever
1:39:00
you're dealing with a vaccine development, there's never
1:39:03
a guarantee that your candidate will be both
1:39:06
safe and effective.
1:39:08
So there's always the big question mark.
1:39:10
However, assuming that there will be one and
1:39:13
maybe more safe and effective vaccines, here's where
1:39:17
we are with the timeline.
1:39:19
There are multiple candidates using different platforms, several
1:39:23
of which the United States government and the
1:39:25
NIH itself.
1:39:27
We are involved in helping to facilitate the
1:39:30
development, either directly or indirectly with our sites.
1:39:34
If things go the way it looks like
1:39:36
they're going, one of these candidates will enter
1:39:39
phase three trial for efficacy at the end
1:39:43
of July.
1:39:45
Other candidates will sequentially come in.
1:39:47
Another one at the end of August, one
1:39:50
in September, and one in October.
1:39:52
It will be important to encourage people to
1:39:55
enroll.
1:39:56
So people who are watching this right now
1:39:58
might want to pay attention in two or
1:40:01
three weeks to announcements that there might be
1:40:03
a vaccine trial enrollment somewhere in your neighborhood,
1:40:07
because we will depend on the public to
1:40:10
sign up and help us figure this out.
1:40:13
Let's be clear.
1:40:13
These vaccines have already gone through phase one
1:40:16
and phase two trials.
1:40:18
So we know that they've been safe for
1:40:20
a significant number of individuals, and we know
1:40:22
that they seem to be capable of raising
1:40:23
antibodies, but we haven't actually done the real
1:40:26
testing in the field that is going to
1:40:28
be in the so-called phase three trials.
1:40:31
But particularly, Tony, it seems to me, because
1:40:34
this disease, COVID-19, has hit particular groups
1:40:37
really hard, and I'm talking about older people,
1:40:40
people with chronic disease, African Americans, Latinos, we
1:40:45
want to be sure that the vaccine enrollment
1:40:47
includes those folks as well.
1:40:49
Are there ways, based on past experience, where
1:40:53
we are sure that outreach will work and
1:40:55
we will get people to sign up from
1:40:57
those groups?
1:40:59
Well, thank you, Francis.
1:41:01
What Dr. Collins was referring to, leading me
1:41:04
into the answer to the question, was that
1:41:06
this is something that we have done with
1:41:12
all our HIV trials.
1:41:14
There is an analogy here.
1:41:15
When you're dealing with HIV, there's a disparity
1:41:19
of susceptibility, of involvement.
1:41:22
Thirteen percent of the American population is African
1:41:25
American, and 45 to 50 percent of the
1:41:28
new infections.
1:41:29
So whenever we do treatment and prevention trials
1:41:32
through our networks, we outreach through community representatives
1:41:36
and community outreach.
1:41:38
We're going to use that same model to
1:41:40
do the same thing for the African American,
1:41:42
Latinx, and Native American populations.
1:41:46
In fact, Francis and I, right now, are
1:41:48
very heavily involved in making sure that the
1:41:51
trials are quite well represented by the individuals
1:41:56
who are most susceptible, not only to infection
1:41:59
because of certain circumstances in their life, but
1:42:02
also because of the fact that they are
1:42:04
more prone to complications because of underlying comorbidities.
1:42:09
It's a major goal of the trial to
1:42:12
be properly represented, and that's what we're going
1:42:14
to make certainly a high priority.
1:42:17
Coming back to the vaccines, I keep getting
1:42:19
asked, Tony, okay, so suppose this all looks
1:42:22
really good and you have a vaccine that's
1:42:24
safe and effective and we start immunizing people.
1:42:27
How long will that protection last?
1:42:30
When you've got a vaccine, are you going
1:42:33
to need to take it again a year
1:42:35
later?
1:42:35
I mean, like the flu, where you have
1:42:37
to have a shot every year, or will
1:42:39
you get a boost or not?
1:42:40
What do you think?
1:42:42
Well, this is, Francis, a great question, and
1:42:44
it's the reason why we have to be
1:42:45
humble about what we do.
1:42:47
We do not know the answer to that.
1:42:49
We do not know.
1:42:50
I mean, you can assume that you're going
1:42:52
to get protection at least to take us
1:42:54
through this cycle.
1:42:55
When you look at natural infection, it's anywhere
1:42:57
between six months to a year.
1:43:00
However, with this spike protein that's being presented
1:43:03
in the way that we do it, with
1:43:05
primes and in some cases boosts, we're going
1:43:07
to assume that there's a degree of protection,
1:43:10
but we have to assume that it's going
1:43:12
to be finite.
1:43:13
It's not going to be like a measles
1:43:14
vaccine.
1:43:15
So there's going to be follow-up in
1:43:17
those cases to see if we might need
1:43:19
a boost.
1:43:19
We may need a boost to continue the
1:43:22
protection.
1:43:23
But right now, we do not know how
1:43:24
long it lasts.
1:43:25
Herd immunity is something that we've been supporting,
1:43:29
and nature supports that.
1:43:31
Herd immunity to COVID-19 is just around
1:43:34
the corner, new studies say, suggesting humans are
1:43:37
rapidly building natural protections against the virus.
1:43:40
That's according to at least two new studies
1:43:42
by the Karolinska Institute in Sweden and the
1:43:45
University Hospital Tübingen in Germany.
1:43:48
The studies find at least 30 percent of
1:43:50
humans now have COVID-specific antibodies, which means
1:43:54
they've been exposed to weak samples of the
1:43:56
virus and effectively equals a natural vaccine.
1:43:59
Herd immunity is essentially here, it's coming.
1:44:02
Like yesterday, when you put up the chart
1:44:04
to show where the death levels were from
1:44:07
the coronavirus, which is down to zero, I
1:44:10
said, well, maybe the epidemic is over.
1:44:12
We still need people to wear the mask
1:44:13
in public.
1:44:14
We still need people to keep social distance
1:44:16
and isolation.
1:44:17
But Ryan, the one thing I want to
1:44:18
try to get across today is we need
1:44:20
to do that when we're in our homes
1:44:21
also.
1:44:22
As you know, I'm a lifelong San Antonioan,
1:44:24
grew up there, worked there for many years,
1:44:27
and I know how many multi-generational families
1:44:29
that we have.
1:44:30
And while we believe the community is doing
1:44:32
a great job of following the rules when
1:44:35
they're outside of the home, we really need
1:44:37
to be thinking about doing the same thing
1:44:39
when we're inside the home.
1:44:40
And all of us are capable of catching
1:44:44
this disease.
1:44:45
None of us are immune from this.
1:44:46
And the fact that we need to get
1:44:47
across this in order to protect ourselves, we
1:44:49
need to protect our families and our loved
1:44:51
ones.
1:44:52
We really need to be thinking about the
1:44:53
care that we're providing inside the home right
1:44:55
now to make sure that we're not spreading
1:44:57
this disease inside the home and then making
1:45:00
it come outside the house.
1:45:01
So let me get this straight.
1:45:02
What you're effectively saying is that people should
1:45:04
be wearing masks inside their own homes now?
1:45:06
Ryan, I'm saying if you can't socially distance
1:45:08
and can't socially isolate, or if you've been
1:45:10
out in public and exposing yourself and you
1:45:13
haven't decontaminated yourself good enough when you get
1:45:16
home, if you have someone that has underlying
1:45:19
medical conditions at home, we really need to
1:45:21
be thinking about that.
1:45:22
Now, if you're the same two or three
1:45:24
people that are living in the same house
1:45:25
and you're really taking care of yourself and
1:45:27
you're following all the rules, then you probably
1:45:29
don't need to wear a mask in your
1:45:30
home.
1:45:31
But if you've gone out for Memorial Day
1:45:34
or 4th of July, or you've gone out
1:45:36
to parties, or you've gone out to graduation
1:45:39
parties, when you've gone out and you've come
1:45:40
back in, you can be bringing that back
1:45:43
inside.
1:45:43
And I think it's no secret we all
1:45:45
like to relax when we're at home.
1:45:47
But if we're not paying attention to how
1:45:49
the virus spreads outside or inside the home,
1:45:53
we're going to keep spreading this virus.
1:45:54
Customers and employees boycotting side-by-side outside
1:45:58
of the Whole Foods in Cambridge.
1:46:00
We've been told to take our masks off
1:46:04
or leave without pay.
1:46:06
It's going on day 18.
1:46:08
Some employees walking off the job daily after
1:46:10
being reprimanded by management for wearing Black Lives
1:46:13
Matter face masks at work.
1:46:15
I think they should let us support any
1:46:18
kind of movement that is human rights and
1:46:22
that's equal rights.
1:46:24
Until their bottom line is hurt and they
1:46:25
see that people care, I don't think they're
1:46:28
going to change.
1:46:30
Even the most loyal of shoppers are changing
1:46:32
their minds about the company, standing in solidarity
1:46:35
with employees.
1:46:36
I feel completely uncomfortable giving them any of
1:46:39
my dollars.
1:46:41
So we've stopped shopping here.
1:46:43
A Whole Foods spokesperson told CBS News their
1:46:46
dress code policy prohibits visible slogans, messages or
1:46:50
logos unrelated to the company.
1:46:52
But their employees disagree.
1:46:54
We're gay pride pins.
1:46:56
We wear Red Sox masks.
1:47:00
We wear Bruins masks.
1:47:02
We're encouraged to.
1:47:03
And I can't understand why they're not changing
1:47:06
this policy because it's so small.
1:47:10
Even though some of these employees are on
1:47:12
the verge of losing their jobs, they vow
1:47:14
to continue to walk out and to speak
1:47:16
out until changes are made.
1:47:17
The Florida Department of Health releasing its daily
1:47:20
coronavirus testing report, showing a statewide positivity rate
1:47:24
of 11 percent.
1:47:26
But Fox 35 quickly noticing some shocking positivity
1:47:30
rates.
1:47:31
Countless labs reporting 100 percent positivity.
1:47:34
That means every single person tested was positive.
1:47:38
We sifted through the reports to find local
1:47:40
testing sites with high numbers.
1:47:43
Like this CentraCare, 83 people tested and all
1:47:47
positive.
1:47:48
Check out the Orlando VA, a positivity rate
1:47:51
of 76 percent.
1:47:53
NCF Diagnostics has a location in Alachua, 88
1:47:57
percent of tests coming back positive and 98
1:48:01
percent for Orlando Health.
1:48:03
How could that be?
1:48:05
We investigated these astronomical numbers contacting every location
1:48:09
mentioned.
1:48:09
Orlando Health, the only to respond, confirming errors
1:48:14
in the report.
1:48:15
Its positivity rate is in fact only 9
1:48:18
.4 percent.
1:48:20
Now we just heard back from the Orlando
1:48:22
VA.
1:48:22
They are looking into the numbers.
1:48:25
We haven't heard back from the other two
1:48:26
labs or the Florida Health Department of Health.
1:48:30
Of course, it makes you wonder if these
1:48:32
numbers are wrong.
1:48:33
Are other numbers on the report also wrong?
1:48:36
We'll stay on top of this story.
1:48:37
I have four children.
1:48:39
The youngest one is 10 months old.
1:48:41
You know, the biggest concern is playing with
1:48:43
kids.
1:48:44
I don't want them to get sick.
1:48:45
And with like a 10-month-old, she's
1:48:47
going to want to crawl, right?
1:48:49
And she's at that age where she'll put
1:48:50
everything in her mouth, right?
1:48:52
And she's always touching things.
1:48:53
And then the other concern is, you know,
1:48:54
right now it's hard to trust other people,
1:48:56
I think.
1:48:57
You have the crowds at the airports, going
1:48:59
through security.
1:49:00
So you're just exposing yourself.
1:49:03
More than that, you have people with this
1:49:06
virus that may not show symptoms until, you
1:49:09
know, you're on the plane and then it's
1:49:11
too late.
1:49:11
If you're, especially if you're going overseas, you
1:49:14
can't go anywhere.
1:49:15
You're stuck.
1:49:17
I'll wait.
1:49:18
I'll wait as long as I have to.
1:49:20
Even when a vaccine comes available, I'm not
1:49:23
going to be the first one to run
1:49:24
out and get it.
1:49:25
I'd like to make sure that it's going
1:49:27
to be effective and it works.
1:49:29
I mean, if it lasts a year, maybe
1:49:31
two years, that's just what we have to
1:49:33
do.
1:49:33
I mean, you know, I obviously want the
1:49:35
kids to get out.
1:49:36
I want my wife to go do the
1:49:37
things that they want to do.
1:49:38
I want to go do things that I
1:49:39
want to do.
1:49:40
But at this time, it's just what it
1:49:42
is.
1:49:43
I mean, so we just kind of have
1:49:44
to put up with it and make the
1:49:45
best out of our time.
1:49:46
Just over 100 days until Election Day.
1:49:49
And this morning, we have a new CBS
1:49:51
News Battleground tracker out that looks at the
1:49:54
presidential race in three states heavily impacted by
1:49:58
the coronavirus.
1:49:59
That's Arizona, Texas and Florida.
1:50:01
Results show former Vice President Joe Biden will
1:50:04
be competitive or better in all three states.
1:50:08
Mr. Biden and President Trump are tied 46
1:50:11
to 46 in Arizona.
1:50:13
President Trump is up 46 to 45 in
1:50:17
Texas.
1:50:17
And the former vice president is up by
1:50:20
six points, 48 to 42 in Florida.
1:50:24
New York's Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo seems to
1:50:26
be on something of a victory tour, congratulating
1:50:28
the state and himself for defeating the virus.
1:50:31
Even selling this poster, which shows his state
1:50:34
getting over the mountain by bringing down the
1:50:36
curve during the 111 days of hell, as
1:50:39
the governor put it.
1:50:40
The poster includes references to his daughters and
1:50:42
a boyfriend, little inside jokes.
1:50:45
There are no illustrations, however, of the more
1:50:47
than 32,000 dead New Yorkers, the highest
1:50:51
death toll by far of any state.
1:50:53
No rendering on that poster of criticism that
1:50:55
Governor Cuomo ignored.
1:50:56
Warnings, no depiction of the study that he
1:50:59
could have saved thousands of lives had he
1:51:01
and Mayor de Blasio acted sooner.
1:51:03
No painting there on the poster of his
1:51:05
since rescinded order that nursing homes take all
1:51:09
infected patients in.
1:51:11
Here's what Governor Cuomo had to say yesterday.
1:51:13
What we went through and what we did
1:51:15
was historic.
1:51:17
Because we did tame the beast.
1:51:20
We did turn the corner.
1:51:22
We did plateau that mountain.
1:51:25
And then we came down the other side.
1:51:28
And they will be talking about what we
1:51:30
did for decades to come.
1:51:34
And I'll just end with a little global
1:51:35
aside, which is the research that's being done
1:51:39
about how much better countries run by women
1:51:42
have done during the COVID pandemic.
1:51:45
From New Zealand to Taiwan to Germany to
1:51:49
Finland, etc.
1:51:51
And, you know, maybe it's not a very
1:51:53
big sample, but the kind of inclusive leadership
1:51:56
that actually followed the evidence and listened to
1:52:00
science has proven to be quite effective.
1:52:03
You take a picture of me.
1:52:05
Does that make you feel better?
1:52:06
Why don't you get a life, lady?
1:52:08
I have a life.
1:52:09
And it's going around taking pictures of people.
1:52:11
Yes, because what you're doing, can you not
1:52:13
follow the lines on the floor?
1:52:15
Keep your mouth running.
1:52:16
The governor, the mayor has asked us all
1:52:19
to wear masks.
1:52:20
And look at you, not wearing a mask.
1:52:22
Oh, dear.
1:52:22
I wear a mask to protect myself.
1:52:24
People have made this sex a fucking political.
1:52:26
It's unbelievable.
1:52:27
Now, you have accosted me in this store.
1:52:29
You've accosted me, but you can't even find
1:52:31
me with a six-week not wearing a
1:52:33
mask.
1:52:33
And if you're going to keep this up,
1:52:35
maybe we'll get the police department in here.
1:52:37
What'd you call 911 then?
1:52:38
Yeah, yeah.
1:52:40
Oh, God, another one.
1:52:42
You people are like monkeys.
1:52:43
Well, I'm out of a tree.
1:52:45
No, you're the monkey that hasn't.
1:52:47
Hey, I'm dragging those knuckles that you've not
1:52:49
evolved.
1:52:50
Okay, how's that grab you?
1:52:52
Ever heard of Darwinism, evolution, evolve, mister?
1:52:56
Why don't you burn something down?
1:52:59
Why don't you go back to where you
1:53:00
were?
1:53:04
Are you burning crosses?
1:53:07
You people are fucking idiots, man.
1:53:10
No, you're the idiot.
1:53:11
Yeah, yeah.
1:53:12
But you're the ones playing your life on
1:53:14
the freaking computer.
1:53:16
You have no life.
1:53:17
So this is what your life is?
1:53:19
Dude, I'm out doing my shopping.
1:53:23
You're unbelievable.
1:53:26
Good luck with the virus.
1:53:28
Good luck with the virus.
1:53:29
Your whole family tree is getting cut off
1:53:31
at its roots.
1:53:33
85 infants have tested positive for coronavirus in
1:53:36
Nueces County, which includes Corpus Christi.
1:53:38
The public health director made that announcement this
1:53:40
week and urged residents to wear masks and
1:53:43
practice social distancing.
1:53:45
These babies have not even had their first
1:53:47
birthday yet.
1:53:48
Please help us to stop the spread of
1:53:50
this disease.
1:53:51
No other details were provided on the condition
1:53:54
of those infants, but Corpus Christi currently has
1:53:56
82 deaths linked to the virus.
1:53:59
Chief, so tell us, what more do we
1:54:00
know about it came to be and also
1:54:02
about that White House relationship with Dr. Fauci?
1:54:04
Well, what we've seen is an escalating war
1:54:07
between the White House and Dr. Fauci.
1:54:09
Dr. Fauci has served some five presidents before
1:54:12
President Trump, and he's someone who's very restricted,
1:54:15
someone who's very restricted.
1:54:16
He was someone who also said before this
1:54:19
op-ed was written by Peter Navarro that
1:54:20
the American public should really trust scientists, including
1:54:23
himself.
1:54:24
The White House, you had your first conversation
1:54:27
with President Trump, we are told, this week
1:54:29
in perhaps a month or longer.
1:54:33
You had a meeting with the White House
1:54:35
chief of staff, Mark Meadows.
1:54:37
But just yesterday, he called you irresponsible for
1:54:41
a statement you made comparing, saying that this
1:54:44
pandemic could be worse than the 1918 pandemic.
1:54:50
You also have been attacked, as you know,
1:54:52
by Peter Navarro, the White House advisor.
1:54:56
Are you convinced that the White House is
1:54:59
not trying to discredit you, Dr. Fauci?
1:55:01
You know, I think you've got to be
1:55:03
careful when you say the White House.
1:55:05
The White House in general is not trying
1:55:08
to.
1:55:09
Certainly, the president is not.
1:55:11
I certainly believe that Mark Meadows is not.
1:55:14
What happened with Peter Navarro in that editorial,
1:55:16
I can't even comment on that.
1:55:18
That just is beyond my comprehension, why he
1:55:21
did that.
1:55:21
But I do not believe that the White
1:55:23
House is trying to discredit me.
1:55:25
No, I don't.
1:55:26
Do you think there are individuals in the
1:55:27
White House who are?
1:55:29
Well, I already mentioned one.
1:55:30
And Mark Meadows saying you're irresponsible for that
1:55:33
comment?
1:55:34
Well, what happened there is that that was
1:55:36
something that was said in another interview where
1:55:40
I went where there could have been a
1:55:42
misunderstanding that I was equating them.
1:55:45
So when the thing we wanted to do
1:55:46
was to correct that, which I did in
1:55:49
an interview that I had just like yesterday,
1:55:51
I believe.
1:55:52
I don't think he was calling me irresponsible
1:55:55
as a person.
1:55:56
I think he was referring to his concern
1:55:58
that there was going to be some misunderstanding.
1:56:01
I don't have a problem with that.
1:56:03
Mark and I are on very good terms.
1:56:05
Let me ask it this way, Dr. Fauci.
1:56:07
Do you think you have the full backing
1:56:08
and support of the White House from the
1:56:12
president on down?
1:56:13
I do.
1:56:14
I do.
1:56:15
I believe I do.
1:56:16
I spoke to the president about that.
1:56:18
I believe I do.
1:56:19
And why do you think they've been trying
1:56:21
to limit your public appearances?
1:56:22
Well, I think it's a question of different
1:56:25
messages getting out.
1:56:26
You know, the real emphasis right now, you
1:56:29
know, is on more of trying to get
1:56:32
the country opened again and economic messages.
1:56:36
I don't think there's going to be that.
1:56:38
Yes, it varies.
1:56:39
There are some times when I'm on a
1:56:40
lot and there's sometimes when I'm not.
1:56:43
Here I am with you.
1:56:44
You know, I always like to be with
1:56:45
you.
1:56:46
I'm glad they said yes to that.
1:56:47
And we appreciate it.
1:56:49
And we appreciate it.
1:56:50
Do you have a worry, though, Dr. Fauci,
1:56:52
that the anti-vaccine movement could interfere with
1:56:56
this timetable?
1:56:58
Yes, I do, because, I mean, we have
1:57:00
to admit and realize that there is an
1:57:03
anti-vax movement that we've had to struggle
1:57:07
with in this country.
1:57:09
And I believe the solution to that would
1:57:11
be community engagement and community outreach to get
1:57:16
people that are trusted by the community to
1:57:19
go out there and explain to them the
1:57:21
importance of not only getting engaged in the
1:57:24
vaccine trial, but the importance of when the
1:57:27
vaccine is shown to be safe and effective
1:57:30
to actually take the vaccine, because it could
1:57:33
be lifesaving and it certainly would be the
1:57:36
solution to this terrible pandemic.
1:57:38
We're not just fighting an epidemic.
1:57:40
We're fighting an infodemic.
1:57:42
This famous quote from WHO Director General has
1:57:45
been widely shared.
1:57:46
So what is an infodemic?
1:57:48
An infodemic is an excessive amount of information
1:57:50
about a problem, making it difficult to identify
1:57:53
a solution.
1:57:54
During a health emergency, an infodemic can drown
1:57:57
out reliable information and allow rumors to spread
1:58:00
more easily, impeding an effective public health response.
1:58:04
Why is it happening now?
1:58:06
Information can spread faster than a virus.
1:58:08
With rapid growth of digital communications and social
1:58:11
media platforms, information spreads fast from online to
1:58:14
our physical lives.
1:58:16
And how does it affect us?
1:58:18
Online information can negatively affect our psychology, daily
1:58:21
lives, and behaviors, worsening the ongoing crisis at
1:58:24
hand.
1:58:24
Infodemics make it difficult to recognize accurate and
1:58:27
reliable information that tells people what preventative actions
1:58:30
they should take.
1:58:31
Some even promote stigma, discrimination, or violence.
1:58:34
Therefore, we all play an important role to
1:58:37
share trustworthy information and reduce disinformation.
1:58:41
Here are simple actions we can do to
1:58:42
mitigate the infodemic.
1:58:44
1.
1:58:44
Look for facts and evidence.
1:58:46
Be critical when receiving information.
1:58:48
Question the source for accuracy and evidence.
1:58:51
Compare with other sources.
1:58:53
2.
1:58:54
Choose carefully.
1:58:55
Share, like, or forward only content from trusted
1:58:58
sources.
1:58:59
3.
1:58:59
Be cautious.
1:59:00
Do not reshare, forward, or like false information
1:59:03
you know is not true.
1:59:04
4.
1:59:05
Be a good example.
1:59:07
Correct or call out people in your social
1:59:09
networks when they post something untrue.
1:59:11
Refer them to verified content and expert organizations
1:59:13
for further information.
1:59:15
5.
1:59:16
Spend less time online.
1:59:18
Only seek the latest information at specific times
1:59:20
of the day, once or twice a day
1:59:23
if needed.
1:59:24
Exercise, listen to music, or read a book.
1:59:26
This helps to maintain good physical and mental
1:59:28
health.
1:59:29
Together, let's combat disinformation and misinformation.
1:59:32
Turn the infodemic into a positive information experience,
1:59:36
one that promotes facts and science.
2:00:39
and the government agreed to offer solidarity and
2:00:42
participate in the trial, which is being led
2:00:44
by Oxford University through South Africa's Birch University.
2:00:48
The difficulty, of course, is one trying to
2:00:52
secure a sufficient number of volunteers for the
2:00:54
trial, with, as you correctly point out, within
2:00:58
a climate where the numbers of people living
2:01:01
with COVID are increasing, and we also estimate
2:01:05
that that is a significant undercount because our
2:01:09
testing strategy has been hampered by the lack
2:01:11
of available testing kits, so the criteria for
2:01:15
testing has changed, and in effect it amounts
2:01:17
to rationing at the moment.
2:01:19
The second issue with the trial, which actually
2:01:22
is, you know, involves quite significantly a pharmaceutical
2:01:27
company called AstraZeneca, and the issue around AstraZeneca's
2:01:32
relationship with Oxford, the relationship with the South
2:01:36
African government, as in the contractual relationship, including
2:01:39
Birch University and clinical participants in other parts
2:01:43
of the world, in Brazil as well, is
2:01:46
unclear.
2:01:47
We're calling for transparency in those agreements, because
2:01:50
on the one hand, if we are going
2:01:52
to participate in a trial that is trying
2:01:54
to ensure equitable access to a vaccine, if
2:01:58
it is successful.
2:01:59
And I had a nurse at, nurses at
2:02:03
Walter Reed Hospital who would bend down and
2:02:07
whisper in my ear and go home and
2:02:09
get me pillows.
2:02:10
They would make sure they'd actually, probably nothing
2:02:13
ever taught in, you can't do it in
2:02:15
the COVID time, but they'd actually breathe in
2:02:17
my nostrils to make me move, to get
2:02:20
me moving.
2:02:21
I understand hospitals are so overwhelmed in one
2:02:24
county in southern Texas so that doctors have
2:02:27
to choose who to send home to die.
2:02:30
What are you learning?
2:02:32
Hey, Wolf.
2:02:32
Well, this is happening in Starr County down
2:02:34
there in south Texas, an area that has
2:02:36
been the hotspot within this Texas hotspot.
2:02:39
County officials, they're saying at the county hospital
2:02:41
in Starr County, that they're going to create
2:02:44
essentially ethics and triage teams to go through
2:02:48
the patients and determine which patients can be
2:02:51
treated there at the hospital and which patients
2:02:53
might be too sick to be treated and
2:02:55
have to go home and, and, and wait
2:02:57
to die essentially.
2:02:59
This because the number of COVID patients has
2:03:02
exploded there over the course of just the
2:03:04
last month.
2:03:05
County officials say they didn't have any COVID
2:03:07
patients about a month ago.
2:03:08
Now they have more than 1,400, more
2:03:11
than 40 added to the rolls there yesterday.
2:03:14
So a great deal of concern there.
2:03:16
Hospitalizations and deaths up.
2:03:18
The number of overall new cases is beginning
2:03:19
to show signs of plateauing, but there's still
2:03:22
disturbing details in this medical data here in
2:03:24
Dallas County.
2:03:25
The County judge announced that one of the
2:03:27
people who died reported, died today was a
2:03:30
five-year-old child.
2:03:31
The top 10 videos that spread lies about
2:03:33
you had almost 5 million views.
2:03:35
It's also pointed out that according to Zignal
2:03:37
Labs, which is a media analysis company that
2:03:39
tracks this, misinformation about you is the most
2:03:41
widespread of all coronavirus falsehoods.
2:03:45
So there's a conspiracy theory that one of
2:03:49
our viewers asked about.
2:03:52
I just want to play that, that sound.
2:03:55
What would you say to the fringe portions
2:03:57
of the public like conspiracy theorists that seem
2:04:00
to think that you're somehow responsible for the
2:04:03
outbreak?
2:04:04
There's also a conspiracy theory that you're pushing
2:04:06
vaccines because you're going to inject people with
2:04:08
a tracking device when they get the vaccine.
2:04:10
It's all, it's all part of a so
2:04:11
-called globalist plot to control the world.
2:04:15
QAnon folks are, you know, which is actually
2:04:17
a group that's been targeting me as well
2:04:19
lately, they're claiming falsely that I'm somehow connected
2:04:22
with Jeffrey Epstein and global Kabbalists of sex
2:04:24
traffickers.
2:04:25
It's insane.
2:04:26
What, what do you say to people who
2:04:28
believe this stuff?
2:04:28
Because I mean, I'm sure you are inundated
2:04:30
by, I am by people direct messaging me,
2:04:33
just insane stuff.
2:04:35
It's not at all.
2:04:35
I mean, I can tell you, I get
2:04:37
stuff from people who seem, you know, they
2:04:39
have lives, they have families.
2:04:40
I don't know if they genuinely believe this
2:04:42
and they've just been misled, but you know,
2:04:44
and for me, it's, you know, I, they
2:04:46
claim I'm, I was on Jeffrey Epstein's airplane
2:04:48
and going to his Island with Tom Hanks
2:04:50
or, or, I mean, just, just insane, crazy
2:04:52
stuff.
2:04:52
Um, what do you, I mean, do you
2:04:55
think, I know internet companies are looking at,
2:04:57
at, at this, do you wish that they
2:04:59
would play a role in, in taking stuff
2:05:02
down, which is as demonstrably false?
2:05:04
Because I mean, it does have real world,
2:05:06
you know, it does have real world impact
2:05:11
on, on vaccines or, you know, a nut
2:05:13
showing up to a pizza parlor in Washington,
2:05:15
DC with a gun.
2:05:16
Yeah.
2:05:16
In some cases they are taking things down.
2:05:19
Um, you know, it, it's a bad combination
2:05:22
of pandemic and social media and people looking
2:05:26
for very simple explanation.
2:05:28
Who's the bad guy here.
2:05:30
Um, and a lot of that's been connected
2:05:32
to politics, um, more in the U S
2:05:35
than in other locations.
2:05:37
Um, and you know, of course, vaccines weren't,
2:05:40
uh, popular with everybody, even before this all,
2:05:43
all started.
2:05:44
So I, you know, I'm a big believer
2:05:46
in getting the truth out.
2:05:48
And if, if, but it's, it's kind of
2:05:50
not as titillating to say, you know, uh,
2:05:54
Cooper is innocent.
2:05:55
Uh, Oh, well, uh, you know, that's not
2:05:59
as exciting.
2:06:00
You don't forward that to quite as many
2:06:01
people, uh, as you do, um, the, the,
2:06:07
the acquisition.
2:06:09
Yeah.
2:06:09
On Tuesday, the centers for disease control and
2:06:11
prevention revealed the actual number of coronavirus infections
2:06:15
nationwide may be 24 times higher than the
2:06:18
public count.
2:06:20
This comes as the Trump administration's opposing more
2:06:22
federal funding for COVID-19 testing.
2:06:25
The white house has refused to spend up
2:06:27
to $8 billion already allocated for testing, even
2:06:32
though many States and cities face severe testing
2:06:36
shortages.
2:06:37
This morning is COVID cases mount across the
2:06:40
country.
2:06:40
The mass debate is intensifying.
2:06:43
People are very passionate on both sides of
2:06:45
the great mass debate.
2:06:45
The partisan mass debate is heating up mass
2:06:47
debates growing.
2:06:48
The president is trying to have us cover
2:06:50
the mass debate.
2:06:51
CBS target and Walgreens are getting in on
2:06:54
the mass debate.
2:06:55
The mass debate now taking center stage at
2:06:57
local restaurants.
2:06:58
It's nine minutes after six now, and there's
2:07:00
a new video of a raging mass debate.
2:07:02
The mass debate in Georgia is getting ugly.
2:07:05
The great mass debate in West Virginia might
2:07:07
soon be coming to an end.
2:07:08
This mass debate is far from over.
2:07:10
How many mass debates have you gotten into?
2:07:12
Love to hear it.
2:07:12
The mass debate was taken to a whole
2:07:14
nother level.
2:07:15
Bishop David Zubik tells Pittsburgh's action news for,
2:07:18
he found himself in the middle of a
2:07:19
mass debate.
2:07:20
We'll dive deeper into this pet store mass
2:07:22
debate.
2:07:22
So we're going to begin with this thing
2:07:24
we're calling the great mass debate.
2:07:27
I think we're going to get to the
2:07:29
point where eye protection is recommended.
2:07:31
You know, it might, I mean, if you
2:07:33
really want perfect protection of your mucosal surfaces,
2:07:37
just for your audience, Jen, as you very
2:07:40
well know, you have mucosa in the nose,
2:07:43
mucosa in the mouth, but you also have
2:07:45
mucosa in the eye.
2:07:47
And that's one of the things that, you
2:07:49
know, theoretically you should protect all the mucosal
2:07:52
surfaces.
2:07:53
So if you have goggles or an eye
2:07:55
or an eye shield, you should use it.
2:07:58
I mean, it's not universally recommended, but if
2:08:01
you really want to be complete, you should
2:08:03
probably use it if you can.
2:08:05
It's just that it's so easy for people
2:08:07
to just make a cloth mask.
2:08:09
Moderna vaccines sound concerning.
2:08:11
We looked after the second dose, at least
2:08:14
80% of participants experienced a systemic side
2:08:18
effect ranging from severe chills to fevers.
2:08:22
So are these vaccines safe?
2:08:27
Well, the FDA not being pressured will look
2:08:34
hard at that.
2:08:35
The FDA is the gold standard of regulators
2:08:37
and their current guidance on this.
2:08:41
If they stick with that is very, very
2:08:44
appropriate.
2:08:46
And, you know, the side effects were not
2:08:51
super severe.
2:08:52
That is, it didn't cause permanent health problems
2:08:55
for the things that are they, you know,
2:08:58
Moderna did have to go with a fairly
2:09:00
high dose.
2:09:01
And so, you know, to get the antibodies,
2:09:05
some of the other vaccines are going able
2:09:08
to go with lower doses to get responses
2:09:12
that are pretty high, including the J&J
2:09:15
and the Pfizer.
2:09:16
And so there's a lot of characteristics of
2:09:19
these vaccines.
2:09:21
It's great that we have multiple of them
2:09:23
that are going out there.
2:09:26
And yes, I think, you know, the data
2:09:27
better than I do, but the bill bill
2:09:30
that the data showed that everybody with a
2:09:31
high dose had a side effect.
2:09:34
Yeah.
2:09:34
But some of that is, is not dramatic
2:09:37
where, you know, it's just, you know, super
2:09:39
painful, but yes, there, we need to make
2:09:41
sure there's not severe side effects.
2:09:43
The FDA, I, I, I think we'll do
2:09:47
a good job of that despite the pressure.
2:09:50
How many doses of the vaccine will we
2:09:52
need?
2:09:53
Well, none of the vaccines at this point
2:09:55
appear like they'll work with a single dose.
2:09:57
That was the hope at the very beginning.
2:10:02
Maybe one of them, particularly in the second
2:10:04
generation, won't surprise us.
2:10:05
We hope just two, although in the elderly,
2:10:08
sometimes it, it takes more.
2:10:11
And so making sure we have lots of
2:10:13
elderly people in the trial will give us
2:10:16
that data.
2:10:17
The gentleman yields back.
2:10:18
I would remind Mr. Jordan, Mr. Biggs, and
2:10:22
Mr. Johnson to stop violating the rules of
2:10:25
the committee, to stop violating the safety of
2:10:27
the members of the committee, to stop, um,
2:10:31
holding themselves out as not caring by refusing
2:10:34
to wear their masks.
2:10:36
Is it permissible to drink a sip of
2:10:38
coffee?
2:10:38
It is not permissible.
2:10:39
Not to drink.
2:10:40
We can't drink.
2:10:40
I'm getting ready to ask questions now.
2:10:43
I'm getting ready to ask questions.
2:10:43
Mr, um, Mr. Gates is recognized.
2:10:48
No, no, no.
2:10:49
He's already went.
2:10:49
He went.
2:10:50
And that's why I took off my mask,
2:10:52
Mr. Chairman.
2:10:53
I'm going to go.
2:10:53
I'm going to go.
2:10:54
Okay.
2:10:54
Mr. Jordan is recognized.
2:10:56
Claiming my time in April, President Trump irresponsibly
2:11:00
suggested that the American people inject themselves with
2:11:06
bleach.
2:11:07
Was that superb?
2:11:08
Yes or no.
2:11:10
That's not what I heard.
2:11:11
That's exactly what he said.
2:11:13
That's what the American people heard.
2:11:15
And you know it and you can't defend
2:11:17
it.
2:11:18
Let's move on to May.
2:11:20
Tonight, the startling new prediction from the CDC,
2:11:24
America could see 20,000 more deaths in
2:11:27
the next three weeks.
2:11:28
And Florida in the middle of a pandemic
2:11:30
now bracing for a hurricane.
2:11:33
Florida's governor declaring a state of emergency, shutting
2:11:37
down COVID testing sites.
2:11:39
The president on the ground there tonight, greeting
2:11:41
a crowd of supporters without masks.
2:11:44
All this as Hurricane Isaias pounds the Caribbean
2:11:48
with devastating floods and is now threatening major
2:11:51
cities along the East Coast.
2:11:54
Deadline looming.
2:11:56
More than 25 million Americans will lose critical
2:11:58
unemployment aid at midnight as Congress goes home
2:12:02
for the weekend without reaching a deal.
2:12:05
Unfounded attacks on mail-in voting.
2:12:08
The president continues to undermine the longstanding practice
2:12:12
of voting by mail.
2:12:14
Growing concerns that the U.S. Postal Service,
2:12:17
led by one of President Trump's biggest donors,
2:12:19
is slowing mail service.
2:12:21
Is that mail is backing up, is getting
2:12:23
delayed.
2:12:24
Democrats tonight accuse President Trump of undermining democracy.
2:12:30
Bitcoin bust.
2:12:32
Tonight, Florida authorities arrest the mastermind behind that
2:12:35
Twitter attack of 130 accounts, including President Obama,
2:12:40
Jeff Bezos, and Elon Musk.
2:12:42
Turns out he's 17 years old.
2:12:46
And tonight, CBS's Steve Hartman is on the
2:12:49
road with a local businessman who's helping send
2:12:53
75 kids to college.
2:12:55
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
2:12:58
Dr. Fauci, do protests increase the spread of
2:13:01
the virus?
2:13:04
Do protests increase the spread of the virus?
2:13:06
I think I can make a general statement.
2:13:09
Well, half a million protesters on June 6
2:13:11
alone.
2:13:11
I'm just asking that number of people.
2:13:12
Does it increase the spread of the virus?
2:13:15
Crowding together, particularly when you're not wearing a
2:13:18
mask, contributes to the spread of the virus.
2:13:20
Should we limit the protesting?
2:13:23
I'm not sure what you mean.
2:13:25
Should how do we say limit the protesting?
2:13:27
The government limit the protesting.
2:13:31
I don't think that's relevant to.
2:13:34
Well, you just said if it increases the
2:13:35
spread of the virus, I'm just asking, should
2:13:37
we limit it?
2:13:38
Well, I'm not in a position to determine
2:13:40
what the government can do in a forceful
2:13:42
way.
2:13:42
Well, you make all kinds of recommendations.
2:13:44
You make comments on dating, on baseball, and
2:13:46
everything you can imagine.
2:13:47
I'm just asking.
2:13:47
You just said that protests increase the spread.
2:13:50
I'm just asking, should we try to limit
2:13:51
the protest?
2:13:51
No, I think I would leave that to
2:13:52
people who have more of a position to
2:13:55
do that.
2:13:55
I can tell you.
2:13:56
Government stopping people from going to church, Dr.
2:13:59
Fauci.
2:14:01
Last week in the Calvary Chapel case, five
2:14:03
liberals on the Supreme Court said it was
2:14:05
OK for Nevada to limit church services.
2:14:09
I mean, Justice Gorsuch said it best.
2:14:11
He said there's no there's no world in
2:14:12
which the Constitution permits Nevada to favor Caesar's
2:14:15
Palace over Calvary Chapel.
2:14:16
I'm just asking, is there a world where
2:14:17
the Constitution says you can favor one First
2:14:20
Amendment liberty protesting over another practicing your faith?
2:14:24
I'm not favoring anybody over anybody.
2:14:27
I'm just making a statement that's a broad
2:14:29
statement that avoid crowds of any type, no
2:14:33
matter where you are, because that leads to
2:14:36
the acquisition and transmission.
2:14:38
And I don't judge one crowd versus another
2:14:40
crowd.
2:14:41
When you're in a crowd, particularly if you're
2:14:43
not wearing a mask, that induces.
2:14:46
It's a simple question, doctor.
2:14:48
Should we limit the protest?
2:14:49
Government is obviously limiting people.
2:14:51
And look, I know there's been no violence
2:14:54
that I can see at church.
2:14:56
I haven't seen people during a church service
2:14:57
go out and harm police officers or burn
2:14:59
buildings.
2:15:00
But we know that I mean, for 63
2:15:02
days, nine weeks, it's been happening in Portland.
2:15:05
One night in Chicago, 49 officers were injured,
2:15:09
but no limit to no limit to protest.
2:15:12
But boy, you can't go to church on
2:15:14
Sunday.
2:15:15
I don't know how many times I can
2:15:17
answer that.
2:15:17
I'm not going to opine on limiting anything.
2:15:19
I'm just going to tell you, you've opined
2:15:21
on a lot of things, Dr. Yeah, but
2:15:23
I've never seen something that directly impacts the
2:15:25
spread of the virus.
2:15:25
And I'm asking your your your position on
2:15:27
the protest.
2:15:28
Yeah, I'm well, I'm not going to opine
2:15:30
on limiting anything.
2:15:31
I'm telling you what it is, the danger.
2:15:34
And you can make your own conclusion about
2:15:36
that.
2:15:37
You should stay away from crowds, no matter
2:15:40
where the government is.
2:15:42
Government has stopped people from going to work.
2:15:45
In fact, just in New Jersey four days
2:15:48
ago, Ian Smith, Frank Trombetta were arrested for
2:15:53
opening up for trying to operate their business,
2:15:55
their gym.
2:15:56
They were arrested.
2:15:57
But my bet is if these two individuals
2:16:00
own this gym were outside just in front
2:16:02
of their gym and all the people who
2:16:03
are working out in their gym were outside
2:16:05
protesting, they'd been just fine.
2:16:06
But because they were in the gym working
2:16:08
out, actually running their business, they got arrested.
2:16:11
You think that's OK?
2:16:13
You know, I'm not going to opine on
2:16:15
who gets arrested and who does not.
2:16:17
I mean, I you get where I'm going.
2:16:19
I'm telling you, as a public health official,
2:16:22
I say crowd.
2:16:23
Do you see the inconsistency, though, Dr. Fauci?
2:16:25
There's no inconsistency, Congressman.
2:16:27
What?
2:16:28
There's no one.
2:16:28
So you're allowed to protest millions of people
2:16:31
on one day in crowds yelling, screaming.
2:16:33
But you try to run your business, you
2:16:34
get arrested.
2:16:35
And if you stood right outside of that
2:16:36
same business and protested, you wouldn't get arrested.
2:16:38
You don't see any inconsistency there.
2:16:40
I don't understand what you're asking me as
2:16:42
a public health official to opine on who
2:16:45
should get arrested or not.
2:16:47
That's not my position.
2:16:48
You could ask as much as you've advocated
2:16:50
for certain businesses.
2:16:51
You've advocated for certain businesses to be shut
2:16:54
down.
2:16:54
I'm I'm just asking you on your position
2:16:56
on the protest.
2:16:57
I mean, I haven't seen one.
2:16:59
We've heard a lot about hair salons.
2:17:01
I haven't seen one hairstylist who between haircuts
2:17:04
goes out and attacks police or set something
2:17:07
on fire.
2:17:07
But we've seen all kinds of that stuff
2:17:08
during protests.
2:17:09
And we know the protests actually increase the
2:17:12
spread of the virus.
2:17:12
You've said that.
2:17:14
I said crowds.
2:17:16
I didn't say specifically.
2:17:17
I didn't say protests do anything.
2:17:19
So the protests don't increase the spread of
2:17:21
the virus?
2:17:21
I didn't say that.
2:17:22
You're putting words in my mouth.
2:17:23
No, I want I would I just want
2:17:25
an answer to the question.
2:17:26
Do the protests increase the spread of the
2:17:27
virus?
2:17:28
I don't have any scientific evidence that anything
2:17:30
I can tell you that crowds are known,
2:17:33
particularly when you don't have a mask, to
2:17:35
increase the acquisition and transmission, no matter what.
2:17:39
You don't have a position on whether the
2:17:41
protest increased the spread of the virus or
2:17:43
don't increase the spread of the virus.
2:17:45
I'm saying that crowds, wherever the crowds are,
2:17:49
can give you an increased probability that there's
2:17:52
going to be acquisition and transmission.
2:17:55
But do you understand Americans concern?
2:17:58
Protesting, according to the Democrats is just fine,
2:18:02
but you can't go to work.
2:18:03
You can't go to school.
2:18:04
You can't go to church.
2:18:05
There's limits placed on all three of those
2:18:08
fundamental activities, First Amendment activities.
2:18:10
But protesting is just fine.
2:18:12
But will you get to meet with them
2:18:13
in person, do you think?
2:18:14
Well, I'm sorry.
2:18:15
Will you be able to meet with them
2:18:16
face to face?
2:18:18
Well, we'll see.
2:18:19
Going to have to wear masks.
2:18:21
They will have to wear masks.
2:18:23
Will you get tested, do you think, if
2:18:24
you have to do that for covid?
2:18:28
I'm not prepared to say much more than
2:18:30
that right now.
2:18:31
Thank you.
2:18:31
You wear the mask so you don't make
2:18:34
somebody else sick.
2:18:36
I want to ask- Sick.
2:18:38
What's with this guy?
2:18:40
Steve, that's our time.
2:18:41
Okay.
2:18:47
I don't believe that it's quite as deadly
2:18:53
as our government is leading us all to
2:18:55
be.
2:18:56
I think it's going to be more to
2:18:58
do with the vaccine.
2:19:00
And they want everyone to have the vaccine,
2:19:02
even though we don't want it, basically.
2:19:05
So that's why I'm here, just giving my
2:19:07
support.
2:19:09
So we are here exercising our democratic right
2:19:12
to assemble.
2:19:13
I'm concerned about the way the country's going
2:19:14
in terms of mandatory face masks used.
2:19:17
Now, this is my body.
2:19:18
Okay.
2:19:18
I used to be a nurse, a mental
2:19:20
health nurse.
2:19:21
And one of the things we learned as
2:19:22
mental health nursing students is that it is
2:19:25
considered battery to impulsively put something on a
2:19:28
person's body without their consent.
2:19:31
COVID-19 was called COVID-19 because it's
2:19:34
19 years since the last bloody disaster, which
2:19:36
was the made-up Twin Tower explosions.
2:19:42
COVID actually stands for- Look, I can't
2:19:43
remember what it is.
2:19:44
I've had half a beer.
2:19:46
But this is all just a reset button.
2:19:49
This is to hurry things up.
2:19:51
They want to get Trump off his perch.
2:19:52
This is the only way they can do
2:19:53
it.
2:19:53
They've got to stop those elections.
2:19:55
They've got to get the Democrats in.
2:19:56
They've got to get old sleepy Joe Biden
2:19:58
in.
2:19:58
What they're looking to do is get the
2:20:00
Blacks uprising by these Antifa riots.
2:20:03
This Democrat state's bloody melting down at the
2:20:06
moment because their counselors are all brown envelopes.
2:20:08
They're all paid off.
2:20:10
We know it's corrupt around the whole Western
2:20:12
nations, everywhere.
2:20:13
The counselors are all paid off.
2:20:14
They're all Marxists, all playing the Chinese game
2:20:17
because China pays their wages.
2:20:19
That's it.
2:20:20
I mean, it's like past time for us
2:20:23
to have a debate about hydroxychloroquine.
2:20:24
We shouldn't be, but let me just say,
2:20:26
first of all, there's many millions of doctors
2:20:27
in this country.
2:20:28
There's five peer-reviewed studies that show it
2:20:30
not to be true.
2:20:31
There's Dr. Birx.
2:20:32
There's Dr. Girard.
2:20:33
There's Dr. Fauci.
2:20:35
Hang on.
2:20:35
And to that study, particularly Dr. Fauci said
2:20:38
that study is a flawed study.
2:20:40
But I need to do this, Peter, because
2:20:42
what you're saying is irresponsible.
2:20:45
All right, let me say this to you,
2:20:46
okay?
2:20:47
And I reach out to all your viewers.
2:20:50
Scott Adams, you know Scott Adams, right?
2:20:52
He's the guy who wrote the Dilbert cartoon.
2:20:54
He did a beautiful video, 10-minute video
2:20:57
on Twitter.
2:20:59
And the thesis of the video is that
2:21:01
CNN might be killing thousands because of the
2:21:05
way they've treated that.
2:21:06
So I would just ask, I'll let Scott
2:21:09
Adams' video be my defense on this.
2:21:11
Okay, well, can I just say something?
2:21:12
I find that to be offensive because he's
2:21:14
a comic strip writer.
2:21:15
So for you to say that he-
2:21:17
Okay, so I just want to give you,
2:21:19
because I want to be clear.
2:21:20
I just said Dr. Fauci.
2:21:21
The person that the president of the United
2:21:23
States- Dr. O'Neill.
2:21:24
Is in charge of testing, Dr. Brett Giroir.
2:21:27
As of today, and I say as of
2:21:29
today at this hour, we have 33 confirmed
2:21:34
positive tests for the virus.
2:21:37
Yesterday we had 22 cases.
2:21:39
Today we have 33 cases.
2:21:41
So it's gone up by 11.
2:21:44
That brings, those are 11 new cases, 22
2:21:48
goes to 33.
2:21:49
As we sort through this here in Arkansas,
2:21:55
today we have 33 confirmed positive cases in
2:21:59
Arkansas.
2:22:01
As of today, we have 33 confirmed cases
2:22:04
with Boston residents.
2:22:06
We expect those numbers to climb.
2:22:08
As of this afternoon, we have 33 Pennsylvanians
2:22:13
who have tested positive for COVID-19.
2:22:16
Um, so as of this morning, there were
2:22:19
33 confirmed cases in North Carolina.
2:22:22
Good evening to you.
2:22:23
Lots to get to tonight.
2:22:24
I'm Leon Hedbergs.
2:22:25
We want to start with new information into
2:22:27
our newsroom.
2:22:28
Within the past couple of hours, there are
2:22:31
now 33 confirmed cases of the coronavirus in
2:22:34
Michigan.
2:22:35
Good evening, everyone.
2:22:36
Thanks for joining us for the news at
2:22:38
six.
2:22:38
I'm Richard Giroir.
2:22:39
Corrina Corral has the night off.
2:22:41
More cases of the coronavirus were confirmed today
2:22:43
in San Luis Obispo County, bringing the total
2:22:45
number down to 33.
2:22:47
Right now, Georgia is reporting a total of
2:22:50
99 cases in 19 counties.
2:22:52
That is 33 new cases from just yesterday.
2:22:56
Good afternoon.
2:22:57
I'm Karen Swenson.
2:22:58
More cases and more events affected.
2:23:00
Here is the latest coronavirus news.
2:23:03
There are now 33 cases in Louisiana.
2:23:06
As expected, the number of cases of COVID
2:23:11
-19 jumps.
2:23:12
A total of 33 people in our state
2:23:14
have been tested and are confirmed to have
2:23:18
the coronavirus.
2:23:19
Day four of the shelter-at-home order
2:23:21
brought six new confirmed cases of the coronavirus
2:23:23
to San Luis Obispo County, bringing the total
2:23:26
number to 33.
2:23:28
All troopers will be professional, polite, and we'll
2:23:31
treat everyone with dignity and respect.
2:23:32
These latest steps is the number of confirmed
2:23:34
COVID-19 cases in Rhode Island jumps by
2:23:36
33 overnight.
2:23:38
Dr. Fauci, great to see you again.
2:23:40
Allison here.
2:23:41
Hi, Allison.
2:23:42
Hi.
2:23:43
I have been listening with rapt attention, but
2:23:45
I feel like John didn't get to the
2:23:46
really burning question that America has for you,
2:23:49
and that is, did you hear that Brad
2:23:51
was nominated for an Emmy for playing you?
2:23:56
Yes, I did.
2:23:58
What a surreal world we're living in, Allison.
2:24:01
I mean, I hope he wins.
2:24:04
He's a great actor.
2:24:05
I mean, he's one of my favorite actors,
2:24:06
so I really do hope he wins.
2:24:08
Have you spoken to him since he played
2:24:10
you?
2:24:11
You know, I have not.
2:24:12
I would love to meet him, because I've
2:24:13
been such a great admirer of him and
2:24:15
his talent, but I have not spoken to
2:24:16
him.
2:24:17
I feel like we can make that happen,
2:24:19
Dr. Fauci.
2:24:21
I feel like we, you know, you and
2:24:23
I have the power to have you meet
2:24:25
Brad, because I sort of feel like anything
2:24:27
you and I suggest, he does.
2:24:29
Well, we'll see.
2:24:30
We'll see.
2:24:31
Thanks, Allison.
2:24:32
I'm not done with you, Dr. Fauci.
2:24:33
Would you like to go up on stage
2:24:36
when he wins?
2:24:37
Would you like to be there to help
2:24:38
accept the Emmy Award?
2:24:40
Yeah.
2:24:42
You know, Allison, the only reason I have
2:24:43
hesitancy about that is that we're in the
2:24:46
middle of an outbreak, a really bad pandemic.
2:24:51
And I think that if that association with
2:24:53
kind of show business thing might be misinterpreted,
2:24:57
that it's I'm not serious about what I'm
2:24:59
doing.
2:25:00
So I'd rather focus on my job and
2:25:02
really wish him well that he wins.
2:25:04
I was afraid there was going to be
2:25:06
a point that I pushed you too far.
2:25:07
And I feel that we have just gotten
2:25:09
up to that point.
2:25:12
But we really appreciate how playful you have
2:25:15
been on the lighter note with all of
2:25:17
that.
2:25:18
And it was just great.
2:25:19
I mean, it was just a great moment
2:25:20
to watch, you know, that obviously Brad Pitt
2:25:23
is a fan of yours and all of
2:25:25
your information as well.
2:25:26
You had all of those claims yesterday.
2:25:28
Now you've got new claims today that we
2:25:30
just reported.
2:25:31
These guards were taking cash in hand while
2:25:34
also claiming JobKeeper payments and also taking guests
2:25:38
out to supermarkets and 7-Elevens and what
2:25:41
have you.
2:25:42
I mean, what do you make of all
2:25:43
of that?
2:25:43
Well, this is a scandal of monumental proportions.
2:25:48
I mean, this is a complete fiasco.
2:25:50
And not one single minister in Daniel Andrews'
2:25:54
government here in Victoria has taken responsibility for
2:25:58
this fiasco, whether that be the police minister,
2:26:00
Lisa Neville, the health minister, Jenny McCarcos, the
2:26:03
jobs minister, Martin Bakula, or indeed the premier,
2:26:06
Daniel Andrews.
2:26:07
I mean, there are allegations that security guards
2:26:11
were bonking those in quarantine.
2:26:13
I mean, this is just quite extraordinary.
2:26:15
What is the actual recommendation by the FDA
2:26:19
or the CDC to doctors?
2:26:22
What is it you are being told if
2:26:24
your patient tests positive, here is what we're
2:26:29
recommending you do?
2:26:31
Let's say literally nothing that I know of.
2:26:35
It is stay home in isolation for two
2:26:38
weeks and then potentially either get retested again
2:26:41
or even that is money.
2:26:44
And I think one of the biggest points
2:26:46
throughout this is people have become so fear
2:26:50
-based because of the fear-mongering mainstream media
2:26:54
that most people are living in their amygdala,
2:26:58
this reptilian, fear-based part of our brain.
2:27:01
And when you do that, critical thinking is
2:27:04
out the window.
2:27:06
So people are not, they've lost critical thinking.
2:27:09
They're reacting with this immediate response from programming.
2:27:14
So for me, it's look at medicine.
2:27:16
It is not black and white.
2:27:18
It is called the art of medicine.
2:27:20
It's the practice of medicine because we look
2:27:22
at all kinds of things to come up
2:27:24
with a program.
2:27:25
Richard, you with us?
2:27:27
That I have right now is that when
2:27:30
the coronavirus took over, President Trump and all
2:27:35
his cronies in that White House knew about
2:27:38
it and took their money out of the
2:27:39
stock market and nobody is doing anything about
2:27:43
it.
2:27:43
And now that the stock market is back
2:27:46
up, they put their money back in and
2:27:47
nobody has caught that yet.
2:27:49
And the other thing is we need to
2:27:53
move this world ahead.
2:27:55
We've been here 50 million years, they say.
2:27:58
Well, I'm 56 tomorrow and I don't understand
2:28:01
why we're not in the Star Wars, like
2:28:04
Star Trek.
2:28:05
We can make movies about it, but we
2:28:06
can't be there.
2:28:08
Why are we not so far ahead?
2:28:09
Why are our brains not moving us forward?
2:28:12
Why is all this money going to all
2:28:14
these people that are way up high and
2:28:18
none of it is being put back into
2:28:20
our society?
2:28:21
Move us ahead.
2:28:23
Move us forward.
2:28:24
Get out of this debt.
2:28:26
Get out of the world.
2:28:28
Move us forward.
2:28:29
We should be a Star Trek era.
2:28:31
And I don't understand why 50 million people
2:28:34
for 50 million years can't move us forward.
2:28:37
Richard, thanks for the call.
2:28:39
I'm all for that ticket, though.
2:28:41
Tonight, the new warning from the Postal Service.
2:28:44
Your ballot might not get counted.
2:28:47
President Trump threatens to hold up funding as
2:28:50
the Post Office tells states it can't handle
2:28:52
millions of mail-in votes this November.
2:28:55
Will your ballot be delivered in time?
2:28:58
Stark projection.
2:29:00
The CDC says as many as 200,000
2:29:02
people could be killed by the coronavirus before
2:29:04
Labor Day.
2:29:06
The White House Task Force warns one state
2:29:08
the virus is widespread and expanding.
2:29:11
And as Texas closes in on 10,000
2:29:13
deaths, high schools in another hot spot vote
2:29:16
to play football this fall.
2:29:19
Unmasked.
2:29:20
Couldn't the mask you're wearing be worse than
2:29:22
no mask at all?
2:29:24
The new research and the government guidance on
2:29:26
which face coverings work and which ones don't.
2:29:30
Conspiracy theory.
2:29:31
President Trump questions if Joe Biden's new running
2:29:34
mate is eligible to be on the ticket.
2:29:36
She is.
2:29:37
Why some are calling the false attack on
2:29:39
Senator Kamala Harris racist.
2:29:41
The first interview from one of the officers
2:29:44
in the George Floyd case.
2:29:45
What he told investigators about that neon neck
2:29:48
maneuver and his first reaction when he learned
2:29:51
Floyd was dead.
2:29:53
Out of control blaze.
2:29:54
A second major wildfire torches Southern California.
2:29:58
Will this weekend's weather make the situation even
2:30:01
more dangerous?
2:30:03
Too close for comfort.
2:30:04
The shocking video as a wild bison violently
2:30:07
attacks a tourist.
2:30:09
Why experts say the animal isn't to blame.
2:30:13
And on the road or at least the
2:30:15
side of it.
2:30:16
CBS's Steve Hartman with the World War II
2:30:19
vet on a cross country mission for the
2:30:21
second time.
2:30:25
This is the CBS Evening News with Norah
2:30:28
O'Donnell.
2:30:29
Reporting from the nation's capital.
2:30:32
Good evening and thank you for joining us.
2:30:34
Norah is off.
2:30:35
I'm Margaret Brennan.
2:30:36
Today, California topped 600,000 confirmed cases.
2:30:40
The most of any state since the pandemic
2:30:42
began.
2:30:43
As positivity rates remain above the recommended levels
2:30:47
for reopening across much of the country.
2:30:49
Dr. Fauci again warned against reopening too quickly.
2:30:54
In your understandable zeal to quickly get back
2:30:58
to normal and revive the economy.
2:31:01
You can do it if you do it
2:31:03
in a measured prudent way.
2:31:06
To think that you can ignore the biologic.
2:31:09
It's just not going to happen.
2:31:11
Looking ahead to a possible vaccine.
2:31:14
The CDC has reportedly reached out to four
2:31:16
states, including Florida, as well as the city
2:31:19
of Philadelphia.
2:31:20
To begin drafting plans on how they would
2:31:22
store and distribute a vaccine, including who gets
2:31:25
priority.
2:31:26
Margaret.
2:31:27
Well, as the battle against COVID-19 continues,
2:31:29
it's also time to get ready for flu
2:31:31
season.
2:31:32
And this year there are concerns about a
2:31:34
possible twindemic.
2:31:35
They're calling it a potential twindemic, the coronavirus
2:31:39
pandemic still going strong at the same time
2:31:41
flu season is approaching.
2:31:43
A new term you could be hearing more
2:31:45
this fall, twindemic.
2:31:47
And she says the earlier we get our
2:31:48
flu shots, the less likely we'll end up
2:31:51
in a twindemic.
2:31:52
The earlier you get that shot, the sooner
2:31:55
you have immunity.
2:31:56
This year with the COVID-19 pandemic expected
2:31:58
to coincide with flu season, doctors say the
2:32:01
concern over a possible twindemic underscores the need
2:32:04
for people to get the flu vaccine.
2:32:06
Do you know the term twindemic?
2:32:08
It's what they're calling a twindemic.
2:32:11
So Tom, a twindemic is exactly how it
2:32:14
sounds.
2:32:14
I want to ask you more, but is
2:32:15
twindemic a new word?
2:32:17
Did we just make this up or have
2:32:18
we experienced or used the term twindemic in
2:32:20
the past?
2:32:21
As far as I know, I think it's
2:32:23
made up.
2:32:23
So it's specially coined for what we're going
2:32:25
through, but it's coined, I think, based on
2:32:28
the Latin for where the pandemic comes from.
2:32:30
So the flu shot will be required for
2:32:34
all students in Massachusetts.
2:32:36
The Department of Public Health just announcing this,
2:32:40
that all children from the age of six
2:32:43
months to those enrolled in college must receive
2:32:46
an influenza vaccine by December 31st in order
2:32:50
to attend school in January.
2:32:52
Exemptions apply to students with medical or religious
2:32:56
reasons and those who are homeschooled and higher
2:32:59
education students who are completely off campus.
2:33:02
State health officials say this new requirement is
2:33:05
an important step to reduce flu-related illnesses
2:33:08
and the overall impact of respiratory illness during
2:33:11
the COVID-19 pandemic.
2:33:13
There will be strong, you know, I suspect
2:33:17
the majority of Australians will get vaccinated and
2:33:19
there will be a strong public view that
2:33:23
those who choose not to get vaccinated need
2:33:27
to, there needs to be some sort of
2:33:31
incentive stick, perhaps, through the current programs, including
2:33:36
No Jab, No Pay, to make that happen.
2:33:40
So I think that is a very reasonable
2:33:43
interpretation of what the PM had to say
2:33:46
today.
2:33:48
Again, looking at specific things like not being
2:33:51
able to go into restaurants, not being able
2:33:53
to travel internationally.
2:33:54
Police are preparing to launch their aerial arsenal
2:33:57
as part of a crackdown on COVID rule
2:34:00
breakers.
2:34:01
High powered drones will be used to find
2:34:03
people not wearing masks and cars too far
2:34:06
from home.
2:34:09
Over the next week, Victoria Police will dispatch
2:34:12
drones.
2:34:13
They'll be keeping a watch on St Kilda
2:34:14
and Port Melbourne Beach, making sure skate parks
2:34:18
and playgrounds remain empty and for those who
2:34:22
head to the park, a mask is a
2:34:25
must or at least a face covering.
2:34:27
Police have also been using drones to guard
2:34:30
the New South Wales border.
2:34:32
There's no escaping this high powered aerial arsenal.
2:34:35
It can be flown for seven kilometres.
2:34:38
The camera is infrared and it's so clear.
2:34:41
It can read a vehicle's number plate from
2:34:43
500 metres away.
2:34:45
It doesn't really bother me.
2:34:46
I'm doing the right thing.
2:34:47
So I've got nothing to hide.
2:34:48
And while this virus touches us all, we
2:34:53
got to be honest, it is not an
2:34:55
equal opportunity offender.
2:34:57
Black, Latino and indigenous people are suffering and
2:35:01
dying disproportionately.
2:35:03
And this is not a coincidence.
2:35:05
It is the effect of structural racism.
2:35:08
How much damage has been done by the
2:35:10
kind of conspiracy theories that have grown up
2:35:12
particularly on social media, even frankly about you
2:35:14
personally, you know, you caused the pandemic.
2:35:16
I mean, it's very ad hominem now.
2:35:19
Is that sort of, you know, something you
2:35:21
could brush aside?
2:35:22
Do you think there's real damage done by
2:35:24
that kind of conspiracy theory?
2:35:26
You know, it's hard for me because I'm
2:35:29
so, you know, science oriented to even, you
2:35:32
know, go, oh, come on.
2:35:34
Not really.
2:35:35
People don't really believe that.
2:35:36
You know, those things are completely untrue.
2:35:40
And to the degree they cause people not
2:35:43
to wear masks or seek out the vaccine,
2:35:46
you know, or to think this is all
2:35:48
some big conspiracy, that's unfortunate.
2:35:51
And, you know, countries where the leaders have
2:35:55
been more clear, you know, have had more
2:35:57
compliance on the masks and social distancing.
2:36:02
So that's been a benefit to them.
2:36:04
I think it'll die down.
2:36:06
I mean, a pandemic is a time when
2:36:09
it's not totally surprising that people's concern and,
2:36:13
you know, reaching for oversimplistic explanations gets a
2:36:17
little bit higher.
2:36:19
And, you know, weirdly it's come at the
2:36:20
time of an election in the US that's
2:36:23
fairly polarized.
2:36:24
So a lot of things, there seems to
2:36:26
be some confluence between social media, election and
2:36:29
pandemic that have this at a level that,
2:36:33
you know, I certainly never expected to be
2:36:36
mentioned in any of those things.
2:36:38
Because, you know, we were pretty obscure doing
2:36:41
our work on infectious disease, which is mostly
2:36:43
in poor countries.
2:36:44
And this has gotten infectious diseases and, you
2:36:48
know, crazy ideas about them into the rich
2:36:50
countries in a way that you never would
2:36:53
have predicted.
2:36:54
You know, the values of the foundation are
2:36:56
about saving lives.
2:36:57
We have a great track record of achieving
2:37:00
that, you know, so I'm not somebody who,
2:37:02
you know, can complain because I've had, you
2:37:05
know, this amazing life and get to do
2:37:07
this amazing work.
2:37:09
Now let's turn to the US because it's
2:37:11
the country, you know, it's the world's biggest
2:37:12
economy.
2:37:13
It's the preeminent public health country in the
2:37:16
world.
2:37:16
It's got the world's best epidemiologists.
2:37:18
Why is it done so badly?
2:37:20
Well, we believe in freedom, individual freedom.
2:37:24
We optimize for individual rights.
2:37:27
You know, there's some bad luck in this
2:37:28
that the CDC's initial test was slow, complicated,
2:37:38
didn't work.
2:37:39
They didn't let the commercial labs come in.
2:37:41
We messed up getting that commercial lab capacity
2:37:44
going.
2:37:45
We never created a CDC website that would
2:37:48
prioritize who was tested so that both we
2:37:52
didn't overload the system to avoid taking more
2:37:55
than 24 hours to give you results.
2:37:57
And we were making sure low-income communities
2:37:59
and people who really needed the tests were
2:38:02
getting them as opposed to wealthy people who
2:38:04
like to be tested on a regular basis
2:38:07
or force their delivery people or people who
2:38:09
work in their house to be tested every
2:38:10
week.
2:38:11
So we've had a very uncoordinated testing thing,
2:38:16
even though we have way more PCR machines
2:38:18
than any country.
2:38:20
We, and we performed at this point, although
2:38:22
that was slow to get going, we performed
2:38:24
a lot of tests, but the delayed results
2:38:28
and the fact that people's behavior, even if
2:38:31
they test positive, doesn't change their behavior as
2:38:35
much as other countries to take them out
2:38:37
of the infection pool, that's where, unfortunately, we
2:38:41
had a continued high level of infection through
2:38:44
the summer.
2:38:45
Governments have been using a range of Orwellian
2:38:49
mind control tricks during the coronavirus crisis.
2:38:53
The slogans, the clapping, and the symbols have
2:38:55
been carefully used to enable the authorities to
2:38:58
take control of our thinking.
2:39:00
I'm grateful to Dr. Colin Barron, a former
2:39:03
NHS doctor and eminent hypnotherapist who's the author
2:39:06
of the book Practical Hypnotherapy, for pointing out
2:39:09
to me just how our minds have been
2:39:12
taken over and how we've been very successfully
2:39:15
and skillfully manipulated into believing the lies we've
2:39:19
been fed.
2:39:21
Elected governments, aided by specialist behavioral scientists, have
2:39:25
been brainwashing millions into accepting the coronavirus propaganda.
2:39:29
The rhythm and pattern used in these phrases
2:39:31
is not a coincidence.
2:39:33
There are usually three words in each phrase
2:39:36
and the phrases run in threes.
2:39:38
This isn't a coincidence.
2:39:40
It isn't happenchance.
2:39:42
Using phrases of three words presented in groups
2:39:45
of three is a technique known as the
2:39:47
rule of three in psychological conditioning.
2:39:50
That's the reason for the three phrases with
2:39:52
which we're all being bombarded.
2:39:54
We're being trained and taught at the same
2:39:56
time.
2:39:56
It's behavioral psychology.
2:39:58
Other hypnotherapists have pointed out that if we
2:40:01
repeat phrases often enough, then the words and
2:40:04
thoughts become implanted in our subconscious minds and
2:40:07
then become a belief which motivates our behavior.
2:40:11
And so governments repeat slogans which become beliefs.
2:40:15
It's called auto-suggestion along the lines of
2:40:18
every day in every way I'm getting better
2:40:20
and better.
2:40:21
George Orwell, who invented Newspeak, also understood the
2:40:24
importance of the triple three word phrase.
2:40:27
In 1984, his futuristic novel which was written
2:40:30
in 1948, Orwell invented the slogan war is
2:40:35
peace.
2:40:35
Freedom is slavery.
2:40:36
Ignorance is strength.
2:40:39
If you want a picture of the future,
2:40:40
wrote Orwell, imagine a boot stamping on a
2:40:44
human face forever.
2:40:46
We are taking a moment to recognize that
2:40:49
the throne speech we delivered eight months ago
2:40:52
had no mention of COVID-19, had no
2:40:56
conception of the reality we find ourselves in
2:40:59
right now.
2:41:00
We need to reset the approach of this
2:41:02
government for a recovery to build back better.
2:41:06
And those are big, important decisions.
2:41:08
And we need to present that to Parliament
2:41:11
and gain the confidence of Parliament to move
2:41:13
forward on this ambitious plan.
2:41:15
Somehow we've let politics overrule science.
2:41:20
It's an absurd situation.
2:41:22
People have compared this to 1984 and the
2:41:24
Ministry of Truth and so on that's limiting
2:41:27
what people can say on objective facts.
2:41:30
It's beyond belief.
2:41:31
Here's the thing.
2:41:32
I think they know that the treatment works.
2:41:35
I think that basically, they're afraid to even
2:41:38
let it be tried because letting it be
2:41:40
tried would show that it works.
2:41:42
So the message has to be shut at
2:41:45
all costs because anything will leak out.
2:41:47
And in fact, it is leaking out.
2:41:49
And you see across the country, people who
2:41:51
started to speak up, who become almost deathly
2:41:54
ill and have been turned around in three
2:41:56
days or sooner even.
2:41:58
And these are now public figures who are
2:42:00
speaking up, who've said that the medicine saved
2:42:03
their life.
2:42:04
And it's very difficult to close all the
2:42:07
leaks in that dike that are being suppressed
2:42:11
by the media that are trying to do
2:42:14
that.
2:42:15
We're seeing fights like this go viral.
2:42:19
Where businesses find themselves at times in verbal
2:42:22
or physical confrontations with customers.
2:42:26
Trying to enforce mask requirements under state or
2:42:30
county orders.
2:42:31
The horrifying videos, you know, they're horrifying.
2:42:34
They're just, they're not fun.
2:42:36
Steve Reinhardt is CEO of Robotic Assistance Devices.
2:42:40
And he's trying to take the ugliness out
2:42:42
of these encounters by deploying a robot.
2:42:45
We developed a face mask analytic so we
2:42:48
can either say, look for people with face
2:42:50
masks on, look for people without face masks
2:42:52
on.
2:42:53
They call the robot ROSA, which means Responsive
2:42:56
Observation Security Agent.
2:42:57
When ROSA recognizes a person about to enter
2:43:00
a business without a mask, you hear and
2:43:02
see the warning immediately.
2:43:04
It is a non-biased, non-confrontational approach
2:43:07
to reminding people to, you know, wear their
2:43:10
face masks.
2:43:11
The robot's creator acknowledges someone could choose to
2:43:14
ignore the messages.
2:43:15
But he says businesses are bracing for the
2:43:19
possibility they'll have to enforce COVID-19 safety
2:43:22
measures for years to come.
2:43:24
And they hope to avoid scenes like this.
2:43:27
You have a machine tell you to do
2:43:29
something.
2:43:29
It blows my mind that the level of
2:43:31
compliance is just skyrocketing.
2:43:33
There's a lot of bad information about therapeutics
2:43:36
out there.
2:43:38
Debunk some of the myths for us, hydroxychloroquine
2:43:41
being one of them.
2:43:43
Well, it's, you know, we, this is an
2:43:46
age of science, but, you know, sometimes it
2:43:50
doesn't feel that way.
2:43:53
You know, just the idea it's about testing
2:43:57
and hydroxychloroquine, you know, the numbers are quite
2:44:04
clear.
2:44:05
It got confused because the trials were done
2:44:07
so poorly, but there's lots of good things
2:44:11
coming in the therapeutic area that are, you
2:44:13
know, really proven to work without the severe
2:44:16
side effects.
2:44:17
So, you know, a little bit slow, but
2:44:21
a lot of good news to come in
2:44:24
that domain.
2:44:25
And if we don't solve the climate problem,
2:44:27
do you believe there will be more pandemics,
2:44:30
worse pandemics in the future?
2:44:31
Well, that's not the only thing.
2:44:32
You'll have incredible instability because your ability to
2:44:36
grow food in large parts of the world
2:44:40
will be so diminished that you literally have
2:44:45
hundreds of millions of migrants and you won't
2:44:50
have a thriving global economy because you will
2:44:53
have degraded the ecosystems.
2:44:56
And there is no quick fix to that
2:44:59
thing, unlike the magic vaccine that's a mere,
2:45:03
you know, year to two years at most
2:45:07
to come up with.
2:45:08
To all the people of Wuhan, you know,
2:45:11
you made a great sacrifice to be in
2:45:14
this very strict quarantine.
2:45:17
And, you know, I'm very glad that it
2:45:20
succeeded, but I'm sure that the difficulties were
2:45:24
very great.
2:45:26
And so we're thankful that you made these
2:45:29
sacrifices.
2:45:31
You know, being at ground zero of infectious
2:45:35
disease is a incredible challenge.
2:45:38
And, you know, you made changes, you know,
2:45:42
work was stopped, your living was very different.
2:45:45
And now the goal that all of that
2:45:48
had, which is getting the cases down to
2:45:50
very small numbers and still being super open
2:45:53
about, okay, where are those cases?
2:45:57
That critical thing is something that people should
2:46:00
feel good about.
2:46:01
And, you know, I'm hope that we can
2:46:03
get things even more back to normal in
2:46:07
the months ahead is, you know, we use
2:46:09
testing data to see where do we still
2:46:11
need to restrict things and where can we
2:46:14
go partially back to normal.
2:46:16
So, you know, thank you for your sacrifices.
2:46:19
Tonight, the urgent new warning ahead of the
2:46:21
Labor Day weekend, the make or break holiday
2:46:23
as we head into fall.
2:46:25
Dr. Anthony Fauci pleading with people, stay away
2:46:28
from those big crowds that have led to
2:46:30
COVID surges, packed pool parties, bars, beaches, and
2:46:34
super spreader events.
2:46:35
The first death linked to that massive biker
2:46:37
rally in South Dakota and the CDC's new
2:46:40
timeline on a vaccine.
2:46:41
What they're telling states.
2:46:43
On the attack, Joe Biden blaming President Trump
2:46:46
for what he calls a national emergency as
2:46:48
schools struggle to reopen.
2:46:50
The president's pushback today and the new alert
2:46:53
about Russia targeting Joe Biden's campaign.
2:46:55
Did the Trump administration try to bury it?
2:46:58
Nancy Pelosi firing back after video of her
2:47:01
inside a salon shuttered by law because of
2:47:04
COVID.
2:47:05
The house speaker now calling it a setup.
2:47:07
The new developments as a rival of Vladimir
2:47:10
Putin fights for his life.
2:47:11
What officials now say was used to poison
2:47:13
him.
2:47:14
The cyber attack on one of the country's
2:47:16
largest school districts.
2:47:18
Remote learning down for a third day.
2:47:20
Whether your kids are at risk.
2:47:22
And the chili challenge that swept the nation.
2:47:25
How all that cold cash raised means a
2:47:28
major step forward in the fight against ALS.
2:47:32
This is NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt.
2:47:36
I take responsibility for trusting the word of
2:47:40
the neighborhood salon that I've been to over
2:47:42
the years many times.
2:47:44
And that when they said what we're able
2:47:47
to accommodate people one person at a time
2:47:52
and that we can set up that time,
2:47:54
I trusted that.
2:47:55
As it turns out, it was a setup.
2:47:58
So I take responsibility for falling for a
2:48:01
setup.
2:48:01
And that's all I'm going to say on
2:48:03
that.
2:48:04
We're being told this is the science.
2:48:07
But it's not.
2:48:10
It's an appeal to authority.
2:48:12
It's science because Tony Fauci and Bill Gates
2:48:15
tell us it's science.
2:48:17
We want to see the studies.
2:48:19
We want to see the studies on hydroxychloroquine.
2:48:23
We want to see the studies on whether
2:48:25
the lockdown is killing more people than the
2:48:29
coronavirus.
2:48:31
We want to see real science and real
2:48:34
risk assessments.
2:48:36
And we are not going to take the
2:48:37
word my father told me when I was
2:48:40
a child.
2:48:41
People in authority lie.
2:48:45
And we all, if we are going to
2:48:47
continue to live in a democracy, we need
2:48:51
to understand that people in authority lie.
2:48:55
People in authority will abuse every power that
2:48:59
we relinquish to them.
2:49:01
And right now, we are giving them the
2:49:03
power to micromanage every bit of our lives
2:49:06
24 hours a day.
2:49:08
They're going to know where we are.
2:49:10
They're going to know the money that we
2:49:11
spend.
2:49:12
They're going to have access to our children.
2:49:15
They're going to have the right to compel
2:49:17
unwanted medical interventions on us.
2:49:22
We, you know, the Nazis did that in
2:49:24
the camps in World War II.
2:49:27
They tested vaccines on gypsies and Jews.
2:49:30
And the world was so horrified after the
2:49:33
war we signed the Nuremberg Charter.
2:49:37
And we all pledge when we do that
2:49:40
we would never again impose unwanted medical interventions
2:49:45
on human beings without informed consent.
2:49:50
Do we have enough infrastructure to contact trace
2:49:52
the way that we need to?
2:49:54
I think that's why the criteria that you
2:49:57
can see the gates that the federal government
2:49:59
has recommended are.
2:50:01
Four weeks ago, Don Baker became the first
2:50:03
person in the U.S. to get a
2:50:05
shot as part of a phase three clinical
2:50:07
trial for a coronavirus vaccine.
2:50:09
And now she's back.
2:50:11
Not just for a visit.
2:50:13
All right, take a nice deep breath.
2:50:15
But for another shot.
2:50:17
That's right.
2:50:18
The coronavirus vaccine will likely be given in
2:50:21
two shots a few weeks apart.
2:50:23
It's like the boxer going into the ring.
2:50:25
You might hit the other guy with one
2:50:28
punch and he might go down.
2:50:30
But two punches is going to be way
2:50:32
more effective.
2:50:33
And that's a problem for several reasons.
2:50:35
Many Americans aren't very excited about the coronavirus
2:50:38
vaccine.
2:50:39
According to a recent CNN poll, 40%
2:50:42
of Americans say they won't get it.
2:50:44
Second, for those who do take it, it's
2:50:46
a logistical challenge to have hundreds of millions
2:50:49
of people come in not once, but twice.
2:50:52
There's no question that this is going to
2:50:54
be the most complicated, largest mass vaccination program
2:50:58
in human history.
2:51:00
People will have to remember to come in
2:51:02
the second time.
2:51:03
They might have to take time off work
2:51:05
twice and possibly experience unpleasant side effects like
2:51:08
fever twice.
2:51:10
Government health officials are aware that's a big
2:51:13
ask.
2:51:14
On the manufacturing end, it's just more complicated
2:51:16
to make 660 million doses of a vaccine
2:51:19
than 330 million.
2:51:21
And it's not just double the vaccine, it's
2:51:23
double all the components that go with the
2:51:25
vaccine.
2:51:26
Two vials with two caps and two stoppers,
2:51:30
two syringes with two needles for everybody.
2:51:33
Doing it twice is going to be daunting.
2:51:36
It is going to be absolutely daunting.
2:51:37
For Don Baker, rolling up her sleeve a
2:51:40
second time was about saving lives.
2:51:42
You guys are doing this.
2:51:44
Yeah, you can show me your search warrant
2:51:46
before you go through my house.
2:51:47
So you're the occupier?
2:51:50
Yeah, I own this house.
2:51:54
Search warrant for what?
2:51:56
Now what I will explain to you is
2:51:58
if you want to listen, you got your
2:52:00
phone going?
2:52:01
Yeah, I do, yeah.
2:52:02
Now you're under arrest in relation to incitement.
2:52:05
Incitement?
2:52:06
You're not obliged to say or do anything,
2:52:09
but anything you say or do may be
2:52:10
given in evidence.
2:52:11
Excuse me, incitement for what?
2:52:12
What on earth?
2:52:14
Excuse me, what on earth?
2:52:16
Just put your phone down.
2:52:17
Can you like record this?
2:52:19
In my pyjama, I had an ultrasound in
2:52:21
an hour.
2:52:21
Yeah, she's pregnant.
2:52:23
So I'll take it easy.
2:52:25
What's this about?
2:52:26
Do I have an ultrasound in an hour?
2:52:28
Let me finish and I'll explain.
2:52:29
It's in relation to a Facebook post in
2:52:31
relation to a lockdown protest you put on
2:52:34
for Saturday.
2:52:35
Yeah, and I wasn't breaking any laws by
2:52:38
doing that.
2:52:38
You are actually.
2:52:39
You are breaking laws.
2:52:40
That's why I'm arresting you in relation to
2:52:41
this post.
2:52:42
How can you arrest her?
2:52:43
In front of my two children.
2:52:45
Can't you just say to her take the
2:52:46
post down?
2:52:46
Like, come on.
2:52:47
I'm happy to delete the post.
2:52:48
Yeah, that's fine.
2:52:49
But my two kids are here.
2:52:51
I have an ultrasound in an hour.
2:52:52
Like, I'm happy to delete the post.
2:52:55
You also have the right to communicate with
2:52:57
or to communicate with a legal practitioner.
2:52:59
You understand those rights?
2:53:01
Yeah, this is ridiculous.
2:53:02
Yeah, this is a bit unfair.
2:53:03
Come on, mate.
2:53:04
What about she just doesn't do the event?
2:53:06
Like, it's not like she's done it.
2:53:08
Well, she made a post.
2:53:08
We've already committed the offence.
2:53:10
So I've nothing to add to it.
2:53:10
So that's an offence.
2:53:11
Now, search warrant.
2:53:13
You put titles us and we're required to
2:53:16
seize any computers, any mobile devices you have.
2:53:20
What's it ask?
2:53:21
You're not taking my phone.
2:53:23
I'm not taking any device.
2:53:24
That's my phone.
2:53:26
It's nothing to do with her.
2:53:27
COVID has taken this year just since the
2:53:30
outbreak has taken more than 100 years Look,
2:53:34
here's the lives.
2:53:36
It's just it's I mean, think about it.
2:53:39
More lives this year than any other year
2:53:42
for the past 100 years.
2:53:45
Data points from a very recent study published
2:53:49
by the Center for Disease Control in August
2:53:52
and mid-August that surveyed thousands of Americans
2:53:56
at the end of June and asked them
2:53:58
a variety of questions designed to gauge trends
2:54:00
and developments in physical and mental health.
2:54:04
And probably the most striking of the statistics
2:54:07
was the one that was produced by the
2:54:10
following question.
2:54:11
Quote, have you seriously considered suicide in the
2:54:16
past 30 days?
2:54:18
A question that was asked among people around
2:54:21
the United States from June 24th to June
2:54:24
30th of 2020.
2:54:26
Of people 18 to 24, people in the
2:54:30
18 to 24 age range, 25.5 percent
2:54:35
or essentially one out of every four Americans
2:54:37
in that age group said that yes, they
2:54:41
have seriously considered not fleetingly or as a
2:54:44
fantasy, but seriously considered suicide not in the
2:54:48
past year, but in the past 30 days.
2:54:50
All right.
2:54:50
We'll hear from Josephine in Livingston, New Jersey
2:54:53
on our Biden line.
2:54:54
Good morning.
2:54:55
Morning.
2:54:56
It is very, very sad that this country
2:54:59
has come to the point it's you against
2:55:01
me, just like the woman you heard from
2:55:03
California.
2:55:05
My God, do we really live in America?
2:55:08
This idolatry to Lucifer.
2:55:10
That's how I label Trump.
2:55:11
I have to say it.
2:55:12
This idolatry to Lucifer and even the white
2:55:16
evangelical church who proclaims themselves pro-life.
2:55:21
They're not pro-life.
2:55:23
They're pro-birth.
2:55:24
Now they're saying go die like this Dr.
2:55:28
Atlas that Trump has just hired, who believes
2:55:32
in this idea of herd mentality to get
2:55:36
to that herd mentality.
2:55:38
Two million people have to die.
2:55:42
Tony's next on our Trump line from Joppa,
2:55:45
Maryland.
2:55:45
Go ahead.
2:55:46
Coronavirus in Victoria.
2:55:48
That is 63 new cases since my update
2:55:51
yesterday.
2:55:52
I'm sad to have to report that there
2:55:55
have now been 666 Victorians who have lost
2:55:58
their life because of this global pandemic.
2:56:01
That's an increase of 5 since yesterday's update.
2:56:05
Two of these deaths occurred prior to yesterday.
2:56:08
These include one female in her 80s, three
2:56:11
females in their 90s, one female in her
2:56:15
100s and we send our sincere sympathies and
2:56:19
condolences to each of those five families.
2:56:22
This will be a very difficult time for
2:56:24
them.
2:56:24
Yeah, Tom and Sally, a big concern.
2:56:26
Good morning.
2:56:26
The university plans to make sure every student
2:56:29
that attends Saturday's game is free of COVID
2:56:31
-19.
2:56:32
They're doing this by making sure that those
2:56:35
who are attending as part of the big
2:56:38
ticket student game package take a COVID-19
2:56:41
test tomorrow.
2:56:42
The test is free but mandatory.
2:56:44
Only students who show proof of their negative
2:56:46
COVID-19 test results will be given a
2:56:49
ticket for Saturday's game.
2:56:51
But thousands of alumni will also be attending
2:56:54
an interim Austin Health Dr. Mark Escott worries
2:56:57
as many as 50 people could catch the
2:56:59
virus at Saturday's game.
2:57:02
Our gathering limit's 10 and having 25,000
2:57:05
people in one space is a concern.
2:57:09
Ultimately, people have to make a decision whether
2:57:12
or not they're going to go to the
2:57:13
game.
2:57:14
I will be watching on my TV.
2:57:18
Dr. Escott says he worries the most about
2:57:20
the increased risk of transmission in lines for
2:57:23
the bathroom and concession stands.
2:57:25
Now keep in mind, UT did eliminate tailgating
2:57:28
for this season and they also plan to
2:57:30
provide over 200 hand sanitizing kiosks as well
2:57:34
as enforcing masks for everyone who attends the
2:57:38
game.
2:57:39
The same tragic story that happened in Wuhan
2:57:42
six months ago is now occurring again in
2:57:44
the Xinjiang region as thousands of residents in
2:57:47
high-rise buildings shouted and screamed into the
2:57:50
night in despair.
2:57:52
Xinjiang's capital, Urumqi, has been under strict lockdown
2:57:55
for nearly 40 days after authorities announced a
2:57:58
resurgence of the CCP virus on July 16.
2:58:01
An Urumqi resident recorded the heartbreaking scene of
2:58:04
people living in surrounding buildings screaming together to
2:58:08
vent their frustration.
2:58:09
It is clearly audible that the videographer himself
2:58:12
was sobbing when filming.
2:58:29
An assistant commissioner has unleashed on anti-lockdown
2:58:33
protesters.
2:58:33
Luke Cornelius described his frustration at having to
2:58:37
prepare the force to face another round of
2:58:40
demonstrations this weekend.
2:58:42
To be honest, I feel a bit like
2:58:44
a dog returning to eat his own vomit.
2:58:46
I mean, it's just none of us would
2:58:48
want to do that and I'm sick of
2:58:51
it.
2:58:51
Please, please don't leave home to engage in
2:58:55
an activity which is going to spread the
2:58:57
deadly virus and keep us locked up in
2:59:00
home even longer.
2:59:04
Well, Al, from August 12th through September 5th,
2:59:07
just over 64,000 COVID tests were administered
2:59:10
to NFL players.
2:59:11
And in that time period, there were five
2:59:13
positive cases.
2:59:14
Now, along with testing, everyone from the front
2:59:17
office to the locker room is required to
2:59:19
wear a Conexon proximity chip from the time
2:59:22
they walk into the facility until they walk
2:59:24
out again.
2:59:25
They're also wearing them tonight.
2:59:26
They will in all games.
2:59:27
So if someone does test positive, the league
2:59:29
will know who they were near, at what
2:59:31
distance, and for how long.
2:59:33
So that is high-tech contact tracing now.
2:59:36
Michelle, it's amazing what's been done because it
2:59:38
was so daunting for so many players and
2:59:40
coaches when the protocols came out as the
2:59:43
pass is caught by...
2:59:44
Do you still trust the FDA?
2:59:46
I think in the FDA, there's a lot
2:59:49
of professionals.
2:59:51
Historically, just like the CDC was viewed as
2:59:53
the best in the world, the FDA had
2:59:56
that same reputation as a top-notch regulator.
3:00:00
But, you know, there's been some cracks with
3:00:04
some of the things they've said.
3:00:07
At the commissioner level, hopefully the staff isn't
3:00:13
pulled in that direction.
3:00:15
What about the CDC?
3:00:16
You made reference to the reputational damage that's
3:00:19
been done to the CDC.
3:00:21
Can you take what the CDC says to
3:00:23
the bank any longer?
3:00:25
Well, the CDC is largely being written out
3:00:28
of the picture because you have people at
3:00:31
the White House who aren't epidemiologists, you know,
3:00:35
saying what a great job they've done.
3:00:37
And so it's no longer a set of
3:00:42
experts.
3:00:43
The CDC actually did make some mistakes, the
3:00:46
way they thought about testing, the way they
3:00:48
hadn't figured out to bring the commercial providers
3:00:52
in.
3:00:52
Now, hundreds have gathered here in front of
3:00:54
the Washington County Administration building, calling for the
3:00:57
end of a mask mandate, saying they are
3:00:59
tired of not living their normal lives.
3:01:01
No more masks, no more masks.
3:01:05
Not on the backs of my kids, or
3:01:07
you're going to get more federal funding, that's
3:01:08
how I feel about that.
3:01:10
A passionate call for action Friday morning in
3:01:13
St. George, several police officers on standby, as
3:01:15
many locals called concerns about coronavirus spikes overblown.
3:01:19
The flu kills more than coronavirus.
3:01:23
Others calling the virus a hoax or stating
3:01:25
that asymptomatic carriers simply do not exist, and
3:01:28
they cannot be forced to wear masks anywhere
3:01:30
as citizens of the United States.
3:01:32
If we want to wear a mask, that's
3:01:33
fine.
3:01:34
We can take care of ourselves.
3:01:35
Some rally attendees say they shouldn't ever wear
3:01:37
masks if they have any medical issues or
3:01:39
mental health concerns, or if they feel they
3:01:41
simply can't breathe.
3:01:42
When George Floyd was saying, I can't breathe,
3:01:45
and then he died.
3:01:46
And now we're wearing a mask, and we
3:01:48
say, I can't breathe, but we're being forced
3:01:50
to wear it anyway.
3:01:51
But many say that they believe in all
3:01:53
cases, masks jeopardize kids' health.
3:01:55
Parents are demanding they have the right to
3:01:57
decide what to do with their children.
3:01:58
I'll tell you another reason I hate masks.
3:02:01
Most child molesters love them.
3:02:04
School administrators responding that they don't understand why
3:02:06
crowds are protesting them based on a mandate
3:02:09
given by the governor.
3:02:10
They blocked off the front entrance to the
3:02:12
school building, and we went out to ask
3:02:13
them to move, and they attempted to storm
3:02:15
the school building.
3:02:16
The school board is implementing the governor's recent
3:02:18
order that face shields alone are not enough.
3:02:20
And if a parent is adamant that their
3:02:21
child cannot wear a mask or a shield,
3:02:24
they must fill out a form, including a
3:02:25
doctor's note, so the district can review it.
3:02:27
In St. George, Katie Kralis, ABC 4 News.
3:02:30
And the tragedy is that this pandemic has
3:02:33
been predicted, and to some extent, it's been
3:02:37
caused by us, because we've disrespected the natural
3:02:40
world.
3:02:41
We've disrespected animals.
3:02:43
We've created environments which make it much easier
3:02:46
for a pathogen to jump from an animal
3:02:49
to a human, where it may cause a
3:02:51
new disease, a zoonotic disease, as it's called,
3:02:54
such as COVID-19.
3:02:56
Unfortunately, COVID-19 was incredibly contagious and has
3:03:01
raced around the world, causing so much havoc,
3:03:04
so much suffering, so much economic chaos.
3:03:07
At the same time, all the time, we
3:03:10
have been threatened by a much greater challenge,
3:03:14
and that is climate change.
3:03:16
And to a great extent, it's the same
3:03:20
disrespect of the natural world that has led
3:03:23
to this climate crisis.
3:03:26
Because this planet has finite natural resources, and
3:03:30
we've been plundering them in many places faster
3:03:33
than Mother Nature can restore them.
3:03:36
We're in the midst of the sixth great
3:03:38
extinction.
3:03:40
We depend on healthy ecosystems, and the healthy
3:03:44
ecosystem depends on the biodiversity.
3:03:47
We need to move into some of these
3:03:49
innovations of science, like solar, wind, and tide
3:03:54
energy.
3:03:55
Otherwise, for my grandchildren and theirs, the future
3:04:00
is more than grim.
3:04:02
It's very dark.
3:04:03
We mustn't let that happen.
3:04:04
We have a window of time which is
3:04:06
closing, and we need everybody who cares to
3:04:09
get together and find solutions now.
3:04:13
37,000 more people will be alive today,
3:04:15
and we're going to have another influx of
3:04:18
cases just between now and January.
3:04:21
It's expected that we're going to have somewhere
3:04:23
between, depending on which estimate you take, between
3:04:26
138,000 and 178,000 more deaths.
3:04:30
And if people just do what we're doing
3:04:31
here, and when you're at a social distance,
3:04:33
as I am, you can take a mask
3:04:35
off, but wear a mask.
3:04:37
They estimate that would save about close to
3:04:41
89,000, 90,000 people.
3:04:44
This newly amended order replaces the city's previous
3:04:47
provision that allowed people to take off their
3:04:49
masks while outside during the summer months.
3:04:51
Masks are part of the daily routine in
3:04:54
Cambridge.
3:04:55
99% of people around here wear them.
3:04:57
Wherever you look, it seems everyone is following
3:04:59
the rules.
3:05:00
It's rare you see someone who's not wearing
3:05:02
it.
3:05:02
Over the summer, the city allowed people to
3:05:04
remove face coverings if they could maintain six
3:05:07
feet of distance from others, but that will
3:05:09
change on October 2nd.
3:05:11
Masks will now be mandatory just about everywhere,
3:05:14
except your own home.
3:05:16
So starting next week, when you're crossing a
3:05:17
bridge from Boston into Cambridge, you're going to
3:05:19
need to mask up.
3:05:21
Whether you're riding a bike, on a basketball
3:05:24
court, or simply dancing on the sidewalk.
3:05:27
Even if you're in a wide open field
3:05:30
all by yourself.
3:05:31
The city says it's because of a slight
3:05:33
uptick in cases as students return to college.
3:05:36
The latest order will also require office workers
3:05:38
to wear masks at all times, unless they
3:05:40
are alone.
3:05:41
I think to have to wear a mask
3:05:42
24-7 outside is over the top.
3:05:45
Those who don't want to play by the
3:05:46
rules could face a $300 fine, but the
3:05:49
majority of people have no problem playing it
3:05:51
safe.
3:05:52
I'm pretty much used to it at this
3:05:53
point.
3:05:53
I've been doing that all summer, so no
3:05:55
different for me.
3:05:56
I think it's a really easy measure we
3:05:58
could take to protect the public.
3:06:00
I mean, it's such a simple thing.
3:06:03
The easiest thing we can do to protect
3:06:05
each other.
3:06:06
As far as enforcement goes, the city says
3:06:07
this is going to be more about education
3:06:09
and less about punishment.
3:06:11
The official United States death toll from COVID
3:06:14
-19 has passed 200,000.
3:06:17
By far the highest in the world.
3:06:20
As University of Washington researchers warn, the U
3:06:23
.S. is on track to double that death
3:06:26
toll by year's end.
3:06:28
In the past 24 hours alone, the U
3:06:30
.S. reported nearly 1,000 new deaths and
3:06:33
over 37,000 new cases, with Minnesota, Montana,
3:06:37
Utah, Wisconsin and Wyoming reporting record levels of
3:06:41
infections over the past week.
3:06:44
On Tuesday, the COVID-19 Memorial Project placed
3:06:47
20,000 flags across the National Mall, each
3:06:51
one symbolizing 10 U.S. residents who've died
3:06:54
of the disease since the first recorded U
3:06:57
.S. death in February.
3:06:58
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi spoke at a memorial
3:07:01
for the dead.
3:07:03
This was preventable.
3:07:05
Not all of it, but much of it.
3:07:08
Mr. Ford says that we know that the
3:07:10
second wave is going to be worse than
3:07:12
the first wave.
3:07:13
Could you tell me in what way it
3:07:15
will be worse?
3:07:15
So I think the potential is that it
3:07:18
can be worse.
3:07:19
Right now, we're on the upward slope of
3:07:21
the second wave.
3:07:23
I think the premier, what he's alluding to,
3:07:24
is the fact that do we know it's
3:07:26
the so-called undulating waves that we've seen
3:07:29
in some of the modules?
3:07:30
How big those are, we have to see.
3:07:33
We always see it better after we have
3:07:34
some time to look at the test results.
3:07:36
If it is that more tsunami-type wave,
3:07:39
it will be far worse than the first
3:07:40
wave as we've seen in other countries.
3:07:43
How big this wave is going to be,
3:07:44
because already we've seen some test results that
3:07:47
are equivalent to what our maximum daily amounts
3:07:48
were in the first wave.
3:07:50
But as I said before, in that time,
3:07:52
the maximum tests we're doing a day around
3:07:54
that highest peak was around about 10,000
3:07:56
tests.
3:07:56
We're doing 41,000 to 43,000 at
3:07:58
the moment.
3:07:59
So it's a different curve, different epidemic.
3:08:02
So right now, we're anticipating if it keeps
3:08:05
going, we have to assume it could be
3:08:07
a lot worse than the first wave, especially
3:08:09
if it's the second scenario.
3:08:11
That's the more of the tsunami one.
3:08:12
But so far, it doesn't seem to be
3:08:14
going that way.
3:08:15
We'd like to hope that we can keep
3:08:16
on top of this and hear recommendations from
3:08:19
myself and others, medical officers around the province
3:08:21
to ask the public to really focus down
3:08:24
now.
3:08:24
We really have to hunker down and stay
3:08:26
at the task to see if we can
3:08:27
flatten this curve like we did the first
3:08:29
time.
3:08:30
People have gotten very casual, I think, at
3:08:31
the end of summer, early fall.
3:08:34
And we've seen that effect.
3:08:35
But I think by everybody refocusing, and we
3:08:37
have some ideas and suggestions of that, we
3:08:39
can turn this one around.
3:08:40
So hopefully, not the premier's fears, we might
3:08:44
be able to flatten it down.
3:08:45
And it may not be worse, but we
3:08:47
cannot be presumptive on that basis.
3:08:51
BLM, baby, remember that?
3:08:52
All of a sudden, it was OK to
3:08:54
go out.
3:08:55
Go ahead.
3:08:55
Yeah, if you were protesting and burning the
3:08:58
place down, yeah, that was OK.
3:09:00
Everything else, no, you had a social distance.
3:09:02
What a crazy time.
3:09:04
That was a crock of crap if ever
3:09:06
there was.
3:09:07
Isn't it amazing how you kind of just
3:09:08
forget that stuff and just it's like a
3:09:11
vague memory and we just moved on with
3:09:13
life.
3:09:14
And here we are, Trump is president again.
3:09:18
I mean, this is, or it will be
3:09:20
president.
3:09:21
Let's just hope that all goes well.
3:09:23
Yeah, unless the aliens show up and block
3:09:25
him.
3:09:27
Yeah, or Jamie Raskin, whichever is scarier.
3:09:31
Same thing.
3:09:33
All right, everybody.
3:09:33
You ever look at that guy?
3:09:34
He looks like he does.
3:09:35
Thank you very much to Strokey Bill Walsh
3:09:37
for producing the best of COVID.
3:09:40
We appreciate you very much, brother.
3:09:42
And we look forward to returning on the
3:09:45
next episode, which will be 1723, just before
3:09:49
we get to Christmas.
3:09:53
So please remember us in the meantime at
3:09:56
noagendadonations.com.
3:09:59
Currently, I am, probably my sister might have
3:10:02
thrown black bags over everybody's head for some
3:10:05
surprise birthday party for my brother-in-law
3:10:07
in Italy.
3:10:11
So I hope I return.
3:10:12
I have no idea where I am at
3:10:13
this moment, but I will soon be coming
3:10:16
to you from Amsterdam, the Netherlands, on our
3:10:19
way back from Italy.
3:10:21
Until then, in the morning, everybody, I'm Adam
3:10:23
Currie.
3:10:23
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I'll be
3:10:26
shopping at Macy's.
3:10:27
I'm John C.
3:10:28
Dvorak.
3:10:28
We'll be back on the next episode.
3:10:31
Please remember us, really, for Christmas.
3:10:33
noagendadonations.com.
3:10:34
Until then, adios, mofos, a-hooey-hooey, and
3:10:38
such.
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