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Newscaster sues Netanyahu’s son over ‘slanderous’ suggestive comments

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(WIN) On Tuesday, Israeli network News 12 and one of its lead anchors, Dana Weiss, announced they will file a lawsuit targeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s son Yair over online comments they say besmirched Weiss’ reputation.

The defamation suit focuses on the younger Netanyahu’s tweet on Sunday, asking, “Does anyone know how Dana Weiss got such a senior position? … Smart? No.”

“Interesting,” Netanyahu added.

A commenter named Amir Barkol answered the tweet, “It was a job interview. Maybe you should try it for once.”

Netanyahu responded, “Hmmmmm. I don’t know if that’s called a job interview, what happened.”

According to the defamation complaint that Weiss and her employer intend to file, Netanyahu’s comments were “slanderous,” “misogynist,” and rise to the the level of “sexual harassment.

Weiss has worked as a political commentator at News 12 for years and anchors the Saturday night “Weekend News” broadcast.

Last year, Weiss and Netanyahu tangled over disparaging comments the newscaster made about the prime minister’s son before a visit to the U.S.

Weiss eventually apologized for allegedly calling Netanyahu a “sh**head.”

Netanyahu has been sued on several occasions by figures in the Israeli media and won, along with his family, a NIS 100,000 libel lawsuit over a disparaging Facebook message posted by an Israeli journalist.

Sen. McConnell: Senate ‘Likely’ to Pass Another Virus Stimulus Bill

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UNITED STATES - JANUARY 23: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., speaks during the Senate Republicans' press conference following the Senate Republicans' policy lunch in the Capitol on Tuesday, Jan. 23, 2018. (Photo By Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call) (CQ Roll Call via AP Images)

By Marisa Herman  (NewsMax)

Expect to see the Senate working toward passing another coronavirus stimulus bill, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Tuesday.

McConnell said another relief bill could be coming “in the next month or so,” CNBC reports.

“Many of you are asking, what next?” McConnell told reporters in his home state. “I think there’s likely to be another bill. It will not be the $3 trillion bill the House passed the other day. But there’s still a likelihood that more will be needed. So, in the next few weeks, we’ll determine whether there is yet another bill.”

House Democrats approved a $3 trillion package earlier this month, before going back on recess.

McConnell said Congress will keep on eye on how states are restarting their economies noting, “We need to make sure we have unemployment insurance properly funded for as long as we need.”

McConnell did not address a second round of direct payments, which is something President Donald Trump has mentioned as a possibility. He did reiterate his support for liability protections for doctors and businesses as the economy reopens.

McConnell also said he would want additional relief for state and local governments to only be able to fund revenue lost due to the coronavirus outbreak.

Four Minneapolis officers Fired After Death of Black Man: Shocking Video Evidence Stuns Nation

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Three women join hands and pray around a makeshift memorial, Tuesday, May 26, 2020, in Minneapolis, near where a black man, who was taken into police custody the day before, later died. The FBI and Minnesota agents are investigating the death of a black man in Minneapolis police custody after video from a bystander showed a white officer kneeling on his neck during his arrest as he pleaded that he couldn't breathe. (Elizabeth Flores/Star Tribune via AP)

By AMY FORLITI and JEFF BAENEN (AP)

Viewer Warning: The horrifying incident described can be viewed at the conclusion of the article. 

Four Minneapolis officers involved in the arrest of a black man who died in police custody were fired Tuesday, hours after a bystander’s video showed the handcuffed man pleading that he could not breathe as a white officer knelt on his neck.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey announced the firings on Twitter, saying “This is the right call.”

The man’s death Monday night was under investigation by the FBI and state law enforcement authorities. It immediately drew comparisons to the case of Eric Garner, an unarmed black man who died in 2014 in New York after he was placed in a chokehold by police and pleaded for his life, saying he could not breathe.

Frey apologized to the black community early Tuesday in a post on his Facebook page for the officer’s conduct, which included keeping his knee on the man after he stopped moving.

“Being Black in America should not be a death sentence. For five minutes, we watched a white officer press his knee into a Black man’s neck. Five minutes. When you hear someone calling for help, you’re supposed to help. This officer failed in the most basic, human sense,” Frey posted.

Police said the man matched the description of a suspect in a forgery case at a grocery store, and that he resisted arrest.

The video of the incident starts with the shirtless man on the ground, and does not show what happened in the moments prior. The unidentified officer is kneeling on his neck, ignoring his pleas. “Please, please, please, I can’t breathe. Please, man,” said the man, who has his face against the pavement.

The man also moans. One of the officers tells the man to “relax.” At one point the man calls for his mother and says: “My stomach hurts, my neck hurts, everything hurts … I can’t breathe.” As bystanders shout their concern, one officer says, “He’s talking, so he’s breathing.”

But the man stops talking — and slowly becomes motionless under the officer’s restraint. The officer does not remove his knee until the man is loaded onto a gurney by paramedics.

Several witnesses had gathered on a nearby sidewalk, some recording the scene on their phones. The bystanders became increasingly agitated. One man yelled repeatedly. “He’s not responsive right now!” Two witnesses, including one woman who said she was a Minneapolis firefighter, yelled at the officers to check the man’s pulse. “Check his pulse right now and tell me what it is!” she said.

At one point, one officer says: “Don’t do drugs, guys.” And one man yells: “Don’t do drugs, bro? What is that? What do you think this is?”

The victim was identified as George Floyd by Ben Crump, a prominent civil rights and personal injury attorney who said he had been hired by Floyd’s family.

“We all watched the horrific death of George Floyd on video as witnesses begged the police officer to take him into the police car and get off his neck,” Crump said in a statement. “This abusive, excessive and inhumane use of force cost the life of a man who was being detained by the police for questioning about a non-violent charge.”

Charles McMillian, 60, of Minneapolis, said he saw police trying to get Floyd into the back of the squad car and heard Floyd tell them he was claustrophobic.

“It’s sad because it didn’t have to happen,” McMillian said.

Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said the department would conduct a full internal investigation.

Experts on police use of force told The Associated Press that the officer clearly restrained the man too long. They noted the man was under control and no longer fighting. Andrew Scott, a former Boca Raton, Florida, police chief who now testifies as an expert witness in use-of-force cases, called Floyd’s death “a combination of not being trained properly or disregarding their training.”

“He couldn’t move. He was telling them he couldn’t breathe, and they ignored him,” Scott said. “I can’t even describe it. It was difficult to watch.”

The New York City officer in the Garner case said he was using a legal maneuver called “the seatbelt” to bring down Garner, whom police said had been resisting arrest. But the medical examiner referred to it as a chokehold in the autopsy report and said it contributed to his death. Chokehold maneuvers are banned under New York police policy.

A grand jury later decided against indicting the officers involved in Garner’s death, sparking protests around the country. The New York Police Department ultimately fired the officer who restrained Garner, but it was five years later, after a federal investigation, a city prosecutor’s investigation and an internal misconduct trial.

In Minneapolis, kneeling on a suspect’s neck is allowed under the department’s use-of-force policy for officers who have received training in how to compress a neck without applying direct pressure to the airway. It is considered a “non-deadly force option,” according to the department’s policy handbook.

A chokehold is considered a deadly force option and involves someone obstructing the airway. According to the department’s use-of-force policy, officers are to use only an amount of force necessary that would be objectively reasonable.

Before the officers were fired, the police union asked the public to wait for the investigation to take its course and not to “rush to judgment and immediately condemn our officers.” Messages left with the union after the firings were not returned.

The Hennepin County Attorney’s Office, which would handle any prosecution of police on state criminal charges, said in a statement that it was “shocked and saddened” by the video and pledged to handle the case fairly. The FBI is investigating whether the officers willfully deprived Floyd of his rights. If those federal civil rights charges are brought, they would be handled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Minnesota, which declined comment.

The death came amid outrage over the death of Ahmaud Arbery, who was fatally shot Feb. 23 in Georgia after a white father and son pursued the 25-year-old black man they had spotted running in their subdivision. More than two months passed before charges were brought. Crump also represents Arbery’s father.

All body camera footage in the Minneapolis case was turned over to the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, and the agency asked to speak with anyone who saw the arrest or recorded video. The agency said the officers’ names will be released after initial interviews with the people involved and witnesses.

What you need to know today about the virus outbreak

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SOS Funeral workers transport by boat a coffin carrying the body of an 86-year-old woman who lived by the Negro River and is a suspected to have died of COVID-19, near Manaus, Brazil, Thursday, May 14, 2020. The virus has spread upriver from Manaus, creeping into remote riverside towns and indigenous territories to infect indigenous tribes. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)

 (AP) As Brazil and India struggle with surging coronavirus cases, a top health expert is warning that the world is still smack in the middle of the pandemic, dampening hopes for a speedy global economic rebound and renewed international travel.

“Right now, we’re not in the second wave. We’re right in the middle of the first wave globally,” said Dr. Mike Ryan, the World Health Organization’s executive director.

“We’re still very much in a phase where the disease is actually on the way up,” Ryan said, pointing to South America, South Asia and other parts of the world.

A U.S. travel ban takes effect Tuesday for foreigners coming from Brazil. On top of that, the South American country got a warning from the U.N. health agency not to reopen its economy before it can perform enough tests to control the spread of the coronavirus. India reported a record single-day jump in new infections for the seventh straight day and Russia had a record number of daily coronavirus deaths

— Georgia’s governor is offering his state as the host of the Republican National Convention — a day after President Donald Trump threatened to pull the convention out of North Carolina if that state’s Democratic governor didn’t assure Trump that the August gathering can go forward despite coronavirus fears. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, sent an open plea to Trump on Tuesday to consider his state as an alternate site for the convention, which is set to gather more than 2,500 delegates and thousands more guests, press and security officials.

— The New York Stock Exchange reopened for in-person trading for the first time in two months. The trading floor in lower Manhattan opened with plastic barriers, masks and a reduced number of traders to adhere to the 6-foot social-distancing rule.

— Blood clots that can cause strokes, heart attacks and dangerous blockages in the legs and lungs are increasingly being found in COVID-19 patients, including some children. Even tiny clots that can damage tissue throughout the body have been seen in hospitalized patients and in autopsies, confounding doctors’ understanding of what was once considered mainly a respiratory infection.

— Congress is wrestling over whether to “go big,” as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wants for the next relief bill, or hit “pause,” as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell insists. It’s a defining moment for the political parties heading toward the election and one that will affect the livelihoods of countless Americans suddenly dependent on the federal government. Billions of dollars in state aid, jobless benefits and health resources are at stake.

— Sweden’s government defended its response to the COVID-19 global pandemic on Tuesday despite the Scandinavian country now reporting one of the highest mortality rates in the world with 4,125 fatalities, or about 40 deaths per 100,000 people.

— Manaus is one of the hardest hit cities in Brazil, but in the absence of evidence proving otherwise, relatives are quick to deny the possibility that COVID-19 claimed their loved ones, meaning that the national death toll of more than 23,000 toll is likely a vast undercount.

JStreet Lost

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Senator Bernie Sanders (I) of Vermont addresses a JStreet conference. Photo Credit: JStreet

To JStreet, it is in Israel’s best interests to surrender the bedrock of Jewish belonging and heritage for a greater good.

By: Barry Shaw

What we witness with JStreet has been the outside influence of radicals on impressionable young Jewish minds who instill into them the perception of resentful Arabs as victims’ worthy of their compassion.  

The result is the JStreet promotion of the Palestinian cause couched failingly in seemingly pro-Israel terms. The confusion of this message is lost on Israelis living under the dark cloud of Palestinian reality.

To JStreet, it is in Israel’s best interests to surrender the bedrock of Jewish belonging and heritage for a greater good. They really believe this dangerous delusion, a delusion not based on any evidence or fact.

On a spiritual level, JStreet has not come to terms with the belief that we do not own the land. The land owns us. It has been our eternal duty to nurture this land since biblical days. Not to give it away on a whim or impulse of some greater good. 

The JStreet message may be addressed to “Dear Israel,” but their appeal brings with it haunting Jewish echoes that fellow Jews must pack up all their possessions and withdraw into a ghetto to avoid the wrath of the Jew killers. 

If JStreet really cares for Israel one would expect them to make demands of Hamas and PLO Fatah to convince them to drop their anti-Israel enmity in the cause of peace. Or persuade them to common sense that a Palestinian state is not possible without them agreeing to live in peace alongside the Jewish state. They don’t because they know they are incapable of moving the enemy out of their intransigent Jew-hating position.  

Why should our enemy move out of their ancient vitriol? In their culture, historically, Jews and Christians were second class citizens, if tolerated at all. 

So how can a young American Jew make any impression on them? Impossible. And JStreet knows it to be true, yet does nothing about this gap in their advocacy. 

Better to put pressure on Israelis to make the concessions. Better instead to move the Jews.

How arrogant of them. And how thoughtless.

What they fail to comprehend in their well-meaning (?) innocence is that their comrades, the Arabs living in a dueling Palestinian power bloc divided against itself, have been indoctrinated not to create an undefined statehood (don’t be fooled by a two-state fallacy on ’67 lines) next to the Jewish homeland but to an unrelenting obsession to struggle against a “racist” (read “Jewish”) presence anywhere on “Palestinian” (read “Israeli”) land.

Let’s not be fooled, as JStreet clearly has been. This radicalism is deep and widespread. It infects the Arab street not only in territory granted by Israel to a double-headed Palestinian control in Ramallah and in Gaza City. It is also heard on the streets of Egypt and Jordan who, although both have signed peace agreements with Israel, have done little to re-educate and condition their people to peace with the Jews, or to recognize the legitimacy of the Jewish State that they were obligated to do under the terms of their agreements with Israel. Rather, the leaders allow this festering hate to bubble.

In order to distract their people, Arab leaders keep the pot boiling, allowing the pot to boil over and scald the neighboring Jew rather than have the mob turn against their corrupt failures.

The religious hatred of Jews has metastasized into an anti-Semitic Arab nationalism with Islamic tentacles to a wider Muslim world that further purifies their violent hate.

And now they can point to external support of idiot groups like JStreet to tell their people, 

“You see, even the Jews support our cause.”

A simple demand would be that JStreet stop supporting those affiliated with and promoting terrorists and terrorism. 

There is no moral imperative for Jewish groups to be pushing the agenda of the killers of Jews. 

One would have thought that Jewish youth in the Diaspora would embrace their Jewish brethren in Israel rather than line up against them in such a harmful and hurtful manner. It is beyond the pale for JStreet to be a constant critic and thorn in the side of Israel, giving comfort to those who want to see us gone. This is morally reprehensible. 

Worse still, following the amazing success of the Zionism that attracted in its wake hundreds of thousands of Arabs and Muslims from far off lands to work, envy and covet the Jewish enterprise, these migrants now consider it demeaning be placed in an inferior position in which Jews are willing to assist them to rise out of their economic and political straitjacket, even to grant them statehood. Better instead to find pride in countering and defeating Jewish ambition out of a sense of justice and victimhood. And so the downward spiral continues. 

JStreet never took on board that the Arabs really don’t want our peace proposals. They don’t want our concessions. They want us destroyed. 

Because JStreet could not get their head around this irremovable fact, they became redundant as a force for peace. 

As a Jewish group, they were heartless in not appreciating the constant Israeli condition of survival under the shadow of annihilation. It has something to do with our history. It is always there.  

One would think that the conscience of the world, particularly the conscience of a Jewish world, would place this Jewish psyche front and center. But it didn’t with JStreet or Yachad in the UK. They see the Jewish State as the obstacle.

So here we are again, more insistent than before that we will not allow ourselves to be forced out of our homes and to our own death. One would think that a Jewish group would come to our support. Instead, JStreet and Yachad are pandering to our enemy. Have they no shame?

JStreet fosters the unripe morality of a fruit that has fallen from a rotten tree. 

It lost touch with reality. It failed to see the sober reality of a tiny Jewish state in a barren desert of burning hate and turmoil. 

The ancient attacks of thieves and bandits have today become an organized and financed terror campaign using anything at hand from knives to rockets to kill Jews. But you wouldn’t know this from the JStreet narrative. The Arabs do this, they say, out of desperation. True. They are desperate to take what belongs to us, as they have for a hundred years and more. 

It’s easier to rob and kill us than to innovate and produce.  That is what divides us and prevents peace. It is a truth that JStreet never accepted.  It was never found in the ledger of JStreet’s moral accountancy. 

Little do they know that if they walked a mile in our shoes they would end up with painful and bloody feet.

Our struggle to avoid death, the success of our achievements, have made us an indefatigable people. The New Jew. Not the flaccid Jew. 

There is an urgency in our striving. It is as if we are in a race against the world. A race that began three thousand years ago. And JStreet is part of the world that rebels against us.

We ignore the tribunal of world opinion. Those that loudly lecture us only urge us on. They make our merciless problems lighter to bear. They give us purpose to press on. 

Their cajoling has a reverse effect. It makes us more determined in our goal. It forces us to be more efficient and productive in our efforts. We avoid defeat in battle by innovations that ends up improving the world. 

They pursue a goal of defeating Zionism, but they inject a spark in us that lights the universe. 

Those that escaped the pogroms of Eastern Europe gave us our productivity and drive. Those that survived the Shoah gave us our spine and muscle. Those that defied the Soviets added to our scientific brain. Those forced out of Muslim lands gave us our spirit. 

Addled youth in support of our killers make us bleed but little else. To us, they lack Jewish awareness and no moral element. 

In opposition to a Ben Ami-led JStreet, Bnei Ami, the brotherhood of Zionism, is forging a destiny that unites our past and our future. 

They deny Jewish heritage and historical legitimacy but adopt leftist intellectual claptrap in support of Arab nationalism and hegemony while claiming they oppose colonialism and imperialism, whatever that means these days. 

They claim to oppose occupation but support driving Jews out of their homes to allow an Arab-Muslim occupation of our God-given land. 

Under Ben Ami they support left-wing anti-Semitism disguised as something else. 

There is nothing even-handed in this struggle. If Arabs are suffering it is because of their corrupt leadership’s failure to deliver them the peace and prosperity they deserve.

The question remains. Which side of history do the Jewish youth of JStreet, the putative friends of Israel who are no friends at all, wish to be on? That of Ben Ami? Or that of Bnei Ami, the real heart and soul of the Jewish people.

It is with us, the Israeli Zionists, where the Revolutionary Generation resides, forging beyond the despots that surround us, the shining star that guides the way to a better future whenever our neighbors will be capable of dropping their rancid hatred, a hatred that has troubled the world for far too long. 

We Jews accepted a historic, a biblical, challenge to be exceptional. We are delivering on that challenge. From our success we demand of our neighbors to rise up to the challenge, as we have done. Pick leaders who can give you a better future. It is achieved by forging the 21st Century, not by being trapped in the past. Look at our liberty and freedom and follow our lead. 

We are one of the countries in a jaded world with a sense of purpose. 

While we fight for life, our detractors, such as JStreet arrogantly weigh our sins. 

Israel’s sovereignty is questioned as in no other country on the planet. They demand justice for the Palestinian but not for us. Nothing that we do will ever satisfy them. The angry thrust for justice and judgment fall on the collective Jew, never on our malevolent enemy that thirsts for our destruction. And these haters have recruited JStreet to sit on their jury against us. 

We have a close knowledge of evil, and it is not us. 

Are there any Arab intellectuals who disassociate themselves from the traditional religious and radical firebrands that whip up the street and the campus with their rhetoric of hate and rejection of the Jew in the Middle East? If there are any, they are a fearful and silent minority. Those that do speak up can be found in Israel. Arab intellectuals that agree with me are too frightened to remain where they are. For out of the street the next firebrand will emerge to harness old religious hatreds to a new rebellion. And so it goes on. A stalemate where liberal dreamers think they represent all that is liberating for a tradition that maintains a rigid dogma. 

This clash solves nothing. It only increases the discord between two worlds leaving us isolated and in jeopardy. And so it goes on. The malevolent rejectionists must be weakened, no strengthened. Sometimes it is kind to be cruel. Isn’t it always thus in war to achieve peace? It was with Germany, with Japan, where only total victory led to peace? Appeasing the Third Reich as it marched from Poland to France would never have achieved peace. To think that appeasing a violent and rejectionist Palestine by scolding Israel will achieve peace is dangerous nonsense. Liberal, progressive, call JStreet what you want. It is an idiocy of a dangerous kind.

Israel, geopolitically, is a tiny state in the epicenter of a maelstrom of savage hostility. 

In Israel staying alive is a cause for joy and optimism. Isn’t that always the Jewish psyche? They came to kill us. We won. Let’s celebrate. 

There is something perverse about the adoration by Jews of the killers of Jews. For JStreet, it has become an obsession. 

Feeding the beast, as JStreet does, has achieved nothing. It never will. 

JStreet Lost.

 

Barry Shaw is the International Public Diplomacy Director at the Israel Institute for Strategic Studies.  He is the author of ‘Fighting Hamas, BDS, and Anti-Semitism’ and the recent best seller ‘BDS for IDIOTS.’

 

New York marks ‘especially poignant’ Memorial Day Amid Virus

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By JENNIFER PELTZ and MICHAEL R. SISAK (AP)

New Yorkers marked Memorial Day with car convoys and small ceremonies instead of big parades as the coronavirus reshaped the solemn holiday, blending tributes to virus victims and frontline workers with the traditional remembrance of the nation’s war dead.

In a year that marks the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II, veterans wore masks and saluted while standing at social-distancing intervals at observances shrunk by virus precautions.

At the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum in Manhattan — the former aircraft carrier USS Intrepid — Gov. Andrew Cuomo honored both veterans and essential workers on a Memorial Day he called “especially poignant and powerful.”

We know something about loss, and we’re living it again,” the Democratic governor said.

In Rochester, officials looked ahead to the construction of the city’s War on Terror Memorial. In Long Island’s Nassau County, a small group of veterans in masks saluted flag-bedecked vehicles at a car parade and wreath-laying that was closed to the public but streamed online.

In Brooklyn, about 30 to 40 cars, including an old-style checkered cab, rode along the route usually covered by marchers at the United Military Veterans of Kings County parade.

They finished by circling a Veterans Affairs hospital, many honking their horns, and laying a wreath near monuments at the hospital’s fence.

We weren’t sure if we were going to be able to do anything,” said parade chairman Raymond Aalbue. But he said he didn’t want the parade “to die on my watch.”

He said this year’s Memorial Day observance also honored people working on the frontlines of the COVID-19 virus fight.

“All day long we’re thinking about these health care workers and first responders and essential workers who are putting their lives on the line, daily, and have been doing that for a couple of months now to keep us safe,” said Allbue. “We owe them a very deep debt of gratitude for all they’ve done all these months.”

Mayor Bill de Blasio, a Democrat, joined a wreath-laying at the Brooklyn War Memorial, saying it was “a different kind of Memorial Day, but our appreciation for the heroes who gave their lives for our country has never been stronger.”

More celebratory Memorial Day traditions also were altered by rules meant to keep the virus in check.

Police kept a watchful eye over lighter-than-usual crowds at Jones Beach on Long Island. A group of teenagers was ordered to leave because they weren’t wearing masks and keeping the required distance from one another.

Brianna Paredes said she was “just trying to have a nice day” with her friends after the pandemic upended their senior year in high school.

“I understand. I work and I wear my mask and my gloves,” the Levittown resident said. But outside at the beach?

“I’m over it by now. I feel like a lot of people are. I think that it’s kind of annoying,” she said while being escorted off the beach.

While the virus crisis has eased in New York, COVID-19 is still killing roughly 100 people a day statewide. There were 96 deaths Sunday, according to figures released Monday.

As the holiday approached, Cuomo loosened coronavirus-related restrictions last week to allow small public gatherings — initially just for Memorial Day observances and religious services. He extended the eased rules Friday to all gatherings after the New York Civil Liberties Union sued, saying that if it was safe to gather to honor veterans and practice religion, the Constitution requires the same right be extended to other gatherings.

The rules now allow get-togethers of as many as 10 people, provided that participants stay at least 6 feet (2 meters) away from one another or cover their faces when unable to maintain that distance.

At a news briefing after a ceremony at the Intrepid, Cuomo remembered veterans killed in combat and, more recently, by the coronavirus. He also emphasized “our heroes of today” — health care, emergency and other essential workers “who showed up and did their duty, lost their lives, to keep others of us safe.”

“In many ways, that is a microcosm of what we’re here talking about today on Memorial Day,” he said, announcing that the state would make sure that public workers on the frontlines who died of COVID-19 got death benefits through state and local pension plans. His office didn’t immediately provide further details.

While many Memorial Day ceremonies this year reflected the World War II anniversary, officials in Rochester held a ceremonial groundbreaking for a memorial that commemorates Americans killed in more recent conflicts.

The city’s forthcoming War on Terror Memorial will honor local members of the military who have died in wars since the 1990s. Construction is due to start next year.

Monroe County Executive Adam Bello, a Democrat, called the planned memorial an enduring reminder “of what it takes to be the land of the free,” WROC-TV reported.

In Queens, the group behind the Little Neck-Douglaston Memorial Day Parade arranged for one person to lay a wreath, another to do a flag ceremony and a third to play “Taps” while some others watched. It was a far cry from the crowds that usually attend the event.

But “we felt the need to do something,” executive director Vincent Mimoni said.

On Staten Island, another convoy of cars, led by motorcycles, took off in a procession after a wreath-laying ceremony at Hero Park.

When Will Shopping and Tourism Reopen in NYC?

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Actual in-store shopping, however, will remain inaccessible till the third week of June at best. Photo Credit: nycgo.com

By: Hellen Zaboulani

Approximately 66 million tourists visit New York City annually.  As of the eve of March 22nd, however, Gov. Andrew Cuomo ordered the Big Apple to take a deep sleep.  The city that never sleeps has experienced a halt in all activities and nonessential business.  Luxury shops have boarded up their once posh window displays, and malls have been shuttered indefinitely.  Hotels have been either closed or transformed into housing for the homeless, or for healthcare workers and recovering Covid-19 patients.  Only hospitals, pharmacies, supermarkets and takeout places remain open.  Now, with talk of slowly opening nonessential businesses, the question on everyone’s minds is when will life return to normal?  When will NYC’s famed attractions be crowded again?

The closest thing we have to a guide now is Gov. Cuomo’s four-phased reopening plan.  As reported by the NY Post, the city of New York has met four of the seven benchmarks required to begin reopening. On Thursday, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that he expects the city will be ready as early as June 1st.  Under the plan, curb-side retail service could begin in early June. Actual in-store shopping, however, will remain inaccessible till the third week of June at best.

The outlook for tourism is even more bleak.  There does not seem to be a rainbow in sight as long as international travel restrictions remain.  “Out of nearly 700 hotels, nearly half of them are closed,” said Vijay Dandapani, the President & CEO of the Hotel Association of New York. He said some hotels may start to open for regular guests beginning in July. “It hinges on how international and domestic travel pick up, how the tech companies react to this,” Dandapani said.  “Unfortunately until Broadway reopens, until the Metropolitan Opera reopens, until the museums reopen, it’s going to take a lot of time, you’re not going to have the city with all its many lights on so to speak and that’s why you’ll see lower occupancy,” added Dandapani.

Many of the famed tourist attractions won’t open till the fourth phase of the governor’s plan, which may occur towards the end of July, if all goes well.   Broadway will not be reopening till September or later.  Even then things may be far from normal.  Until a vaccine or cure is developed, Dandapani believes there will be a continued aversion to traveling.  The new norm may include continued mask usage, outdoor retail stands outside of shops, Facetime calls with sales associates, and “single-serve public spaces”.

“First, New York City residents are going to have to come back to the city and then we will be the template for tourism. Once we start going back to Times Square and Bell Boulevard in Queens then the world will see New York City has got this,” said Councilman Paul Vallone, the Chair of the Committee on Economic Development, who introduced a bill to start an Office of Interagency Tourism Affairs.  “And once we show the world that we got it then you’ll see the tourists follow right behind them.”  He says basically tourism will depend on the resilience of New Yorkers, and our ability to open up a changed but still enticing Big Apple.

 

 

Historic East Hampton B&B to Rent Out Entire Bldg for Summer at $1M

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An East Hamptons Inn has come up with a new business model for this summer, amid the ongoing pandemic. Hedges Inn, a historic bed and breakfast in East Hampton, will be offering the entire space to one renter. Photo Credit: tripadvisor.com

By Hellen Zaboulani

An East Hamptons Inn has come up with a new business model for this summer, amid the ongoing pandemic.  Hedges Inn, a historic bed and breakfast in East Hampton, will be offering the entire space to one renter.  Many hotels have been forced to shutter their doors for fear of having the novel coronavirus spread throughout hotel guests.   This luxury hotel usually splits the property which consists of 13 bedrooms, a commercial kitchen, a fully stocked bar and two lush acres of outdoor space.  Usually, the hotel serves roughly 3,000 guests annually, with dozens of guests checking in at out regularly.

As reported to the NY Post, this year the inn has opted to offer the entire property to one tenant, to live in full-time from June 1 to Labor Day for $350,000 per month, for a total fee of $1 million, owners told the East Hampton Star.  With an extra $100,000 the inn will include a chef and housekeeping staff for the fortunate tenant.   This arrangement will help the hotel circumvent sanitation hassles in connection with the coronavirus.  With revolving guests, even with all the cleaning protocols in place, keeping guests safe from pandemic may prove impossible.

“I didn’t feel great about the nightly turnover, encouraging people to come out here, and worrying about their health and the health of the staff and the community,” manager Jenny Lilja said. “So I thought, how can we adjust our business model?”   Lilja added that “it’s been nothing but cancellations” this spring.

Since the onset of the pandemic in March hotel chains across the country have either closed or turned into housing for healthcare workers, Covid-19 patients, and the homeless.   This is the first time in history that NYC hotels have been forced to close their doors, with the complete shutdown in tourism throughout the country.  Starting March 20, the largest hotel in the Big Apple , The New York Hilton Midtown on Sixth Avenue, shuttered all 1,878 rooms indefinitely.  The luxury Baccarat hotel on West 53rd Street was shuttered a day later as well as most of the hotels that were not converted into alternative housing.  As per the Post, the coronavirus will likely hurt the industry more than the attacks of 9/11 or the Great Recession in 2008.   NYC hotel occupancy rates fell to a low of 74 percent following 9/11, and to 79 percent after Lehman Brothers failure, as per Sean Hennessey, an NYU professor of hospitality and President of Lodging Advisors, a consulting firm.

NYers Angered at Food Delivery Men Who Cluster on Corners; Found Sneezing

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Grub hub deliverymen offer contact-free food delivery, but residents say they have plenty of contact with one another. Clustering in groups and waiting to be called, packs of the men have been seen crowding in the small West Village square, many of them holding the signature red and black Grub hub bags.

As reported by the NY Post, some local residents are fed up with the crowd of deliverymen who sit with no social distancing, many without masks, chattering loudly and often arguing. “I’m telling you, it’s a nightmare,” said a woman whose apartment overlooks Mulry Square by the corner of Greenwich avenue and Seventh Avenue. The Square, also named 9/11 Tiles for America, is supposed to serve as kind of a mini museum with a bus parked there, commemorating the attacks on 9/11. The troubled neighbor said roughly 20 deliverymen crowd in the park with their bikes from approximately 9:30 a.m. until 6 p.m. She said she sees them without masks, too close to each other, and sometimes can hear them screaming and sometimes sneezing. “They’re certainly not distancing, which is outrageous,” she said, adding she would never order food through the Grub hub app.

The deliverymen have also been clustering in the New York City AIDS Memorial Park across the street at 76 Greenwich Ave. A local resident who lives on Bank Street and Greenwich Avenue, voiced the same complaint about the gathering spot on her neighborhood. “It’s bothersome to have my street become the employee lounge for the Grub hub,” the woman said. “Grub hub needs to organize that.” Some residents said they now have to avoid that crowded area. “I certainly wouldn’t sit anywhere near them,” said Barbara Chernick, 72, a retiree. “They’re not wearing masks. There’s a big group.”

It’s worth noting, there are several other similar services and delivery forces, such as Door Dash, that operate similar ways

The restaurant delivery app already has enough on its plate, as complaints have mounted about the fees it charges restaurants. The city council will be voting this month on whether it can permanently limit the charges it slaps onto for its service. For the duration of the state of emergency caused by the pandemic, the delivery apps will not be permitted to charge restaurants more than 15 percent in delivery fees and 5 percent for any other takeout order fees. Grub hub has responded to this legal action by threatening to file its own lawsuit against the city council for its “overstep.” City Council Speaker Corey Johnson dismissed the threat saying, “We do believe we have the legal authority. We’ve spent a lot of time looking at these issues. So I believe we’re on solid legal grounds and I’m not concerned about this challenge.”

Wuhan Lab Director Admits Having Three Live Strains of Bat Coronavirus

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Wang Yanyi, head of the Wuhan Institute of Virology. (Internet)

By Ilana Siyance

The Chinese lab, where Secretary of State Mike Pompeo alleged that the novel and deadly coronavirus may have begun, has finally released a statement.  The Wuhan Institute of Virology now admits that it has three live strains of bat coronavirus on-site, as per the lab director, who made the statements to Chinese State media on Sunday.  The director, however, still insists that these strains are not the source of the global pandemic, which has killed over 340,000 people around the world, and infected over 5.3 million globally, as of Sunday morning.  The Institute has since 2004 “isolated and obtained some coronaviruses from bats,” said director Wang Yanyi, in an interview, as per Agence France-Presse.

As reported by the NY Post, Yanyi denied the notion that the pandemic began in her lab, and called the Trump administration allegation a “pure fabrication.”  She stressed that the strains are not the same.  “Now we have three strains of live viruses… But their highest similarity to SARS-CoV-2 only reaches 79.8 percent,” Yanyi said, referring to the coronavirus strain that causes COVID-19.  “It’s an obvious difference,” she said.

Further, Yanyi claimed that her scientists had never “encountered, researched or kept the virus” until it received the samples on December 30, when the pandemic had already unwittingly started in Wuhan.  “In fact, like everyone else, we didn’t even know the virus existed,” she said.  “How could it have leaked from our lab when we never had it?”

Chinese scientists have said from the onset that the virus first materialized in a Wuhan wet market selling live animals.  The novel virus is supposed to have been transferred from bats to humans through another animal intermediary, but that theory too has yet to be proven.  The US authorities voiced misgivings that it may have started in a lab.  “There’s enormous evidence that that’s where this began. We’ve said from the beginning that this was a virus that originated in Wuhan, China. We took a lot of grief for that from the outset. But I think the whole world can see now,” Pompeo had said on ABC News’ in early May.  “China behaved like authoritarian regimes do, attempted to conceal and hide and confuse. It employed the World Health Organization as a tool to do the same. These are the kind of things that have now presented this enormous crisis, an enormous loss of life and tremendous economic cost, all across the globe,” Pompeo had added.

The World Health Organization has repeatedly maintained that any allegations against a Wuhan lab are just “speculative”, and devoid of any proof.  On Sunday, Chinese Foreign minister Wang Yi asserted that US politicians decided to “fabricate rumors” about the virus’ origins in order to “stigmatize China.”  He said China would be “open” to international cooperation in identifying the source of COVID-19, so long as the search remains “free of political interference.”

NY Update Memorial Day: Cuomo “We all Failed” at Projections, Death Benefits for Frontline Covid Victims

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The governor,  held his news briefing on the deck of the U.S.S. Intrepid, an aircraft carrier turned museum anchored at the piers along the Hudson River, specifically mentioned veterans who died of the virus.

Newsmax reported: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo declared Monday he is getting out of the projection “business,” when asked when his state might reopen, admitting “we all failed.”

“Now, people can speculate; people can guess: ‘I think next week, I think two weeks, I think a month,” Cuomo told reporters on Memorial Day. “I’m out of that business, because we all failed at that business. Right?

“All the early national experts: ‘Here’s my projection model; here’s my projection model.’ They were all wrong.”

“During these troubling times there have been so many New Yorkers who have really risen to the challenge and done more than anyone could ask for or expect, and we want to make sure that we remember them and we thank those heroes for all that they’ve done,” Governor Cuomo said. “I personally feel a grave responsibility to our frontline and essential workers who understood the dangers of this virus, but went to work anyway because we needed them to. And we’re going to make sure that every government in the State of New York provides death benefits to those public heroes who died from COVID-19 during this emergency.

Mr. Cuomo noted that even as he shut down the state, citing the severity of the outbreak, workers across New York had been required to put themselves in danger to help fight the virus.

“They showed up because I asked them to show up,” he said.

Mr. Cuomo also called on the federal government to provide funds to give hazard pay to workers who were crucial to keeping states and municipalities operating during the outbreak.

 

Chinese Embassy In France Tweets and Deletes Anti-Semitic Imagery

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. (Li Xueren/Xinhua via AP)

(Washington Free Beacon)

The Chinese embassy in France on Sunday tweeted, and then quickly deleted, an anti-Semitic image portraying the United States and Israel as the grim reaper knocking on Hong Kong’s door.

The image, which has been circulating online among anti-Semites for some time, depicts the United States as the grim reaper holding a scythe with Israel’s flag. Countries such as Syria, Venezuela, Libya, and Iraq are portrayed as places where America and Israel have caused death and destruction. The picture reads, “Who’s next?” in French, with the grim reaper approaching a door with Hong Kong written on it.

China has been ramping up its anti-U.S. rhetoric as it cracks down on democratic protesters in Hong Kong. A new national security law forwarded by Beijing would significantly expand the country’s spy apparatus and specifically target protesters who have taken to the streets.

China’s embassy in France released a statement on its website claiming its Twitter feed was hacked. The country said it is a victim of “fake news.” The statement did not identify anyone or group the country suspects of posting the tweet.

The distribution of anti-Semitic images, like those posted by China’s embassy, runs afoul of French laws.

“The Chinese Embassy in France has found that yesterday, someone used the Embassy’s official Twitter account to post a picture captioned ‘Qui est le prochain?’ [who is next?],” read the Chinese-language statement.

“We hereby solemnly declare: That picture violates French law and we strongly condemn such activity that damages the reputation of the Chinese embassy,” according to the Chinese embassy. “Our embassy’s duty is to comprehensively, accurately, and objectively introduce China and promote friendship between the China and France.”

Emily Bruyere, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told the Washington Free Beacon that China’s anti-Semitic rhetoric has become increasingly frequent.

“The fake news story, that the tweet was an accident, obscures the real, non-accidental sentiment that it conveyed — a militancy quickly deleted in cases like this; widespread in discourse in China,” Bruyere said. “The wolf warrior conversation begins to get at this. One beat farther, it’s not unusual for Chinese sources to talk about the US-China contest as a zero-sum battle. So while this may have been an accident, we should also be awake to an increasingly aggressive rhetoric in China and the sentiment it reflects.”

An email to the Chinese embassy seeking further comment was not immediately returned.

Trump honors war Dead in events Colored by Pandemic’s Threat

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By DARLENE SUPERVILLE (AP)

BALTIMORE (AP) — President Donald Trump honored America’s war dead Monday in back-to-back Memorial Day appearances colored by an epic struggle off the battlefield, against the coronavirus.

Eager to demonstrate national revival from the pandemic, Trump doubled up on his public schedule, while threatening to pull the Republican National Convention out of Charlotte in August unless North Carolina’s Democratic governor gives a quick green light to the party’s plans to assemble en masse.

The U.S. death toll from the pandemic approached 100,000; North Carolina two days earlier reported its largest daily increase yet in COVID-19 sickness.

Trump first honored the nation’s fallen at Arlington National Cemetery. Presidents on Memorial Day typically lay a wreath and speak at the hallowed burial ground in Virginia. But the coronavirus crisis made this year different.

Many attendees arrived wearing masks but removed them for the outdoor ceremony in front of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Trump, maskless as always in public, gave no remarks. He approached a wreath already in place, touched it and saluted.

Trump then traveled to Baltimore’s historic Fort McHenry, where he declared: “Together we will vanquish the virus and America will rise from this crisis to new and even greater heights. No obstacle, no challenge and no threat is a match for the sheer determination of the American people.”

He praised the tens of thousands of service members and national guard personnel “on the front lines of our war against this terrible virus.”

His Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, chose Memorial Day to make his first public appearance in the two months since the pandemic closed down the nation. Biden emerged unannounced from his Delaware home to lay a wreath at a nearby park, with no crowd gathered to greet him. It was a milestone in a presidential campaign that has largely been frozen.

Biden’s words were muffled through a black cloth face mask. “Never forget the sacrifices that these men and women made,” he said after. “Never, ever forget.”

The U.S. leads the world with more than 1.6 million confirmed coronavirus cases and more than 98,000 deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Trump tweeted his frustration with North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, who has been moving his state into a cautious reopening that will keep indoor entertainment venues, like its NBA arena, closed for the time being. The state reported a daily high of 1,100 new cases Saturday, and has suffered about 750 deaths in the pandemic.

The president said Republicans will be “reluctantly forced” to find a convention site in another state unless Cooper can guarantee that the GOP will be able to fill its convention spaces, including the arena in Charlotte.

Cooper’s office said state officials are working with the GOP on convention decisions.

Changing sites would be difficult for numerous reasons, including the contract between Republican officials and Charlotte leaders to hold the gathering there.

Trump is intent on accelerating his own schedule as he urges the country to get to work. This month, Trump has toured factories in ArizonaPennsylvania and Michigan that make pandemic supplies. He plans to be in Florida on Wednesday to watch two NASA astronauts rocket into space, and he played golf at his private club in Virginia on Saturday and Sunday.

The Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine commemorates the site where Francis Scott Key wrote a poem after a huge American flag was hoisted to celebrate an important victory over the British during the War of 1812. That poem became “The Star-Spangled Banner.” The fort is closed to the public because of the pandemic.

Baltimore Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young objected to Trump’s visit in advance, saying it sends the wrong message about stay-at-home directives and the city could not afford the added cost of hosting him when it is losing $20 million a month because of the pandemic.

He cited the disproportionate effect the virus has had on his city and called on Trump to “set a positive example” by not traveling during the holiday weekend.

Trump was not dissuaded.

“The brave men and women who have preserved our freedoms for generations did not stay home and the president will not either as he honors their sacrifice by visiting such a historic landmark in our nation’s history,” White House spokesman Judd Deere said in an emailed statement Sunday.

Trump last summer described a congressional district that includes Baltimore as a “disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess” where “no human being would want to live.” He visited Baltimore months later to address a meeting of congressional Republicans, and a giant inflatable rat adorned with Trump-style hair and a red necktie taunted him from a few blocks away. Trump did not visit any Baltimore neighborhoods.

CDC Warns Of Aggressive Rodents Due to Lack of Food Resulting from Lockdowns

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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has published a new warning that rats across the country are becoming hungry as they scavenge for food amid the closure of restaurants triggered by COVID-19 lockdowns.

“Community-wide closures have led to a decrease in food available to rodents, especially in dense commercial areas. Some jurisdictions have reported an increase in rodent activity as rodents search for new sources of food. Environmental health and rodent control programs may see an increase in service requests related to rodents and reports of unusual or aggressive rodent behavior,” the CDC warning read.

The CDC said some regions have reported “an increase in rodent activity” and cautioned about their aggressive behavior.

Stressed-out and aggressive rats in major US cities could become a regular occurrence until the rat population normalizes, Zero Hedge reported.

“The rats are not becoming aggressive toward people, but toward each other,” Bobby Corrigan, an urban rodentologist who has both a master’s degree and Ph.D. in rodent pest management, said on Sunday. “They’re simply turning on each other”, The NY Times reported

The Times stated:

Dr. Corrigan said there are certain colonies of rats in New York that have depended on restaurants’ nightly trash for hundreds of generations, coming out of the sewers and alleys to ravage the bags left on the streets. With the shutdown, all of that went away, leaving rats hungry and desperate.

” Like it was Designed in a Lab, A Cell Culture Experiment Gone Wrong” , According to New Study on COVID-19

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(AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

The paper, currently under peer review, comes from Flinders University Professor Nikolai Petrovsky, who has spent over two decades developing vaccines against influenza, Ebola, and animal Sars. He says his findings allow for the possibility that COVID-19 leaked from a laboratory, according to Sky News.

“The two possibilities which I think are both still open is that it was a chance transmission of a virus from an as yet unidentified animal to human. The other possibility is that it was an accidental release of the virus from a laboratory,” said Petrovsky, adding “Certainly we can’t exclude the possibility that this came from a laboratory experiment rather than from an animal. They are both open possibilities.”

Professor Petrovsky, who is the Chairman and Research Director of Vaxine Pty Ltd, said COVID-19 has genetic elements similar to bat coronaviruses as well as other coronaviruses.

The way coronavirus enters human cells is by binding to a protein on the surface of lung-cells called ACE2. The study showed the virus bound more tightly to human-ACE2 than to any of the other animals they tested.

“It was like it was designed to infect humans,” he said.

“One of the possibilities is that an animal host was infected by two coronaviruses at the same time and COVID-19 is the progeny of that interaction between the two viruses. -Sky News

“The same process can happen in a petri-dish,” added Petrovsky. “If you have cells in culture and you have human cells in that culture which the viruses are infecting, then if there are two viruses in that dish, they can swap genetic information and you can accidentally or deliberately create a whole third new virus out of that system.”

“In other words COVID-19 could have been created from that recombination event in an animal host or it could have occurred in a cell-culture experiment.”

Chaos at Daytona Beach, Gunfire, Injuries & Man Handing Out Money Causes Traffic Jams

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In Daytona Beach, Florida, gunfire erupted Saturday night along a beachside road where more than 200 people had gathered and were seen partying and dancing despite the restrictions. Several people were wounded and taken to the hospital, A.P reported

“Disney is closed, Universal is closed. Everything is closed so where did everybody come with the first warm day with 50% opening? Everybody came to the beach,” Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood said at a Sunday news conference, referring to crowds in the Daytona Beach area.

Daytona Police Chief Craig Capri said Sunday at a news conference that two people were shot around 7:30 p.m. on South Ocean Avenue near Breakers Oceanfront Park. Police later discovered four people were hit by shrapnel during the shooting. None of the injuries are life-threatening, Orlando Sentinel reported.

Chitwood said “the linchpin” of the disturbances that happened Saturday in Daytona Beach was an incident that drew a large crowd around a man tossing cash from a vehicle.

Helicopter footage released by the Sheriff’s Office shows “a couple hundred people” surrounding the car parked on State Road A1A in front of a Burger King and dozens more gathered on the sidewalk.

“We’re going to identify him, and we’re going to charge him,” Chitwood said, without elaborating on possible charge, Orlando Sentinel Reported

Below is the actual police footage from a helicopter