ECONOMICAL+PANDEMICAL+DECLASS-ATTEMPTED COUP. THE BRITISH ROGUE EMPIRE STILL BREATHES IN THE SWAMP

Sunday, March 22, 2020

MERKEL! RAND PAUL!




Q!!mG7VJxZNCI
  • Anonymous
    >>3754220
    Once you take care of yours.. pls help Canada Q.
    >>3754247
    The world will follow.
    Think Merkel.

    QImage result for PICTURES OF SMITH CORONA
Q!!mG7VJxZNCI
Anonymous
>>3754220
Once you take care of yours.. pls help Canada Q.
>>3754247
The world will follow.
Think Merkel.
Q

  • German Chancellor Angela Merkel Goes Into Self-Isolation

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks to the media to announce further measures to combat the spread of the coronavirus and COVID-19 on March 22, 2020 in Berlin.
    Pool/Getty Images
    German Chancellor Angela Merkel has put herself under self-quarantine after learning that her doctor who had vaccinated her against pneumonia on Friday has tested positive for COVID-19.
    Merkel will be tested regularly in the coming days as she plans to carry out her duties from home, and Germany's government will continue to operate as planned, with Merkel's cabinet set to meet Monday to discuss a stimulus package of roughly $160 billion to help keep Germany afloat as it suffers from the pandemic.
    As of Sunday, Germany had nearly 24,000 confirmed cases of the coronavirus with more than 90 deaths, according to tracking by Johns Hopkins University. The news of Merkel's quarantine came soon after her government imposed new social-distancing rules that limit public gatherings to two people, not including families. Under the new restrictions, restaurants will be allowed to stay open, but provide only takeout and delivery services. People will still be allowed to go to work and to leave home to care for relatives, shop and visit doctors.
    From now in Germany, when people do go outside, they are being told to keep a distance of four feet from anyone else. Germany's new social distancing rules come into effect after authorities said too many Germans were not following guidelines set last week, urging them to stay at home to slow the spread of the virus. Instead, in the past week, city parks in Berlin were full of people as spring weather hit the region, and groups of young people held so-called corona parties, some of which had to be broken up by police.
    Germany is just one of many countries limiting crowds to slow the spread of the virus. The U.S. government has said that no more than 10 people should gather in one place, while Switzerland says people in groups of fewer than five must stay at least two meters apart or face a fine. Italy and Spain have taken more stringent measures, not allowing people to leave their homes unless to conduct essential activities like buying food, filling a prescription or seeing a doctor.
    =====

Rand Paul Tests Positive For COVID-19, Ohio, Louisiana & Delaware Issue 'Stay At Home' Orders: Live Updates

Summary:
  • Global case total nears 320,000
  • UK death toll jumps ~60 to 281
  • Rand Paul tests positive
  • US case total nears 30,000
  • Ohio, Louisiana, Delaware join lockdown
  • Harvey Weinstein reportedly tests positive for COVID-19
  • NYC total cases passes 9k, while New York state nears 20k
  • US death toll hits 374
  • Italy reports slowdown in deaths, cases
  • IOC sets 4 week deadline for Tokyo Games decision
  • WHO says lockdowns "not sufficient" to stop virus
  • NY secures supplies of meds that purportedly work to combat virus
  • Mnuchin proposes $4 trillion rescue package
  • Afghanistan, Kosovo and Romania all reported their first confirmed deaths
  • Italy set to revise death totals lower
  • Cuomo says nobody can say how long outbreaks will last
*  *  *
Update (1930ET): We've had a few updates over the course of the day that probably are worth mentioning.
First, a local paper in New Jersey is reporting that Harvey Weinstein has tested positive for COVID-19, which is apparently the reason he was hurriedly transferred out of Rikers Island, where the virus is apparently spreading like wildfire.
Across the US, more states are issuing mandatory quarantine orders. Ohio, Louisiana, and Delaware are ll ordering residents remain at home beginning on Monday to help stop the spread of the virus. The director of Ohio's Department of Public Health signed the state's order Sunday, and the shelter-in-place order goes into effect Monday night, and will continue until April 6, or possibly even longer.
The order will of course include 'common sense exceptions' the governor tweeted.
Ohio has 250 confirmed cases of the virus, according to a Johns Hopkins University tracker, and it has had three deaths.
Louisiana issued a similar order on Sunday, which is set to take effect Monday evening and allows residents to leave their homes only for "essential needs."
And Delaware Gov. John Carney issued an order Sunday evening mandating that all non-essential businesses, and all non-essential workers, close and stay at home for a few weeks.
*  *  *
Update (1430ET): The IOC has set a deadline of 4 weeks to make a decision on whether or not to postpone the Tokyo Games.
In other news, the UK death toll jump by roughly 60 cases to 281 overnight, according to the Department of Health and Social Care.
*  *  *
Update (1345ET): Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky has tested positive for COVID-19, according to media reports.
The Republican senator and perennial gadfly for both his Republican colleagues and Democratic opponents, the Kentucky senator is perhaps best known for being the son of legendary Libertarian, former presidential candidate and Texas Congressman Ron Paul, as well as for an incident where one of his neighbors back in Kentucky - a doctor, no less - lost his temper and straight up dropkicked the Senator over a lawncare-inspired property beef.
At least two members of the House have also tested positive, but Paul is the first member of the Senate.
Paul has a tendency for delaying critical legislation over issues of principle, since he's one of the Senate's last die-hard 'deficit hawks', a position that he still cares about from time to time, based, from what we can tell, on some arbitrary factor like which way the wind is blowing or possibly the tides, we're not really sure.
Whatever it is that makes Paul tick, he's probably going to be sidelined as the administration tries to push through pt. 2 of its economic aid package to stave off a brutal depression.
Some on twitter seized the opportunity to slam Paul.
Can't say we blame them: Paul was the sole "no" vote on the $8.3 billion coronavirus spending bill the Senate passed earlier this month, the first part of what's expected to be a three-party rescue package, two of which have been passed into law, and one still on the way as senators argue over how much money should be given away, and to whom.
*  *  *
Update (1330ET): After nearly two weeks of reporting one grim record after another, Italy has finally reported a drop in new cases on Sunday. During the day before, Italy confirmed 5,560 new cases of COVID-19 and 651 new deaths. That brings the country to a total of 59,138 cases, and 5,476 deaths. That's a slower pace of increase than yesterday's report, though Italy's rate of spread is still nothing short of extraordinary, and in a few days, confirmed cases in the country will surpass China's "official" total.
In Milan, the number of new cases recorded over the last 24 hours halved from the day before.
In other news, the IOC is holding an emergency board meeting on Sunday to discuss the future of the Tokyo Games, including an option to delay the event, according to Japanese media. It might take a month to reach a decision - but who knows when the leaks will begin. We suspect the Japanese press will be keeping a close eye on the behind-the-scenes talks.
Interestingly enough, American social-media companies including Facebook and Twitter have continued their bizarre practice of censoring virus-related news, even when it's published by "reputable" mainstream media organizations like Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal.
It looks like a Bloomberg article quoting SCMP warning that one-third of coronavirus cases may show no symptoms - making the virus immensely more difficult to track - has been censored.
*  *  *
Update (1240ET): Here are some more details from the second half of Cuomo's Sunday press conference...
After insisting that nobody could say for certain how long the outbreak will last, Cuomo added that there was no reason to rush to grocery stores and start hoarding supplies, adding that all essential services will continue, even as some states' are seeing critical toiletpaper shortages entering their second week.
"It's going to be hard - no doubt - I’m not minimizing it and I don’t think you should either but it is going to be okay. The grocery stores are going to function...there’s going to be foodall essential services will be maintained."
"There's not going to be anarchy, there's not going to be chaos...order will be maintained."
Though thousands have died, Cuomo urged New Yorkers, and Americans, to try and find the strength within to make it through this crisis without putting the public welfare in jeopardy, like so many are still doing. Asked during the Q&A what he would do to stop New Yorkers from crowding into the city's parks on a nice day, he said he would require the city to put together an action plan within a day , adding that even though he's a life-long New Yorker, he doesn't know the city's operations well enough to tell them how to run the parks.
Adding to the chorus of prominent Democrats who are criticizing President Trump for not taking advantage of the Defense Production Act to coordinate a federal response to alleviate the shortage of critical medical supplies.
Instead of sitting around and complaining about how too much of the US supply chain is dependent on China, Cuomo urged Trump to use the DPA to develop a plan and tell factories how much of which critical items they should produce.
This way, Cuomo said, it will end the bidding wars between states that led to New York purchasing medical masks that typically cost well under a dollar for more than $6 a mask.
"I say forget the voluntary partnership - order the companies to produce it. Let the federal government do it so the private company doesn’t end up marketing with all these states that are competing. We paid 75 cents for a mask and now we’re paying  $7 dollars. Why? Because California will pay $6…”Let the federal government just take the power of supply and distribution," Cuomop said.
He added that during the testing ramp-up, it was better to give more power to the states to ramp up capacity because governors control labs and have resources to put toward this effort. But when it comes to production, supply chains are too distributed. The require coordination at the federal level.
The governor also detailed the state's stockpile of essential medical equipment and hospital + ICU beds, which he said he is doing everything in his power to alleviate.
For some unknown reason, Sunday's press conference contained none of the optimistic references toward the Army Corp of Engineers traveling through the state setting up staging areas, while the Navy sends a hospital ship to NYC.
*  *  *
Update (1150ET): Gov. Andrew Cuomo's daily press briefings have become high-priority events as the coronavirus outbreak spreads across the US. After winning early approval from the FDA to ramp up testing in state labs, Cuomo's star has risen alongside the state's tally of positive tests.
He and Trump appeared to have declared a truce, with the two men acknowledging their intention to cooperate, and as the White House shifts its focus to passing the critical second installment of its economic rescue package, which is expected to include rescue packages for small businesses and helicopter money for individuals.
Cuomo started the press conference by chiding New Yorkers, primarily those in the city, who took advantage of nice weather over the past few days to crowd into the city's parks, inadvertently helping to spread the virus.
At one point, Cuomo declared that the city had confirmed 374 deaths, taking the assembled reporters by surprise. The statement was soon corrected, as a graphic on the screen displayed the updated national death toll, meaning that 14 more Americans had succumbed to the virus over the last few hours.
Across the state, Cuomo reported 4,812 new cases, bringing the total to 15,168, with 9,045 of those in NYC.
These new numbers have brought the US total to just shy of 30k.
As Trump continues to battle with the FDA, Cuomo said New York will start implementing the trial drugs to treat Coronavirus and that they have acquired 70,000 Hydroxychloroquine, 10,000 Zithromax, and 750,000 Chloroquine from the Federal Government.
The governor then launched into a breakdown of the data that researchers have collected so far. Of those who have passed away from COVID-19-related complications, 70% are either 70 or older. Of those who passed that were under the age of 70, 80% had underlying health issues.
Though young people have a higher chance of survival, "young people can get it, young people can get sick, young people can transfer it," Cuomo said.
But just because an individual catches the virus, and meets the high-risk criteria, doesn't mean they're doomed, Cuomo explained.
"But even within that population the capacity of our health care system can save those lives it doesn’t mean that just because you’re 80 and you have an underlying health condition, you must pass away," he said. Nothing is pre-ordained, and New York State's health-care system has the capacity to save the lives of people whose lives are seriously imperiled by the infection.
The fear, as Cuomo explained, is that the virus makes it to places like nursing homes, and other places where concentrations of high-vulnerability people.
The importance, as has been said many times before, is that the government tries to smooth the 'peak' of the outbreak - which Cuomo's models projected would arrive in roughly 45 days - as much as possible, given the shortage of beds, ICU beds and critical medical equipment, which Cuomo is scrambling to buy up for New York State, taking Trump's advice to do what states can to secure equipment to heart.
"Up to 80% of the population will get this virus. We will try to slow the spread but it will spread," Cuomo said.
As far as addressing how long the outbreak will last, and how long some level of movement restrictions might be in place, Cuomo said nobody can say for certain, adding that it could be 9 months, or possibly even longer.
"It is going to be 4 months, 6 months. 9 months - once they really changed the trajectory - which we have not done yet - 8 months. Were in that range. Nobody has a crystal ball, nobody can tell you," Cuomo said.
*  *  *
Update (1100amET): NY Gov Andrew Cuomo is delivering his daily press conference. Watch live below:
*  *  *
The surge in newly confirmed cases in the US and Europe continued overnight, as roughly 7,000 new cases were reported in the US, according to Johns Hopkins data, vaunting the US total above 25k while most Americans were asleep.
According to the latest numbers, as of 11amET on Sunday, 26,747 Americans have tested positive for COVID-19. 340 have died (and some of these were posthumously diagnosed).
New York State, where the Army Corp of Engineers has arrived to start outfitting school gyms and other buildings into COVID-19 hospitals, the picture of the outbreak continues to expand as testing capabilities in the state rapidly accelerate. 9 million New Jerseyans are now under 'shelter in place' restrictions following the mandatory lockdown order signed by Gov. Phil Murphy last night, although it's still not exactly clear how the order will be enforced. In Connecticut, Gov. Ned Lamont has asked residents to stay at home and ordered non-essential businesses - including restaurants, gyms, theaters and the like - to close.
And globally, the total number of cases has passed 315,000, and is rapidly closing in on 320,000. We'll likely hit 350,000 by noon on Monday.
Across Europe and the Middle East, governments tightened travel restrictions and lockdowns, even as the WHO whined that these measures were now somehow not enough to contain the outbreak , when this very same organization for weeks denied that border closures were necessary to stop the spread in an obvious sop to the NGOs Chinese backers.

Following in Italy's footsteps, one week after Spain adopted nationwide lockdown measures and as the number of cases soars to 28,572, with 1,720 deaths, Spanish media says the  government of PM Pedro Sanchez is planning to ask Congress to approve the nationwide lockdown for an additional 15 days.
Afghanistan, Kosovo and Romania all reported their first confirmed deaths from COVID-19 on Sunday, while Albania closed flights as the virus continues to spread north through the Balkans from Greece, which has been turning away asylum seekers as it struggles to suppress its domestic outbreak.
After invoking the Defense Production Act last week, one of the most useful tools in the White House arsenal, granting Trump the power to act unilaterally and marshal the nation's factories to the "war" effort, the president has yet to use the power, even as Democratic leaders like Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer hammer him on the delay.
As it turns out, Trump might have a point. Though FEMA Administrator Peter Gaynor contradicted Trump during an appearance Sunday on CNN’s "State of the Union", saying the administration hadn't yet ordered factories to produce critical medical supplies, as Trump had claimed earlier in the week. But he clarified that the only reason Trump hasn't actively used the power is because companies are voluntarily taking these steps so as to deter the administration from seizing control of their operations. He described the act as "leverage".
Gaynor added that companies and countries around the world are offering help and support to the US.
With multiple officials making the Sunday show rounds, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin once again upped the ante of the administration's 'helicopter money' stimulus package (now that the Fed's balance-sheet expansion is back in full swing and the administration is preparing to issue 50-year bonds to back the stimulus), raising the amount to be doled out to individuals to $3,000. As we observed yesterday, the stimulus-bill figures continue to climb faster than the number of confirmed cases.
It's unclear when - or even if - the plan will make it into law, but Mnuchin said it's intended to sustain out-of-work Americans and suffering small-businesses for the next 10-12 weeks.
And with 7k new cases confirmed since VP Pence announced to the world last night that he had tested negative, and hundreds of thousands more layoffs announced overnight, we suppose it's only fitting.
Last night, Italy shuttered much of the country's industrial production (at least whatever was still operating) in a desperate attempt to contain the outbreak as it extends its national lockdown in the face of lackluster results. In Jordan, meanwhile, authorities are responding with a heavy hand, warning residents they will risk a year in jail if caught outside without permission.
Which approach do you think would work better in the US?
Whatever happens, any NYC-based bankers growing bored with their doomsday stash and willing to splurge on some high-quality meats can get takeout from Peter Lugar's.

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