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Health

C.D.C. to Suggest Some Vaccinated Folks Put on Masks Indoors Once more

Reversing a decision made just two months ago, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is expected to recommend on Tuesday that people vaccinated for the coronavirus resume wearing masks indoors in certain areas of the country.

The change follows reports of rising breakthrough infections with the Delta variant of the virus in people who were fully immunized, and case surges in regions with low vaccination rates. The vaccines remain effective against the worst outcomes of infection with the virus, including those involving the Delta variant.

But the new guidance, the details of which are expected later Tuesday, would mark a sharp turnabout from the agency’s position since May that vaccinated people do not need to wear masks in most indoor spaces.

As recently as last week, an agency spokesman said that the C.D.C. had no plans to change its guidance, unless there were a significant change in the science. Federal officials met on Sunday night to review new evidence that may have prompted the reversal, CNN reported on Tuesday.

“I think that’s great,” said Dr. Celine Gounder, an infectious disease specialist at Bellevue Hospital Center in New York. Based on what scientists are learning about the Delta variant’s ability to cause breakthrough infections, she said, “this is a move in the right direction.”

The C.D.C.’s initial guidance in May said people fully protected from the coronavirus could go mask-free indoors in most scenarios, but recommended that unvaccinated people still wear masks. Those recommendations drew sharp criticism from some experts, who said it was premature given the vast swaths of unvaccinated people in the country.

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the C.D.C.’s director, at the time pointed to two scientific findings as significant factors. Few vaccinated people become infected with the virus, and transmission seems rarer still, she noted; and the vaccines appear to be effective against all known variants of the coronavirus.

A day after the announcement, the agency released results from a large study showing that the mRNA vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna were 94 percent effective in preventing symptomatic illness in those who got two doses, and 82 percent effective in those who had received one dose.

But those data, and the C.D.C.’s decision, were based on infections of previous versions of the virus before the Delta variant began sweeping through the country. Reports of clusters of infections among fully immunized people have suggested that the variant may be able to break through the vaccine barrier more often than previous iterations of the virus.

Categories
Politics

Elizabeth Warren presses Janet Yellen to deal with crypto market threats

Senator Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., Holds a press conference outside of the Capitol on Tuesday, April 27, 2021 to reinstate the Universal Childcare and Early Education Act.

Tom Williams | CQ Roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

Senator Elizabeth Warren called on Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen Tuesday to identify and address cryptocurrency risks and create a “comprehensive and coordinated” framework through which federal agencies can continuously regulate virtual coins.

Warren, a member of the Senate Banking Committee and longtime critic of the country’s largest banks, urged the Treasury Secretary to use her powers on the Financial Stability Oversight Council to create a more secure crypto market.

“The FSOC must act quickly to use its legal powers to address the risks of cryptocurrencies and regulate the market to ensure the safety and stability of consumers and our financial system,” the Massachusetts Democrat wrote in a letter to Yellen .

“As the demand for cryptocurrencies continues to grow and these assets become more embedded in our financial system, consumers, the environment and our financial system are exposed to increasing threats,” she added.

Warren named five risks posed by an under-regulated crypto market. In her words it is:

  • Exposure to hedge funds and other investment vehicles with no transparency
  • Risks for banks
  • Unique threats from stablecoins
  • Used in cyber attacks that can disrupt the financial system
  • Risks from decentralized financing

A Treasury Department spokesman did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

Warren’s letter also came as she and other lawmakers held a hearing on the Senate Banking Committee entitled “Cryptocurrencies: What Are They Good For?”

Senators will grill Coin Center Executive Director Jerry Brito, Filecoin Foundation Chair Marta Belcher, and Angela Walch, a research fellow at University College London’s Center for Blockchain Technologies, during Tuesday’s hearing.

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“Cryptocurrencies and other digital assets present significant risks right now, and the risks they pose are increasing as they permeate the traditional financial system and more and more people are investing,” Walch told lawmakers in a written statement. Her Twitter bio advises readers “not to own crypto”.

Warren’s letter is the latest in a series of calls from Capitol Hill for tighter market regulation.

Perhaps the most prominent example came in February when lawmakers on both sides of the political aisle pecked executives at brokerage firm Robinhood, social media website Reddit, market maker Citadel Securities, and video game retailer GameStop about “gamifying” stock trading.

However, regulating crypto markets has proven to be a more difficult task given the sheer number of different assets as well as the novelty of the technology behind digital currencies. To date, it is unclear which body – the FSOC, the Securities and Exchange Commission, or Congress itself – will ultimately be responsible for the day-to-day oversight of crypto trading.

That’s probably why Warren addressed her letter to Yellen in her role at FSOC.

Established after the 2008 financial crisis, the FSOC is headed by the Treasury Secretary and brings together 10 state financial regulators, including the Federal Reserve, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Commodities Future Trading Commission.

The council’s role is to identify risks to the financial industry and coordinate a regulatory response between cabinet departments and other agencies, as no single regulator is responsible for overseeing and addressing global risks to financial stability.

The SEC, under the new leadership of Chairman Gary Gensler, is currently considering approving exchange-traded funds that track Bitcoin’s performance. Many investors say that given the recent rally in Bitcoin and the extensive amount of futures and other derivatives trading in the space, the decision cannot come soon enough.

So far, Gensler has said investor protection should apply to crypto exchanges, and the Federal Reserve is considering issuing central bank digital currency.

Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee, including ranking member Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania and Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming, argue that Congress should better understand the potential uses of cryptocurrencies while keeping illegal activity at bay.

Toomey and Lummis are investigating the value and possible uses of so-called stablecoins or digital currencies that are linked to national currencies such as the US dollar.

“It’s important to note that people have raised legitimate issues with cryptocurrencies,” Toomey said in prepared remarks on Tuesday morning. “But we shouldn’t lose sight of the enormous potential benefits that distributed ledger technology offers.”

“We should also keep in mind that private innovation has made most of these developments possible,” he added. “We shouldn’t suppress the concepts of individual entrepreneurship and empowerment that made this innovation possible.”

– CNBC’s Stephanie Dhue contributed to this article.

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Health

5 issues to know earlier than the inventory market opens Tuesday, July 27

Here are the most important news, trends and analysis that investors need to start their trading day:

1. Wall Street dips after another day of record high closes

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), July 21, 2021.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

U.S. futures were under some pressure Tuesday, one day after the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and Nasdaq logged a fifth straight session of gains and another day of record high closes. The Federal Reserve holds its two-day July meeting on Tuesday and Wednesday, with the future for rates, bond-buying, and inflation on the agenda. Big Tech earnings are set to start arriving after the bell Tuesday. The second-quarter earnings season has been stronger than expected. So far, 88% of S&P 500 companies reported a positive EPS surprise, according to FactSet. If that’s the final tally, it would be the highest since FactSet began tracking the metric in 2008.

2. Big Tech earnings start after the closing bell

Tim Cook, CEO of Apple (L), Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft (C) and Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google.

Getty Images

3. Tesla tops $1 billion in quarterly net income for first time ever

SpaceX founder and Tesla CEO Elon Musk looks on as he visits the construction site of Tesla’s gigafactory in Gruenheide, near Berlin, Germany, May 17, 2021.

Michele Tantussi | Reuters

Shares of Tesla rose about 1.5% in Tuesday’s premarket, the morning after the electric automaker reported earnings of $1.45 per share on $11.96 billion in revenue. Both beat expectations. Tesla passed $1 billion in quarterly net income for the first time, 10 times higher than the year-ago period. The company also reported a $23 million impairment related the bitcoin it holds on its balance sheet. The world’s largest cryptocurrency plunged more than 40% in Q2, so Tesla’s holdings would be worth much less than the nearly $2.5 billion at the end of the first quarter. During Tesla’s post-earnings conference call, CEO Elon Musk said he won’t likely appear on future calls unless he has “something really important” to communicate.

4. GE, UPS best estimates on earnings, revenue

Larry Culp, CEO, General Electric

Scott Mlyn | CNBC

Shares of General Electric jumped more than 3.5% in premarket trading, after the struggling conglomerate exceeded estimates with second-quarter earnings and revenue. GE on Tuesday also said it expects 2021 free cash flow to be $3.5 billion to $5 billion, up from its prior forecast of $2.5 billion to $4.5 billion. Free-cash flow is closely watched by investors as a sign of the health of GE’s operations and ability to repay debt.

UPS CEO Carol Tome meets with workers

Source: UPS

Shares of United Parcel Service dropped about 2% in the premarket, after the delivery giant on Tuesday reported second-quarter earnings and revenue that beat estimates. Under CEO Carol Tome, UPS has been reining in costs and focusing on high margin packages under her “better not bigger” strategy.

5. House select panel on Capitol attack to hold first hearing

U.S. Representative Liz Cheney (R-WY), with Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-MS) and members of the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol speak to reporters after meeting with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) at the Capitol in Washington, U.S. July 1, 2021.

Jonathan Ernst | Reuters

The House select committee investigating the deadly pro-Trump invasion of the U.S. Capitol will hold its first hearing Tuesday. The panel will hear directly from four law enforcement officers about their struggles to defend the Capitol from the mob. Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, who was ousted from GOP leadership after refusing to stop criticizing Donald Trump for falsely claiming the 2020 election was rigged, is one of two Republicans appointed to the committee so far. The other Republican is Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi previously rejected two of GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy’s picks for the committee.

— Reuters contributed to this report. Follow all the market action like a pro on CNBC Pro. Get the latest on the pandemic with CNBC’s coronavirus coverage.

Categories
Entertainment

‘Dune’ and Princess Diana Biopic to Debut at a Starry Venice Movie Pageant

Five of the 21 films in the competition are directed by women, Barbera said – up from eight last year. “It may seem like a step backwards, but that’s only part of the story,” he added. Female directors appeared to be more affected by the coronavirus pandemic than their male counterparts, he said, adding, “I really hope they make a comeback.”

Bong Joon Ho, the director of “Parasite,” will chair the competition jury, which will include British actress Cynthia Erivo and Chloé Zhao, the director of “Nomadland,” which won the Golden Lion and the Oscar last year Movie.

This year’s festival may see the blockbusters return to Venice, but it will still be far from normal. Roberto Cicutto, the festival’s president, said at the press conference that the rules introduced last year to limit the spread of the coronavirus, such as:

According to Italian government regulations coming into effect on August 6th, anyone attending screenings or even eating indoors on the festival site must provide evidence that they have received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, a recent negative test result or a certificate of recovery from the disease in the past six months.

Italy’s government announced the requirements this month as the number of viruses increased across the country. Health officials reported 4,742 new cases on Sunday. That’s well below this year’s high of over 25,000 new daily cases in March, but the surge in cases has caused concern in a country hit hard by the pandemic last year.

“This year we were hoping we could be more relaxed,” said Cicutto. “It is not so for the time being. But we continue to hope. “

Categories
Politics

Michael Enzi, Former Senator From Wyoming, Dies at 77

According to Mr. Enzi, Mr. Simpson encouraged him to run for mayor of Gillette, the city to which he had moved only a few years earlier.

“On the way home from that Cody meeting while my wife was driving, I told her what Senator Simpson had said, and that I was thinking maybe I should run for mayor,” Mr. Enzi said in his retirement speech. “It must have come as quite a shock, because she ended up swerving into the barrow pit and then coming back up onto the road.”

At the time, Mr. Enzi said, Gillette was a place where recent discoveries of oil, gas and coal were drawing more and more people — and putting a strain on municipal services. The city, he said, was in need of three things that would become a recurring theme in Mr. Enzi’s political career: budgets, agendas and planning.

“Not the most exciting topics,” he said in his retirement speech.

Mr. Enzi was elected mayor in 1974 and served two four-year terms, during which time he also traveled to and from Washington as a member of the Coal Advisory Committee for the U.S. Department of Interior and served as the president of the Wyoming Association of Municipalities.

He soon set his sights on state politics, joining the Wyoming House of Representatives in 1987, and the Wyoming State Senate in 1991. He was first elected to the United States Senate in 1996. He led the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions from 2005 to 2007, and was the chairman of the Senate Budget Committee from 2015 to 2021.

In 2009, Mr. Enzi was a member of what came to be known as the Gang of Six, a group of Senate Finance Committee members — three Democrats and three Republicans — who held lengthy negotiations on a health care overhaul. The talks dragged on, and Republicans ultimately backed away from those compromise efforts amid protests from their constituents. The Affordable Care Act would pass in 2010, without support from Republicans in Congress. Mr. Enzi had sought to repeal the legislation.

In 2017, Mr. Enzi was one of 22 senators who signed a letter asking President Donald J. Trump to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement.

Categories
World News

‘They Have My Sister’: As Uyghurs Communicate Out, China Targets Their Households

She was a gifted agricultural scientist educated at prestigious universities in Shanghai and Tokyo. She said she wanted to help farmers in poor areas, like her hometown in Xinjiang, in western China. But because of her uncle’s activism for China’s oppressed Muslim Uyghurs, her family and friends said, the Chinese state made her a security target.

At first they took away her father. Then they pressed her to return home from Japan. Last year, at age 30, Mihriay Erkin, the scientist, died in Xinjiang, under mysterious circumstances.

The government confirmed Ms. Erkin’s death but attributed it to an illness. Her uncle, Abduweli Ayup, the activist, believes she died in state custody.

Mr. Ayup says his niece was only the latest in his family to come under pressure from the authorities. His two siblings had already been detained and imprisoned. All three were targeted in retaliation for his efforts to expose the plight of the Uyghurs, he said.

“People are not only suffering there, they are not only being indoctrinated there, not only being tortured, they are actually dying,” said Mr. Ayup, who now lives in Norway. “And the Chinese government is using this death, using these threats to make us silent, to make us lose our hope.”

As Beijing has intensified its repression in Xinjiang in recent years, more Uyghurs living overseas have felt compelled to speak out about mass internment camps and other abuses against their families back home. Their testimonies have added to a growing body of evidence of China’s crackdown, which some have called a genocide, prompting foreign governments to impose sanctions.

Credit…Abduweli Ayup

Now the Chinese authorities are pushing back against overseas Uyghurs by targeting their relatives.

The Communist Party has long treated the relatives of dissidents as guilty by association and used them to pressure and punish outspoken family members. With the courts under the control of the authorities, there is little recourse to challenge such prosecutions. Liu Xia, the wife of Chinese activist Liu Xiaobo, spent nearly eight years under house arrest after he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010. Her younger brother, Liu Hui, served two years in prison for a fraud conviction she called retaliation.

But with the Uyghurs, the authorities seem to be applying this tactic with unusual, and increasing severity, placing some Uyghur activists’ relatives in prison for decades, or longer.

Dolkun Isa, the German-based president of the World Uyghur Congress, a Uyghur rights group, said he believes his older brother is in detention. He learned in late May that his younger brother, Hushtar, had been sentenced to life in prison. “It was connected to my activism, surely,” Mr. Isa said.

Radio Free Asia, a United States-funded broadcaster, says that more than 50 relatives of journalists on staff have been detained in Xinjiang, with some held in detention camps and others sentenced to prison. The journalists all work for the broadcaster’s Uyghur language service, which has in the past several years stood out for its reporting on the crackdown, exposing the existence of camps and publishing the first accounts of deaths and forced sterilizations.

The sister of Rushan Abbas, a Uyghur American activist, was sentenced in December to 20 years in prison for terrorism. The sister, Gulshan Abbas, and her aunt had been detained in 2018, days after Rushan Abbas spoke at an event in Washington denouncing the crackdown and widespread detention in Xinjiang.

“As retaliation against me because I made that public speech, as a tool to silence me, they abducted my sister,” Ms. Abbas said. “They have my sister as a hostage right now.”

At Beijing’s request, some countries have also sent more than 300 Uyghurs back to China since 2010, according to a study by the Oxus Society for Central Asian Affairs, and the Uyghur Human Rights Project, nonprofits based in Washington, D.C. One Uyghur now fighting extradition is Idris Hasan, whom activists say has been detained in Morocco.

In the case of Ms. Erkin, the scientist, her uncle first drew the attention of the authorities in Xinjiang for trying to expand the use of the Uyghur language. The government regarded even the most moderate expression of ethnic identity as a threat and Mr. Ayup was arrested in 2013 and spent 15 months in prison. After he was released, he fled abroad, but his experience emboldened him to continue campaigning.

Back home, Mr. Ayup’s brother, Erkin Ayup, a local Communist Party official, knew that his own situation was precarious. In 2016, he told his daughter that a crackdown was unfolding, and he feared he could be caught up in it, according to Asami Nuru, a friend of Ms. Erkin’s in Tokyo.

The father and daughter devised a simple system to let Ms. Erkin know he was safe: he would send her a smiley face sticker on WeChat every morning.

“One day, he didn’t send the sticker,” Ms. Nuru said. “She called her mother and she learned her father was in a camp. She was very upset, and from then on she would cry every day.”

Mr. Ayup believes the authorities took his brother into custody in mid-2017.

In the years that followed, Ms. Erkin’s anxiety over her father’s situation bore down on her, and she even lost weight, Ms. Nuru said. She began to receive adamant messages from her mother, likely at the behest of the authorities, telling her to stop her uncle’s activism or return home.

Her family and friends say her decision to return to China in June 2019 was sudden. She left her suitcases in the house where she lived.

Ms. Erkin called Ms. Nuru from the airport and told her that she wanted to try to find her father, even though she knew he was still in detention. Ms. Nuru said she tried to persuade her against the idea.

“She told me, ‘I want to try to find my father, even if it means I might die,’” Ms. Nuru said.

Mr. Ayup says he believes that the authorities arrested Ms. Erkin in February 2020 to punish him after he helped international news outlets report on a leaked government document outlining how Uyghurs were tracked and chosen for detention.

The circumstances of Ms. Erkin’s death remain unclear.

Her death was first reported by Radio Free Asia, which cited a national security officer from Ms. Erkin’s hometown as saying she had died while in a detention center in the southern city of Kashgar. Mr. Ayup said he believed it was the same place where he himself had been beaten and sexually abused six years earlier.

Ms. Erkin’s family was given her body, Mr. Ayup said, but were told by security officials to not have guests at her funeral and to tell others she died at home.

In a statement to The New York Times, the Xinjiang government said that Ms. Erkin had returned from overseas in June 2019 to receive medical treatment. On Dec. 19, she died at a hospital in Kashgar of organ failure caused by severe anemia, according to the statement.

From the time she went to the hospital until her death, she had always been looked after by her uncle and younger brother, the government wrote.

Before she returned to China, Ms. Erkin seemed to be aware that her return could end tragically.

“We all leave alone, the only things that can accompany us are the Love of Allah and our smile,” she wrote in text messages to Mr. Ayup when he tried to dissuade her from going home.

“I am very scared,” she admitted. “I hope I would be killed with a single bullet.”

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Health

As Virus Instances Rise, One other Contagion Spreads Among the many Vaccinated: Anger

As coronavirus cases resurface across the country, many vaccine Americans are losing patience with vaccine holdouts who they believe neglect a civic duty or cling to conspiracy theories and misinformation, even as new patients arrive in emergency rooms and the nation renews mask recommendations.

The pandemic appeared to be leaving the country; Almost a month ago there was a feeling of celebration. Now many of the vaccinated fear for their unvaccinated children and fear that they themselves are at risk for breakthrough infections. Rising case numbers are turning plans to reopen schools and workplaces upside down and threaten another wave of infections that could overwhelm hospitals in many communities.

“It’s like the morning sun came up and everyone was arguing about it,” said Jim Taylor, 66, a retired civil servant in Baton Rouge, LA, a state where fewer than half of adults are fully vaccinated.

“The virus is here and killing people, and we have a proven way to stop it – and we’re not going to. That is rude.”

The rising sentiment adds support for further coercive measures. Scientists, business leaders, and government officials are demanding vaccine mandates – if not from the federal government, then from local jurisdictions, schools, employers, and corporations.

“I’ve gotten angrier over time,” said Doug Robertson, 39, a teacher who lives outside of Portland, Oregon and has three children too young to be vaccinated, including a toddler with serious health.

“Now there’s a vaccine and a light at the end of the tunnel and some people choose not to go to it,” he said. “You are making it darker for my family and others like mine by making this decision.”

On Monday, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio ordered all city workers to be vaccinated against Covid-19 or subjected to weekly tests until schools reopen in mid-September. Officials in California followed hours later with a similar mandate that covered all government employees and health care workers.

The Department of Veterans Affairs on Monday called for 115,000 local health care workers to be vaccinated over the next two months, becoming the first federal agency to mandate a mandate. Nearly 60 major medical organizations, including the American Medical Association and the American Nurses Association, called for mandatory vaccination of all health care workers on Monday.

“It is time to blame the unvaccinated people, not the ordinary people,” a frustrated Governor Kay Ivey, Republican of Alabama, told reporters last week. “It’s the unvaccinated people who fail us.”

There is no doubt that the United States has reached a turning point. According to a New York Times database, 57 percent of Americans 12 and older are fully vaccinated. Eligible Americans receive an average of 537,000 doses per day, down 84 percent from the high of 3.38 million in early April.

Infections are on the rise as a result of delayed vaccinations and lifted restrictions. As of Sunday, the country recorded 52,000 new cases a day, an average of 170 percent more than the previous two weeks. Hospital stays and death rates are also increasing, though not as rapidly.

Communities from San Francisco to Austin, Texas recommend that people who have been vaccinated wear masks again in public indoor spaces. Citing the spread of the more contagious Delta variant of the virus, Los Angeles and St. Louis, Missouri counties have mandated indoor masking.

For many Americans who were vaccinated months ago, the future looks bleak. Frustration strains relationships even within close-knit families.

Josh Perldeiner, 36, a Connecticut public defender who has a 2-year-old son, was fully vaccinated in mid-May. But a close relative who visits frequently refused to get the syringes, even though he and other family members urged them to do so.

She recently tested positive for the virus after traveling to Florida, where hospitals are filling up with Covid-19 patients. Now Mr Perldeiner is concerned that his son, too young to have a vaccine, might be exposed.

“It’s beyond risk,” he said. “People with privileges are opposed to the vaccine, and it affects our economies and continues the cycle.” As infections rise, he added, “I feel like we are on the same precipice as we were a year ago, when People don’t care if more people die. “

Hospitals have become a particular focus. Vaccination remains voluntary in most facilities and is not required for nursing staff in most hospitals and nursing homes. Many large hospital chains are just beginning to require their employees to be vaccinated.

A city stirs

As New York begins its post-pandemic life, we are investigating the ongoing effects of Covid on the city.

Despite being fully vaccinated, Aimee McLean, a nurse case manager at the University of Utah Hospital in Salt Lake City, is concerned that she will contract the virus in a patient and accidentally pass it on to her father, who has a severe chronic condition Suffers from lung disease. Less than half of Utah’s population is fully vaccinated.

“The longer we get near that number, the more it feels like there is a decent percentage of the population that honestly doesn’t care about us as healthcare workers,” said Ms. McLean, 46.

She suggested that health insurers link hospital bills to vaccination. “If you choose not to be part of the solution, you should be responsible for the consequences,” she said.

Many schools and universities will resume classroom teaching as early as next month. With the increase in the number of infections, the tensions between vaccinated and unvaccinated people have also risen in these settings.

Recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to reopen K-12 schools are tied to community virus transmission rates. In communities where vaccination is delayed, these rates are rising and vaccinated parents are again concerned about school outbreaks. The vaccines are not yet approved for children under 12 years of age.

The American Academy of Pediatrics has recommended that children wear masks in class when schools reopen. School districts from Chicago to Washington began enacting mandates on Friday.

Universities, on the other hand, can often require students and staff to be vaccinated. But many don’t have what frustrates the vaccinated.

“If we respect the rights and freedoms of the unvaccinated, what happens to the rights and freedoms of the vaccinated?” Said Elif Akcali, 49, who teaches engineering at the University of Florida at Gainesville. The university doesn’t require students to be vaccinated, and as rates rise in Florida, it worries about exposure to the virus.

Some even wonder how much sympathy they should have for fellow citizens who are not acting in their own interests. “I feel like if you decide not to have a vaccination and now you get sick, it’s kind of bad,” said Lia Hockett, 21, the manager of Thunderbolt Spiritual Books in Santa Monica, California.

Understand the state of vaccine mandates in the United States

As the virus spreads again, some vaccinated people believe the federal government should start using sticks instead of carrots, like lottery tickets.

Carol Meyer, 65, of Ulster County, NY, suggested withholding incentive payments or tax credits from vaccine objectors. “I have a feeling that in this country we have a social contract with our neighbors, and people who can get vaccinated and choose not to get vaccinated are breaking it,” said Meyer.

Bill Alsstrom, 74, a retired innkeeper in Acton, Massachusetts, said he would not support measures that would directly affect individual families and children, but asked if states that do not meet vaccination goals are withholding federal government funding should be.

Perhaps the federal government should require employees and contractors to be vaccinated, he thought. Why shouldn’t federal funding be withheld from states that don’t meet vaccination goals?

Although it is often viewed as a conservative phenomenon, hesitant and refused vaccination occurs in the United States for a variety of reasons across the political and cultural spectrum. No argument can address all of these concerns, and rethinking is often a slow, individual process.

Pastor Shon Neyland, who regularly pleads with members of his Portland, Oregon church to get Covid-19 vaccines, estimates that only about half of the members of the Highland Christian Center church have been injected. There was tension in the community over vaccination.

“It is disappointing because I was trying to show them that their life is in danger and that this is a serious threat to humanity,” he said.

Shareese Harris, 26, who works in the Grace Cathedral International office in Uniondale, NY, has not been vaccinated and is “taking my time” with it. She fears that the vaccines may have long-term side effects and that they have been brought to market.

“I shouldn’t be convicted or forced into a decision,” said Ms. Harris. “Society will just have to wait for us.”

Rising resentment among vaccinated people may well lead the public to support stronger coercive action, including mandates, but experts warn that punitive action and social exclusion can backfire and end dialogue and outreach.

Elected officials in several communities in Los Angeles County, for example, are already refusing to enforce the county’s new mask mandate.

“Anything that limits the opportunity for honest dialogue and persuasion is not a good thing,” said Stephen Thomas, professor of health policy and management at the University of Maryland School of Public Health. “We are already in isolated, isolated information systems where people are in their own echo chambers.”

Gentle persuasion and persistent urging convinced Dorrett Denton, a 62-year-old home nurse in Queens, to get vaccinated in February. Her employer repeatedly urged Ms. Denton to get vaccinated, but in the end it was her doctor who persuaded her.

“She says to me: ‘You have been coming to me since 1999. How many times have I operated on you and your life was in my hands? You trust me with your life, don’t you? ”Ms. Denton recalled.

“I said, ‘Yes, Doctor.’ She said, ‘Well, trust me on this.’ “

Giulia Heyward contributed the coverage from Miami, Sophie Kasakove from New York and Livia Albeck-Ripka from Los Angeles.

Categories
Health

California is requiring proof of Covid vaccination for state staff

Frederic J. Brown | AFP | Getty Images

California will require government employees and some health care workers to provide evidence of Covid-19 or undergo mandatory weekly tests, senior state officials said Monday.

According to a press release, government officials are required to submit records of their vaccination by August 2. All civil servants who have not been vaccinated by then must present a negative Covid test at least once a week.

The new policy for health workers and convention facilities goes into effect on August 9, and health facilities must be fully complied with by August 23, according to the press release.

In government health care facilities, employees who work in a hospital are required to show evidence of a Covid vaccine or show negative coronavirus tests twice a week. Unvaccinated people are advised to wear N95 masks while working. Medical staff in outpatient facilities such as dental practices also have to do a Covid test once a week.

“We are at a point in this epidemic of this pandemic where the choice, the individual’s decision not to be vaccinated, is now profound, devastating and deadly on the rest of us,” Governor Gavin Newsom said at the announcement new arrangement. “This election has led to an increase in the number of cases, growing concerns about rising mortality rates and apparently induced hospitalizations.”

While the state already requires employees to disclose whether they have been vaccinated if they do not wish to wear masks indoors, they do not need to provide proof of vaccination. The new guidelines require proof of vaccination for all civil servants and mandatory tests for those who do not provide proof.

“Our projections are sobering,” said Newsom, noting that state officials are forecasting a “significant increase in hospital admissions” over the next few weeks that will put pressure on local hospitals.

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio recently introduced similar guidelines for city and health workers, NBC New York reported. All employees who fail to provide proof of vaccination by September 13 are required to have a weekly coronavirus test, and all unvaccinated employees must wear a mask at work starting August 2.

The San Francisco Bar Owner Alliance, which represents 500 bars in San Francisco, said it is encouraging its members to require customers to have a negative Covid test or proof of vaccination from July 29, requirements are “welcome to sit outside.” The individual bars have a choice of whether to enforce the requirements or not.

California saw vaccination rates rise 16% last week as the Delta variant quickly spread across the state. It now makes up about 80% of all newly sequenced cases in the state, health officials said.

Los Angeles County recently redesigned its indoor mask mandate regardless of vaccination status.

When asked about a statewide mask mandate, Newsom said the majority of Californians live in jurisdictions that either mandate or encourage the use of masks. “Our focus is on vaccinations, so there won’t be a need.” he said.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs also announced Monday that it will require Covid vaccinations for all health care workers who work in Veterans Health Administration facilities.

“VA is taking this necessary step to protect the veterans it serves,” the agency wrote on its website. It is the first federal agency to mandate vaccinations and give employees eight weeks to get their vaccinations.

Categories
Politics

Last lacking individual recognized, dying toll 98

People visit the memorial which contains pictures of some of the victims from the partially collapsed 12-story Champlain Towers South Condo building on July 15, 2021 in Surfside, Florida. 92 victims have been identified while the search and recovery work is nearing completion.

Joe Raedle | Getty Images

The last person missing in the collapse of a residential complex in Surfside, Florida has been recovered and identified, bringing the death toll to 98, according to Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava.

The remains of Estelle Hedeya, 54, were finally identified by authorities, the victim’s younger brother told the Associated Press. A total of 242 people are now recorded, said Levine Cava.

“Although we have identified all of the missing reported victims, the Miami-Dade police are continuing their ongoing search and recovery efforts on the evidence pile to ensure that all identifiable human remains are recovered,” Levine Cava said during a press conference Monday.

Miami-Dade Police Department director Alfredo Ramirez found that human remains had been recovered from the “secondary site” of the collapse, where the remaining portion of the condo building stood before it was demolished three weeks ago.

“We are recovering human remains and will continue to process them […]”said Ramirez.” We are still working on the stacks of evidence and will continue until we think we have done all we can.

The fire department ended their search for bodies on Friday when the heap of debris was almost completely swept away from the collapse site. Miami-Dade Police Department officials were forced to stop efforts to recover the remains and personal effects.

“Nothing we can say or do will bring back those 98 angels who left grieving families, loved ones and loved ones in this community and around the world,” said Levine Cava. “But we did everything we could to bring the families out of school. I am particularly proud that, thanks to this tireless effort, we were finally able to close down all the people who reported missing relatives.”

The news comes more than a month after the sudden collapse of the 12-story Champlain Towers South. First responders pursued an emotional and tireless search that shifted from rescue to recovery after officials said the possibility of finding someone alive was “near zero”.

Search teams had spent weeks tackling the dangers of the rubble, including severe weather conditions that temporarily halted their work. Ultimately, they cleared more than 14,000 tons of concrete and rubble from the construction site.

As their search neared the end, authorities focused on helping victims and families affected by the collapse. This includes the provision of resources by a family counseling center, which offers psychological counseling as well as financial and housing assistance, among other things.

Last week, a judge ruled that victims and families affected by the collapse should initially receive at least $ 150 million in compensation.

The compensation includes insurance for the Champlain Towers South building and the expected proceeds from the sale of the land on which the condominium building once stood.

While the exact cause of the collapse is still unknown, a 2018 report shows the 40-year-old building suffered significant structural damage, with cracks in the underground parking garage and waterproofing problems under the pool.

Recent reports also show that the repeal of a law in Florida in 2010 that required condos to schedule repairs may also have contributed to the collapse.

Categories
Health

When Euphemisms (however By no means Sharks) Assault

Shark scientists have been exhorting the public to call human-shark interactions something other than shark attacks, preferring less pejorative terms like “shark encounters.” The scientists emphasize that humans tend to be to blame for shark injuries — stepping accidentally on small sharks, which snap back; swimming in murky water, venturing too close.

“A ‘shark attack’ is a story of intent,” Christopher Pepin-Neff of the University of Sydney, told the Times reporter Alan Yuhas. “But sharks don’t know what people are. They don’t know when you’re in the boat. They don’t know what a propeller is. It’s not an attack.”

But the terms being offered as replacements, while more accurate and less inflammatory, have a ring of gentility to them, evoking the top hats and evening gloves of centuries past.

To wit, a shark incident:

Meanwhile, scientists elsewhere this week published one of the most detailed views yet of shark guts, using a CT scanner to reveal “the complex inner geographies of more than 20 species of sharks,” Veronique Greenwood writes. The results, in stunning 3-D video, indicate that the spiraling intestine of some sharks behaves like a Tesla valve, drawing fluid forward without moving parts.

The study also appears to confirm the long-held notion that such intricacy helps to slow down digestion and extract the most calories from its prey. Chew on that while you do your part to avoid shark, uh, euphemisms.

  • Hard to miss: Earlier this week a rare, 100-pound opah, or moonfish, washed ashore in Oregon.

  • This week on “The Argument,” Michio Kaku, a physicist at the City College of New York, and Douglas Vakoch, an astrobiologist and the president of the research and educational nonprofit METI (Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence) International, discussed the wisdom of trying to contact other intelligent life in the universe.

  • These African wild dog parents aren’t bringing home bacon, exactly, but this rare footage of them feeding their pups sure is adorable.

  • And there are few better moments to read Norman Maclean, both “A River Runs Through It,” his majestic fly-fishing memoir, and “Young Men and Fire,” his reconstruction of the 1949 Mann Gulch tragedy in Montana that took the lives of a dozen U.S. Forest Service firefighters. “The story, which I’ve read at least four times now, is agonizing to read, making the hairs on my arms stand on end,” Anna Holmes wrote in The Times in 2015. “It is also one of the most pleasurable experiences I’ve had.”

“On Tuesday, the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks imposed “hoot owl” restrictions on the Missouri River, one of the most popular trout fishing sites in the state, between Helena and Great Falls because of warm water temperatures. The rule bans fishing after 2 p.m. (The term “hoot owl restrictions” stems from the early days of the timber industry. Loggers work early in the mornings of late summer, when it’s cooler, because the forests are dry and that increases the risk of chain saws or other equipment sparking a fire. Loggers often heard owls during their early morning shifts.)”