Wednesday, March 4, 2020

Dick Sucker Trump Claims He Hasn't Touched His Face In Weeks, Twitter Users Prove Otherwise

Things got touchy for President Donald Trump after he claimed he hadn’t touched his face in weeks.
It happened after the president met with airline executives on Wednesday to discuss steps to stop the spread of the new coronavirus.
White House coronavirus response coordinator Deborah Birx was discussing the importance of frequent hand-washing and avoiding touching one’s face as much as possible.
To which Trump quipped, “I haven’t touched my face in weeks. It’s been weeks! I miss it.”
Although the president was joking, his tendency to lie about even the stupidest things led many Twitter users to start fact-checking.
H/T RawStory

'We are in a crisis here': The Yale professor who said US coronavirus cases were set to 'explode' in the coming days warns that America is way behind on testing

David Ryder/Reuters
  • Coronavirus testing in the United States is falling behind other countries and putting more people at risk, Howard Forman, a Yale professor and healthcare-management expert, told Business Insider.
  • The number of confirmed cases in the US will rise as existing cases are properly identified.
  • Testing is expected to ramp up in the coming weeks as kits become more readily available and labs prepare for testing.

A swab for testing for the novel coronavirus.

The number of documented coronavirus cases in the US was at more than 100 on Tuesday, but according to the Yale professor Howard Forman, a practicing radiologist and expert in healthcare management, the United States is way behind on testing people.
Broad-scale testing is a crucial step in properly containing and mitigating the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, Forman said. But so far, the US hasn't been able to test enough people who meet the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's criteria.
"It is well within the realm of possibility that there are 100,000 people infected with this right now in the United States," Forman said. "Healthcare providers may be being exposed, other patients may be being exposed, and until you can give confidence to people about those answers, we are in a crisis here."
Forman said coronavirus testing needed to happen on a bigger scale than flu testing — and so far, that's not happening. As more cases go undetected, the spread of the disease becomes more likely, Forman said.
"It wouldn't surprise me if we were to learn that most major hospitals have coronavirus patients in them right now," he said.
Forman said in a tweet on Sunday that the number of confirmed cases in the US would "explode" in the coming days as existing cases are documented.
The CDC hopes "to have every state and local health department online doing their own testing by the end of next week," Nancy Messonnier, the director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said.
But because of flawed testsinadequate funding, and limited testing capacity, widespread testing hasn't been possible.
There have been more than 90,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and more than 3,000 deaths, mostly in China. There have been at least nine deaths in the United States.
Forman said the level of testing and containment achieved in China, which has seen its number of new cases decrease, would be difficult to reproduce in the US because the American population is much more mobile.
"Other countries are testing much more broadly than we are," William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine told Business Insider. "We are trotting along while they're racing along."
South Korea, which reported its first coronavirus case the same day as the US, has tested thousands of people in the past few days, while the US has tested fewer than 500.
"Until someone can tell me what real testing is happening here, we aren't going to have optimism here," Forman said.
But panicking won't help. Instead, Forman said the best course of action is to wash your hands, not touch your face, and avoid sick people.
Testing is expected to ramp up in the next few weeks as CDC labs, private labs, and academic hospitals prepare to conduct 10,000 to 100,000 tests a day, Forman said.
Additional reporting by: Aylin Woodward and Aria Bendix.
Read the original article on Business Insider

Eric Trump says father held rally for 30,000 in venue only capable of fitting 8,600

James Crump
The Independent
Eric Trump falsely claimed 30,000 people attended his Father's rally on Monday: (Fox News)
Eric Trump falsely claimed 30,000 people attended his Father's rally on Monday: (Fox News)
Eric Trump falsely claimed Tuesday night that his father Donald Trump spoke to 30,000 people at a rally on Monday.
Speaking to Fox News during the coverage of Super Tuesday, Mr Trump claimed his father spoke to 30,000 people at Bojangles' Coliseum in Charlotte, North Carolina, but the arena only holds 8,600.
Twitter user Aaron Rupar shared the seven second clip of the 36-year-old, highlighting that the arena holds a lot less than claimed.
"Eric Trump just claimed that "my father had 30,000 in an arena in Charlotte last night." (The Bojangles Center in which the rally was held holds 8,600 people.)" said Mr Rupar.
This is not the first time that the Trump family have lied about the number of attendees at an event or rally.
After his inauguration, his first public event as president, Mr Trump asked for photos to be edited to make the crowd look bigger according to The Guardian.
Then, last year the US President was publicly called out by a fire department in El Paso, Texas, after he claimed in his speech that fire department officials helped him get 10,000 people into his rally.
The coliseum only holds around 6,500 people and Enrique D Aguilar, a spokesperson for the department denied Mr Trump was given special permission, telling the El Paso Times “It might be 10,000 with the people outside,".
Last year, The Washington Post's Fact Checker database claimed that the US President averages 22 lies and inaccuracies every day.
The Independent has reached out to the White House for comment.