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Monday, August 31, 2020

Hurricane Laura: Nurses bravely raced to protect the neonatal babies they were treating

Amazing love and heroism to save neonatal babies in Lake Charles, Louisiana, to protect them from the Category 4 Hurricane Laura's devastation.

Published in Acadiana Advocate by Katie Gagliano 

As her ambulance unit passed downed trees and whooshed through standing water, Our Lady of Lourdes neonatal intensive care unit nurse Ashley Judice was thinking of babies in Lake Charles.

Judice and seven other team members including a nurse, respiratory therapists and Acadian Ambulance medics drove to Lake Charles Thursday in two ambulances to help evacuate NICU infants from Lake Charles Memorial Hospital.

In all, Our Lady of Lourdes Women’s and Children’s Hospital took in 10 NICU babies, two before Hurricane Laura’s landfall and eight after, Our Lady of Lourdes spokesperson Elisabeth Arnold said.

Judice said she tried not to let herself get distracted by the devastation they passed; her mind focused on the task at hand. Would the baby need respiratory support, an IV or blood products, she considered, as she ran through a checklist in her head and prepared for what lie ahead.

“I was more worried about the babies and what baby I was picking up and what they would need. I was preparing myself for what I might be walking into …My priority was making sure that baby was delivered safely to our hospital,” Judice said.

The nurses and health care workers at Lake Charles Memorial were similarly single-minded. Lake Charles Memorial Hospital for Women NICU Director Leah Upton said emotions were high among the team as people feared for their families and homes as dire reports flooded in about the projected “unsurvivable” storm surge and severe conditions ahead of Hurricane Laura’s landfall.

For Upton, the moment of dread came when she awoke at 4:45 a.m. Wednesday to start finalizing the team’s plan B with hospital administrators and saw the updated storm projections. The initial plan was to remain at the Women’s campus and, if water inundated the building, evacuate the babies to the building’s modest second floor area and provide oxygen and other needed therapies manually.

They were confident in the building’s Category-4 storm rating, but by 3 p.m. Wednesday regional emergency officials told the team to evacuate the babies to the main hospital, fearing possible flooding.

“I think a lot of the tears and fear came before the storm that morning before it all happened. The anticipation, fear of the unknown and not knowing what’s going to happen," Upton said. "But once we started evacuating those babies, all the nurses, all the staff put their fears aside and we just put our heads down and got to work. We put comforts aside, put our sleep aside and everybody just took care of these babies."

It was all hands on deck – night nurses were woken up, doctors and teams were called in from other departments, emergency officials and deputies with the Calcasieu Parish Sheriff’s Office came in to clear roadways, provide trailers and a U-Haul to move equipment and supplies.

It can take an hour to move one baby across town between hospital campuses on a normal day, Upton said, and they needed to move 19 babies.

They got it done in two and a half hours, she said.

Families received calls about the swift move once the infants were secure on the main hospital campus and Upton and staff assured the families they would protect the babies like their own children.

“They had to put a lot of trust in us to care for these infants during this time,” she said.

Once settled in the pediatric wing on the sixth floor at Lake Charles Memorial, the night didn’t stop. The team of 14 nurses, three respiratory therapists and two administrators spent the night caring for the infants and contending with the hurricane, sopping up puddles of water with towels, listening to the windows rattle and the building shake in the wind, and propping mattresses in front of windows with heavy chairs in case they shattered as tornado warnings signaled, she said.

The power and water cut out in the night and the electricity switched over to generator power, fueling the babies’ needed machines. The staff used bottled water to wash their hands and collected rain water in buckets to flush the toilets.

The air conditioning system, powered using city water supplies, never came back on, Upton said.

Through it all, the babies were unfazed.

“The babies didn’t even realize there was a storm. They did better than us,” Upton said.

Lake Charles Memorial Hospital, the largest hospital in southwest Louisiana, eventually evacuated 146 patients after Hurricane Laura damaged the city’s water infrastructure so badly the facility warned it may be weeks before water service is restored. The facility relies on the city for water to help air condition the facility and sterilize equipment.

“We just can’t function as a hospital without water,” said Matt Felder, a spokesman for the hospital. He added the hospital will still have some “limited” emergency room services.

The dire water situation was confirmed at 1 p.m. Thursday, and Upton and staff immediately began calling facilities in Baton Rouge, Lafayette and New Orleans to transfer their patients, arranging their second evacuation in less than 24 hours. Staff moved IV fluids into syringes, bottled medications and formula, copied charts and packed the babies’ belongings for their next leg of travel, Upton said.

They even printed each baby’s name, their parents’ names and phone number on cards or pieces of tape and affixed it to their onesies to ensure they were always identified, she said.

“The first transport team arrived and all of a sudden there was clapping and cheering from all the staff that our babies were going to be transported out and they were going to be OK," Upton said. "We were super relieved. We were relieved when we made it through the storm and we were super relieved when the transport teams came…that they were going to be in a safer area."

Despite the grueling last 36 hours, the men and women at Lake Charles Memorial were determined and kind when the transport teams arrived, Judice said. Dripping sweat behind their face masks in the heat, they still had smiles on their faces, were helpful, calm and giving their best while seeing the babies off to new health centers.

The group showed grace and grit during the hurricane’s onslaught and aftermath, Judice said.

By 11 p.m. Thursday the final transport took Lake Charles Memorial’s last two NICU infants to other south Louisiana hospitals. There was a profound sense of relief knowing they had done the job, Upton said.

“In this situation whenever everyone is afraid, stressed and separated from families, the staff came together, supported one another and relentlessly took care of these babies to do what was best for them. I could not be more proud of them,” she said.

Email Katie Gagliano at Kgagliano@theadvocate.com

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Sunday, August 30, 2020

Cluster of deaths at Fort Hood Texas - What in the world is happening?

 https://www.texastribune.org/2020/08/28/Texas-Hispanic-Caucus-Fort-Hood/

The Texas Senate Hispanic Caucus wants an investigation into Fort Hood. 

Echo reported in the Texas Tribune by Cassandra Pollock.

At least nine soldiers stationed there have been found dead this year.

The Texas Senate Hispanic Caucus reupped its request for a congressional investigation into Fort Hood.
A dozen Texas Senate members are reupping their request for a congressional investigation into the Fort Hood military base after a soldier was found dead earlier this week, becoming at least the ninth person stationed at the Killeen post to have been found dead this year, according to officials and media reports.

The body of Sgt. Elder Fernandes was found Tuesday in Temple, about 30 miles from the base, *hanging from a tree!*, roughly a week after he was reported missing. Temple law enforcement officials said foul play was not suspected.

In May, Fernandes reported he had been a victim of sexual assault. Army officials said Wednesday that an investigation determined the inquiry was unsubstantiated and that Fernandes was made aware of the results, according to The Washington Post. But an attorney for the Fernandes family said Thursday that Fernandes, who was transferred to a new unit after reporting his assault, was harassed and bullied over it before his death.


Earlier this summer, the remains of 20-year-old Army Spc. Vanessa Guillén, who had reportedly told her family that she was harassed on base, were found in Bell County after the soldier had been missing since April. The circumstances surrounding Guillén's death sparked protests across major cities in Texas, with demonstrators calling on the military to reform its investigations into sexual assault allegations.

After her remains were found, the U.S. Department of Justice said the main suspect in Guillén's death, fellow Fort Hood soldier Aaron Robinson, killed himself when confronted by police.

In July, after Guillén's remains were found, the Army called on an independent panel to review the base's command climate. But in a letter Friday, the Texas Senate Hispanic Caucus said that the review did not include an examination of the base's policies and processes with sexual assault or harassment cases, as well as soldier deaths or disappearances. The caucus sent the letter to Secretary of the Army Ryan McCarthy, Gov. Greg Abbott, members of Texas' congressional delegation and Scott Mras, legislative liaison to McCarthy.

"While we acknowledge the U.S. Army is taking steps to examine the base, these reviews are still led and conducted by the U.S. Army itself," the caucus wrote. "Anything other than a thorough transparent investigation into the processes, discipline, and the United States Army’s handling of the matters in their aftermath would be a disservice to the [Guillén], Morales, Morta and now Fernandes families."

Other lawmakers and elected officials have recently called for changes to the base. U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, for example, wrote a letter to McCarty this week before Fernandes' body was found saying that changes were needed to "better safeguard the soldiers stationed there."

When reached for comment later Friday, a spokesperson for the Army told The Texas Tribune via email that, as with all correspondence involving elected officials, the department "will respond directly to the authors of the letter." 

Moreover, the email also cited the July 30 announcement of an independent review of the military base.

A spokesperson for Abbott did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Donald Trump ignores pandemic public suffering and coronavirus medical science

Trump Is Grossly Unfit to be President
How a single wedding in Millinocket Maine changed the contours of the state's coronavirus outbreak- reported by Charles Eichacker- 
"...a young couple got married at a church in East Millinocket. Afterward, they celebrated the milestone with a 62-person dinner at an inn outside Baxter State Park. So, after a summer in which Maine controlled the coronavirus better than almost every other state, that couple’s fateful decision has spawned the state’s most far-reaching outbreak of COVID-19 to date. It infected at least 123 people and caused secondary outbreaks at a rehabilitation center in Madison, Maine and, more than 200 miles to the south, at the York County, Maine, jail in Alfred. One woman who did not attend the wedding has now died from the disease."

Also, this echo report by ShaCamree Gowdy in the Midland Reporter-Telegram Texas newspaper

Weeks before her death, an El Paso mother received millions of views on her public message saying COVID-19 isn't a joke and pleading with people to never take the little things for granted.

Forty-three-year Sara Montoya, connected to a ventilator and struggling to breathe, went live on Facebook from her hospital bed on July 5 and urged people to take the virus seriously. She passed away about six weeks later on Aug. 13.

“Never in my life did I ever think that I would be fighting for my breath, something that we take for granted every day when we wake up. Please do not put your families at risk. I did the best that I thought I could. It is not worth it. Put your masks on. Don’t go out if you don’t have to,” she said in the video.

“Never in my life did I ever think that I would be fighting for my breath, something that we take for granted every day when we wake up. Please do not put your families at risk. I did the best that I thought I could. It is not worth it. Put your masks on. Don’t go out if you don’t have to,” she said in the video.

Jasmin Chavez told TODAY she was initially embarrassed about her mother's video and asked her to remove it, but "I'm glad she didn’t listen to me. Her video has been viewed over 5 million times and I’m glad people realize this virus is real."

Her mother at first thought she had a simple sinus infection, Chavez said, but by July 1 she had been admitted to the hospital because of COVID-19. A week later, she found out she had staph infection in her lungs.

The 24-year-old is now reaffirming her mother's final message to the public, and encouraging everyone to do all they can to slow the virus's spread.

“I want people to continue to wear their masks, wash their hands, and only leave their house when necessary,” Chavez said. “There is not a cure."


Meanwhile, Donald Trump conducted a "made for reality show television" ostentatious Republican National Committee "cultvention" where wearing masks was not required.  

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Saturday, August 29, 2020

#Unfit - George Conway gives testimony about Donald Trump as a racist

In an upcoming documentary, conservative attorney George Conway emotionally recalls when he first realized beyond a doubt that President Donald Trump is a racist.
Donald Trump: 'Go Back Where You Came From': The Long Rhetorical Roots Of Trump's Racist Tweets- National Public Radio report by Dolin Dwyer and Andrew Limbong

Politico Report- "Go back to where you came from".

George Conway echo reported on RawStory:  “My mother came from the Philippines. She came to the United States in the late 1950s. So I’m half Filipino, and the other half is some mixture of Irish, Scottish – you know, I’m classic American mutt,” Conway explains in a clip of the documentary “#Unfit: The Psychology of Donald Trump.”

“I think of myself as an American. I just assume people aren’t racist. And I tend to forget that, well, some people are. And that’s sort of the lesson with Trump is. I just gave him the benefit of the doubt.”

“But what he said about those members of Congress,” Conway continues, referring to Trump telling four Democratic members of Congress to “go back” to the “crime infested places from which they came.”


“It brought back that memory of the one time I really remember, wow, there really are people like that here. I was with my mother when I was a teenager in a parking lot in Massachusetts and somebody said to her, ‘go back to your country.’ It came home to me then. This man is a racist. He is evil,” Conway says in the clip.

The documentary also includes interviews with doctors and mental health professionals, who provide insight into the mental pathologies they believe drive Trump’s behavior.

“#Unfit” is set for a limited theatrical release on August 28 before heading to on-demand platforms on September 1.

Maine Writer- I intend to watch #Unfit

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Senator Susan Collins is a Donald Trump surrogate

Echo opinion letter from Maine, published in the Portland Press Herald.  Senator Collins refuses to stand up to Donald Trump. She is a Trump surrogate.

 After a long career of voting across the political aisle, why did the Maine Senator Susan Collins gamble her legacy on Trump?

Echo from South Freeport, Maine- Donald Trump’s move to drill and sell oil from the Alaskan National Wildlife Refuge, ironically the day after it reported the third warmest temperature ever recorded on Earth: 130 degrees in California.

A classic Trumponian move – foolishly selling into a glutted market and despoiling a national treasure to appeal to his base, and create division and headlines to distract from his daily scandals, as well as a litany of illegal activities.

The window for the drilling was opened in the Trump tax bill, passed with Sen. Susan Collins’ deciding vote. Alaska’s Sen. Lisa Murkowski had that provision added in exchange for her vote. Collins voted for the bill in exchange for promises that President Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell unshockingly broke. Collins said the cuts would pay for themselves; a study by the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service found that the results suggest they are paying for 5 percent or less. The rest would be left for our children and grandchildren.

Susan Collins voted against taking evidence or imposing any reprimand on Trump, saying that she thought he had “learned … a pretty big lesson.” Since then, Trump’s assault on our senses and our Constitution has gotten worse every day. Collins’ Senate committee just published a report that found that Trump’s campaign gave information to Russian intelligence to help his 2016 election. 

Senator Collins knew.

Democratic Maine House Speaker Sara Gideon has been gracious, intelligent and effective when faced with a divisive, headline-seeking chief executive. It is time for fresh, alert ideas in Washington. 

Vote Blue. Vote Joe Biden Kamala Harris. 

Please support Sara Gideon.

From Arnold Macdonald in South Freeport, Maine

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Friday, August 28, 2020

Donald Trump's failed nepotism - Trumpziism's crime family

Nepotism Is Bad For Government. (Failed!) Donald Trump’s Convention Reminds Us Why- Personal relationships and flattery are no way to govern.

Echo opinion published in the History News Network

By Christine Adams, professor of history at St. Mary's College of Maryland and author of book on The Creation of the Official French Royal Mistress, with Tracy Adams.

For Donald Trump, personal relationships and (blind) loyalty matter. This explains why so many of his top advisers and speakers at this week’s (failed!) Republican Convention are “anyone named Trump, anyone who can speak Fox and anyone willing to pay some form of fealty,” as Philip Bump writes. 

It was distressing to see Trump’s children serving as his primary gatekeepers at the White House. Those with a personal connection to Trumpzi or one of his children are much more likely to find a receptive audience. For example, environmental concerns alone were not enough to delay federal approval of a controversial gold and copper mine in Alaska — it was the intervention of eldest son Donald Trump Jr. that persuaded Trump to reconsider.

This is not how policymaking is supposed to work in a liberal democracy. The personal nature of Trump’s decision-making on matters from foreign relations to presidential pardons is one of the reasons that his administration is widely considered one of the most corrupt in recent history.

Failed Trump's approach would look very familiar to courtiers in early modern Europe, where individual relationships, connections and proximity to the monarch shaped nearly all political decisions.

Obviously, such an approach to governance has consequences. 

In France, as the economic and political crises of the late 1780s escalated, the people blamed their country’s problems on the corrupt network of influence peddlers and rent-seekers who surrounded Louis XVI. When revolution broke out in 1789, one of the most insistent demands was for an end to “personal” government in favor of institutions that would protect the public interest. 

People find the incompetence that nepotism fosters particularly intolerable in times of crisis; a clear example of this is the botched response to the coronavirus pandemic from Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner. Democrats are certain to focus on the politics of personal favors in the upcoming election, to Trump’s detriment.

Enlightenment philosophers and revolutionary politicians alike understood that a personal relationship with the king was the way to secure favorable policies. For them, that was the problem. In an “absolutist” polity, the king was the only openly recognized political actor, and his will had the force of law. In 1682, Louis XIV moved the court to Versailles, where he expected members of the nobility to spend the majority of their time if they wanted consideration and influence, mingling his household with the official seat of government. He would not grant favors to “a man I never see.”

Few French aristocrats questioned the system; rather, they learned how best to gain a favorable hearing from the king. The Duke of Saint-Simon, in a scathing critique of this process, remarked on how Louis XIV’s “weak point” was his “love of hearing his own praises. 

There was nothing he liked so much as flattery or, to put it more plainly, adulation; the coarser and clumsier it was, the more he relished it. That was the only way to approach him.” The revolutionaries of 1789 later used such accounts to buttress their own critique of the Bourbon monarchy, arguing that kings were too susceptible to the blandishments of courtiers, and insufficiently interested in the public good.

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Thursday, August 27, 2020

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg is among the men and women of courage and conviction

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to Receive Liberty Medal from National Constitution Center


Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Sept. 17, will be honored with the National Constitution Center’s 32nd annual Liberty Medal for her “pathbreaking efforts to advance liberty and justice for all,” the institute said in a press release.

The center, housed in Philadelphia, explores and explains the U.S. Constitution through high-tech exhibits, artifacts and interactive displays.

The National Constitution Center has awarded the medal since 1988 to “men and women of courage and conviction who strive to secure the blessings of liberty to people around the globe.”


Past recipients include rock musician Bono, Nelson Mandela, deceased civil rights icon John Lewis and Pakistani activist Malala Yousafzai.

Ginsburg, an associate justice of the Supreme Court nominated by President Bill Clinton in 1993, has long fought for gender equality. At 87, she is the oldest justice of the nine-member court.

“It is a special honor for the National Constitution Center to award the 2020 Liberty Medal to Justice Ginsburg for her historic efforts to advance equality and liberty for all,” National Constitution Center President and CEO Jeffrey Rosen said in a statement. “It’s especially meaningful to have convened some of the Justice’s favorite opera singers and special friends to offer her a tribute in words and music, describing how she has touched their lives and created what she calls a more ‘embracive’ Constitution.”

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Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Coronavirus Pandemic: Millinocket Maine "...as if the virus is everywhere around us," Dr. Nirav Shah said.

https://www.mainebiz.biz/article/far-spreading-millinocket-wedding-outbreak-spurs-call-for-individual-business-vigilance?utm_source=Newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=Daily+Report%3A+Millinocket+outbreak+ripples%3B+Maine+lobster+industry+targets+a+new+market&utm_campaign=Daily+Report+082620+v2

Maine provides lengthy checklists of public safety measures, and the hospitality industry has also teamed with Eastern Maine Community College to provide free online training on safety measures. Echo report by Maureen Milliken published in MaineBiz.

CORONAVIRUS- The outbreak started with a wedding on Aug. 7 where there was reportedly little social distancing and most of the 65 attendees didn't wear masks. 

Less than three weeks later, at least 83 people linked to that wedding or its guests have tested positive for COVID-19, including 18 associated with the York County Jail, and one person has died.

The rapid spread across hundreds of miles spurred a call Tuesday from Gov. Janet Mills and Nirav Shah, director of the Maine CDC, to the state's businesses and residents not to let Maine's overall low virus numbers cause complacency. The pair stressed that the need to be vigilant is as important now as it was in March, when measures were first taken to slow the outbreak of the disease.

The 83 cases associated with the Millinocket wedding and its reception include six at Maplecrest Rehabilitation and Living Center in Madison, a 58-bed nursing home 100 miles away, where one of the staff members attended the wedding.

A staff member of the York County Jail, more than 200 miles away, also attended, and now 18 cases at the jail and the York County municipal complex are associated with the wedding. The York County outbreak comprises seven inmates, nine jail staff and two York County employees who work in the complex. Those cases are included in the 83 linked to the wedding.

Maine CDC is also investigating an outbreak among York County firefighters that hasn't been linked to the county complex cases.

“What these outbreaks show — whether it’s the wedding or Maplecreast or the York County Jail complex — these recent examples ... demonstrate how aggressive and how opportunistic this virus is and how quickly it can move from one community to another," Shah said at Tuesday's biweekly briefing.

"Even if those communities are miles apart, separated by multiple counties in between, what we’ve learned about COVID-19 is that it can be the uninvited guest at every single wedding, party or event in Maine. The virus is where we are, then it comes home with us."
Wedding investigation ongoing
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=955673868238590&extid=OhkfQxhCZ60l8ome

The Big Moose Inn, Cabins & Campground was cited by the Maine CDC last week for exceeding the indoor gathering limit of 50 people — there were 65 wedding guests — and for not ensuring 6-feet social distancing or gathering contact information from those in attendance, as required. Shaw also confirmed at Tuesday's briefing that the investigation shows most of the guests weren't wearing protective face masks.

Big Moose is the first business in the state to be cited for not complying with state public health orders related to the pandemic. The citation comes with a requirement to agree to comply in the future, but no fines unless there's another violation.

The couple who held the wedding, who haven't been publicly identified, and the church where it took place, Tri-Town Baptist Church in East Millinocket, haven't been cited, but Shah said the investigation is ongoing.

Shah said the link between the Millinocket outbreak and the York County one had only been determined earlier Tuesday.

"Right now it's under evaluation. We want to make sure have all the facts, the key pieces to make sure we understand it fully," he said. "Given the expansion of the outbreak and the number of cases now connected, we're also focused on mitigating spread."

Steve Hewins, executive director of HospitalityME, which represents more than 1,000 members in the restaurant and lodging industry in the state, told Mainebiz, the majority of business owners are following the rules.

"This shows the importance of closely following all protocols so that employees, guests and the general public are kept safe," Hewins said Wednesday. "However, this one incident also overshadows the incredible work being done by thousands of restaurants and hotels across the state in keeping Maine’s infection numbers low even while our peak summer season remains in full swing."

The association, along with retailers and other related associations, has pushed since late spring to allow further opening, and stressed that restaurants and lodging establishments will follow guidelines to keep spreads, like the one in Millinocket, from occurring.

The state supplies lengthy checklists of public safety measures, and the hospitality industry has also teamed with Eastern Maine Community College to provide free online training on safety measures.

Shah said that the investigation shows so far that that “mask wearing not commonplace or widespread” at the wedding. He also said it hadn't yet been determined how much information the venue provided those attending aside from the fact that signs about mask-wearing had been posted.
'We can't let our guard down'

But Mills and Shah emphasized Tuesday that that one incident can have wide-ranging effects.

Mills said Tuesday at the briefing the fact the majority of Maine individuals and businesses are following the rules is what has kept the state's number of cases among the lowest in the country. Maine's seven-day postivity rate among those tested is 0.74% compared to 7% nationwide.


"We know we can’t let down our guard now," Mills said. "I know for many people the worst parts of this pandemic feel far away, like they’re in another country or another state," but "the spread here isn't just a possibility, it's a reality."

She added, "A woman who never even attended the wedding or the reception, who interacted with someone else who did attend the wedding or reception, lost her life to this virus. One person, one contact, can light a match, can spark a fire, that we may be unable to put out and it may cause our health care system to be overwhelmed it may cause people to lose their life."

Maine CDC is also investigating an outbreak at the Sanford, Buxton and Saco fire departments, which share some members, Shah said. While they are in York County, he said so far there's been no link, yet, to the county jail and Millinocket outbreaks. He also confirmed, in response to a reporter's question, that the pastor of a church in Sanford officiated at the Millinocket wedding.

Shah said the spread from the wedding provides a glimpse of how quickly an outbreak can unfold. Of the 60 cases associated with the wedding, 32 are people who attended the wedding or reception, 33 are people who didn't, but had close contact with them, and 20 had close contact with the secondary people.

A wedding guest infected a parent, that parent had contact with another child who works at Maplecrest, who infected five people there, four residents and one staff member. "All of this unfolded in two and a half weeks," Shah said. "That’s just an example of how quickly this virus can spread, from a wedding to a guest to a parent to another child to a nursing home.”


Mills and Shah stressed that it's still important for people to wear masks, practice social distancing and stay home when they can, particularly if they don't feel well.

“In light of the situation in York County and Sanford, please do not go to work if you are not feeling well," Shah said. "Gone are the days when powering through the workday with a cold is the heroic thing to do. Right now, in an era of COVID-19, staying home when you are sick is the most heroic thing that you can do."

"We should be going about our days as if the virus is everywhere around us," Dr. Shah said.

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Tuesday, August 25, 2020

COVID-19 mismanagement - Florida is coronavirus morbidity ground zero

 https://www.modernhealthcare.com/policy/how-starving-public-health-fueled-covid-fire-florida?utm_source=modern-healthcare-covid-19-coverage&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20200823&utm_content=article1-readmore&fbclid=IwAR01-X3BNd89otLQR-0w7NkN3SQDdvErBWd2uMaz65tnm2F6w2g00Fz5bl8

How the starving public health system fueled a COVID-19 fire in Florida- echo reported in the Associated Press

On a sweltering July morning, Rose Wilson struggled to breathe as she sat in her bed, the light from her computer illuminating her face and the oxygen tubes in her nose.

Wilson, a retiree who worked as a public health department nurse supervisor in Duval County for 35 years, had just been diagnosed with COVID-19-induced pneumonia. She had a telemedicine appointment with her doctor.

Staring back from her screen was Dr. Rogers Cain, who runs a tidy little family medical clinic a couple of blocks from the Trout River in north Jacksonville, a predominantly Black area where the coronavirus is running roughshod. Wilson, 81, was one of Cain's patients who'd tested positive — he had seven other COVID patients that morning before noon. 
Governot DeSantis failed coronavirus policy led to gross pandemic mismanagement

Moreover, three of her grown children had contracted the virus, too.

"It started as a drip, drip, drip in May," said Cain, his voice muffled by his mask. "Now it's more like a faucet running."

Cain and Wilson are nervous. Over the past two decades, both watched as the county health department was gutted of money and people, hampering Duval's ability to respond to outbreaks, including a small cluster of tuberculosis cases in 2012. And now they face the menace of COVID-19 in a city once slated to host this week's Republican National Convention, in one of the states leading the latest U.S. surge.

Florida is both a microcosm and a cautionary tale for America. As the nation starved the public health system intended to protect communities against disease, staffing and funding fell faster and further in the Sunshine State, leaving it especially unprepared for the worst health crisis in a century.

Although Florida's population grew by 2.4 million since 2010 to make it the nation's third-most populous state, a joint investigation by KHN and The Associated Press has found, the state slashed its local health departments' staffing ― from 12,422 full-time equivalent workers to 9,125 in 2019, the latest data available.

According to an analysis of state data, the state-run local health departments spent 41% less per resident in 2019 than in 2010, dropping from $57 to $34 after adjusting for inflation. Departments nationwide have also cut spending, but by less than half as much ― an average of 18%, according to data from the National Association of County and City Health Officials.

Even before the pandemic hit, that meant fewer investigators to track, trace and contain diseases such as hepatitis. It meant fewer public health nurses to teach people how to protect themselves from HIV/AIDS or the flu. When the wave of COVID-19 inundated Florida, the state was caught flat-footed when it mattered most, its main lines of defense eviscerated.

Now, confirmed cases have soared past 588,000 and deaths have risen to more than 10,000. Concerns over the virus prompted Republicans to cancel plans for an in-person convention in Jacksonville, opting for a pared-down version in North Carolina.

Health experts blame the funding cuts on the Great Recession and choices by a series of governors who wanted to move publicly funded state services to for-profit companies.

And when the pandemic took hold, they say, residents got mixed messages about prevention strategies like wearing masks from Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis and other political leaders. Voices within the health departments were muzzled.

Governor DeSantos: Positive Cases Florida Smashes Coronavirus Case Record: Nearly 9,000 

"The reality, unfortunately, is people are going to die because of the irresponsibility of the decisions being made by the people crafting the budgets," said Ron Bialek, president of the Public Health Foundation, a nonprofit in Washington, D.C., offering tools and training. "Public health can't help us get out of this situation without our elected officials giving us the resources."

State officials neither answered specific, repeated questions from The Associated Press and KHN about changes in public health funding, nor made staffers available for deeper explanations.

Dr. Leslie Beitsch, a former deputy secretary of Florida's state health department, said failing to prepare for a foreseeable disaster "is governmental malpractice." The nation's pandemic response is only as good as the weakest link, he said. Since the virus respects no borders, other states feel the ripples of Florida's failings.

Those failings are clear in Duval County, which had employed the equivalent of 852 full-time workers and spent $91 per person in 2008 but in 2019 had only 422 workers and spent just $34 per resident, according to the KHN/AP analysis of state data. That's less than the typical list price of a single COVID test. Former county health director Dr. Jeff Goldhagen said the county's team has been "dismantled to the extent that it could not really manage an outbreak."

Yet it must.

Cain's private north Jacksonville medical clinic alone has had about 60 confirmed COVID cases and eight deaths. "We are all on fire right now," he said. "You have to have a fire department that is adequately equipped to put out the fire. "

Dwindling Budgets

Florida faced similar shortcomings around the time of the last great pandemic, the 1918 flu. Back then, according to a 1924 state report, public health workers faced too many demands and their efforts were "to some extent scattered and transitory." The state could have used at least three more district health officers, the report said: "It is a source of regret and a matter of grave concern to public health workers that the funds available are not sufficient."

County-based health departments began in 1930, providing more robust services closer to home. About 50 years later, legislation created state-administered primary care programs in which county health departments provided low-income Floridians with the type of basic healthcare and treatment most people now get at private doctors' offices.

The 1990s saw a move toward privatization, particularly as Medicaid managed care took hold, said a 2004 paper in the Florida Public Health Review. Still, per-person spending on local public health rose until the late 1990s, when adjusted for inflation to 2019 dollars, peaking at $59.

Wilson, the retired public health nurse stricken with COVID-19, recalled how Duval County's department started feeling the financial pain during former Republican Gov. Jeb Bush's administration in the early 2000s and kept losing nurses and other staff until they were "very, very short."

Beitsch, who worked for the state health department in the 1990s, said the downward trend continued under former Republican governors Charlie Crist and Rick Scott, fueled by a growing belief in shrinking government that flourished in many states. 

Florida's leaders exerted more control over public health, Beitsch said, and "the amount of local autonomy has been diminishing with successive administrations."

The recession that began in late 2007 sparked public health reductions across the nation that were especially harsh in Florida. 

By 2011, budget cuts and lack of money were the most frequently cited challenges in a Florida public health workforce survey, which pointed to growing needs. In the following years, the state had some of the nation's highest rates of heart disease and diabetes.

Squeezed departments struggled and sometimes stumbled. A report from the state health department's inspector general for the 2018-19 fiscal year, for example, found a series of lost and inconsistent shipments of lab specimens from county health departments to the state lab — not long before the pandemic would make labs more important than ever.

As Florida's governor, Scott presided over the state from 2011 to 2019, when funding and staffing dropped most. Now a U.S. senator, he said through a spokesperson that he was unapologetic for health department cuts, which he characterized as a move toward "making government more efficient" without endangering public health.

"I'm sure that he had no problem with the cuts that were being made," said Patrick Bernet, an associate professor in health administration at Florida Atlantic University. "To put it all on him is not fair because a bunch of little henchmen from the counties had to vote that way. ... We keep voting in people who undervalue public health."

Democratic state Sen. Janet Cruz, a legislator who has represented the Tampa region for a dozen years and sat on healthcare committees, said she watched lawmakers systematically cut money for health departments. When she questioned it, she said, some colleagues claimed the need wasn't as great because the state was moving toward private family healthcare centers. "Public health in Florida has been wholly underfunded," she said.

Some places have suffered more than others. Departments serving at least half a million residents spent $29 per person in 2019 on average, compared with $90 per person in departments serving 50,000 or fewer — a difference starker than the typical gap between larger and smaller departments nationally, according to an KHN-AP analysis. Experts can't say exactly why the gap is wider in Florida, which has a state-run system, but point to politics and historical decisions about budgets.

Duval County's health department spending was the equivalent of $34 per person, down 63% since 2008. Typically, about 22 workers, or 5% of the total staff, have been dedicated to preparing for and tracking disease outbreaks.

But when the pandemic hit, many there and elsewhere were diverted to fight the coronavirus, leaving little time for their typical duties such as mosquito abatement and tracking sexually transmitted infections, such as syphilis.

"Current events demonstrate how bad a decision" the deep cuts to public health were, said Dr. Marissa Levine, a professor of public health and family medicine at the University of South Florida. "It's really come back to haunt us."

Mixed and Muzzled Messages

In fact, the pandemic caught fire in Florida this summer as the state's rapid reopening allowed people to flock to beaches, to Disney World, movie theaters and bars.

The state has had more than half a million confirmed cases ― among them, players and workers for baseball's Miami Marlins ― and 35,000 hospitalizations, yet DeSantis still hasn't issued a mask mandate. Some local governments have. Jacksonville adopted one in late June, and about a week later Republican Mayor Lenny Curry announced he and his family were self-quarantining because he'd been exposed to someone who tested positive for the virus.

Chad Neilsen, director of infection prevention at University of Florida-Jacksonville, lauded the mayor for the mask requirement, saying, "We know that masking works." But he pointed out that other counties have different rules and that the inconsistent messaging breeds confusion.

St. Johns County began requiring masks in late July but only in county facilities. And DeSantis has appeared in public without a mask numerous times, including at an Aug. 13 coronavirus update briefing during which some other speakers wore them.

"One voice is so critical during a pandemic," said Dr. Jonathan Kantor, a Jacksonville epidemiologist and dermatologist. "We have to have one voice, and consistent leadership that is modeling behavior if we want to get people to change their behaviors."

Instead, experts in Florida said, public health workers have been silenced or told by top state officials what to say. 

For example, The Palm Beach Post reported that state leaders told school boards they needed health department approval to keep schools closed, then instructed health directors not to give it.

"All the communication is directed by the state, and localities are very limited in what they can do," said Levine, the University of South Florida professor. "Anything to do with a mandate, there's resistance to do at a state level. This includes the hot debate on masks. The locals have to extend the state messaging." Local health officials "are being told bluntly: 'Shut up,'" Bernet said. "They literally cannot speak."

Beitsch, who now chairs the department of behavioral sciences and social medicine at Florida State University, said such limitations ― and similar mixed messages and silencing of medical experts at the national level ― fuels the politicization of public health and undermining of science.

"People think they should be listening to politicians and state legislative leaders about their healthcare. They're not listening to health experts and the epidemiologists who say if you just wear a mask and if you just wash your hands, we can really, really reduce the spread of the virus," said Cruz, the state senator. "People are confused, and they think this is a hoax and it's nothing more than the flu."

Meanwhile, the COVID caseload continues to rise, surpassing 25,000 in Duval County, with minorities stricken disproportionately, as elsewhere in the nation. In a county that's 29% Black and 60% white, Black residents with COVID have been hospitalized at more than double the rate of white residents. Rates are also high for Floridians grouped together as "other," including Native American, Asian and multiracial residents.

Duval County's overall caseload is rising so fast that Goldhagen, the former health department director, said the agency has given up on contact tracing, which means trying to curb the virus by identifying and warning people who have been exposed.

"It's impossible," Goldhagen said. "Dismantling the system was a complete disregard for the health and well-being of the citizens of Florida."

With an ill-equipped public health system, Wilson, the retired public health nurse, said it falls to everyone to lead Jacksonville, and Florida, out of the coronavirus crisis.

"My hope is that everybody begins to take this virus seriously, and wear their mask and stay social distancing. It can work if we do that," said Wilson, whose condition has improved. "So, that's my hope. Eventually, there will be a vaccine that will curtail this virus. But until then, it's up to us to help do that. 

And if we're not serious about it, then we're doomed."

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Monday, August 24, 2020

Evangelicals and Donald Trump's Hollywood Access tapes - failure of morals

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcZcTnykYbw
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/08/us/donald-trump-tape-transcript.html

Why didn’t an irreligious and publicly immoral candidate present moral difficulties to a religious group which has traditionally emphasized the close connection of faith and character? 
Many skilled researchers and analysts have tried to understand how people who profess such devotion to Jesus and the Bible could see Trump as their prophet. 

Unfortunately, I have no better explanation than anyone else.

Matthew Avery Sutton in the New Republic explained the Christian nationalism behind the evangelical political program, embodying “assumptions of nativism, white supremacy, patriarchy, and heteronormativity, along with divine sanction for authoritarian control and militarism.” Kristin Kobes Du Mez, a historian at Calvin University, minimizes any contradiction between evangelical Christianity and Trump. In her book Jesus and John Wayne she similarly argues that evangelicals embrace a militantly white patriarchy. Thus the revelations of Trump’s Access Hollywood tapes in 2016 made only a ripple among his evangelical supporters.

My own reading of many evangelical statements of support for Trump is that they universally deny his personal moral failings, by focusing, for example, on hoping that he would tweet less, rather than paying attention to his long-standing behavioral patterns and policy initiatives.

I believe that evangelicals have become increasingly desperate, as their more appropriate religious and political leaders failed to preserve the white Christian world they imagine is their birthright. Public opinion polls show that the evangelical agenda continues to lose popular support in America. One political scientist estimates that the “public mood” in 2018 was the most liberal since 1961. That measurement from two years ago does not reflect the further shift towards the left in 2020. On issues of race, gender, government regulation, and taxation, evangelicals have become an even smaller minority. That might explain why they are so eager to attach themselves to a leader with authoritarian tendencies who is systematically dismantling our traditional democratic processes and norms. Democracy has not been favorable to hatred of homosexuals, white supremacy, and traditional gender norms.

But let’s put side for the moment the conflict between the white evangelical political agenda and the narrowness of the white evangelical understanding of how to be a good Christian and a good person. Even in their own self-interest, I see the white evangelical community’s political strategy as a major error. Their “victories” during Trump’s presidency and their continued adulation of Trump as their political savior come at great costs they have not reckoned with.

If this minority ever really believed in their own moral transcendence, they have given that argument away by hitching themselves to a remarkably amoral and immoral personality. Their defense of Trump reveals how many supposedly bedrock Christian principles they willingly sacrifice to achieve their political agenda. The self-proclaimed “Moral Majority” has become a frankly political minority, a partisan interest group shorn of the trappings of ethical righteousness.

I never accepted the Christian right’s claims to the moral superiority of their religious teachings. My family’s immersion in and escape from the Holocaust, my young life in a still Christian supremacist society, and my close study of the past thousand years of white Christian persecution of Jews, made me skeptical of Christian contentions that they practiced a unique path to grace. But that was a powerful internal argument for all believers, perhaps the fundamental argument for them.

If loving someone of your own sex is so sinful that the practice must be forbidden, what should one think of a man who loves and grabs and insults random members of the other sex? The concept of sin itself has been so politicized that it can only be transmitted to the next generation as dogma, despite Jesus and the Bible.

Separating white right-wing Christian political ideology from their theology will forever impair their incessant proselytizing, even among their own children. While 26% of Americans older than 65 were white evangelicals in 2017, that was true of only 14% of 30- to 49-year-olds, and 8% of 18- to 29-year olds.

Externally, this evangelical error threatens the very nature of American politics and society, in which such an ideological minority could flourish. White evangelicals have tolerated the undemocratic politics of the Republican Party for decades, but kept some distance from it. In these last weeks, Trump has escalated his open warfare on the traditional American political system, the system that evangelicals have so vociferously defended against the modern willingness to talk about white supremacy instead of American exceptionalism. All the basic lessons of middle school civics courses and high school history textbooks are being violated in public by the man of whom they so overwhelmingly approve. Proclaiming hypocrisy is beside my point: if their champion wins, the democratic structure they count on may be damaged beyond repair. Unless most evangelicals actually believe that our nation and our world are about to go up in smoke and that Jesus will smile on their part in destroying it, their short-term strategy of taking whatever Trump gives them may doom them in the long run.

I hope the white evangelical political program fails. I look forward to an America where race and gender are no longer political categories; where religion is a personal choice, not a national prescription; where particular interpretations of ancient texts do not damage the lives of people who do not accept them.

My understanding of American politics during my lifetime encourages that hope. The conventional thinking I grew up with about racial differences and gender norms based on centuries of Christian teaching is no longer dominant. I’m sad that so many Americans choose to hate homosexuals, shun people with different skin color, and condemn other kinds of believers to eternal damnation. My allegiance to personal and political freedom in our democracy is stronger, though. I would defend their right to believe as they wish.

The white evangelical subculture appears to me to be drifting into outer space, as QAnon spreads its nonsensical “discoveries.” It is possible that more evangelicals believe in QAnon than in mainstream media. They are not America at its best, yet America at its best protects their rights.

Trump is trying to destroy that America in his own interest. His allegiance to the evangelical cause is purely transactional. If white evangelicals do not recognize the difference between waving a Bible and believing in it, their long-term future will be just as dire as ours.

Steve Hochstadt, Springbrook WI


Steve Hochstadt has been writing weekly op-eds since 2009. His collection, Freedom of the Press in Small-Town America: My Opinions, will be published this fall. He taught history at Bates College and Illinois College for 37 years.

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Sunday, August 23, 2020

Speak softly but vote big! Congratulations to the Democratic National Committee

At the successful Democratic National Convention, Senator Harris didn't need to be loud to be heard.

Echo opinion written by Carla Hall and published in the Arizona Daily Sun newspaper.

"The notion that people would not vote this year is alarming. I’ve never understood how anyone today — certainly any person of color — would sit out any election when people in this country put their lives in danger to guarantee us all the right to mail in a ballot or walk to a polling place and be allowed to vote."- President Obama

It’s OK that there wasn’t a roaring crowd in a packed auditorium to watch Sen. Kamala Harris become the first Black woman to accept a major party’s nomination for vice president of the United States. It’s OK that there was just a podium and unnerving silence when she uttered the first words of the most important speech of her life. And it was even OK for those of us watching to stop weeping that her mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, wasn’t alive to see this.

It was OK because Harris wasn’t crying when she talked about the most important woman in her life, her mother, who came from India as a 19-year-old to study at the University of California, Berkeley, hoping to cure cancer but dying of it in 2009. She was the woman who taught her daughters that service to others gives purpose to life.


“Ohh, how I wish she were here tonight,” Harris said, smiling triumphantly. “But I know she’s looking down on me from above. I keep thinking about that 25-year-old Indian woman, all of 5 feet tall, who gave birth to me at Kaiser Hospital in Oakland, California. On that day she probably could have never imagined that I would be standing here before you now and speaking these words: I accept your nomination for vice president of the United States of America.”


And never far from any speaker’s agenda Wednesday night was the need for people to go vote. By mail, in person, whatever. Just figure it out and do it. Harris saluted the recent 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment guaranteeing women the right to vote. “Yet so many of the Black women who helped secure that victory were still prohibited from voting long after its ratification,” she noted. “But they were undeterred. Without fanfare or recognition, they organized and testified and rallied and marched and fought not just for their vote but for a seat at the table.”

The notion that people would not vote this year is alarming. I’ve never understood how anyone today — certainly any person of color — would sit out any election when people in this country put their lives in danger to guarantee

And that was kind of the night it was. It was a quiet convention night, but it would be hard to imagine a more powerful one. 

Instead of speechifying, Harris — and President Barack Obama before her and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton before him on Wednesday night — just talked to people. It was casual, it was intimate and it was searing.

President Obma said he understood that an immigrant may look around and wonder whether there was a place for him. He understood that a young person might look around and think this is all a circus. What’s the point?

“Well, here is the point,” he said. “This president and those in power and those who benefit from keeping things the way they are, they are counting on your cynicism. They know they can’t win you over with their policies. So they are hoping to make it as hard as possible for you to vote and convince you that your vote doesn’t matter. That is how they win. That is how they get to keep making decision that affect your life.”

It was the most compelling argument I’ve heard to reach Americans so disenchanted that they won’t vote at all.

And that’s part of what Obama spoke about as easily and authentically as if he were simply talking to you in your living room over a beer (or a glass of wine).

“Look, I understand why a lot of Americans are down on government,” Obama said. “The way the rules have been set up and abused in Congress make it easier for special interests to stop progress than to make progress. Believe me, I know it. I understand why a white factory worker seeing his wages cut or his job shift overseas believes the government no longer looks out for him and why a Black mom may feel like it never looked out for her at all.”

“Do not let them take away your power. Do not let them take away your democracy. Make a plan right now for how you are going to get involved and vote.”

I hope those disaffected folks were watching.

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Donald Trump has no empathy for the coronavirus deaths- Trumpziism denialism

 Echo opinion letter published in the Arizona Daily Sun
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Donald Trump is this generation’s Herbert Hoover. 

Herbert Hoover was president when the Great Depression began. Instead of finding ways to respond to it, Hoover did nothing, believing it to be no more than a recession, and that the economy would eventually right itself. 

Hoover's failure caused the disaster to last many years longer.

Trump is following the same path with COVID -- first denying that it is a pandemic and then believing it would resolve itself with little government intervention. We are seeing the results of that lack of leadership, which is costing thousands of lives. Here’s hoping that the American people will do what they did in 1932 -- kick him out of office. From Lana Vasage, Flagstaff, Arizona


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Saturday, August 22, 2020

Failure and fraud: Steve Bannon failed as a fake-potus hate advisor and finally arrested for fraud

Shortly after 4 p.m. on August 20, the sunburned visage of Steve Bannon popped up on a projector screen inside the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Courthouse in Lower Manhattan. Donald Trump’s former chief strategist was sitting in what appeared to be a holding cell in lieu of a courtroom, wearing an open-collared shirt, a white mask, and handcuffs.
The United States Versus Steve Bannon
Masked and handcuffed, Donald Trump’s former failed chief strategist was arraigned on charges of fraud.  Echo essay published in The Atlantic by Russell Berman

Hours earlier, federal agents had arrested Bannon on a yacht off the coast of Connecticut and brought him to New York City, where a grand jury had indicted him for a scheme to defraud donors to a crowdsourcing campaign that raised more than $25 million in private money to build a section of Trump’s southern-border wall. Prosecutors allege that Bannon and three co-defendants each took hundreds of thousands of dollars from the group, known as We Build the Wall, for their personal use, despite assuring the public that the money would all go toward the wall.

The details in the 24-page indictment describe a scam that was almost comically flagrant: The four men lied, over and over again, about not taking even “a penny in compensation” and then bilked the fund anyway. Bannon allegedly took more than $1 million for himself, while the ringleader of the effort, Brian Kolfage, an Air Force veteran, used some of the money to buy a boat named the Warfighter that was spotted
in a recent Trump “boat parade” in Florida.

Now Bannon and the others could face up to 20 years in prison. 

“This case should serve as a warning to other fraudsters that no one is above the law, not even a disabled war veteran or a millionaire political strategist,” said Philip Bartlett, the New York inspector in charge for the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, which handled the investigation along with the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan.

Inside the Moynihan courthouse this afternoon, the famously voluble Bannon was reduced to offering a few monosyllabic responses to a magistrate judge, Stewart Aaron, who read him his Miranda rights and confirmed that Bannon understood the charges. 

Bannon’s virtual appearance was a function of the coronavirus pandemic: Only the judge appeared in the courtroom, while lawyers for the government and the defense called in by phone. 

Reporters watched the proceedings via closed-circuit television in a repurposed jury room, sitting in chairs spaced several feet apart rather than the usual wooden pews. Even the sketch artists were forced to capture the scene through a low-resolution web video. 

“A whole new world,” one journalist sighed as he took his seat in what amounted to an overflow room.

If Bannon displayed any emotion, it couldn’t be discerned through the mask. He answered Aaron’s largely perfunctory questions crisply and directly. Was he able to hear the audio? Aaron asked. “Uh, yes, I am,” Bannon replied. Had he consented to appear virtually instead of physically at the hearing? “Yes, your honor, I did.”

One of Bannon’s lawyers, William Burck, entered a plea of not guilty on his client’s behalf. The government agreed to release him on a $5 million bond, of which Bannon must put up $1.7 million within two weeks to stay out of jail. On one level, Bannon’s arrest this morning, coming on the day former Vice President Joe Biden will formally accept the Democratic nomination to challenge Trump this fall, was a stunner: It was not widely reported that Bannon was under criminal investigation, and though personally estranged from the president since his ouster from the White House three years ago this week, he has remained a Trump booster on the outside. Yet the news felt oddly familiar during an administration in which the president’s former national security adviser, campaign chairman, deputy campaign manager, lawyer, and political confidant have already been prosecuted for federal crimes.

During any previous national convention, the revelation that a sitting president’s onetime chief strategist had been arrested and indicted would have sent the challenger’s campaign scrambling to rewrite speeches and work the news into that evening’s program. Biden’s campaign, however, merely shrugged: “No one needed a federalindictment to know that Steve Bannon was a fraud,” deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield told reporters when she was asked about the news on a press call.“Is it really any surprise that another one of the grifters he has surrounded himself with since he took office was indicted? Sadly, no it was not.”

While Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., had given a speech at a fundraiser for We Build the Wall, the president had recently distanced himself from the effort. “I disagreed with doing this very small (tiny) section of wall, in a tricky area, by a private group which raised money by ads,” he tweeted last month, commenting on a report that a privately funded piece of the border wall was structurally unsound. “It was only done to make me look bad, and perhaps it now doesn’t even work.” Today, Trump told reporters that he felt “badly” for Bannon, whom he fired in August 2017. “I haven’t been dealing with him for a very long period of time,” the president said. “I don’t like that project. I thought it was being done for showboating reasons.”

Adding to the intrigue around Bannon’s arrest, the U.S. attorney’s office that brought the indictment—the Southern District of New York—is the same one that has investigated several other Trump associates, including Michael Cohen and Rudy Giuliani, the president’s former and current attorney, respectively. 

In June, Attorney General William Barr forced out the office’s top prosecutor, Geoffrey Berman, although Berman left only after he was assured that the investigations his lieutenants were pursuing would continue and that his top deputy, Audrey Strauss, would take over as acting U.S. attorney.

One of those probes, apparently, resulted in Bannon’s arrest andindictment today. ‘We remain dedicated to rooting out and prosecuting fraud wherever we find it,” Strauss said in a statement.

Before concluding the brief hearing, Judge Aaron advised Bannon that he could not travel outside the New York or Washington, D.C., metro areas (except to work in Connecticut), nor could he use private planes or boats.

His partial freedom at least temporarily secured, Bannon was unbowed as he walked past a crush of reporters outside the courthouse. He waved and smiled, holding the mask that he had been required to wear inside the building. “This entire fiasco,” Bannon said, “is to stop people who want to build the wall.”

Then he ducked into a car and left.

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