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World News

Our bodies once more pile up in Bolivia as Latin America endures an extended, lethal coronavirus wave.

In Bolivia, bodies are piling up at home and on the streets, reflecting the terrifying images of last summer when a deadly spike in coronavirus infections overwhelmed the country’s fragile medical system. Bolivian police say they recovered 170 bodies of people believed to have died from Covid-19 in January and health officials say the intensive care units are full.

“If 10 or 20 patients die, their beds will be full again in a matter of hours,” said Carlos Hurtado, a public health epidemiologist in Santa Cruz, Bolivia’s largest city.

The virus resurgence in Bolivia is part of a larger second wave across Latin America where some of the toughest quarantine in the world is giving way to pandemic fatigue and economic worries.

The International Monetary Fund announced on Monday that it was revising its 2021 growth forecast for Latin America and the Caribbean from 3.6 percent to 4.1 percent. The fund warned that in some cases the surge could jeopardize an economic recovery that is likely to take longer than other parts of the world, and forecast regional production will not return to pre-pandemic levels until 2023.

As the number of new cases falls, deaths remain at record highs in many parts of the region, just as some governments are starting vaccination efforts.

In Brazil and Mexico, an average of more than 1,000 people have died from Covid-19 every day for weeks. Its total pandemic death toll is second only to that of the United States. Deaths in Brazil have reached their summer peak, while in Mexico they are far higher than any previous high, although they have started to fall in the past few days.

In Bolivia last summer, the New York Times revised mortality figures suggested the country’s actual death toll was nearly five times the official figure, suggesting that Bolivia had suffered one of the worst epidemics in the world. According to a Times analysis, about 20,000 more people died from June to August than in previous years – a large number in a country of about 11 million people.

Bolivia currently reports an average of 60 coronavirus deaths per day, approaching last summer’s numbers. Experts believe the higher mortality rate is caused by the contagious virus variants that originate from neighboring Brazil and elsewhere, but they lack the tools to analyze the viruses’ genetic code.

Despite the rising death rate, the Bolivian authorities failed to implement quarantine measures to contain the first wave of the virus a year ago. Officials in Bolivia and other Latin American countries are hailing their emerging vaccination programs as a reason to avoid lockdowns, although few countries in the region outside of Brazil have sourced significant numbers of doses.

Only 20,000 doses of vaccine have arrived in Bolivia, although the government plans to vaccinate eight million people by September.

Categories
Politics

U.S. Plane Provider Returning Residence After Lengthy Sea Tour Watching Iran

WASHINGTON – The aircraft carrier Nimitz is finally going home.

The Pentagon ordered the warship last month to remain in the Middle East over Iranian threats against President Donald J. Trump and other American officials, just three days after announcing that the ship would be returning home to ease growing tensions with Tehran .

Given these immediate tensions, which appear to be easing somewhat, and President Biden looking to renew talks with Iran over the 2015 nuclear deal from which Mr Trump withdrew, three Defense Department officials said Monday the Nimitz and her 5,000-strong crew were ordered on Sunday to return to the ship’s homeport in Bremerton, Washington after a longer than usual 10 month deployment.

For weeks, the Pentagon had pursued a strategy to prevent Iran and its Shiite representatives in Iraq from attacking American personnel in the Persian Gulf in order to avenge the death of Major General Qassim Suleimani. General Suleimani, the commander of the Iranian elite quds force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, was killed in an American drone attack in January 2020.

The Pentagon then claimed last month – without producing evidence – that it had discovered new information that Iran had targeted Mr Trump in the weeks leading up to the inauguration. Strike planes ordered the Nimitz and her wing to stay near the Persian Gulf just in case.

Shortly after taking office, Biden helpers estimated that it was time to send the Nimitz home. General Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr., the commander of the military’s central command, said last week that American firepower in the area most likely helped deter Iran and its proxies from attack in the dwindling days of the Trump administration.

“By and large, they were able to tell them that this is not the time to provoke war,” General McKenzie said, according to Defense One, one of the publications traveling with him in the region. “Not everything is likely the result of the military component. I am sure there is some political calculation in Iran to get to a new government and see if things change. “

Indeed, Robert Malley, a veteran Middle East expert and former Obama administration official, was selected as Mr Biden’s Special Envoy to Iran last week. He will be responsible for convincing Tehran to curb its nuclear program – and stop enriching uranium beyond the limits imposed by a 2015 nuclear deal with world powers – and agree to new negotiations before the United States begins its punitive economic sanctions against Iran cancel.

This prospect has angered key regional allies. Israel’s military chief, Lieutenant General Aviv Kochavi, last week warned the Biden government not to rejoin the nuclear deal, even if it tightened the terms of the deal. General Kochavi also said he had ordered his armed forces to step up preparations for possible offensive measures against Iran in the coming year.

No decision has been made whether to send another airline to the Middle East to relieve the Nimitz, the three Pentagon officials said Monday. But the Eisenhower airline, which is now operating in the Atlantic and Mediterranean, or the Theodore Roosevelt airline in the Pacific could be discontinued in the coming weeks or months.

The Air Force is also expected to continue deploying B-52 bombers on regular round-trip flights from the United States to the Persian Gulf. Two B-52s flew a 36-hour mission from Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana last week – the first during the Biden administration and the third overall this year – 10 days after a similar tandem of bombers took the same route from the Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota.

“It’s still a tense time,” said Vice Adm. John W. Miller, a retired Bahrain-based Fifth Fleet commander who recently visited the Persian Gulf region.

Categories
Entertainment

‘Framing Britney Spears’: The Lengthy Combat to ‘Free Britney’

Producer / director Samantha Stark

Watch it on Friday, February 5th at 10pm on FX and streaming on Hulu.

“My client told me she was afraid of her father,” Britney Spears’ court-appointed attorney told a judge in November. “She won’t perform again if her father is in charge of her career.”

The career of one of music’s greatest superstars – and in some ways their life – stands still.

The country was fascinated by Spears in the 1990s when she suddenly rose to become a global superstar. Then the public seemed to enjoy watching their personal struggles and turning their lives into fodder for late night talk show zingers, sensational interviewers, and a thriving tabloid industry.

That was a long time ago. These days, Spears endures a strange, and perhaps even darker, chapter: she lives under a court-approved conservatory, her rights are restricted. She has no control over the fortune she has earned as an actress.

Spears entered the Conservatory in 2008 at the age of 26 when her fights were shown publicly. She is now 39 and a growing number of her fans are agitating on her behalf, raising questions about civil liberties and trying to figure out what Spears wants.

A new full-length documentary from The New York Times reveals what the public may not know about the nature of Spears’ conservatory and her legal battle with her father over who should control her assets.

The documentary “Framing Britney Spears” features interviews with key insiders, including:

  • A lifelong friend of the family who has spent much of her career with Spears

  • the marketing director who originally created the Spears image

  • A lawyer currently working at the Conservatory

  • and attorney Spears tried to challenge her father in the early days of the conservatory

The new film about FX and Hulu also examines the avid fan base who believe Spears should be exempted from the Conservatory and re-examines how the media treated one of the greatest pop stars of all time.

Editor-in-chief Liz Day
Manufacturer Liz Hodes
camera operator Emily Topper
Video editors Geoff O’Brien and Pierre Takal
Associate producer Melanie Bencosme

The New York Times Presents is a series of documentaries depicting the unprecedented journalism and insight of the New York Times, bringing viewers to the essential stories of our time.

Categories
Business

The GameStop Reckoning Was a Lengthy Time Coming

Wall Street was one of the last powerful institutions to be overrun by online populists, partly because it had a higher barrier to entry. Anyone with an internet connection and a Twitter account can start a hashtag campaign. However, because trading stocks costs money and requires a certain amount of expertise and time, this has largely been left to professionals.

Smartphone-based trading apps like Robinhood changed that by introducing commission-free trades and an interface that made performing a gamma squeeze as easy as ordering a burrito on Uber Eats. All of a sudden, millions of amateurs could get organized, create their own market research and investment theses, add excitement in Reddit threads and TikTok videos, and go to the casino with the big boys. (Whether storming the high roller tables helped them financially is a whole different question.)

Many accounts of the GameStop saga have captured the hilarious, mundane excitement of the dealers and the stunned disbelief of their Wall Street antagonists. But there is a corner of economic justice that is easy to miss. On r / WallStreetBets, you’ll find passionate essays from traders who say that betting on GameStop will make them re-empowered in a financial system that has only been exploiting them and their families for years.

“Greed is absolutely out of control at the top, and this funny little message is tangible evidence of it,” one user wrote in a popular post on Wednesday. “Don’t let them make you think that getting a slightly bigger piece of cake is wrong for you.”

If you can get past the madness and weird jargon, the Redditors make some good points. Big banks and hedge funds actually adhere to different rules than private investors. Wall Street banks were truly bailed out after the 2008 financial crisis, while Main Street homeowners suffered. MBAs in fancy suits probably won’t give you good investment advice than people on YouTube with names like “RoaringKitty”.

While watching the GameStop drama, I was pondering what writer Martin Gurri calls “the public revolt”. Mr. Gurri writes that the Internet has empowered ordinary citizens by providing them with new information and tools that they then use to discover the flaws in the systems and institutions that run their lives. Once they discover these flaws, he writes, these citizens often rebel, raging down elites and dominant institutions for being lied to and holding back.

The result, writes Mr Gurri, is a kind of vengeful nihilism, an urge to burn the establishment down without a clear sense of what to replace.

Categories
Politics

At Lengthy Final, a Stimulus Nears

  • Habemus appeal? Congress seemed to be getting closer on a deal Last night, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told Republican colleagues in private that he feared voter frustration could topple Georgia’s two incumbent Senators next month if Congress doesn’t pass another stimulus bill.

  • It has been more than eight months since the last coronavirus stimuli law was incorporated into law. The ink on this bill, which was finalized in late March, wasn’t dry before many lawmakers, union leaders and others began to argue that more help was needed.

  • McConnell has largely refused to negotiate, repeatedly postponing discussions and even rejecting the White House’s occasional attempts to resume talks.

  • But now that Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler need a win Ahead of the January 5 runoff election in Georgia, McConnell announced that he was ready to move forward.

  • He told senators on a private phone call yesterday that they should not leave Washington for the holidays until after this weekend, as he expects lawmakers to take a few more days to finalize the deal and write legislative texts.

  • On the call, McConnell said Loeffler and Perdue were being “hammered” because Congress had stopped providing further pandemic aid.

  • The draft law is discussed now includes funding for direct stimulus payments to Americans. Senator John Thune, the No. 2 Republican in the chamber, said yesterday he expects $ 600-700 per person, despite some Democrats pushing for a replay of the $ 1,200 spent earlier this year.

  • The bill would not include the corporate and school liability protection McConnell wanted to create as a condition of talks, nor the steady funding for state, local, and tribal governments that the Democrats had identified as essential.

  • While Congress fought over the incentive, the heads of state or government have taken matters into their own hands. In New Mexico, $ 1,200 in stimulus checks were sent to around 130,000 unemployed residents after Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham signed a $ 330 million aid package last month that included small business aid and direct payments to those who lost their jobs.

  • The federal incentive law is expected to be included Billions of dollars in support of vaccine distribution, and this week hospital pharmacists spotted some good news: Many of the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine vials that have already been approved for distribution are filled with more than their assigned doses.

  • The Food and Drug Administration announced yesterday that it would authorize pharmacists to use the remaining doses after the first five doses – the amount that is expected to be in each vial.

  • Joe Biden has said he will ask Americans to mask themselves for the first 100 days of his term as president. A mask mandate is supported by a large majority in the country but is still not universally popular.

  • A heartland mayor literally had to dodge this week after passing a mask mandate. Joyce Warshaw, the mayor of Dodge City, Kan., Said she received such violent and threatening hate mail after signing a citywide mask mandate that she feared for her safety. That is why Warshaw stepped down yesterday, a few weeks before the end of her year-long term.

  • One message read: “We’re coming to get you.” Warshaw said the word “murder” was used several times. “Our nation is seeing so much division and so much inappropriate bullying that is being accepted and it only worried me,” she said. “I don’t know if these people would act on your words.”

  • To vote the pressure that was built on Biden yesterday Representative Deb Haaland as his Home Secretary, a rare consensus of progressives, moderates and even some Republicans, expressed support for a historic nomination.

  • Haaland, recently elected to a second term and representing the New Mexico First District in Congress, was the first Native American to head the Home Office.

  • Progressive groups, tribal leaders, and some of Haaland’s colleagues in Congress had been pushing Biden to select her for the position for weeks, but House Democratic leaders had raised concerns about allowing Biden to recruit too many representatives from the Democratic caucus given his slim majority.

  • Yesterday the leadership accepted Haaland’s candidacy. “Congresswoman Deb Haaland is one of the most respected and best members of Congress that I have worked with,” said Nancy Pelosi in a statement, adding that she was “an excellent choice” for the Home Secretary.

  • Some progressive groups have also put pressure on Senator Tom Udall of New Mexico, who is retiring after 12 years in the Senate, to remove himself from the competition for the cabinet job.

  • Biden is also considering a lot less consensus generating number To serve in his administration: Diana Taylor, a Citigroup board member closely associated with Wall Street.

  • Taylor was the executive director of Wolfensohn Fund Management and the banking supervisor of New York State under former Republican Governor George Pataki. She is also the longtime romantic partner of Michael Bloomberg.

  • It’s not clear what role Biden would fit Taylor into, but one of the roles she is being considered for is the Small Business Administration Administrator, according to those familiar with the selection process.

  • Progressives have expressed concern about their possible choices, which is part of broader concerns about the party’s left flank lack of representation in Biden’s personnel decisions.

  • “The progressive movement deserves a number of seats – important seats – in the Biden administration,” Senator Bernie Sanders, himself a possible candidate for a cabinet post, told Axios recently. “Did I see that at that point? I didn’t. “