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Coronavirus in USA

U.S. CDC reports 1,031,659 coronavirus cases, 60,057 deaths

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Thursday reported 1,031,659 cases of new coronavirus, an increase of 26,512 cases from its previous count, and said the number of deaths had risen by 2,552 to 60,057.

The CDC reported its tally of cases of the respiratory illness known as COVID-19, caused by a new coronavirus, as of 4 p.m. ET on April 29, compared with its count a day earlier. (bit.ly/2IVY1JT)

The CDC figures do not necessarily reflect cases reported by individual states.

https://www.reuters.com/article/hea...-coronavirus-cases-60057-deaths-idUSKBN22C3JK
 
US: Armed protesters demand end to Michigan coronavirus lockdown

Hundreds of angry protesters, some carrying firearms, gathered at Michigan’s State Capitol in Lansing on Thursday to protest against Governor Gretchen Whitmer’s request to extend the state of emergency to combat the coronavirus pandemic.

The protests came as state legislators debated a measure refusing the governor's request and voted to authorise a lawsuit challenging her authority and actions to combat the pandemic.

At one point during the legislative deliberations, dozens of protesters - many without face coverings and some with rifles slung around their chests - entered the Capitol and demanded to be let into the House chamber, which was closed to the public to allow room for representatives and reporters to spread apart. The crowd shouted, "Let us in" while mask-wearing sergeants and state police blocked them.

Demonstrators were allowed in the state Senate, which has fewer members and remained in session to also authorise legal action.

Firearms have been legally allowed in the Michigan state Capitol building for some time.

The protest appeared to be the largest in the state since April 15, when supporters and allies of President Donald Trump organised thousands of people for "Operation Gridlock", jamming the streets of Lansing with their cars to call out what they said was the overreach of Whitmer’s strict stay-at-home order.

It was one of the country’s first major anti-lockdown rallies and helped sparked a wave of similar events nationwide.

The slow reopening of state economies around the country has taken on political overtones, as Republican politicians and individuals affiliated with Trump’s re-election promoted protests in electoral battleground states such as Michigan.

"Governor Whitmer, and our state legislature, it’s over with. Open this state," Mike Detmer, a Republican candidate for US Congress told the crowd. "Let’s get businesses back open again. Let’s make sure there are jobs to go back to."

Other speakers at the "American Patriot Rally," which had different organisers to the mid-April protest, questioned the deadliness of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. They also said Whitmer’s stay-at-home order violated constitutional rights, and urged people to open their businesses on May 1 in disregard of her order.

Protesters, many from more rural parts of Michigan, have argued it has crippled the economy statewide even though the majority of deaths from the virus are centred on the southeastern Detroit metro area.

Whitmer's stay-at-home order, the strictest in the US, is in effect through May 15. House Republicans wanted changes, such as allowing elective medical and dental procedures again and certainty on the date she plans to reopen the economy on a regional basis. Meanwhile, the governor has allowed some businesses, such as lawn-care companies and greenhouses, to resume operating.

Many states, including Georgia, Oklahoma, Alaska, South Carolina and Ohio, have already moved to restart parts of their economies following weeks of mandatory lockdowns that have thrown nearly one in six American workers out of their jobs.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...and-coronavirus-lockdown-200430193810902.html
 
US: Armed protesters demand end to Michigan coronavirus lockdown

Hundreds of angry protesters, some carrying firearms, gathered at Michigan’s State Capitol in Lansing on Thursday to protest against Governor Gretchen Whitmer’s request to extend the state of emergency to combat the coronavirus pandemic.

The protests came as state legislators debated a measure refusing the governor's request and voted to authorise a lawsuit challenging her authority and actions to combat the pandemic.

At one point during the legislative deliberations, dozens of protesters - many without face coverings and some with rifles slung around their chests - entered the Capitol and demanded to be let into the House chamber, which was closed to the public to allow room for representatives and reporters to spread apart. The crowd shouted, "Let us in" while mask-wearing sergeants and state police blocked them.

Demonstrators were allowed in the state Senate, which has fewer members and remained in session to also authorise legal action.

Firearms have been legally allowed in the Michigan state Capitol building for some time.

The protest appeared to be the largest in the state since April 15, when supporters and allies of President Donald Trump organised thousands of people for "Operation Gridlock", jamming the streets of Lansing with their cars to call out what they said was the overreach of Whitmer’s strict stay-at-home order.

It was one of the country’s first major anti-lockdown rallies and helped sparked a wave of similar events nationwide.

The slow reopening of state economies around the country has taken on political overtones, as Republican politicians and individuals affiliated with Trump’s re-election promoted protests in electoral battleground states such as Michigan.

"Governor Whitmer, and our state legislature, it’s over with. Open this state," Mike Detmer, a Republican candidate for US Congress told the crowd. "Let’s get businesses back open again. Let’s make sure there are jobs to go back to."

Other speakers at the "American Patriot Rally," which had different organisers to the mid-April protest, questioned the deadliness of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. They also said Whitmer’s stay-at-home order violated constitutional rights, and urged people to open their businesses on May 1 in disregard of her order.

Protesters, many from more rural parts of Michigan, have argued it has crippled the economy statewide even though the majority of deaths from the virus are centred on the southeastern Detroit metro area.

Whitmer's stay-at-home order, the strictest in the US, is in effect through May 15. House Republicans wanted changes, such as allowing elective medical and dental procedures again and certainty on the date she plans to reopen the economy on a regional basis. Meanwhile, the governor has allowed some businesses, such as lawn-care companies and greenhouses, to resume operating.

Many states, including Georgia, Oklahoma, Alaska, South Carolina and Ohio, have already moved to restart parts of their economies following weeks of mandatory lockdowns that have thrown nearly one in six American workers out of their jobs.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...and-coronavirus-lockdown-200430193810902.html

if these were brown people we would have had a bloodbath. This nation is fast on its way to poor status!!
 
U.S. CDC reports 1,031,659 coronavirus cases, 60,057 deaths

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Thursday reported 1,031,659 cases of new coronavirus, an increase of 26,512 cases from its previous count, and said the number of deaths had risen by 2,552 to 60,057.

The CDC reported its tally of cases of the respiratory illness known as COVID-19, caused by a new coronavirus, as of 4 p.m. ET on April 29, compared with its count a day earlier. (bit.ly/2IVY1JT)

The CDC figures do not necessarily reflect cases reported by individual states.

https://www.reuters.com/article/hea...-coronavirus-cases-60057-deaths-idUSKBN22C3JK

these are shocking numbers..what can one say!! more have died via corona than the whole vietnam war!!
how is it that this man has not been removed from office yet?
 
Trump says Michigan governor should 'make a deal' with protesters

Trump is once again weighing in on the anti-stay-at-home protests that have been popping up across the country, suggesting Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer should “make a deal” with the demonstrators.

“The Governor of Michigan should give a little, and put out the fire,” Trump wrote in a tweet. “These are very good people, but they are angry. They want their lives back again, safely! See them, talk to them, make a deal.”

The president’s tweet comes one day after protesters descended on the Michigan capitol in Lansing to rail against Whitmer’s stay-at-home order. A number of the demonstrators were photographed carrying assault rifles, causing alarm among the legislators who were at the Capitol.
 
these are shocking numbers..what can one say!! more have died via corona than the whole vietnam war!!
how is it that this man has not been removed from office yet?

In bad flu seasons, 60,000 Americans lose their lives as well

America's death per population is still lower than Italy or UK or Spain

Also America is a story of 2 halves; NYC area and rest of America

The latter has a much lower death rate
 
The US federal government has placed an order for 100,000 additional body bags, according to contracts reviewed by US media.

The order with California-based manufacturer EM Oil Transport, which cost $5.1m (£4m), was placed on 21 April by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema).

"I hope to God that they don't need my order and that they cancel it," a company spokesman told NBC News.

A Fema spokeswoman told the Wall Street Journal the agency had been focused since the beginning of the pandemic on the “worst possible case national scenario".

President Trump on Monday predicted the final US coronavirus death toll to be 60,000 to 70,000. It had surpassed 63,000 as of Friday.
 
Ten US states have today begun lifting restrictions imposed to limit Covid-19.

Texas is among them, and will allow restaurants, cinemas and other businesses to reopen - if they limit capacity to 25%.Alabama, Maine and Tennessee are also allowing stay-at-home orders to expire.

Others face a longer timetable. In New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo has said some parts of the state might be able to gradually reopen businesses on 15 May, while Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont hopes to reopen some businesses and outdoor recreation facilities by 20 May.

Michigan's stay-at-home mandate has been extended to 15 May and on Thursday hundreds of protesters, a few of them armed, gathered at the state capitol building in Lansing.

The protest, dubbed the "American Patriot Rally", was organised by Michigan United for Liberty and called for state businesses to reopen on 1 May. President Trump tweeted that Governor Gretchen Whitmer should strike a deal with the protesters.
 
Trump now says he hopes U.S. coronavirus deaths less than 100,000

President Donald Trump on Friday seemingly increased his estimate of possible deaths in the United States from the coronavirus, telling a White House event he hopes for less than 100,000 fatalities, a higher upper limit than the 60,000 to 70,000 deaths he discussed on Monday.

“Hopefully we’re going to come in below that 100,000 lives lost, which is a horrible number nevertheless,” Trump said.

Projections have varied for how many lives COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the novel coronavirus, would claim. Anthony Fauci, a top infectious disease official, had said in March that Americans should be prepared for 100,000 deaths.

“So, yeah, we’ve lost a lot of people. But if you look at what original projections were — 2.2 million — we’re probably heading to 60,000, 70,000,” Trump said at a press briefing on Monday.

On Wednesday the number of deaths passed 60,000, eclipsing the number of Americans killed in the Vietnam War.By Friday afternoon, at least 63,260 people had died, according to a Reuters tally of state and local government reports.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...navirus-deaths-less-than-100000-idUSKBN22D6EK
 
The White House has blocked senior health adviser Dr Anthony Fauci from testifying next week to a congressional committee examining the Trump administration's response to the pandemic.

A subcommittee of the Democratic-led House of Representatives had sought Dr Fauci's testimony for a hearing on 6 May. Democrats have heavily criticised President Donald Trump's response to the outbreak, which has killed more than 65,000 Americans.

A White House spokesman said it would be "counterproductive" for those involved in the coronavirus response to testify.

"We are committed to working with Congress to offer testimony at the appropriate time," the spokesman added.

However, Dr Fauci is due to appear the following week at a hearing focused on testing in the Republican-controlled Senate, an official quoted by the Washington Post said.

Dr Fauci was a familiar face at the White House daily briefings on the pandemic but has appeared at fewer in recent weeks.

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U.S. hospitals promise new safety measures to ease patient fears after coronavirus crush

(Reuters) - U.S. hospitals, many past the peak coronavirus crush, are relying on plexiglass dividers, advance testing of patients and limited elevator traffic to convince people, especially those needing urgent care, that the facilities are safe.

Hospitals put lucrative elective procedures and other nonessential operations on hold weeks ago as they geared up for the coronavirus onslaught.

But fear of the highly contagious virus, which has killed over 63,000 people and infected more than one million in the United States, has kept even victims of serious health crises like stroke and appendicitis away from emergency rooms.

“We have to convey to the public that we are safe ... and to defer medical care in urgent situations will cause more harm,” said Mark Solazzo, chief operating officer at Northwell Health, New York’s largest healthcare provider.

In addition to urgent care, medical providers are beginning to tell patients they can come back for more routine care, and are spelling out new precautions they are taking in order to regain the public’s trust.

Efforts put in place due to the pandemic - like screening people for symptoms of COVID-19 - the illness caused by the coronavirus - taking the temperature of everyone entering a healthcare facility, making people wear masks, and supplying disinfectant wipes, will continue.

Hospitals will still rely heavily on “telemedicine” visits by video chat to help triage patients and determine whether they need to be seen. Patients are automatically tested for coronavirus infection before they are admitted for scheduled surgery or other inpatient procedures. Northwell and other hospital systems have launched marketing campaigns to explain how they are making visits safer.

In an email sent to nearly 3 million New York area residents, Northwell reminds patients that visitors are not allowed at its hospitals, that all staff wear full protective gear, and that patients can wait in the parking lot and check in to appointments on their phone to avoid waiting room crowds. Plexiglass barriers are being used in reception areas to separate patients from office staff and the health system plans to share information about how facilities are being deep-cleaned.

UCHealth, Colorado’s largest health system, is limiting elevator capacity, normally around a dozen people, to four at a time, and is asking them to maintain their distance, with one person in each corner. To avoid sharing pens, UCHealth urges patients to fill out their paperwork online ahead of a visit.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...t-fears-after-coronavirus-crush-idUSKBN22E0EP
 
Florida’s governor, Ron de Santis, announced on Friday that state parks will soon reopen, even as the coronavirus pandemic continued and Death himself stalked the beaches of the sunshine state.

The Grim Reaper in question was actually , a lawyer and campaigner for public beach access who put on a cowl and wielded a scythe in to the dangers of reopening their economy too soon.

As footage of a socially distanced interview with a TV reporter at Miramar Beach in Walton county went viral, Uhlfelder told CNN: “We aren’t at the point now where we have enough testing, enough data, enough preparation for what’s going to be coming to our state from all over the world from this pandemic.

“I know how beautiful and attractive our beaches are. But if we don’t take measures to control things, this virus is going to get really, really out of control.”
 
More than 65,000 coronavirus-related deaths have been reported in the US, but some experts fear the real figure could be much higher.

New data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows that total deaths in seven hard-hit states were almost 50% higher than normal during the period 8 March to 11 April.

Researchers fear as many as 9,000 additional deaths in the country could be attributed to the virus.

The US has by far the highest number of coronavirus cases and deaths in the world but fewer relative to population than some European countries.
 
New York's Cuomo warns against 'blindly' reopening states

NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York Governor Andrew Cuomo on Saturday pushed back against what he called premature demands that he reopen the state, saying he knew people were struggling without jobs but that more understanding of the new coronavirus was needed.

As governors in about half of the United States partially reopen their economies over this weekend, Cuomo said he needed much more information on what the pandemic was doing in his state, the hardest hit by the disease, before he loosens restrictions aimed at curbing its spread.

“Even when you are in uncharted waters, it doesn’t mean you proceed blindly,” he said. “Use information to determine action - not emotions, not politics, not what people think or feel, but what we know in terms of facts.”

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy echoed Cuomo’s slow-go restart approach, even as he reported “positive trends,” including a decline in the number of hospital patients with COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus.

While the number of deaths has trended lower in recent days, New Jersey’s toll, second only to New York’s, stood at 7,742, which Murphy cited as a key reason for maintaining his stay-at-home order.

“The family, friends and neighbors who we have lost are the reason why we cannot rush our restart,” he said at a news briefing. “We need to keep seeing these lines moving in these directions before we can put New Jersey on the road back, and before we’re able to responsibly restart our economy.”

An many U.S. eastern seaboard residents enjoyed a perfect spring day on Saturday, those in New Jersey had access to more outdoor space as Murphy allowed the state’s parks and golf courses to reopen for the first time in a month, warning they would be shut again if social distancing requirements were violated.

“Anecdotal and preliminary” reports suggest that the rules were being observed, he said.

Georgia and Texas are leading the way in the partial reopening of businesses that had been shuttered by the pandemic.

Leaders in those and several other states where the coronavirus has had less of an impact are under pressure to allow people to return to work, as government data released this week showed 30 million Americans have sought unemployment benefits since March 21.

Cuomo pointed to the roughly 900 new coronavirus cases that hospitals in New York are still reporting daily and the fact that officials do not know where those infections are coming from, as reason enough to continue keeping the Empire State shut down.

The governor also released the preliminary results of a statewide antibody survey of about 15,000 people showing that 12.3% had been previously infected with the virus.

It confirmed the results of another test with a smaller sample size released about 10 days ago showing that one in five New York City residents has had the virus, with the Bronx borough seeing the highest number positive for antibodies at 27.6%.

As of Saturday, the number of known infections nationwide had climbed to more than 1.1 million, including about 65,000 deaths, according to a Reuters tally.

As testing increases across the country, so does the number of cases. North Carolina on Saturday posted a record number of new cases with 551 infections, as did Puerto Rico, with 182. Iowa hit a record for the second straight day. Overall in the United States, there were 34,000 new cases on Friday, the highest daily total since April 24.

On the National Mall in Washington, thousands of people gathered to view a flyover by the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds and Navy Blue Angels jets in honor of healthcare workers and others battling the pandemic, applauding after the aircraft soared over the Lincoln Memorial and past the White House.

Despite the size of the crowd, most maintained social distancing, with some wearing face masks and others not.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...gainst-blindly-reopening-states-idUSKBN22E0PI
 
After noting that New York state has spent more than $2 billion on medical equipment this year alone, Cuomo announces the formation of a regional buying consortium with seven neighboring states to “increase market power and bring down prices” in the pursuit of PPE, ventilators and other medical equipment.

The governor says the mutual-aid agreement “will make us more competitive in the international marketplace and I believe it will save taxpayers money”.

“We will come up with a regional identification of all the equipment we need,” Cuomo says. “Let’s come up with the total amount that we need. Let’s stop doing business with vendors we found to be irresponsible and we found out the hard way – I can’t tell you how many orders we placed with vendors who are acting basically as brokers, who just started businesses in the middle of this pandemic because they saw an opportunity – so let’s compare notes among the states to find out who is good to do business with [and] who was not good to do business with. Let’s see if we can’t do the purchasing in this country and let’s see if we can’t do the purchasing in this region. Why we buying all this material from China? “

New York governor Andrew Cuomo says the number of current Covid-19 hospitalizations statewide has dropped below 10,000 for the first time since mid-March in his daily coronavirus briefing from Albany.

The number of new hospitalizations over the last 24-hour period has also fallen to 789, though Cuomo warns this could be an anomaly.

Cuomo says 280 people died yesterday, lifting the total death toll to 19,189.

“The overall direction is good even though it’s very painful,” Cuomo says.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">"Those who don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat it."<br><br>The 1918 Influenza Epidemic lasted over 10 months and came in three waves.<br><br>The 2nd wave was worse than the first wave. <br><br>We must be cautious. The war isn’t won yet.</p>— Andrew Cuomo (@NYGovCuomo) <a href="https://twitter.com/NYGovCuomo/status/1256982073195343878?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 3, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
In Stillwater, Oklahoma, officials softened a requirement to wear face coverings in stores and restaurants on the same day it went into effect, after people were threatened for trying to enforce it.

City Manager Norman McNickle said a number of local business staff were “threatened with physical violence and showered with verbal abuse” on 1 May - within three hours of the rule’s enactment.

In one case, someone threatened staff with a firearm.

McNickle said those with objections mistakenly believed the requirement was unconstitutional.

But it was just a show of "respect and kindness to others" he said.

The city government still recommends wearing a mask but it is no longer mandatory.
 
New Yorkers fined for social distancing violations

Dozens of New Yorkers were fined for violating coronavirus social distancing guidelines as they flocked to the city's beaches and parks to enjoy balmy weekend weather, AFP quoted police as saying on Sunday.

NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea told reporters that officers had issued 51 summonses on Saturday, mostly for social distance violations, as temperatures in America's Covid-19 epicentre registered upwards of 70 degrees Fahrenheit (21 degrees Celsius).

Residents of the Big Apple, which has been shut down since mid-March, are allowed outside to exercise providing they maintain six-feet (two meters) of distance and wear a mask when around others.
 
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and the governors of neighbouring New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and Delaware have announced a regional purchasing consortium to identify equipment and suppliers together, instead of competing against each other.

Rhode Island and Massachusetts are also to be part of the new coalition.

Cuomo said New York state will now require all hospitals to have a 90-day stockpile of all personal protective equipment.
Other key points:

Saturday saw 789 new Covid-19 cases in the state

The number of New Yorkers in hospital due to Covid-19 fell below 10,000 for the first time since March, and deaths also declined, with 280 in the last day

Cuomo again noted the virus strain affecting NYC was not from China, but a “totally different” one from Europe, saying some medical experts told him “our strain was more virulent than the strain that came from China”

Cuomo said while the Trump administration’s travel ban on China “may have been helpful, the horse was already out of the barn” as the virus was in Europe and no one was watching out for European travellers

He called people not wearing masks “disrespectful” to front-line workers and other residents, adding many employees are doing “unprecedented work” to sanitise public spaces
 
A video filmed at a protest in Sacramento in California on Friday shows protesters without face coverings shouting directly in the faces of police officers, who are also not wearing masks.

The video is one of the most shocking to emerge from a significant number of protests in the US against the ongoing coronavirus lockdown restrictions. Others have showed armed protesters occupying state government buildings.

In the Sacramento video, protesters are seen violently pushing up against a line of police officers while chanting and holding signs.

The demonstrations have varied in size, from a handful of individuals with signs to thousands rallying outside state capitol buildings. Many protesters have worn Trump hats or other paraphernalia.

White House taskforce expert Dr Deborah Birx told Fox News on Sunday that a recent protest of hundreds in Michigan, including some armed individuals, was “devastatingly worrisome”.

“We need to protect each other at the same time we’re voicing our discontent," Dr Birx said.

Despite the vocal and headline-grabbing protests, most Americans support the lockdown measures, according to data from Pew Research Center.

A study last month found 66% were more concerned that states would lift restrictions too quickly, including most moderate and liberal-leaning members of Trump’s Republicans.

But 53% of more conservative Republicans expressed concerns that restrictions would not be eased quickly enough.

It comes just days after gun-toting lockdown protesters rallied inside Michigan state capitol building.
 
U.S. CDC reports 1,122,486 coronavirus cases, 65,735 deaths

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Sunday reported 1,122,486 U.S. cases of the new coronavirus, an increase of 29,671 cases from its previous count, and said the number of deaths had risen by 1,452 to 65,735.

The CDC reported its tally of cases of the respiratory illness known as COVID-19, caused by the novel coronavirus, as of 4 p.m. EDT (2000 GMT) on Saturday, compared with its count a day earlier. (bit.ly/2IVY1JT)

The CDC figures do not necessarily reflect cases reported by individual states. The tally reported over the weekend is preliminary and will be updated on Monday.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-coronavirus-cases-65735-deaths-idUSKBN22F0WD
 
More patient are dying of corona virus in NJ than NY for last 2-3 day.

But, in our hospital in NJ, now ICU patients numbers are down by 25 % from its peak 2 weeks ago.

Thanks to shrinking number of ICU patients , I had my first day off from work in more than a month. April 2020 was the first month in my life without a day off including weekends.
 
More patient are dying of corona virus in NJ than NY for last 2-3 day.

But, in our hospital in NJ, now ICU patients numbers are down by 25 % from its peak 2 weeks ago.

Thanks to shrinking number of ICU patients , I had my first day off from work in more than a month. April 2020 was the first month in my life without a day off including weekends.

Stay safe and enjoy your day off.
 
US President Donald Trump has warned that as many as 100,000 people could die of coronavirus in the US.

Speaking at a two-hour virtual "town hall", Mr Trump also denied that his administration had acted too slowly.

More than 67,000 people have already died with Covid-19 in the US.

But Mr Trump expressed optimism about the development of a vaccine, saying one would be ready by the end of this year - although public health experts believe it will take 12 to 18 months.
 
US President Donald Trump has predicted 100,000 coronavirus-related deaths in the country and a vaccine to be ready by the end of the year, contradicting experts who said a cure is likely 18 months away.

Trump relaunched his election campaign on Sunday, forecasting an "incredible" future as he alternated during a two-hour Fox News broadcast between predicting a rapid recovery for the US economy and casting blame for the pandemic's spread on China, where the disease is believed to have originated.

COVID-19, the illness caused by the new coronavirus, has infected more than 1.1 million and killed more than 67,000 in the United States, shut wide swaths of society, including most schools and many businesses.

"We're going to lose anywhere from 75, 80 to a 100,000 people. That's a horrible thing," said Trump.

As recently as Friday, he had said he hoped fewer than 100,000 Americans would die and earlier in the week had talked about 60,000 to 70,000 deaths.

About half of the states in the US have now moved towards at least partial lifting of lockdowns as the number of new cases started to drop or level off and as citizens agitate for relief from restrictions that have sent the economy into a tailspin.

"We can't stay closed as a country [or] we're not gonna have a country left," Trump said.

Few tough questions

The US president faced a few tough questions in the event, which gave him a new format to reach the public while he is unable to hold campaign rallies and after he faced widespread criticism for his combative daily briefings.

In an assessment that clashes with those of some public health experts, Trump said he believed that there would be a vaccine for COVID-19 by the end of the year.

"The doctors would say, well, you shouldn't say that," Trump said. "I'll say what I think ... I think we'll have a vaccine sooner than later."

Many health experts, including Dr Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert, have cautioned that a vaccine is likely a year to 18 months away.

There is an "incredibly small" chance of having a highly effective vaccine or treatment for the coronavirus within the next year, England's Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty said on April 22.

Trump also said he wanted students to return to schools and colleges in autumn (in the months of September to December in the US), even as he acknowledged the possibility of a resurgence of the disease.

"We'll put out the embers, we'll put out whatever it may be. We may have to put out a fire," he said.

Speaking the day before the Senate returns to Washington, DC, Trump said it was possible that federal coronavirus aid could rise to $6 trillion from the nearly $3 trillion Congress has already passed to try to ease the heavy economic toll of the crisis.

"There is more help coming. There has to be," he said.

Meanwhile, Trump, who has been criticised for not moving faster early in the year to stop the spread of the disease, sought to blunt criticism by blaming China.

He said China made a "horrible mistake" without saying precisely what this was or providing specific evidence for his assertion.

Earlier in the day, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said there was "a significant amount of evidence" that COVID-19 emerged from a Chinese laboratory, but did not dispute US intelligence agencies' conclusion that it was not man-made.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/05/trump-predicts-100000-coronavirus-deaths-200504063427656.html
 
US Supreme Court to hold proceedings over phone

The coronavirus pandemic is forcing the US Supreme Court to adopt some extraordinary changes.

Over the next two weeks, America's highest court will hear court arguments over the phone for the first time in its history. Audio from the proceedings will also be live-streamed.

Most lawyers will be making their cases from the comfort of their homes - though the government's lawyers will be in the office of the Solicitor General, a few blocks from the court.

And in a nod to formality, they'll wear their usual formal attire during the proceedings.

Several high-profile cases are scheduled to go ahead, including one about President Trump's financial records.
 
New York governor, Andrew Cuomo, has outlined a phased reopening of business activity in the state hardest hit by the coronavirus pandemic, starting with select retailers, wholesale suppliers and the construction and manufacturing industries.

Cuomo, speaking at a daily briefing, did not put specific dates to the outline, which envisions allowing finance, insurance, retail, administrative support and real estate businesses to restart in a second phase of reopening.
 
At least six more US states are loosening social distancing measures starting on Monday.

Gyms in Arkansas can resume operation, as long as clients have their temperatures screened before entering. Florida beaches and parks can reopen, but not in the Miami area.

Missouri businesses can open, but customers must keep six feet (two metres) apart. Nonessential businesses in Colorado are also permitted to reopen, but with limited capacity.

Ohio’s governor is allowing manufacturing, construction and office work to resume starting on Monday. Retail shops are expected to reopen on 12 May.

Indiana is moving towards its second stage of reopening and is allowing social gatherings of up to 25 people. But residents over 65 are encouraged to remain at home.

Around half of US states have begun taking steps to reopen, even as health officials warn that the pandemic is not yet under control.
 
New projection puts U.S. COVID-19 deaths at nearly 135,000 by August

A new forecast projects nearly 135,000 deaths due to COVID-19 in the United States through the beginning of August mainly due to reopening measures under way, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington said on Monday.

The forecast U.S. death toll through early August totaled 134,475, a midrange between 95,092 and 242,890, the IHME said. The revised projection almost doubles the number of deaths foreseen in the United States since the last estimate in mid-April.

The new projections reflect rising mobility and the easing of social distancing measures expected in 31 states by May 11, said the IHME, whose models are used by the White House. The increasing contacts among people will promote transmission of the coronavirus, it said.

“This new model is the basis for the sobering new estimate of U.S. deaths,” said IHME director Christopher Murray, referring to the reopening measures.

The IHME said its new model assumes that public health orders that are currently in place will stay in place until infections are minimized.

The IHME’s forecast increases the projected number of deaths in the U.S. by more than 62,000, with a rise of more than 8,700 deaths in New Jersey and more than 7,800 in New York state for the same period, up from estimates released last month.

Murray said understanding the effect of temperature on transmission of the virus “is rapidly evolving.”

“At the moment, we believe that the effects of temperature on transmission are important, yet minimal. As we move into summer and temperatures rise, we will learn more and will revise our projections if it is statistically relevant.”

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...aths-at-nearly-135000-by-august-idUSKBN22G2VG
 
U.S. CDC reports 1,152,372 coronavirus cases, 67,456 deaths

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Monday reported 1,152,372 cases of the coronavirus, and said the number of deaths had risen to 67,456.

Over the weekend, the CDC updated its case count to 1,122,486 and said 65,735 people had died across the country, but that the numbers were preliminary and had not been confirmed by individual states.

The CDC's tally of cases of the respiratory illness known as COVID-19, caused by the new coronavirus, on Monday is as of May 3. (bit.ly/2IVY1JT)

The CDC figures do not necessarily reflect cases reported by individual states.

https://www.reuters.com/article/hea...-coronavirus-cases-67456-deaths-idUSKBN22G2OA
 
U.S. CDC reports 1,152,372 coronavirus cases, 67,456 deaths

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Monday reported 1,152,372 cases of the coronavirus, and said the number of deaths had risen to 67,456.

Over the weekend, the CDC updated its case count to 1,122,486 and said 65,735 people had died across the country, but that the numbers were preliminary and had not been confirmed by individual states.

The CDC's tally of cases of the respiratory illness known as COVID-19, caused by the new coronavirus, on Monday is as of May 3. (bit.ly/2IVY1JT)

The CDC figures do not necessarily reflect cases reported by individual states.

https://www.reuters.com/article/hea...-coronavirus-cases-67456-deaths-idUSKBN22G2OA

That looks quite worrisome because it either means the mortality rate in the US is almost 6% or more than half of the cases are not being reported.
 
The US has said it wants to borrow a record $3tn (£2.4tn) in the second quarter, as coronavirus-related rescue packages blow up the budget.

The sum is more than five times the previous quarterly record, set at the height of the 2008 financial crisis.

In all of 2019, the country borrowed $1.28tn. The US has approved about $3tn in virus-related relief, including health funding and direct payouts.

Total US government debt is now near $25tn.

The latest spending packages are estimated to be worth about 14% of the country's economy. The government has also extended the annual 15 April deadline for tax payments, adding to the cash crunch.

The new borrowing estimate is more than $3tn above the government's previous estimate, a sign of the impact of the new programmes.

Discussions are under way over further assistance, though some Republicans have expressed concerns about the impact of more spending on the country's skyrocketing national debt.

The US borrows by selling government bonds. It has historically enjoyed relatively low interest rates since its debt is viewed as relatively low-risk by investors around the world.

But even before the coronavirus, the country's debt load had been climbing toward levels many economists consider risky for long-term growth, as the country spent more than it took in.

The US Congressional Budget Office last month predicted the budget deficit would hit $3.7tn this year, while the national debt soared above 100% of GDP.

Last week, the chair of America's central bank, Jerome Powell, said he would have liked to see the US government's books be in better shape before the pandemic.

However, he said spending now was essential to cushion the economic blow, as orders to shut businesses to slow the spread of the virus cost at least 30 million people their jobs.

"It may well be that the economy will need more help from all of us if the recovery is to be a robust one," he said.

As part of its own relief efforts, the Federal Reserve has bought more than $1tn in treasuries in recent weeks.

Investors from foreign countries are also historically significant holders of US debt, with Japan, China and the UK at the top of the pack as of February.

Increased tensions between the US and China in recent years have renewed scrutiny of America's debt position. According to the Washington Post last week, Trump administration officials had discussed cancelling debt obligations to China, but US President Donald Trump reportedly played down the idea, saying "you start playing those games and it's tough".

For now, continued low rates suggest investor appetite for US debt remains, allowing for a borrowing increase, Alan Blinder, a professor of economics and public affairs at Princeton University, told the BBC last month.

"So far, the answer has been everything is fine, as to how much borrowing the United States government can do before investors start to feel satiated with US debt," he said. "But there is a legitimate question."

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-52537938
 
An internal US government document predicts 3,000 daily coronavirus deaths in the country by early June, according to The New York Times.

The document from the Trump administration appears to project that deaths will nearly double from the current level of about 1,750.

It seems to predict about 200,000 new coronavirus cases per day by the end of this month, up from about 25,000 currently.

The leaked document could throw into question the relaxation of social distancing measures across a number of states, as Donald Trump has pressed for economies to reopen and anti-lockdown protests were held over the weekend.

Health systems in some areas have struggled to cope with an influx of patients, and in some cases sufferers have been treated on stretchers in hospital corridors.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has warned there "remains a large number of counties whose burden continues to grow", although there has been some improvement in places such as New York City, New Orleans and Detroit.

So far, more than 67,000 people have died in the US and more than a million have been infected.

As of last week, the University of Washington's IHME predictive model projected a first wave of 72,400 coronavirus-related deaths.


On Sunday, Mr Trump said up to 100,000 people could die with coronavirus in the US - doubling the number he had forecast two weeks ago.

"We're going to lose anywhere from 75, 80 to 100,000 people," he told a virtual town hall on Fox News. "That's a horrible thing. We shouldn't lose one person over this."

His figures are still less than what the government document predicts.

The Trump administration has responded to the New York Times report, denying the document's authenticity.

Protesters in Virginia have been rallying against stay-at-home orders and warning they 'will not comply'

Protests continue in the US against lockdown
The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health said: "These preliminary analyses were provided to FEMA to aid in scenario planning - not to be used as forecasts - and the version published is not a final version.

"These preliminary results are not forecasts, and it is not accurate to present them as forecasts.

"The information illustrates that there are some scenarios, including the premature relaxation of social distancing, that are likely to cause significant increases in the number of COVID-19 cases and deaths in the United States."

White House spokesperson Judd Deere said: "This is not a White House document nor has it been presented to the Coronavirus taskforce or gone through inter-agency vetting.

"This data is not reflective of any of the modelling done by the taskforce or data that the task force has analysed.

"The president's phased guidelines to open up America again are a scientific driven approach that the top health and infectious disease experts in the federal government agreed with.

"The health of the American people remains President Trump's top priority and that will continue as we monitor the efforts by states to ease restrictions."


:: Listen to Divided States on Apple podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, and Spreaker

Officials said the projections assumed that states resumed normal activities immediately, not according to the phased guidelines unveiled last month.

Mr Trump has been accused of ignoring warnings about the risks of the virus in his daily briefings throughout January, and also has not yet joined a global pledge for research to find a vaccine.

World leaders, organisations and banks have pledged to give $8bn (£6.4bn).

Former foreign secretary David Miliband described Mr Trump's absence from the global pledge as a "mystery".

"At the moment, the US is not a good advertisement for the kind of global leadership or national reaction that would historically have been the case," he said.

IRC president David Miliband said more countries must focus on prevention and treatment now, rather than hold out for a vaccine

Mr Miliband continued: "Sadly so far the reaction to the crisis has been to compound the problem rather than to tackle it.

"Although it's obviously right that every government has in the first instance to look after its own citizens, this disease shows that unless there is a global response then there won't be a return to anything like economic or social normality."

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...-3-000-covid-19-deaths-a-day-by-june-11983203
 
The issue is highly politicized here in the US. Leftist news channels like CNN advocate against lifting restrictions all day and cause massive fear mongering. Republicans have been a lot more methodological in their approach of gradually lifting restriction and balancing economy. People are going bankrupt and losing their minds in blue democratic states where in some cases, lockdown is unnecessarily extended. For example. Maine extended its lockdown to June 1 despite having minimal cases.
 
New York state reports more than 1,700 previously undisclosed deaths at nursing homes

New York state in US has reported more than 1,700 previously undisclosed deaths at nursing homes and adult care facilities, AP reports.

At least 4,813 people have died from Covid-19 in the state’s nursing homes since March 1, according to a tally released by the state's governor Andrew Cuomo’s administration.
 
New York City's Metropolitan Transportation Administration (MTA) plans to shut down the city's subway system from 01:00 to 05:00 on Wednesday morning for disinfecting.

Service will resume each day, but on a truncated schedule for the first time in the subway's 115-year history. Buses will be free during that time.

It comes amid a 90% drop in riders, but a large uptick in homeless people who have essentially moved onto railcars.

"Our customers should not have to board a car that’s being used as a shelter," acting New York City Transit President Sarah Feinberg said last week.

Starting at 01:00 the city’s 472 subway stations will become exit-only and thousands of NYPD officers will flood the system to force out anyone remaining on trains and platforms.

At his daily news conference New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said normal service would resume when "the pandemic is not problematic".

"You tell me when the global pandemic is over and I’ll tell you when 24-hour service resumes," he told one reporter.

Cuomo added that the state had seen 230 Covid-related deaths in past 24 hours, up from 226 on Sunday.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">For the constant criticism from the Do Nothing Democrats and their Fake News partners, here is the newest chart on our great testing “miracle" compared to other countries. Dems and LameStream Media should be proud of the USA, instead of always ripping us down! <a href="https://t.co/8AwnPCNchF">pic.twitter.com/8AwnPCNchF</a></p>— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) <a href="https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1257714716492722176?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 5, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Trump outlines wish list as Congress mulls more coronavirus relief

U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday outlined a wish list of policies he suggested Congress should consider as it weighs a possible fourth round of coronavirus relief legislation, including payroll tax cuts and a business expense deduction.

“The elimination of Sanctuary Cities, Payroll Taxes, and perhaps Capital Gains Taxes, must be put on the table,” Trump said in a tweet.

He also said liability protections for businesses that are reopening and a business tax deduction for restaurant and entertainment expenses should be in the mix.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...s-mulls-more-coronavirus-relief-idUSKBN22H2MX
 
US President Donald Trump has confirmed the White House coronavirus task force will be winding down, with Vice-President Mike Pence suggesting it could be disbanded within weeks.

"We are bringing our country back," Mr Trump said during a visit to a mask-manufacturing factory in Arizona.

New confirmed infections per day in the US currently top 20,000, and daily deaths exceed 1,000.

US health officials warn the virus may spread as businesses begin to reopen.

The US currently has 1.2 million confirmed coronavirus infections and more than 70,000 related deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, which is tracking the pandemic.

What did President Trump say?

During a visit to the plant in Phoenix after weeks holed up at the White House, Mr Trump told journalists: "Mike Pence and the task force have done a great job, but we're now looking at a little bit of a different form, and that form is safety and opening. And we'll have a different group probably set up for that."

The president - who wore safety goggles but no face mask during his tour of the facility - was asked if it was "mission accomplished", and he said: "No, not at all. The mission accomplished is when it's over."

Critics have accused the president of sacrificing Americans' public health in his eagerness to reopen the US economy ahead of his re-election battle in November.

In Arizona on Tuesday, Mr Trump said that Democrats were hoping his coronavirus policy would fail "so they can win the election".

Acknowledging a human cost to the plans, Mr Trump told reporters: "I'm not saying anything is perfect, and yes, will some people be affected? Yes.

"Will some people be affected badly? Yes. But we have to get our country open and we have to get it open soon."

However, it will be up to individual states to determine how they reopen.

Some Democratic governors in badly hit states have been cautious, calling for more testing and other safeguards before easing lockdowns. Other states, many led by Republicans in the south and mid-west, have already begun lifting restrictions.

The president was also asked on Tuesday if White House task force experts Dr Deborah Birx and Dr Anthony Fauci would still be involved in efforts to address the coronavirus.

"They will be and so will other doctors and so will other experts in the field," the president answered.

The once daily task force briefings have become increasingly scarce since Mr Trump was widely condemned by the medical community last month after he pondered at the podium whether injecting bleach into people might kill the virus.

Mr Pence earlier on Tuesday told reporters in a briefing that the task force could soon be disbanded.

He said the Trump administration was "starting to look at the Memorial Day [late May] window, early June window as a time when we could begin to transition back to having our agencies begin to manage, begin to manage our national response in a more traditional manner".

He said it was "a reflection of the tremendous progress we've made as a country".

Mr Pence has led the task force, which reports to the president and co-ordinates with medical institutes, political staff and state governors. The group also consulted medical experts to formulate national guidelines on social distancing.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany later tweeted that the president "will continue his data-driven approach towards safely re-opening".

The White House's shift in focus from the public health aspect of the coronavirus pandemic to its economic impact continues.

For more than a month, the task force had been the public face of the administration's response to the crisis, even though President Trump sometimes veered far from the topic at hand during its press briefings.

When the president wasn't talking, however, government public health officials led the conversation.

Now, it appears, the officials setting the agenda will be ones more concerned with jobs, businesses and the fiscal health of the nation - even though the number of cases of the virus throughout the US continues to increase.

There is growing frustration among the president's core supporters, however, with government shelter-in-place orders. Several states, encouraged by the president, have already begun to ease restrictions, even though they have not met White House guidelines for when to do so.

Those recommendations were set by the current coronavirus task force, of course. And the "different group" in a "different form" that replaces it, as the president describes, may have other ideas.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-52553829
 
251,718 people around the world have now died from COVID-19, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. The number of confirmed cases exceeds 3.5 million, while nearly 1.2 million people have recovered.

The death toll in the United States continues to surge with 70,847 deaths and 1,201,337 cases. The US continues to lead worldwide cases and deaths from the virus.

Coronavirus deaths in the United Kingdom have surpassed the 30,000 mark, the highest in Europe, according to official data.
 
<iframe width="1280" height="720" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/t_yG_-K2MDo" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>

A sad commentary on USA.
 
The New York governor, Andrew Cuomo, said that he believes states reopening their economies while seeing growing rates of infections from Covid-19 are making a mistake.

“You have states that are opening where you are still on the incline,” Cuomo told a daily briefing. “I think that’s a mistake.”
 
The White House appeared to be in fresh disarray on Wednesday as Donald Trump insisted that his coronavirus taskforce would remain in place – less than 24 hours after suggesting it would be disbanded.

The US president reversed course following a backlash against moves to wind down the taskforce even as the country reports about 30,000 new cases a day and the death toll moves past 70,000, the highest in the world.

But Trump did confirm a switch in focus to reviving America’s devastated economy, fuelling anxiety that he has made a cold political calculation to put his re-election chances ahead of saving lives.
 
Here are some updates from across the US today:

There are currently more than 1.2 millionconfirmed coronavirus cases in the US, and nearly 72,000 deaths

Trump said the White House virus task force would be re-framed to focus on reopening; he had earlier suggested the group would be disbanded, but told reporters on Wednesday: "I thought we could wind it down sooner, but I had no idea how popular the task force is"

Nearly 4,900 inmates or detained individuals have Covid-19, and 88 have died, according to the Centers for Disease Control, along with nearly 2,800 correction staff, 15 of whom have died

A farmer in Kansas who sent New York Governor Andrew Cuomo an N-95 mask has received an honorary degree from his state university, thanks to his "kindness and lifelong career in agriculture"; he was two credits away from graduating in 1971 but had left school to care for his mother

New Jersey, which has been a hotspot for the virus, will extend its state of public health emergency for another 30 days

An Ohio Republican state lawmaker has said he will not wear a mask due to his Christian religious beliefs, as the image of God is "seen the most by our face"
 
Trump says he did not wear mask at Honeywell facility after consulting CEO

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he did not wear a mask during a tour on Tuesday of a Honeywell International Inc factory in Arizona after consulting the company’s chief executive, despite requirements at the plant that workers wear them.

Trump, speaking to reporters at a White House event marking National Nurses Day, said he tried some masks on backstage, including one from Honeywell, 3M and about four others.

The president has not been wearing a mask in public despite health advice from his administration encouraging people to do so to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. Trump said before embarking on his trip to Arizona to visit a plant that made masks that he would likely wear one when he was there.

He did not wear one for the majority of his visit, but he told reporters he had one on at least briefly.

“I had a mask on for a period of time,” Trump said. “I can’t help it if you didn’t see me. I mean, I had a mask on, but I didn’t need it. And I asked specifically the head of Honeywell: ‘Should I wear a mask?’ And he said, “Well, you don’t need one,’” Trump said.

Trump took a tour of the facility, held a meeting about how the virus was affecting native Americans, and gave remarks, all without a mask.

Asked how long he had one on, Trump said, “Not too long, but I had it on. I had it on ... backstage. But they said you didn’t need it.”

Trump wore safety goggles during the factory tour. Production workers wore masks and a sign was visible that read: “Attention: Face Mask Required in this Area. Thank You!”

Some of the officials who joined Trump for the tour also did not wear masks.

Honeywell said on Wednesday, “Following White House recommended protocol, a small number of individuals directly interfacing with the president ... were tested for COVID-19 immediately prior to the event, received negative test results, and were permitted to not wear masks ... All others present were wearing masks ... in accordance with Honeywell’s site policy.”

Vice President Mike Pence was criticized in recent days for not wearing a face mask when visiting patients at the Mayo Clinic last week, something he apologized for during a television interview on Sunday.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...l-facility-after-consulting-ceo-idUSKBN22I2QU
 
CDC reports 1,193,813 coronavirus cases, 70,802 deaths

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Wednesday reported 1,193,813 cases of the new coronavirus, an increase of 22,303 cases from its previous count, and said that the number of deaths had risen by 2,523 to 70,802.

The CDC reported its tally of cases of the respiratory illness known as COVID-19, caused by the new coronavirus, as of 4 p.m. ET on May 5, compared with its count a day earlier. (bit.ly/2SGLijD)

The CDC figures do not necessarily reflect cases reported by individual states.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-coronavirus-cases-70802-deaths-idUSKBN22I33U
 
Sadly we lost a Pakistani-American doctor in our care in ICU yesterday. He received every possible treatment including convalescent plasma and remdisivir but passed away after two weeks in ICU. Was a generous man , other than taking care of his own family , he was supporting many poor families in Pakistan too.

Just one week prior to his admission, he was working, treating patients.

He was added as another number to the 70K plus Americans died with corona virus pandemic. Sometime we don't realize that behind every number there is a human being , who left behind his/her children, spouse, parents and other loved ones and for each family life would change for ever.
 
US President Donald Trump has described the coronavirus pandemic as the "worst attack" ever on the United States, pointing the finger at China.

Mr Trump said the outbreak had hit the US harder than the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor in World War Two, or the 9/11 attacks two decades ago.

His administration is weighing punitive actions against China over its early handling of the global emergency.

Beijing says the US wants to distract from its own response to the pandemic.

Since emerging in the Chinese city of Wuhan in December, the coronavirus is confirmed to have infected 1.2 million Americans, killing more than 73,000.

Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office of the White House on Wednesday, Mr Trump said: "We went through the worst attack we've ever had on our country, this is worst attack we've ever had.

"This is worse than Pearl Harbor, this is worse than the World Trade Center. There's never been an attack like this.

"And it should have never happened. Could've been stopped at the source. Could've been stopped in China. It should've been stopped right at the source. And it wasn't."

Asked later by a reporter if he saw the pandemic as an actual act of war, Mr Trump indicated the outbreak was America's foe, rather than China.

"I view the invisible enemy [coronavirus] as a war," he said. "I don't like how it got here, because it could have been stopped, but no, I view the invisible enemy like a war."

The deepening rift between Washington and Beijing was further underscored on Wednesday as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo renewed his rhetoric against China, accusing it of covering up the outbreak.

He stuck by his so far unsubstantiated charge that there is "enormous evidence" the coronavirus hatched in a Chinese laboratory, even while acknowledging there is still uncertainty about its origins.

"Those statements are both true," America's top diplomat told the BBC. "We don't have certainty and there is significant evidence that it came from a lab."

Chinese state media accused him of lying.

One of the most trusted US public health experts has said the best evidence indicates the virus was not made in a lab.

Dr Anthony Fauci, a member of Mr Trump's coronavirus task force, said on Monday the illness appeared to have "evolved in nature and then jumped species".

Why is the US blaming China?
President Trump faces a tough re-election campaign in November, but the once humming US economy - which had been his main selling point - is currently in a coronavirus-induced coma.

A Pew opinion survey last month found that two-thirds of Americans, a historic high, view China unfavourably. But roughly the same margin of poll respondents said they believed Mr Trump acted too slowly to contain the pandemic.

As Mr Trump found his management of the crisis under scrutiny, he began labelling the outbreak "the China virus", but dropped that term last month days before speaking by phone with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Both Mr Trump and his likely Democratic challenger, Joe Biden, appear to be fastening on to China's unpopularity as an election issue, with each accusing the other of being a patsy for America's primary economic competitor.

As the coronavirus began spreading in the US back in January, Mr Trump signed phase one of a trade deal with China that called a truce in their tariff war. The US president's hopes of sealing a more comprehensive phase two deal are now in limbo because of the pandemic.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-52568405
 
US coronavirus deaths:

10 wks ago: 0 deaths
9 wks ago: 12 deaths
8 wks ago: 41 deaths
7 wks ago: 195 deaths
6 wks ago: 1,195 deaths
5 wks ago: 5,983 deaths
4 wks ago: 16,684 deaths
3 wks ago: 33,268 deaths
2 wks ago: 49,887 deaths
1 wk ago: 63,006 deaths
Right now: 73,431 deaths
 
BREAKING: Nearly 3.2 million filed jobless claims in US last week

Nearly 3.2 million Americans filed for unemployment in the last week. That brings the number of jobless claims to some 33 million since mid-March, when Covid-19 led to shutdowns nationwide.

Thursday's Labor Department weekly report, however, is less than its previous number of new claims, which was over 3.8 million.

The count has been declining in recent weeks, but US analysts note the number is still unprecedented, even compared to the 2008 recession.

On Friday, we'll learn the unemployment numbers for April.

The president of the St Louis US Federal Reserve Bank, James Bullard, told CNBC that the report "will probably be one of the worst ever" in American history.
 
US shopping centres reopen

Throughout the United States, lockdown restrictions are being lifted in phases, meaning shopping centres are beginning to reopen.

In states like Texas, malls can currently operate at 25% capacity.

Security guards are handing our free face masks and shoppers and retailers have a set of safety rules to follow, including sanitising surfaces and maintain social distancing.
 
A member of the US Navy who serves as one of President Trump's personal valets has tested positive for coronavirus, raising concerns about the President's possible exposure to the virus
 
A member of the US Navy who serves as one of President Trump's personal valets has tested positive for coronavirus, raising concerns about the President's possible exposure to the virus

Trump tests negative after report valet infected

US President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence have tested negative for coronavirus after finding out a member of the US military who worked on the White House campus had become infected, a White House spokesman has said.

The military official was identified by CNN as personal valet to Trump.
 
CDC reports 1,219,066 coronavirus cases, 73,297 deaths

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Thursday reported 1,219,066 cases of the new coronavirus, an increase of 25,253 cases from its previous count, and said that the number of deaths had risen by 2,495 to 73,297.

The CDC reported its tally of cases of the respiratory illness known as COVID-19, caused by the new coronavirus, as of 4 p.m. ET on May 6, compared with its count a day earlier.(bit.ly/2WfXuu1)

The CDC figures do not necessarily reflect cases reported by individual states.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-coronavirus-cases-73297-deaths-idUSKBN22J3GN
 
Many states disregarding Trump's guideline on reopening

Many governors across the US are disregarding or creatively interpreting White House guidelines for safely easing restrictions and letting businesses reopen amid the coronavirus pandemic, an Associated Press analysis found.

The AP determined that 17 states did not meet a key benchmark set by the White House for loosening up — a 14-day downward trajectory in new cases or positive test rates. And yet many of those have begun to reopen or are about to do so, including Alabama, Kentucky, Maine, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Utah.

Asked Thursday about states reopening without meeting the benchmarks, President Donald Trump said: "The governors have great power as to that, given by us. We want them to do that. We rely on them. We trust them. And hopefully they are making the right decisions."
 
Pandemic destroys 20.5 million US jobs in April

The US unemployment rate hit 14.7 percent in April, the highest rate since the Great Depression, as 20.5 million jobs vanished in the worst monthly loss on record.

The figures are a stark evidence of the damage the coronavirus pandemic has done to a now-shattered economy.

The unprecedented collapse drove the unemployment rate well beyond the peak hit in late 2009 during the global financial crisis - from 4.4 percent in March.

Almost all the job growth achieved during the 11-year recovery from the Great Recession has now been lost in one month.
 
The job losses in the month of April alone far exceed those from the 2008-2009 financial crisis, when the unemployment rate peaked at 10% in the US.

Two months ago, the monthly unemployment rate in the US was 3.5%, a 50 year low.

With alarming speed, the world’s largest economy is now reporting the worst unemployment figures since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Employment in the US fell sharply in all major sectors.

The heaviest losses were in the leisure and hospitality sectors, which lost a staggering 7.7 million workers.
 
Trump ‘totally expected’ 20.5 million job losses

As historically high unemployment figures were announced in the US, President Donald Trump seemed optimistic about the future prospects of the economy.

Appearing on the Fox News channel, Trump shrugged off the 20.5 million jobs lost in April as “totally expected” and “no surprise”.

“Even the Democrats aren’t blaming me for that. What I can do is I can bring it back,” Trump told Fox & Friends, in an interview as the figures were released.

Mindful of the presidential election in November, Trump has been keen to reboot the US economy despite the rising number of coronavirus cases.

Some states have already started to relax rules, while protests against lockdown orders have arisen elsewhere.

Even if jobless claims continue to subside as reopening gets under way, analysts say the scars on America's economy will be slow to heal.
 
Now an aide to US Vice-President Mike Pence has also tested positive for the coronavirus, officials have told US media.

The news comes one day after a personal valet to President Trump also tested positive. Trump said testing of White House staff would begin happening every day, rather than once a week.

On Friday, Pence is traveling to Iowa to meet faith leaders to discuss how places of worship can begin to reopen for religious services.

His flight was delayed by an hour and several of his staff members were seen disembarking the plane before takeoff from Washington.
 
Trump says aide with Covid-19 was in Oval Office

US President Donald Trump says a military aide who tested positive for the coronavirus was with him in the Oval Office on Tuesday, 24 hours before he started showing symptoms.

The White House said the aide, widely described as Trump’s personal valet, tested positive on Wednesday.

In an interview with Fox News, Trump said the aide was “in the room” with him, but played down the risk of contagion.

Trump echoed comments he made on Thursday, when he said he had had "very little contact, personal contact, with this gentleman".

Trump and Vice-President Mike Pence have tested negative for the virus since coming into contact with the aide, the White House said.

The two leaders, it added, would now be tested daily for coronavirus, rather than weekly.

In the same interview, Trump said certain White House staff members had started wearing face masks - as would those serving him food.
 
US prevents Security Council vote on pandemic resolution: diplomats

The United States prevented a vote in the UN Security Council on a resolution on the coronavirus pandemic, apparently because it made implicit mention of the World Health Organization, diplomats said.

The text, under negotiation since March, called for a worldwide cessation of hostilities in conflict zones so governments can address the pandemic.

The United States blocked a procedure that would have led to a vote on the resolution, the diplomats said.
 
A White House official has told reporters travelling with Vice-President Mike Pence to Iowa that neither Pence nor President Trump had recent contact with an aide that was diagnosed with Covid-19 earlier on Friday.

"This morning we had someone on the vice-president's staff test positive and so out of abundance of caution we went back and looked into all the person's contacts most recently," said the unnamed official.

Six members of Pence's staff who had recently been in contact with the infected worker were taken off Air Force 2 before the departure from Washington DC earlier today.
 
New York governor says 5-year old died from rare COVID-related complications

A 5-year old boy has died in New York from a rare inflammatory syndrome believed to be linked to the novel coronavirus, highlighting a potential new risk for children in the pandemic, Governor Andrew Cuomo said on Friday.

Cuomo told a daily briefing that the boy died in New York City on Thursday and that health officials were looking at other deaths involving children under similar circumstances to see if there is a link to COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

“There has been at least one fatality because of this and there may be others that are now under investigation,” Cuomo said. “This is every parents’ nightmare, right, that your child may actually be affected by this virus.”

Cases of rare, life-threatening inflammatory illnesses in children associated with exposure to COVID-19 were first reported in Britain, Italy and Spain, but doctors in the United States are starting to report clusters of kids with the disorder, which can attack multiple organs, impair heart function and weaken heart arteries.

Dr. Sean O’Leary, a pediatric infectious disease expert at Children’s Hospital Colorado who serves on the American Academy of Pediatrics committee on infectious disease, said he believes the New York case is the first reported death from this syndrome in the United States.

The syndrome shares symptoms with toxic shock and Kawasaki disease, which is associated with fever, skin rashes, swelling of glands, and in severe cases, inflammation of arteries of the heart. Scientists are still trying to determine whether the syndrome is linked with the new coronavirus because not all children with it have tested positive for the virus.

Cuomo said New York’s health department, which on Wednesday issued an advisory to healthcare providers about the so-called pediatric multi-system inflammatory syndrome, were reviewing 73 cases with children showing similar symptoms across the state.

“While rare, we are seeing some cases where children affected with the COVID virus can become ill with symptoms similar to the Kawasaki disease or toxic shock-like syndrome that literally causes inflammation in their blood vessels,” the governor said.

This emerging syndrome, which may occur days to weeks after a COVID-19 illness, reflects the surprising ways that this entirely new coronavirus infects and sickens its human hosts.

In Westchester County, a suburb of Manhattan, officials said on Friday that they were reviewing the recent death of another child that was possibly related to the syndrome and COVID-19 at the Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital in Valhalla, New York.

“In these early stages, we cannot say with certainty whether this was specifically related to COVID-19, and not to underlying medical issues,” the Westchester Medical Center Health Network, which counts the hospital in its network, said in a statement.

If the syndrome grows in prevelance it would shake a prior assumption that children by and large did not have to worry about COVID-19, Cuomo said.

“This would be really painful news and would open up an entirely different chapter,” he said. “I can’t tell you how many people I spoke to who took peace and solace in the fact that children were not getting infected.”

In neighboring New Jersey, a child was among the 162 COVID-19 fatalities reported on Friday by state Health Commissioner Judith Persichilli. Speaking at a briefing, Persichilli declined to provide any details about the child to protect the privacy of the family other than to say that the child had “an underlying medical condition.”

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...are-covid-related-complications-idUSKBN22K2C0
 
U.S. CDC reopening guidelines are under review: White House

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommended guidelines on when and how localities should reopen activity are being edited, White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany told reporters on Friday.

An administration official on Thursday said the White House had shelved a step-by-step guide prepared by CDC officials to help states safely reopen public places closed by the novel coronavirus pandemic.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...es-are-under-review-white-house-idUSKBN22K2FH
 
A White House official has told reporters travelling with Vice-President Mike Pence to Iowa that neither Pence nor President Trump had recent contact with an aide that was diagnosed with Covid-19 earlier on Friday.

"This morning we had someone on the vice-president's staff test positive and so out of abundance of caution we went back and looked into all the person's contacts most recently," said the unnamed official.

Six members of Pence's staff who had recently been in contact with the infected worker were taken off Air Force 2 before the departure from Washington DC earlier today.

A top aide to US Vice-President Mike Pence has tested positive for Covid-19 one day after another White House staff member was diagnosed with the virus.

Mr Pence's press secretary Katie Miller tested positive on Friday, a day after President Donald Trump's valet.

The White House has begun daily testing for Mr Pence and Mr Trump, and has claimed to be taking "every single precaution to protect the president".

The US death toll is now over 76,000 and states are beginning to reopen.

Six members of Mr Pence's team were abruptly taken off his plane, Air Force 2, after it was held on the tarmac outside Washington, DC for over an hour on Friday, as he prepared to travel to Iowa to meet religious leaders.

The staff members had had recent contact with Mrs Miller, according to an unnamed US official cited in the media pool report. The president and vice-president had not.

Mrs Miller is the wife of Trump aide Stephen Miller.

During a meeting with Republicans at the White House, Mr Trump told reporters: "She's a wonderful young woman, Katie."

"She tested very good for a long period of time and then all of a sudden today she tested positive."

When asked about the possibility of an outbreak in the White House, Mr Trump told reporters: "All you can do is take precautions and do the best you can."

He also said he was correct not to wear a mask while visiting the World War II memorial in Washington for VE Day, because the elderly veterans there with him were "far away".

"Plus the wind was blowing so hard and such a direction that if the plague ever reached them, I'd be very surprised," he added.


https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-52595700
 
Coronavirus inflicts huge U.S. job losses as pandemic breaches White House walls

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. government reported more catastrophic economic fallout from the coronavirus crisis on Friday as the pandemic pierced the very walls of the White House and California gave the green light for its factories to restart after a seven-week lockdown.

A day after the White House confirmed that President Donald Trump’s personal valet had tested positive for the virus, Trump told reporters that Katie Miller, press secretary to Vice President Mike Pence, had also been infected. She is married to senior Trump aide and immigration policy hard-liner Stephen Miller and travels frequently with Pence.

The back-to-back diagnoses of individuals close to Trump, Pence and the White House inner circle raised questions about whether the highest levels of government are adequately safeguarded from infection.

“We’ve taken every single precaution to protect the president,” White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany told reporters.

Earlier in the day, the Labor Department reported the U.S. unemployment rate rose to 14.7% last month, up from 3.5% in February, demonstrating the speed with which the workforce collapsed after stay-at-home orders meant to curb the outbreak were imposed across most of the country.

Worse economic news may be yet to come. White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett said the unemployment rate was likely to climb to around 20% this month. The jobless rate for April already shattered the post-World War Two record of 10.8% set in November 1982.

The economic devastation has heightened the urgency of governors’ efforts to get their states’ economies moving again, even though infection rates and deaths are still rising in parts of the country.

California, the first state to issue stay-at-home orders on March 19, partially reopened shuttered commerce on Friday. Retailers such as bookstores, jewelers, clothing merchants, sporting goods shops and florists were permitted to begin offering curbside pickup and deliveries, while manufacturing and warehouse facilities were allowed to resume operations if they met infection-control requirements.

Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, said California had managed to flatten its infection curve in recent weeks, allowing the state to safely proceed with gradually restarting the economy.
Read more: https://www.reuters.com/article/hea...emic-breaches-white-house-walls-idUSKBN22K27D
 
The US recovery from the pandemic lags way behind Europe – even as states reopen

The US may be moving to loosen social distancing restrictions around the same time as several European countries but it remains in a far different, and worse, stage of the coronavirus pandemic.

While infections and deaths from Covid-19 quickly raced to terrifying peaks in Italy and Spain, both countries have managed to arrest the increase and are now forcing the key trends downwards.

Certain shops have reopened in Italy, which has suffered more than 29,000 Covid-19 deaths, while Spain, where nearly 24,000 people have died from the virus, will return to a “new normality” by the end of June, according to the prime minister, Pedro Sánchez.

amir1.jpg

In the US, more than half of the states are also pushing ahead with plans to restart economic activity, urged on by Donald Trump, who has said that “we have to get our country open, and we have to get it open soon”.

But the Covid-19 trends in the US are starkly different from the European countries hardest hit in the early stages of the pandemic. Not only has the US suffered the most deaths worldwide, at more than 75,000 people so far, it has also failed so far to bend the curve of infections downwards.

The US peaked at around 30,000 new confirmed Covid-19 cases a day in April but rather than this rate sharply dropping, it has simply plateaued. Outside New York, a global hotspot for the pandemic that has managed to bend its curve downwards after weeks of societal restrictions, the rate of new cases is actually climbing in America.

amir2.jpg

Comparing the journey of the pandemic in the US with other nations is instructive – while new cases and deaths in Italy, Spain and France rocketed, they then plunged back down to more manageable levels ahead of plans to restart the patterns of normal life. The trend lines in the US show sharp climbs before a flattening to a stagnation, rather than quick decrease.

Public health experts have warned that the US is at risk of prematurely removing social distancing restrictions and encouraging a second, stronger wave of infections. One disaster management specialist has said the reopening of several states, devoid of the mass public testing required to safely do so, will hand a “death sentence” to many more Americans.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/08/us-reopening-coronavirus-trends
 
Land of the free.

Land of the brave.

Land of the incompetent. :facepalm:

----

7300 cases till now.

New cases in the last 3 days:

737
983
1748

Right now, it's 10:21 am EST there.

1105 cases already recorded.

https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us/

You’ve never stepped foot in America and have no clue what you’re taking about. This is not India where “lathi charge” will keep everyone at home. Each state has a governor that decides the actions to take for its residents. Think of each state as a country.
 
New York governor criticised over highest nursing home death toll

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, who has won bipartisan praise for rallying supplies for his state's ravaged hospitals and helping slow the spread of the coronavirus, is coming under increasing criticism for not bringing that same level of commitment to a problem that has so far stymied him: nursing homes.

In part-lecture, part-cheerleading briefings that have made him a Democratic counter to US President Donald Trump, Cuomo has often seemed dismissive and resigned to defeat when asked about his state leading the nation in nursing home deaths, AP reports.

“We’ve tried everything to keep it out of a nursing home, but it’s virtually impossible,” Cuomo told reporters. “Now is not the best time to put your mother in a nursing home. That is a fact.”
 
You’ve never stepped foot in America and have no clue what you’re taking about. This is not India where “lathi charge” will keep everyone at home. Each state has a governor that decides the actions to take for its residents. Think of each state as a country.

There are idiots here too as you can see from the protests or the beach incident recently in Florida. In our part of the world it is easy to criticize the police but if you grew up in the subcontinent you would know how difficult it is to control large crowds.

As far as state governments go in the USA it has been a mixed back but it all comes down to the federal government and I think Trump has failed here.
 
There are idiots here too as you can see from the protests or the beach incident recently in Florida. In our part of the world it is easy to criticize the police but if you grew up in the subcontinent you would know how difficult it is to control large crowds.

As far as state governments go in the USA it has been a mixed back but it all comes down to the federal government and I think Trump has failed here.

Agreed Trump was too slow to react but by February all other countries were on the same page and had not restricted air travel other than flights from China. The issue has been heavily politicized by both parties and the spread was never going to be controlled. Till today no state has imposed restrictions on driving to any other state and those restrictions will never be put in place. And you need to be a US resident to understand that.
 
Former US President Barack Obama has strongly criticised his successor Donald Trump over his response to the coronavirus crisis.
In a private call, he called the US handling of the pandemic "an absolute chaotic disaster".

Mr Obama has said he wants to play a larger role supporting Joe Biden in the presidential election in November.

His new remarks were made in a call meant toencourage former staff to work for Mr Biden 's campaign, CNN reports.

Mr Trump's approach to government is partly to blame for the US response to coronavirus, Mr Obama said. "It would have been bad even with the best of government," he was quoted as saying in the call. "It has been an absolute chaotic disaster when that mindset -- of 'what's in it for me' and 'to heck with everybody else' -- when that mindset is operationalized in our government."

Mr Obama also strongly criticised the decision to drop criminal charges against former national security adviser Michael Flynn during the Trump-Russia investigation.

More than 77,000 people have now died and the US has 1.2m confirmed cases - both by far the highest in the world.
Many states introduced lockdown measures in March but have now lifted restrictions, allowing people to return to work.

But health officials warn this may lead the virus to spread further.
Mr Trump's approach to the pandemic has oscillated. In February he dismissed the threat, saying it would disappear, but by mid-March he acknowledged its severity.

In April he suggested that ingesting disinfectant could be a preventative - something experts immediately rejected.


Last week he announced he would close down his government's coronavirus task force but later said it is re-focusing on opening the economy.
 
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