Nov 26 (Reuters) – New York Governor Kathy Hochul issued a COVID-19 “disaster emergency” declaration on Friday, citing increasing rates of infections and hospitalizations.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/us/new-york-governor-declares-disaster-emergency-over-rising-covid-19-infection-2021-11-27/

“I was in the back just cooking, making orders and once I heard the first two shots go off, I ran to grab everybody. I started yelling, ‘Get down, get down’ and I actually had to pull people to the ground because they were still standing up walking around,” said Carlo Medina, an employee at the same restaurant. “People were definitely shocked, they were traumatized, there were people crying in the hallway.”

Source Article from https://www.king5.com/article/news/local/tacoma/shooting-reported-at-tacoma-mall-friday-night/281-e1bd48c2-153a-4653-a6e3-5247670cd917

Fox News host Dagen McDowell said that, like Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., President Biden’s administration has followed a strategy.

“This is Biden and company: Create a problem, blame somebody else and then use demagoguery to completely shirk accountability,” she said Friday on “The Five.”

Their conduct, she added, follows the same playbook as Warren, who blamed high turkey prices on “plain old corporate greed.”

SEN. ELIZABETH WARREN CALLS FOR PROBE INTO TURKEY COSTS AS PRICES SOAR

“The Five” co-host Sean Duffy cited Ohio Republican Rep. Jim Jordan’s recent allegation that Biden-era inflation “has to be intentional with [Democrats’] crazy spending.”

In response to co-host Jessica Tarlov’s mention of low numbers in recent jobless claims, McDowell said, “…[I]t’s laughable that they’re trying to make a show out of that number when the real issue is people won’t take jobs. …[T]here are almost 10 and a half million job openings in this country.”

“…[T]he Biden administration crowing about [low numbers of jobless claims] is like, you’re losing 35 to nothing in a football game and you score in the fourth quarter a field goal and then you’re running around the field like you just won the Super Bowl,” she continued. “That’s how idiotic it is.”

Co-host Joe Concha suggested that instead of calling Al Roker on Thanksgiving, Biden should have called the families of the victims of the Waukesha Christmas parade massacre. 

“He’s barely talked about that,” he said. “I would have gone to Wisconsin before I go to Nantucket.”

Biden and first lady Jill Biden spent Thanksgiving at billionaire David Rubenstein’s $30-million Nantucket home while inflation grips the country.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The president claimed during the call to Roker that “America is back.” Biden, Concha quipped, was half-right.

“I think he means back in 1979 because that’s what we’re dealing with, with inflation, supply chain, gas prices and an unstable…Middle East, in essence, right?” he said. “So America is back, not quite. … One-quarter of this country says that this country is on the right track right now. If that’s back, I’d rather be back in 1979.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/the-five-sound-off-bidens-out-of-touch-nantucket-visit

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/11/26/omar-house-leadership-must-take-action-boeberts-anti-muslim-remarks/8768484002/

An 11-year-old girl rammed by a career criminal in the Waukesha, Wis., Christmas parade massacre spent Thanksgiving unconscious in a hospital bed, clinging to life and breathing with the help of a ventilator, her distraught mother told The Post. 

Jessalyn Torres, 11, is one of nine children injured in the Nov. 21 crash who are still being treated at Children’s Wisconsin Hospital. 

“No mother should ever go through this. This is a very traumatic ordeal,” her mother, Amber Kohnke, told The Post. 

“The hardest part was not being with everyone and Jessalyn, in the condition she is, was not able to be with her family either,” she said.

In a Thanksgiving note to her family and friends, Kohnke described the agony of watching her child struggle to breathe.

“Let me say this again… she is a fighter!” Kohnke wrote in the Facebook post.“I sat here and held her hand, kissed her head and just watched and cried and told her I was so proud of her.”

Jessalyn Torres, 11, is one of nine children injured in the Nov. 21 crash.
GoFundMe

She suffered a broken pelvis and femur, a fractured skull, lacerations to her lungs and an injury to her kidney when Darrell Brooks allegedly barreled through the small town holiday parade in a red SUV, injuring 60 people and killing six.

Torres is one of four children who remain in a serious condition, while three others are in fair condition and two are in a good condition, the hospital said. 

Her little girl was dancing in the parade before Brooks unleashed hell at the event — and she was thrown into the air after the impact. 

The collision caused her kidney to tear from the renal artery, rendering the organ permanently useless. She is now unconscious and breathing with the help of a ventilator, her mother said. 

An SUV plows into a crowd of people during a Christmas parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin.
WAUKESHA COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE/

Kohnke said celebrating Thanksgiving at her child’s hospital bedside was especially difficult, not least because she has four other children to care for.

“I hate watching my daughter go through this,” she added in another note. “Cry a little tear, suck it up, and stay strong for her.”

Kohnke has raised some $110,000 in an online fundraiser to help cover Jessalyn’s medical bills.

Brooks was out on $1,000 cash bail at the time of the parade massacre after he allegedly punched the mother of his child and purposefully ran her “over with his vehicle” in a Milwaukee gas station parking lot on Nov. 2, according to court documents previously reviewed by The Post.

He has been charged with five counts of first-degree intentional homicide, with a sixth expected to be added soon. 

He’ll face the additional charge because the youngest victim, 8-year-old Jackson Sparks, who was critically injured, died two days after the massacre. 

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/11/26/waukesha-christmas-parade-victim-11-clinging-to-life-on-ventilator/

US officials said flights from South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Lesotho, Eswatini, Mozambique and Malawi would be blocked, mirroring earlier moves taken by the. It will come into effect on Monday.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-59438723

Nov 26 (Reuters) – New York Governor Kathy Hochul issued a COVID-19 “disaster emergency” declaration on Friday, citing increasing rates of infections and hospitalizations.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/us/new-york-governor-declares-disaster-emergency-over-rising-covid-19-infection-2021-11-27/

President Biden said Friday that he delayed implementation of a new ban on travel from southern Africa on the advice of his medical advisers, who are led by Dr. Anthony Fauci.

A reporter asked Biden why the emergency precaution will take effect Monday, rather than immediately to contain the potentially more contagious Omicron version of COVID-19.

“Why not do it now like other countries have done?” the journalist asked Biden, who is spending a long Thanksgiving weekend in Nantucket.

Biden said “because that was the recommendation coming from my medical team.” Fauci is Biden’s chief medical adviser and led a half hour briefing for Biden on Friday.

Biden said “we don’t know a lot about the variant except that it is of great concern and it seems to spread rapidly — and I spent about a half hour this morning with my COVID team led by Dr. Fauci and that was the decision we made.”

But Biden seemed to have a poor grasp on the travel rules. He misstated the number of countries impacted and said the policy would bar people traveling “to and from” the region, despite official releases only noting restrictions on travel from — but not to — southern Africa.

President Joe Biden insists that countries “can’t hide the variants” from the public.
Alex Wong/Getty Images

“I’ve decided that we’re going to be cautious and make sure there is no travel to and from South Africa and six other countries in that region, except for American citizens who are able to come back,” Biden said.

The eight countries covered by the ban are Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland and Zimbabwe.

Biden also attempted to reassure spooked financial markets. He called a steep drop in stock values during the holiday weekend-shortened session “expected” because of prior drops after poor pandemic news and said he was “not at all” worried.

Passengers line up for a COVID-19 test before boarding at O.R. Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg, South Africa, on Nov. 26, 2021.
REUTERS/Sumaya Hisham/File

Just hours before the new travel ban was announced, Fauci, the longtime director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, gave the impression he wasn’t recommending such bans and cited a need for more data.

“There is always the possibility of doing what the UK has done, namely block travel from South Africa and related countries,” Fauci said in a CNN interview.

“That’s certainly something you think about and get prepared to do. You’re prepared to do everything you need to protect the American public. But you want to make sure there’s a basis for doing that.”

Passengers traveling from South Africa are tested for COVID after arriving at Schiphol Airport in the Netherlands on Nov. 25, 2021.
via REUTERS

Fauci added in that interview: “Obviously as soon as we find out more information we’ll make a decision as quickly as we possibly can.”

While taking questions from reporters after the ban was announced, Biden knocked a reporter’s question about whether the new travel restriction could incentivize countries to hide new COVID-19 variants.

“That’s ridiculous because you can’t hide the variants. It’s not like someone could hide the fact that there’s a new variant and people getting sick,” Biden said.

So far, the Omicron variant has been detected in Botswana, South Africa, Hong Kong, Belgium and Israel. The infected person in Belgium had traveled recently to Egypt and Turkey and the Israeli patient recently visited Malawi.

Although the new variant might be more contagious and vaccine-resistant due to a high number of mutations, Biden urged people to continue to get vaccinated.

“Here’s the deal: Every American who has not been vaccinated should be responsible and be vaccinated from age five years and up… Everyone eligible for booster shots should get the booster shot immediately upon being eligible. That is a minimum that everyone should be doing,” he said.

President Joe Biden will hold off on banning travel from South Africa and other countries off the recommendation of White House Chief Medical Adviser Anthony Fauci.
Alex Wong/Getty Images

Biden added: “You know, we always talk about whether this is about freedom. I think it’s a patriotic responsibility.”

Biden sought to mandate vaccination or weekly testing upon employers with 100 or more workers, but that rule is tied up in court. Asked if he was considering “any new mandates,” Biden said, “No, not at the moment.”

The Biden administration this month ended a long-running ban on travel from early COVID-19 hotspots including Europe and adopted a policy where foreign citizens who enter the US by plane must be vaccinated and also get tested for the virus within three days. 

Dr. Anthony Fauci says his team needs more information on the Omicron COVID-19 variant in South Africa.
AP Photo/Denis Farrell
The Omicron COVID-19 variant has reportedly emerged in five countries.
REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko/File

But rapid tests of dubious accuracy are allowed and residents of poorer countries, many of them in Africa, were exempted from the vaccine requirement.

Biden kept the Europe travel ban long after former President Donald Trump wanted it to expire, but as a presidential candidate he took shots at Trump for banning residents of coronavirus hotspots.

“A wall will not stop the coronavirus. Banning all travel from Europe — or any other part of the world — will not stop it,” Biden tweeted one day after Trump announced the Europe travel ban with just over 48 hours notice to travelers. “This disease could impact every nation and any person on the planet — and we need a plan to combat it.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/11/26/biden-delayed-africa-travel-ban-over-omicron-on-advice-of-advisers-led-by-fauci/

  • Three men were convicted for the 2020 murder of Ahmaud Arbery on Wednesday.
  • The verdicts were the latest in a series of criminal cases that the nation watched for weeks.
  • Critics say the Arbery and Rittenhouse trials, and Julius Jones commutation speak to larger issues. 

The nation has watched as the news has centered white vigilantism and Black executions in the past week, continuing an ongoing conversation of racial injustice in the country.

Uprisings over the past few years in response to the killings of Black people — Trayvon Martin, Mike Brown, and so many others — were “directly related to state-sanctioned violence and police brutality,” Nakisha Lewis, a racial and social justice activist, told Insider.

More recently though, the trial for the murder of Ahmaud Arbery, the trial for the Kenosha shootings by Kyle Rittenhouse, and the commutation for former death row inmate Julius Jones have been at the forefront of news.

Ahmaud Arbery, an unarmed 25-year-old Black man, was chased, shot, and then killed as he ran through a neighborhood in Southern Georgia in 2020, causing nationwide outrage. 

Three white men — Travis McMichael, his father, Gregory McMichael, and their neighbor William ‘Roddie’ Bryan — were found guilty of murder. 

Travis, who fired the shot that killed Arbery, was found guilty on all nine counts he faced. Gregory was found guilty of eight of the nine counts, and Bryan was found guilty of six.

The three men also face federal hate crime charges.

“The verdict in this case demonstrates that justice is possible, but Black victims still must find nearly perfect circumstances — an aggressive, outside prosecutor; video documentation; and a local and national pressure campaign — just to get a white-on-black murder case to trial and win a conviction,” Keith Boykin, author of “Race Against Time” told Insider in an emailed statement.

Unlike the jury in the Arbery trial, the jury in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial found him not guilty.

On Friday, Rittenhouse, who fatally shot two men and injured one more at a 2020 Black Lives Matter protest for Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin, was acquitted on all five charges he faced. The jury cited self-defense.

“The system of justice works if I look like Kyle Rittenhouse. It does not work if I look like Jacob Blake,” said Jacob Blake Sr., the father of Jacob Blake who police officers shot seven times and left paralyzed, to Amy Goodman on  “Democracy Now.” 

None of the three men that Rittenhouse shot were Black, but critics say his acquittal is still evocative of a larger issue: racial injustice.

“It’s part of sending a signal about what whiteness is, and it requires whiteness to stay in its place,” historian Carol Anderson, told the Center for Public Integrity. “And if you don’t stay in your place, there are consequences.”

The system of justice works if I look like Kyle Rittenhouse. It does not work if I look like Jacob Blake. Jacob Blake Sr.


Paul Henderson, BNC Legal Contributor, cited “the privilege of white men to drift back and forth between vigilantism on behalf of law enforcement and self-defense on behalf of their own beliefs and fears” on a BNC News episode comparing the Julius Jones commutation to the Kyle Rittenhouse and Ahmaud Arbery trials Friday.

And while Kyle Rittenhouse and Travis McMichael are regarded by critics as cases of vigilantism, Julius Jones’ life sentence is another reminder to advocates of reform of the injustices in the legal system.

The day before Rittenhouse walked away without charges, Julius Jones, a man who has been on Oklahoma death row since 2002 for the 1999 killing of Paul Howell, narrowly escaped execution.

Jones and his family say that he didn’t commit the crime. Others, including the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole board and the Innocence Project — also doubt the evidence that led to his conviction.

Governor Kevin Stitt announced an executive order just hours before Jones’ scheduled execution. That last-minute commutation came despite a docuseries, calls to justice by organizers and activists nationwide, numerous meeting and outreach attempts from Jones’ family, and a recommendation from the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board to grant the man clemency.

“I’m an abolitionist though,” Marc Lamont Hill said during BNC’s “Amplified with Aisha Mills” on Wednesday. “I don’t believe in a world where prisons and police are our primary mechanisms to address harm.”

“I’m happy that we didn’t have our hearts broken again, but I don’t want us to ever confuse what happened [with the Ahmaud Arbery trial] as justice.”

Citing the Rittenhouse acquittal, the Ahmaud Arbery case, and the Julius Jones commutation, attorney and activist Angelo Pinto told Hill on BNC that he doesn’t think “the amount of effort” done by activists and communities to “get one guilty verdict” bring racial justice to the forefront is “sustainable.”

“We really can’t sustain the work at this rate,” he added. “I don’t think a case-by-case basis is going to get it done. I think most folks are sophisticated enough to think that we need real system change.”

Source Article from https://www.insider.com/rittenhouse-arbery-julius-jones-instances-evocative-of-racial-justice-issue-2021-11

UNION CITY, Ga. — Police say the man accused of plowing into a Christmas parade in Wisconsin and killing six people was arrested in Union City earlier this year.

Police say Darrell E. Brooks, 39, drove his SUV through a parade in Waukesha last weekend. Five adults and an 8-year-old boy were killed and at least 60 other people were injured.

[DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks]

Brooks has been charged with five counts of intentional homicide, and prosecutors are expected to file a sixth charge.

TRENDING STORIES:

Police reports reveal that Brooks was arrested in Union City in May on battery charges. The charges stemmed from a fight with his girlfriend at the time at a Country Hearth Inn & Suites.

[SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

A witness told police he heard Brooks hitting his girlfriend through the wall. The witness said he confronted Brooks, who then called the police and claimed the witness was harassing the couple.

Police were able to determine that Brooks was the aggressor and that his girlfriend had injuries consistent with domestic abuse.

Brooks was taken to the East Point Jail. It’s unclear what happened to the case after that or if Brooks was convicted of anything.

Source Article from https://www.wsbtv.com/news/local/atlanta/man-police-say-plowed-into-wisconsin-parade-killing-6-arrested-ga-months-earlier/2QFMMATT2BDNPDXZDSR6LMH6WA/

Republican U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert apologized on Twitter on Friday morning after a video of her implying that Ilhan Omar, a fellow member of Congress and a Muslim, could be a suicide bomber circulated on the social media site on Thanksgiving.

Boebert, who was elected to represent Colorado’s western 3rd Congressional District in 2020, addressed her apology to “anyone in the Muslim community I offended …” She added that she has reached out to Omar’s office in hopes of speaking with her directly.

“There are plenty of policy differences to focus on without this unnecessary distraction,” Boebert tweeted.

Boebert has a history of using anti-Islamic language as an attack on Democrats in Congress. She has repeatedly referred to Omar and fellow Muslim U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib as members of the “jihad squad” including in comments delivered on the House floor.

The clip that circulated on Thursday took that rhetoric to a new level.

Tweeted by the account @PatriotTakes, the clip shows Boebert speaking to a group on a small stage in front of an American flag. She tells the crowd she and a staffer were on an elevator in the U.S. Capitol when they saw a police officer running to catch the door before it closed. When the officer wasn’t able to get on the elevator, Boebert said she turned to see Omar next to her on the elevator.

“And I said, ‘Well, she doesn’t have a backpack, we should be fine,’ ” Boebert cracked. The line, implying Omar may have been carrying explosives, drew a round of laughter and applause from the crowd.

The clip drew a speedy reply from Omar, who represents Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District that includes Minneapolis.

On Thursday, Omar tweeted that the elevator story was made up and the Boebert is a “buffoon” who looks down whenever she sees Omar at the Capitol. On Friday, Omar followed up with a tweet calling on Republican Congressional leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi to take disciplinary action against Boebert.

“Saying I am a suicide bomber is no laughing matter,” Omar Tweeted in part. “Muslim bigotry has no place in Congress.”

Patriot Takes, which bills itself as an organization dedicated to exposing right-wing extremism in America, has called for Boebert to be stripped of her committee assignments.


Source Article from https://www.denverpost.com/2021/11/26/lauren-boebert-ilhan-omar-anti-muslim-comments-apology/

The Biden administration on Friday proposed reforms to the country’s oil and gas leasing program that would raise costs for energy companies to drill on public lands and water, but stopped short of recommending an end to leasing on public lands.

The long-anticipated report, published by the Interior Department, recommended increasing royalty rates and rents for drillers, prioritizing leasing in areas with known resource potential and avoiding leasing in areas that can be developed to protect wildlife habitat, recreation and cultural resources.

The report completes a review that President Joe Biden ordered in January. The president directed a halt to new federal oil and gas lease sales on public lands and waters, but a Louisiana federal judge blocked the administration’s suspension in June.

Drilling on public lands generates billions of dollars in revenue but contributes to roughly a quarter of the country’s planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions. The report did not indicate that the administration would take climate change impact into account when approving new leases.

The report said the federal oil and gas program, which is enshrined in law, fails to provide a fair return to taxpayers and inadequately accounts for its harmful impact on the environment. It called for new rules to hike royalty rates, bonding rates and other fees for drillers. The minimum royalty rate is currently 12.5% for oil and gas production on federal lands.

“Our nation faces a profound climate crisis that is impacting every American,” Interior Secretary Deb Haaland said in a statement. “The Interior Department has an obligation to responsibly manage our public lands and waters – providing a fair return to the taxpayer and mitigating worsening climate impacts – while staying steadfast in the pursuit of environmental justice.”

Environmentalists argue the report offers little on the climate impacts of drilling and contradicts Biden’s vows to end drilling on public lands. Some groups note that the report was released during a long holiday weekend when fewer people would notice it.

“Releasing this completely inadequate report over a long holiday weekend is a shameful attempt to hide the fact that President Biden has no intention of fulfilling his promise to stop oil and gas drilling on our public lands,” Mitch Jones, policy director at the environmental group Food & Water Watch, said in a statement.

“A minor increase in the royalties paid by climate polluters will have zero impact on combating the climate crisis, and will in effect make the federal government more dependent on fossil fuels as a source of revenue,” Jones said.

The report comes after the president on Tuesday ordered the release of 50 million barrels of crude from the country’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve as part of a global effort by energy-consuming nations to calm this year′s rapid rise in fuel prices.

The Biden administration has approved 3,091 new drilling permits on public lands at a rate of 332 per month, a faster pace than the Trump administration’s 300 permits per month. The administration recently opened more than 80 million acres in the Gulf of Mexico to auction for oil and gas drilling, a record offshore sale that will lock in years of greenhouse gas emissions.

The permit approvals for fossil fuel production are at odds with Biden’s climate agenda, which involves a commitment to slash U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030 and reach net-zero emissions by 2050.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/26/biden-recommends-reforms-to-oil-and-gas-drilling-stops-short-of-ban.html

LONDON (AP) — WHAT IS THIS NEW COVID-19 VARIANT IN SOUTH AFRICA?

South African scientists identified a new version of the coronavirus this week that they say is behind a recent spike in COVID-19 infections in Gauteng, the country’s most populous province. It’s unclear where the new variant actually arose, but it was first detected by scientists in South Africa and has now been seen in travelers to Belgium, Botswana, Hong Kong and Israel.

Health Minister Joe Phaahla said the variant was linked to an “exponential rise” of cases in the last few days, although experts are still trying to determine if the new variant is actually responsible.

From just over 200 new confirmed cases per day in recent weeks, South Africa saw the number of new daily cases rocket to 2,465 on Thursday. Struggling to explain the sudden rise in cases, scientists studied virus samples from the outbreak and discovered the new variant.

In a statement on Friday, the World Health Organization designated it as a “variant of concern,” naming it “Omicron” after a letter in the Greek alphabet.

After convening a group of experts to assess the data, the U.N. health agency said that “preliminary evidence suggests an increased risk of reinfection with this variant,” as compared to other variants.

“The number of cases of this variant appears to be increasing in almost all provinces in South Africa,” the WHO said.

WHY ARE SCIENTISTS WORRIED ABOUT THIS NEW VARIANT?

It appears to have a high number of mutations — about 30 — in the coronavirus’ spike protein, which could affect how easily it spreads to people.

Sharon Peacock, who has led genetic sequencing of COVID-19 in Britain at the University of Cambridge, said the data so far suggest the new variant has mutations “consistent with enhanced transmissibility,” but said that “the significance of many of the mutations is still not known.”

Lawrence Young, a virologist at the University of Warwick, described omicron as “the most heavily mutated version of the virus we have seen,” including potentially worrying changes never before seen all in the same virus.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the U.S.′ top infectious diseases doctor, said American officials had arranged a call with their South African counterparts later on Friday to find out more details and said there was no indication the variant had yet arrived in the U.S.

WHAT’S KNOWN AND NOT KNOWN ABOUT THE VARIANT?

Scientists know that omicron is genetically distinct from previous variants including the beta and delta variants, but do not know if these genetic changes make it any more transmissible or dangerous. So far, there is no indication the variant causes more severe disease.

It will likely take weeks to sort out if omicron is more infectious and if vaccines are still effective against it.

Peter Openshaw, a professor of experimental medicine at Imperial College London said it was “extremely unlikely” that current vaccines wouldn’t work, noting they are effective against numerous other variants.

Even though some of the genetic changes in omicron appear worrying, it’s still unclear if they will pose a public health threat. Some previous variants, like the beta variant, initially alarmed scientists but didn’t end up spreading very far.

“We don’t know if this new variant could get a toehold in regions where delta is,” said Peacock of the University of Cambridge. “The jury is out on how well this variant will do where there are other variants circulating.” To date, delta is by far the most predominant form of COVID-19, accounting for more than 99% of sequences submitted to the world’s biggest public database.

HOW DID THIS NEW VARIANT ARISE?

The coronavirus mutates as it spreads and many new variants, including those with worrying genetic changes, often just die out. Scientists monitor COVID-19 sequences for mutations that could make the disease more transmissible or deadly, but they cannot determine that simply by looking at the virus.

Peacock said the variant “may have evolved in someone who was infected but could then not clear the virus, giving the virus the chance to genetically evolve,” in a scenario similar to how experts think the alpha variant — which was first identified in England — also emerged, by mutating in an immune-compromised person.

ARE THE TRAVEL RESTRICTIONS BEING IMPOSED BY SOME COUNTRIES JUSTIFIED?

Maybe. As of noon Friday, travelers arriving in the U.K. from South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Lesotho, Eswatini and Zimbabwe will have to self-isolate for 10 days. European Union nations also moved quickly on Friday to ban air travel from southern Africa, and the U.S. also said it would ban travel from South Africa and seven other African nations by non-US citizens beginning Monday.

Given the recent rapid rise in COVID-19 in South Africa, restricting travel from the region is “prudent” and would buy authorities more time, said Neil Ferguson, an infectious diseases expert at Imperial College London.

Jeffrey Barrett, director of COVID-19 Genetics at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, thought that the early detection of the new variant could mean restrictions taken now would have a bigger impact than when the delta variant first emerged

“With delta, it took many, many weeks into India’s terrible wave before it became clear what was going on and delta had already seeded itself in many places in the world and it was too late to do anything about it,” he said. “We may be at an earlier point with this new variant so there may still be time to do something about it.”

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/coronavirus-pandemic-lifestyle-health-travel-europe-116ef818ac4a8e7bc23bb28d6511ecad

The similarities between the two cases aren’t hard to see. Both involved defendants who assumed the Black male victim was involved in criminal activity — burglary, to be specific. In both cases, the defendants who opened fire claimed to be acting in self-defense, and the men responsible for the killings were not immediately arrested or charged.

When it came to the trials, in both cases, the defense tried to capitalize on racial stereotypes to advance their positions. The defense in the Zimmerman case, for example, called on a white woman living in the neighborhood to testify about having her house burglarized by a Black man. The woman said she was scared to death, hiding upstairs, while the Black man was downstairs ransacking her belongings. The burglar wasn’t Trayvon Martin; the only thing the two had in common was that they were both Black males. By calling this witness, the defense seemingly sought to convey to the jury that it was reasonable for Zimmerman to believe Martin, a Black male he didn’t recognize, was up to no good.

In the Arbery case, Travis McMichael invoked the angry Black man stereotype on the stand, testifying that when he first pulled up alongside Arbery in a pickup truck, he noticed Arbery’s demeanor: “He looks very angry.” When asked by his attorney to describe what he meant, McMichael responded, “Mad. It’s clenched teeth. Closed brow. He was mad.” He proceeded to testify that Arbery grabbed his shotgun, and he shot Arbery because he was afraid that Arbery would use his gun against him. Studies have shown that people tend to see ambiguously hostile behavior by a Black man as dangerous, violent and threatening, while seeing the same behavior by a white man as simply playing around. On cross-examination, McMichael admitted that when he was asked by the police whether Arbery had grabbed his shotgun, he told them, “I want to say that he did, but I honestly can’t remember.”

In closing arguments, Laura Hogue, an attorney for Gregory McMichael, went much further, suggesting that Arbery came into the neighborhood where he was shot and killed to engage in criminal activity, and invoking an ugly stereotype. Hogue drew gasps from within the courtroom and harsh criticism from legal observers when she said, “Turning Ahmaud Arbery into a victim after the choices he made does not reflect the reality of what brought Ahmaud Arbery to Satilla Shores in khaki shorts, with no socks to cover his long dirty toenails.”

Despite these similar defense tactics, race operated differently in the two trials in other ways. Most notably, there was a greater nationwide focus on the role that implicit racial bias likely played in Arbery’s killing both before and during the trial — perhaps ultimately contributing to the guilty verdicts.

Decades of social science research indicates that when race is not highlighted in a trial, jurors tend to be more punitive against Black defendants and more forgiving of white defendants even when all other facts are equal. When race — and the possibility of racial bias — is highlighted, however, whether by the attorneys, a witness or the judge, jurors tend to treat Black and white defendants more equally. In a homicide case involving a white defendant who claims self-defense against a Black victim, race needs to be made salient, so the jury does not subconsciously favor the white defendant over the Black victim.

Even though the failure to arrest Zimmerman unleashed an outcry about race and the criminal justice system, there was little focus on race at his trial. The presiding judge made clear that she wanted to run a colorblind trial, ruling early on that the prosecution could use the term “profiling” but not “racial profiling” when describing Zimmerman’s acts. The prosecution acquiesced and avoided references to race during the trial. Indeed, during rebuttal closing argument, prosecutor John Guy told the jury, “Race. This case is not about race. It’s about right and wrong.” After the trial was over, Angela Corey, the lead prosecutor on the case, told the press, “This case has never been about race.”

In contrast, the racial dynamics in the Arbery case were readily apparent both inside and outside the courtroom. The judge, Timothy Walmsley, seemed sensitive to these dynamics. For instance, Walmsley expressed concern when the defense struck numerous Black people from the jury, leaving only one Black juror; ultimately, though, the judge said he felt he had to accept the ostensibly race-neutral reasons for the strikes. The judge likewise denied a defense attorney’s request that he prohibit Black pastors from attending the trial.

Prior to the announcement of the verdicts, some legal analysts criticized prosecutor Linda Dunikoski for not doing more to highlight race. But Dunikoski had to be careful, given the current state of polarization around race in America. She was trying the case in the South and didn’t know whether the white people on her jury might take offense if she emphasized the racial bias that likely caused the defendants to see Arbery as a criminal and a threat to their safety. She needed to make the jury understand the racial dynamics of the case without making any of the 11 white jurors feel she was accusing them of being racist.

And she did that very skillfully.

In her opening statement, Dunikoski told the jury, “We are here because of assumptions and driveway decisions. All three of these defendants did everything they did based on assumptions.” While she didn’t say the defendants relied on racial assumptions, given America’s racial reckoning over the past year and a half, it wouldn’t take a rocket scientist to connect the dots. She also humanized Arbery and didn’t try to hide the fact that he was Black, showing jurors a photo of him and telling them he was a “brother, uncle and an avid runner.” Dunikoski also used the defendants’ own statements to the police to show that they saw Arbery’s race as a threat, telling the jury that when one of the defendants called 911 and was asked, “What’s your emergency?” he responded, “There’s a Black male running down the street.”

In her closing statement, Dunikoski was more explicit, telling the jury that the defendants “made assumptions because Ahmaud Arbery was a Black man, jogging down that street.” The cold transcript of this moment doesn’t fully capture its impact. Dunikoski paused after she said the words “Black man,” so the jury initially heard: “They made assumptions because Ahmaud Arbery was a Black man.” The implication was that the defendants jumped to conclusions about Arbery and thought he had just committed a crime because of his race.

Dunikowski likely was aided by the fact that nationwide protests over the death of George Floyd in 2020 put a spotlight on implicit racial bias and how that bias can lead to fatal outcomes. The jurors were reminded of this reality thanks to the presence of members of Arbery’s family and the Black community in the courtroom every day.

We don’t know exactly why the jurors in the Arbery case made the decision they did, but if there is a lesson to be drawn from the verdict, perhaps it is this: Sometimes to achieve racial justice, we need to remind people that race matters.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2021/11/26/race-ahmaud-arbery-case-bias-523395

WASHINGTON, Nov 26 (Reuters) – U.S. President Joe Biden on Friday called on nations meeting at the World Trade Organization next week to agree to waive intellectual property protections for COVID-19 vaccines in the wake of the discovery of a new coronavirus variant in South Africa.

“The news about this new variant should make clearer than ever why this pandemic will not end until we have global vaccinations,” Biden said in a statement.

“This news today reiterates the importance of moving on this (waiving intellectual property protections) quickly.”

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/us-president-biden-calls-intellectual-property-protection-waivers-covid-19-2021-11-26/

The U.S. will speak Friday with scientists in South Africa to “get the facts” on the emerging, heavily mutated Covid-19 variant detected there in a small number of samples, White House chief medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci told CNN’s “New Day” on Friday morning.

Reviewing South Africa’s research will help the U.S. better understand whether the novel B.1.1.529 variant can evade the antibody protection against the virus provided by vaccines and previous infection, Fauci said.

With countries across Europe and Asia imposing travel restrictions on several nations in southern Africa, Fauci added that analyzing the data could help determine whether similar measures might also be necessary in the U.S.

“This is really something that’s in motion,” Fauci said. “And we just arranged, right now, a discussion between our scientists and the South African scientists a little bit later in the morning to really get the facts, because you’re hearing a lot of things back and forth.”

Fauci emphasized that the U.S. is in “very active communication” with South African scientists and is working to get the molecular makeup of the variant in order to conduct lab tests.

The new strain has now been detected in a growing number of countries, including Belgium, Botswana and Israel. Fauci said there was “no indication” that B.1.1.529 had reached the U.S. yet.

B.1.1.529 contains even more mutations than the world’s most dominant Covid strain, the highly transmissible delta variant. The new variant features roughly 50 mutations, according to data presented by scientist Tulio de Oliveira at a briefing hosted by the South Africa Department of Health on Thursday. That includes more than 30 mutations to the spike protein that allows Covid to enter cells and 10 to the receptor binding domain that first makes contact with cells.

Comparatively, the delta strain has just two mutations to the receptor binding domain.

Some of the mutations found in B.1.1.529 are connected with enhanced antibody resistance and could lower the barrier produced by Covid vaccines, according to de Oliveira’s presentation at the briefing. Certain mutations could lead to greater contagiousness, while others have never been reported until now, he noted.

World Health Organization officials said Thursday that B.1.1.529 contained a large number of mutations but had only been detected in small numbers across South Africa. The organization announced a special meeting for Friday to further discuss the variant’s potential implications on Covid vaccines and treatments.

The WHO’s virus evolution working group will also gather to weigh whether to call the strain a variant of concern, a designation for mutations that are more contagious and more virulent and that can more easily dodge vaccines and therapeutics.

Fauci said the U.S. would decide on enacting travel restrictions “as quickly as we possibly can” if health officials believe they’re necessary after reading South Africa’s data. The European Union’s 27 member states jointly agreed on Friday to pause travel from southern Africa, and the U.K. has suspended flights from six countries in the region as well.

In Asia, Singapore has banned flights from southern Africa, while Japan has heightened its border controls for anyone entering from the region.

“You’re prepared to do everything you need to do to protect the American public, but you want to make sure there’s a basis for doing that,” Fauci said. “And that’s what we’re doing right now.”  

Correction: South Africa’s Department of Health held a briefing on the B.1.1.529 Covid variant on Thursday. A previous version of this story misstated the date.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/26/fauci-us-in-active-communication-with-south-african-scientists-about-covid-variant.html