Sunday, October 4, 2020

Deceptive Doctors Putting The Best Spin On Trump On Trump's Battle With The Hoax Virus While Moral Americans Hope He Dies In Agony

 BETHESDA, Md. (AP) — President Donald Trump’s blood oxygen level dropped suddenly twice in recent days, but he “has continued to improve” since then, the White House physician said Sunday, adding a new layer of confusion to the president’s fight with COVID-19 even while suggesting he could be discharged from the hospital as early as Monday.

Trump’s doctors, speaking on the steps of the military hospital where he was being treated for a third consecutive day, again refused to answer key questions about his condition, including the timing of the president’s second dip in oxygen, which they neglected to mention in multiple statements the day before, or whether lung scans showed any damage.

Pressed about the conflicting information he and the White House released the previous day, Navy Cmdr. Dr. Sean Conley acknowledged that he had tried to present a rosy description of of the president's condition.

“I was trying to reflect the upbeat attitude of the team, that the president, that his course of illness has had. Didn’t want to give any information that might steer the course of illness in another direction," Conley said. "And in doing so, came off like we’re trying to hide something, which wasn’t necessarily true. The fact of the matter is that he’s doing really well."

The briefing lasted just 10 minutes.

Before walking away, Conley said the president had a “high fever” and a blood oxygen level below 94% on Friday and during “another episode” on Saturday. He was evasive when asked whether Trump's level had dropped below 90%: “We don’t have any recordings here on that.”

OpEd: How far below 90%?  This sounds like the early stages of pneumonia.

Trump's lies have caused the deaths and illnesses of thousand of health care workers.

The level currently stands at 98%, Trump's medical team said.

Blood oxygen saturation is a key health marker for COVID-19 patients. A normal reading is between 95 and 100. A drop below 90 is concerning. People with the virus sometimes do not realize their oxygen levels are low.

Trump offered his own assessment of his status the night before in a video from his hospital suite, saying he was beginning to feel better and hoped to “be back soon.” And he was back on social media early Sunday morning, sharing a video of flag-waving supporters, most not wearing masks, gathered outside Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

The changing, and at times contradictory, accounts from the Trump administration highlighted a credibility crisis for the White House at a crucial moment, with the president’s health and the nation’s leadership on the line. Moreover, the president's health represents a national security issue of paramount importance not only to the functions of the U.S. government but also to countries around the world, friendly and otherwise.

Trump's Democratic challenger, Joe Biden, pulled his attack ads off the air during Trump's hospitalization, and on Sunday, he dispatched senior aides to deliver a largely friendly message.

“We are sincerely hoping that the president makes a very quick recovery, and we can see him back out on the campaign trail very soon," Biden adviser Symone Sanders said on CNN's “State of the Union.”

She added: “This is a glaring reminder that the virus is real.”

Biden was at home in Wilmington, Delaware, on Sunday with no plans for in-person campaigning or other public appearances. Having already tested negative, he is expected to release the results of a new coronavirus test later in the day, and the campaign has pledged to disclose those results and all other future test results for the 77-year-old candidate.

On Saturday, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows told reporters outside the hospital, “We’re still not on a clear path yet to a full recovery.” In an update Saturday night, Trump’s chief doctor expressed cautious optimism but added that the president was “not yet out of the woods.”

On Sunday, Conley's assessment was more positive, even while he acknowledged for the first time a second sudden drop in Trump's blood oxygen level on Saturday.

Another member of the president's medical team, Dr. Brian Garibaldi, said Trump on Sunday “has been up and around” and “feels well."

“Our plan for today is to have him eat and drink, to be up out of bed as much as possible, to be mobile,” Garibaldi said. “And if he continues to look and feel as well as he does today, our hope is that we can plan for a discharge as early as tomorrow to the White House where he can continue his treatment course.”

Meanwhile, Trump’s handling of the pandemic and his own health faced new scrutiny.

More than 209,000 Americans have been killed by the virus, by far the highest number of confirmed fatalities in the word. In all, nearly 7.4 million people have been infected in the United States, and few have access to the kind of around-the-clock attention and experimental treatments as Trump.

The doctors revealed that Trump was given a dose of the steroid dexamethasone after the drop in oxygen levels on Saturday.

That was in addition to the single dose he was given Friday of an experimental drug from Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. that supplies antibodies to help the immune system fight the virus. Trump on Friday also began a five-day course of remdesivir, a Gilead Sciences drug currently used for moderately and severely ill patients. The drugs work in different ways — the antibodies help the immune system rid the body of virus, and remdesivir curbs the virus’ ability to multiply.

Trump is 74 years old and clinically obese, putting him at higher risk of serious complications.

First lady Melania Trump remained at the White House to recover from her own bout with the virus.

Trump's administration has been less than transparent with the public throughout the pandemic, both about the president’s health and the virus's spread inside the White House. The first word that a close aide to Trump had been infected came from the media, not the White House. And aides have repeatedly declined to share basic health information, including a full accounting of the president’s symptoms, what tests he’s undertaken and the results.

Several White House officials have expressed frustration with the tenor of the White House’s discussion of the president’s health.

They were particularly upset by the whiplash between Conley’s rosy assessment Saturday and Meadows’ more concerned outlook. They privately acknowledge that the administration has little credibility on COVID-19, but believe they have unnecessarily squandered what remains of it with the lack of clear, accurate updates on Trump’s condition.

Most of that frustration appears to be directed at Trump himself, with aides believing that he has restricted what Conley can say or that Conley has tried to appease the president by presenting an optimistic outlook. They also blame Meadows for not establishing clear lines of communication and for making the situation worse Saturday.

At the same time, the White House has been working to trace a flurry of new infections of close Trump aides and allies. Attention is focused in particular on the Sept. 26 White House event introducing Trump’s Supreme Court nominee.

That day, Trump gathered more than 150 people in the Rose Garden, where they mingled, hugged and shook hands — overwhelmingly without masks. There were also several indoor receptions, where Trump’s Supreme Court pick, Amy Coney Barrett, her family, senators and others spent time in the close quarters of the White House, photographs show.

Among those who attended and have now tested positive: former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, former White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, the president of the University of Notre Dame and at least two Republican lawmakers — Utah Sen. Mike Lee and North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis. The president’s campaign manager, Bill Stepien, and the head of the Republican National Committee, Ronna McDaniel, have also tested positive, though they were not at the event. Another prominent Republican who has tested positive: Sen. Ron Johnson. R-Wis.

___

Peoples reported from New York. Miller reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Lauran Neergaard and Jonathan Lemire in Washington, and Bill Barrow in Wilmington, Del., and Marilynn Marchione in Milwaukee contributed to this report.

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Trump could be discharged as early as Monday, physician says

President Trump's physician, Dr. Sean Conley, said Sunday that "if everything continues to go well" with the president's health, he could be discharged from Walter Reed Medical Center as early as Monday. Watch the briefing from the president's medical team.

Saturday, October 3, 2020

No regrets': Trump supporters at campaign rally unfazed by his positive test. LET EM DIE!

 


No regrets': Trump supporters at campaign rally unfazed by his positive test

By Gabriella Borter, Nathan Layn

(Reuters) - Callie Kaspszak, a 19-year-old registered Republican, was somewhat worried for her health when she heard on Friday that President Donald Trump had tested positive for the coronavirus, two days after she had attended his campaign rally in Minnesota.

But she had no regrets about going, she said.

“It’s a little worrying that there’s a possible exposure, but I did what I could to the best of my ability to protect myself,” the University of Minnesota Duluth student said in a telephone interview, adding that she wore a mask and was far from the stage.

“I have no regrets at all, it’s always an honor to see the president of the United States speak, and it would be an honor to see any presidential candidate as well,” she said.



Officials in Minnesota and New Jersey on Friday urged hundreds of people who attended Trump’s campaign events in those states this week to get tested for COVID-19.

Trump, who has played down the threat of the coronavirus pandemic from the outset, said that he and his wife Melania were going into quarantine after testing positive for the virus just hours after hosting a fundraising event in Bedminster, New Jersey.

On Wednesday, Trump held an outdoor campaign rally in Duluth, Minnesota with hundreds of attendees. Video shows Trump tossing campaign caps into the crowd, not all of whom were wearing masks.

On a stage several feet away from his front row supporters, Trump would not have been likely to transmit the virus widely in the crowd if he was contagious, based on health experts’ understanding of how COVID-19 spreads outdoors.

But his positive test raised alarm among health experts, serving as a reminder that large group gatherings pose a high risk of outbreaks.

The  said those who attended events including the Duluth rally and a fundraiser in Shorewood should get tested even if they were not showing symptoms.

“There is a potential risk that transmission occurred at the Duluth rally and other events associated with President Trump’s visit. Community transmission of COVID-19 was high in St. Louis County prior to this week’s rally, and people attending the rally may have been infectious without realizing it,” the department said in a statement.

Six people who attended the rally in Duluth told Reuters they were not concerned.

“I personally don’t feel like I’m going to be affected by it, I don’t think my dad will be affected by it,” said Daniel Peters, a 28-year-old aerospace industry worker, who attended the rally with his father, who is over 60.

Peters, who plans to vote for Trump for a second time, said he believed the president had done “a decent job” handling the coronavirus crisis. Peters said he did not think the president’s inconsistent mask-wearing was likely to blame for his contracting the virus, citing instead Trump’s busy travel schedule.



Simon Eddy, a 24-year-old engineer who supports Biden for president, said he attended the rally to see what the hype was about. He said he knew he could be exposed to the virus at the crowded event but did not think he could have gotten it from Trump.

“Anyone who went to that event is putting themselves at risk,” Eddy said.

Duluth City Council President Gary Anderson said the rally flew in the face of precautions taken so far by the city, which was early to enact a mask ordinance and had adhered to state guidelines limiting outdoor gatherings to 250 people.

“That was a huge event. There hasn’t been any other event like that in Duluth since the pandemic,” Anderson said. “It is disappointing that President Trump wanted to come here and flouted our state laws and took risks with our own health.”

In New Jersey, some questioned Trump’s decision to go ahead with the fundraiser at his Bedminster golf club on Thursday after staffer Hope Hicks tested positive. Some at the event wore masks while others did not, a source familiar with the event said.

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy encouraged those who attended the event to get tested.

“We urge everyone who attended yesterday’s event in Bedminster to take full precautions, including self-quarantining and getting tested for #COVID19,” Murphy wrote on Twitter.

Reporting by Gabriella Borter and Nathan Layne; Additional reporting by Brad Brooks; Editing by Rosalba O’Brien

OpEd:  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE! LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE! LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE! LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE! LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE! LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE! LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!  LET EM DIE!

There is a good chance that the actual number of COVID-19 deaths is much higher than being reported and this is a good thing. With elections close in Florida and Texas and now with mostly Trump supporters dying of COVID-19 the more arrogant and thoughtless they are the better because most of the people the infect with be other MAGAts.

WARNING! Trump supporters may be hazardous to your health!

Friday, October 2, 2020

Trump family broke venue rules and went mask-less at the presidential debate

 

2 days before Trump and Melania tested positive for COVID-19, the Trump family broke venue rules and went mask-less at the presidential debate

sbaker@businessinsider.com (Sinéad Baker,Isabella Jibilian)
  • President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump tested positive for coronavirus on Thursday, just days after the Trump family took off their masks during the debate.

  • Trump's children were pictured wearing masks as they approached their seats, but they took them off for the debate itself.

  • A Bloomberg reporter at the debate also said first lady Melania Trump took off her mask after sitting down. She did not wear while approaching the stage at the end of the debate, while Jill Biden did.

  • Trump mocked Biden for wearing a mask during the debate, while Biden quipped that, "He's been totally irresponsible the way he's handled social distancing and discouraging people to wear masks."

  • Learn more about the race for a coronavirus vaccine in our live event on October 5. Sign up here.

Eric Trump, Ivanka Trump, first lady Melania Trump, Tiffany Trump, and Donald Trump Jr. before the first presidential debate on Tuesday in Cleveland, Ohio. <p class="copyright">JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images</p>

President Donald Trump and Melania Trump tested positive for COVID-19 on Thursday, just days after the first lady and members of Trump's family went mask-less at Tuesday's presidential debate.

The presidential debate, held in Cleveland, Ohio, had multiple COVID-19 precautions, including setting seats far apart to adhere to social distancing guidelines, requiring attendees to wear masks, testing attendees, and asking Trump and Biden to refrain from shaking hands prior to starting the debate. In violation of these rules, multiple attendees, including some from Trump's inner circle, removed their masks.

At the debate, Ivanka, Donald Jr., Eric, and Tiffany Trump wore masks while walking into the auditorium, but removed them when they sat down in the front row. In addition, first lady Melania Trump was pictured wearing one while sitting with them. But Tyler Pager, a Bloomberg News political reporter at the event, said she removed her mask after she sat down.

The President's infection has sparked myriad concerns, from economic stability, to a potential spread of COVID-19 among the government's top officials, to impacts on the presidential election, which is just 32 days away. The announcement also caps a long and contentious discourse about mask-wearing, which President Trump has repeatedly derided.

Trump mocked Biden for wearing masks during Tuesday's debate. "I don't wear face masks like him," Trump said. "Every time you see him he's got a mask. He could be speaking 200 feet away ... and he shows up with the biggest mask I've ever seen."

In turn, Biden used the debate to attack Trump's handling of the coronavirus pandemic. "He's been totally irresponsible the way he's handled social distancing and discouraging people to wear masks," Biden said.

Following President Trump's announcement that he tested positive, daughter Ivanka Trump, son-in-law Jared Kushner, Vice President Mike Pence, Second Lady Karen Pence, and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows have all tested negative.

Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr. walking into the venue. <p class="copyright">JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images</p>
Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr. walking into the venue.

NBC News reported that a Cleveland Clinic doctor tried to approach the Trump children to ask them to wear masks as they entered the venue but that she ultimately couldn't get to them.

Pager also said a doctor at the event told him that unmasked audience members on Trump's side of the room refused to take a mask when offered one.

NBC News also reported that some members of the Trump administration who were there were not wearing masks.

Peter Eyre, a senior adviser for the Commission on Presidential Debates, told Cleveland's WJW news station before the event: "There are things we're doing differently this year that we haven't done before because of COVID-19. That includes a variety of testing, social distancing, mask wearing and obviously reducing the total number of people who will be involved."

People who were there to support Biden appeared to wear masks while seated, The Daily Beast reported.

This photo shows people on that side of the room wearing masks and Eric Trump not wearing one:

Many supporters of Joe Biden wore masks during the debate. Eric Trump, the only Trump child visible in this photo, isn't wearing one. <p class="copyright">Olivier Douliery-Pool/Getty Images/Business Insider</p>

Biden's wife, Jill Biden, wore a mask to greet her husband on stage after the debate, while Melania Trump did not.

Donald Trump Jr. told the Fox News host Sean Hannity after the debate that he had been tested for the virus and joked that he would face backlash for not wearing a mask unless he clarified that.

Eyre had said before the debate that all audience members would be screened for the virus. There was no suggestion that testing negative was a reason not to wear a mask.

Photos from Trump's indoor campaign rallies have shown many attendees not social distancing or wearing masks.

More than 200,000 people in the US have died from the coronavirus, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The US has the highest coronavirus death toll in the world.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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GOOD NEWS: Trump's COVID-19 diagnosis is not slowing virulent anti-mask movement on Facebook





President Trump and the First Lady testing positive for COVID-19 has not slowed the anti-mask movement on Facebook. 

Despite growing evidence that face masks prevent the spread of the virus, dozens of public and private groups with hundreds, even thousands, of members are still urging people not to wear them.

Among the anti-mask groups spreading on Facebook is “The Free Face Society,” which has 5,400 members and believes “no government or Tyrant should control our faces! A man cannot be free if he does not control his or her own face!”

The cover photo for “Umask America!!” is a black mask that reads: “This mask is as useless as Joe Biden.” A sample post from one of its 6,200 members reads: “Well Target has the mask police out and they are handing out masks at the door. My husband and daughter sent me a picture saying courtesy of Target. Bunch of communist sheeple. I told my husband and daughter I would’ve just left. They are better sports than I am. This makes my blood boil!”

QAnon crackdown:Facebook goes after extremist conspiracy group for hijacking Save the Children

COVID-19 and the election:How QAnon is radicalizing Americans

Another anti-mask group with nearly 1,000 members goes by the name “Anti-Mask Lives Matter.” “Today, it seems as if being in public without a mask on, is comparable to experiencing racism at its core,” the group's description says.

Anti-maskers say being forced to wear a face mask in public violates their constitutional rights. They also claim that wearing a mask does not protect from the virus and could do more harm than wearing one. And some of them believe that the coronavirus (“the scamdemic”) is also a hoax. 

“Having worked for Trump personally years ago, it was made clear to me in those occasions that he is not an idiot. I believe that he knows this is a farce and a hoax,” one COVID denier wrote in one of the public anti-mask groups. “Trump will take the hydroxychloroquine, he will be ‘cured’ and the masses will know it via an official press conference.” 

Joe Biden and President Trump disagree on when and where masks should be worn.

The number of people joining public anti-mask groups has increased 1,800% to more than 43,000 users since the beginning of August, according to an analysis by the New York Times, using data from CrowdTangle, a public insights tool owned by Facebook.

But much of the anti-mask activity is taking place in private groups. For example, “Mask Off” has 2,000 members and describes itself as a group “to connect with others who refuse to bow down to the corrupt government and wear a muzzle.” Its cover photo is a black #PizzaGate mask.

The 1,100 members of the “Indiana anti-mask coalition” rally around their hatred of masks. “Whether you just don’t like being told to wear one, have a medical condition or think this is all a hoax. I don’t care,” the group’s description reads.

Since late January, Facebook has been aggressively cracking down on the spread of coronavirus-related misinformation, removing harmful content that it deems could contribute to physical harm, including posts that make false claims about cures, treatments, the availability of essential services or the location and severity of the outbreak. 

Between April and June, Facebook said it took down 7 million pieces of coronavirus-related misinformation and put warning labels on nearly 100 million other posts.

Trump and COVID-19:Facebook, Twitter and YouTube race to contain disinformation about president's diagnosis

Conspiracy theories:Social media teems with posts from QAnon, critics after president's positive COVID-19 test

One anti-mask group, “Say NO to face masks,” which had grown to 3,500 members, was taken down by Facebook late this week.

"We have clear policies against promoting harmful misinformation about COVID 19 and have removed this group for violating our Community Standards," the company told USA TODAY. 

But even before that public group was deleted, a private group sprang up in its place.

“No shock there, they really are getting desperate to shut down the truth now,” one member of the new group, "We do not consent," commented. It already has more than 400 members.

An anti-mask Facebook group, say NO to face masks, was removed by Facebook for violating its policies.

And that's worrying to Jennifer Grygiel, a communications professor at Syracuse University. Earlier this week, Facebook announced it will start surfacing public group discussions in people’s News Feeds and search results, part of an effort to encourage more people to join groups.

Promoting content from these groups could backfire for Facebook if more people are exposed to misinformation or extremism, said Grygiel, who studies social media.

“Some may not see public groups as an issue, but they are often used to recruit users to private groups and in this way act as a feeder to more secretive Facebook spaces and problematic activities and content,” she said. “We also need to be concerned about the timing of this all as amplifying Facebook groups could further minimize the amount of legitimate and independent news people are receiving on Facebook during a presidential election.”