Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Trump doesn't seem to care about America's unfolding tragedy


President Donald Trump speaks with reporters before departing on Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, Tuesday, June 23, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
ANALYSIS

The President again falsely declared that the danger from Covid-19 had passed -- even with the nation racing towards another deadly summit of infection

Trump is not just in denial but also indifferent to an unfolding American tragedy

Hearing goes off the rails when lawmaker keeps banging table

Obama calls out Republicans for enabling the White House

The Kentucky primary election that is too close to call

Lemon lays out times Trump admin has used mail-in ballots

24-year-old wins over Trump pick in NC House GOP primary

Doctor on Trump rally: A scene like that is really upsetting

President Trump speaks on the attack on Lafayette Square

White House defends Trump's use of racist language

Lemon: If you value your health, don't believe Trump

Blitzer to Bolton: If you had testified, you might've made a difference

Adam Schiff: What Barr has done to DOJ is reprehensible

Speaker at Trump event criticized for Aunt Jemima remarks

Hear Kellyanne Conway defend Trump's racist rhetoric

New Jersey governor: Trump is an essential worker

Bolton not surprised Trump would try to slow testing for reelection

Prosecutor says Roger Stone got special treatment from DOJ

Hearing goes off the rails when lawmaker keeps banging table

Obama calls out Republicans for enabling the White House

The Kentucky primary election that is too close to call

Lemon lays out times Trump admin has used mail-in ballots

24-year-old wins over Trump pick in NC House GOP primary

Doctor on Trump rally: A scene like that is really upsetting

President Trump speaks on the attack on Lafayette Square

White House defends Trump's use of racist language

Lemon: If you value your health, don't believe Trump

Blitzer to Bolton: If you had testified, you might've made a difference

Adam Schiff: What Barr has done to DOJ is reprehensible

Speaker at Trump event criticized for Aunt Jemima remarks

Hear Kellyanne Conway defend Trump's racist rhetoric

New Jersey governor: Trump is an essential worker

Bolton not surprised Trump would try to slow testing for reelection

Prosecutor says Roger Stone got special treatment from DOJ

The US just hit its third highest ever peak of new coronavirus cases, multiple states are registering their own daily records and three are now taking the extraordinary step of imposing quarantines for citizens from pandemic hotspots. The world's most powerful nation lacks a coherent national strategy to meet another cresting viral crisis, the capacity or even the willingness to take steps that might stop it.
It is also led by a man who is suggesting by his actions and attitudes that he doesn't care that much about the unfolding tragedy.
Trump, who has previously predicted a "miracle" would occur or the virus would just disappear in the warmer weather, again declared falsely Wednesday that the danger had passed -- even with the nation racing towards another deadly summit of infection. In his latest misleading effort to create a picture of normality, Trump welcomed Polish President Andrzej Duda to the Oval Office.
    "This is the first after Covid, after the start of the plague as I call it," Trump told his visitor, who was happy to play along after being given a huge political gift of a visit a few days before a national election and approvingly noted "the end of the coronavirus."
    But the coronavirus pandemic in the United States is like watching a "public health train wreck in slow motion," said Dr. David Blumenthal, president of The Commonwealth Fund, in an Alliance for Health Policy and Commonwealth Fund webinar on Wednesday.
    "It can be frustrating and perplexing," he added. "But now is the time to stop dwelling on the past and to start looking forward, and to ask ourselves how we can seize the moment, learn from experience and make things better."
    Instead, the President's attitude appears to have crossed into callous indifference.
    Trump has long denied the worsening situation over his failed gamble of pushing for aggressive state openings to revive the economy on which his reelection hopes may depend. He has constantly flouted guidance on mask wearing and social distancing, insisted on being pretty much the only entity in the Western world holding indoor events that risk turning into deadly super-spreaders and has failed to hardly ever mention the victims of the pandemic.
    His behavior has brought about the extraordinary spectacle of a President running for a second term ignoring a massive national crisis that has killed tens of thousands of Americans and has no end in sight.
    Trump reached for his familiar tactics of distraction on Wednesday, all but accusing Democrats of supporting unidentified demonstrators who he said want to haul down statues of Jesus Christ, as he stepped up they culture war tactics he adopted during the nation's national reckoning on race.
    In a Wednesday news conference, Trump largely ignored the huge and worsening national crisis. But he delivered his latest evidence-free prediction of stunning medical advances on vaccines and therapeutics not yet supported by any evidence.
    "I think you're going to have a big surprise, a beautiful surprise, sooner than anybody would think."
    Vice President Mike Pence, the head of the White House coronavirus task force who hasn't held a public briefing with top health officials in weeks, apparently sought to spin the situation when he traveled up to Capitol Hill for lunch with Republican senators.
    South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham said Pence mentioned lowered mortality rates from the virus and said that the provision of emergency protective equipment in hospitals was in good shape.

    Busted gamble

    Given the terrible economic consequences of lockdowns imposed to bend the curve of infections several months ago, there was always going to be a limited tolerance for long-term shutdowns. But the White House has long since given up offering Americans advice on how to prepare themselves for venturing out into the world.
    Indeed, Trump gladly ignored his own government's advice on when it was safe for states to reopen.
    The facts of the pandemic now clearly show that northeastern states that imposed painful restrictions on their people for longest -- such as New York and New Jersey -- have been most successful in reducing infections. Those that most enthusiastically accepted Trump's urging to open -- such as Texas, Florida and Arizona -- are now racing towards their own crisis points.
    One exception is California, which despite months of draconian public health measures is still in the middle of its battle. The rising infections in opening states also raise the grim possibility that even those who have carefully begun to get back to business in the northeast and the Midwest will see infections soon tick up again.
    A new battery of infection figures and academic projections on Wednesday reflected how the United States is heading into an intensifying duel with the virus, even as its economic competitors like the European Union -- now mulling a ban on American visitors and which has a higher population than the US -- begin to contemplate life after successfully suppressing the pandemic, at least for now.
    Arizona is currently seeing the highest number of new coronavirus cases per capita of any state in the country, and more than any other state besides New York or New Jersey has experienced, according to a CNN analysis of data from Johns Hopkins University which puts the rate at about 38 new cases per 100,000 people per day.
    Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott warned in an interview with KFDA-TV on Wednesday that his state was facing a "massive outbreak" of the virus. Florida piled up another daily record, of 5,500 new cases of Covid-19. CNN data based on figures collected by Johns Hopkins University also finds that 26 states now have rising infection rates, including 10 where cases are going up by 50% or more each day. Another 10 states are steady and 14 states are seeing falling new infections.

    No direction from leaders

    WE REMEMBER

    Derek Johnson

    18 months ago, he married the love of his life. They were planning a family.

    Francesca Porco

    Even at 72, she could dance a mean tango. "It was incredible to watch."

    Dr. Reza Shah Towfiqur Rahman Chowdhury

    He always wore the gifts patients sent, even if it embarrassed his kids.

    James W. “Chucky” Means Jr.

    Fried pork chops. Ribs. He and his son worked out just so they could eat.

    Ruth Lorras


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