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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

 

Trump Keeps Tweeting About The Joe Scarborough Murder Conspiracy

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President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, and Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly, in the Cabinet Room of the White House, Wednesday, May 20, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Over the past several weeks President Trump has mentioned MSNBC “Morning Joe” anchor Joe Scarborough, a former Republican congressman from Florida,  being tied to the death on an intern in his Florida office back in 2001.

The president on Sunday morning urged his followers in a tweet to read an article from conservative website True Pundit, which claimed that evidence showed foul play in the death of Lori Klausutis, 28, in 2001- The Hill Pointed out

Rep. Adam Kinzinger a Republican from Illinois has had enough and is worried this will hurt the Republican party in November. He responded to Trumps Tweet by saying ““Stop spreading it, stop creating paranoia. It will destroy us.”

Scarborough and his wife Mika Brzezinski host the morning show on MSNBC. While they constantly attack Trump, the show has some of the lowest ratings imaginable  and have next to zero impact in the media. Maybe it’s time for Trump to left go of his obsession with “Morning Joe”. After 19 years and still no evidence of foul play, it really is ridiculous.

 

Ilhan Omar Believes Joe Biden Accuser Tara Reade: ‘Justice Should Never Be Denied’

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Representative Ilhan Omar at a news conference in the Capitol on January 10, 2019. (Tom Williams / AP Images)

BEN KEW (Breitbart)

Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) has revealed that she believes Tara Reade’s sexual assault claims against presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden, warning that the historical nature of the allegations should not deny her justice.

In an interview with Britain’s Sunday Times, the far-left congresswoman said she trusted Reade’s claims that Joe Biden sexually assaulted her in the halls of Congress while she was working for him as a staffer when Biden was the Senator for Delaware.

“I do believe Reade,” she told the newspaper. “Justice can be delayed, but should never be denied.” According to the interviewer, Omar added that if it was up to her, Biden would not be the Democratic nominee.

Omar’s comments underlined the sharp divisions between the Democratic Party establishment and its growing number of far-left lawmakers, all of whom opposed Biden’s candidacy.

Despite being cheerleaders of the #MeToo anti-sexual harassment movement, practically all major party figures (including Biden himself) have ignored or dismissed the allegations outright, having previously argued that all women should be believed whether or not they can provide evidence.

Meanwhile Omar’s most prominent ally in Congress, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), admitted last week that it “certainly seems as though something has happened.” Both women were strong supporters of Bernie Sanders’s unsuccessful bid for the nomination.

“There have been investigative journalists that have corroborated certain aspects of her account — that is undeniable — [and] have raised questions about other aspects of her account,” Ocasio-Cortez told NPR. “I’m not sure. Frankly, this is a messy moment, and I think we need to acknowledge that — that it is not clear-cut.”

Biden, who has been accused of misconduct by seven other women, has fervently denied the allegations, and he claims not to even remember who Reade is. Last week, he even called on voters who believed her account not to vote for him in November.

“I think they should vote their heart, and if they believe Tara Reade, they probably shouldn’t vote for me,” he said on MSNBC’s The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell. “I wouldn’t vote for me if I believed Tara Reade.”

Follow Ben Kew on Facebook, Twitter at @ben_kew, or email him at [email protected]

White House imposes coronavirus travel ban on Brazil

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President Donald Trump points during a "Rolling to Remember Ceremony," to honor the nation's veterans and POW/MIA, from the Blue Room Balcony of the White House, Friday, May 22, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

By DARLENE SUPERVILLE

President Donald Trump on Sunday further limited travel from the world’s coronavirus hotspots by denying entry to foreigners coming from Brazil, which is second to the U.S. in the number of confirmed cases.

Trump had already banned certain travelers from China, Europe, the United Kingdom and Ireland and, to a lesser extent, Iran. He has not moved to ban travel from Russia, which has the world’s third-highest caseload.

Trump had said last week that he was considering limiting travel from Brazil.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany cast the step announced Sunday as another “decisive action to protect our country” by Trump, whose management of the crisis has come under sharp scrutiny.

The U.S. leads the world with more than 1.6 million confirmed coronavirus cases and a death toll that is expected to surpass 100,000 later this week, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Brazil, now Latin America’s hardest-hit country, is second, with more than 347,000 cases and more than 22,000 deaths. Third on the list is Russia, with more than 344,000 reported cases and more than 3,500 deaths.

The White House did not immediately respond to queries about whether a travel ban would be imposed on Russia.

“Today’s action will help ensure foreign nationals who have been in Brazil do not become a source of additional infections in our country,” McEnany said.

Filipe Martins, who advises Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on international affairs, said the U.S. was treating Brazil as it had other populous countries and suggested the news media were overplaying Trump’s ban.

“By temporarily banning the entry of Brazilians to the U.S., the American government is following previously established quantitative parameters that naturally reach a country as populous as ours,” Martins tweeted. “There isn’t anything specifically against Brazil. Ignore the hysteria from the press.”

Bolsonaro has downplayed the coronavirus by repeatedly calling it a “little flu” and insisting that closing businesses and issuing stay-at-home recommendations will ultimately cause more hardship by wrecking the economy. Bolsonaro fired his first health minister for going against him and backing restrictions put in place by Brazil’s governors. His second minister also resigned after openly breaking with Bolsonaro over widespread prescription of the antimalarial drug chloroquine for coronavirus treatment.

Trump said in an interview broadcast in the U.S. on Sunday that he had completed a course of a related drug, hydroxychloroquine, as a line of defense against becoming infected.

Bolsonaro’s approach has mirrored that of Trump, who in the early days of the outbreak sought to downplay the severity and suggest the few cases that existed in the U.S. would “just disappear.” After agreeing to encourage Americans to practice social distancing, Trump began to say the “cure can’t be worse than the problem itself.” He has been aggressively pushing governors to allow businesses to reopen and traveling more himself.

Meanwhile, the number of cases in Brazil has continued to surge, pushing hospitals in multiple states to the brink of collapse and causing the Amazon city of Manaus to bury people in mass graves. The pace of deaths has been accelerating and, with a peak still approaching, the country has only an interim health minister.

Brazil has more than 360,000 cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, according to health ministry data released Sunday night, meaning it trails only the U.S. in the Johns Hopkins University tally. Experts consider it a vast undercount due to insufficient testing. The ministry reported more than 22,600 deaths.

The White House said Sunday it plans to donate 1,000 ventilators to Brazil.

The ban on travel from Brazil takes effect late Thursday. As with the other bans, it does not apply to legal permanent residents. A spouse, parent or child of a U.S. citizen or legal permanent resident also would be allowed to enter the country. The restrictions also do not apply to trade between the U.S. and Brazil.

Earlier Sunday, Robert O’Brien, the U.S. national security adviser, had said an announcement was likely.

“We’re concerned about the people of the Southern Hemisphere and certainly the people of Brazil. They’re having a rough go of it,” he said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” He said the travel ban would likely be temporary.

“But because of the situation in Brazil, we’re going to take every step necessary to protect the American people.” O’Brien said.

Data from Brazil’s civil aviation agency shows there has already been a sharp reduction in U.S.-bound flights from the South American country. There were more than 700 flights from Brazil to the U.S. in February of this year, with the number dropping to just 140 in April, two months later.

There were more than 700 flights to the U.S. from Brazil in April 2019, the data shows.

Billions Still Available in Federal Small-Business Loans for Mom & Pop Shops

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“There is $140 billion in money left that can be accessed by these institutions to do lending,” said Beth Goldberg, the Small Business Administration's New York district director. Photo Credit: SBA

By: Hadassa Kalatizadeh

The second round of the Paycheck Protection Program still has billions of dollars available for mom-and pop-businesses to claim.  On Thursday in a Crain’s webcast, lenders and local business experts said there has been a decline in applications, despite the billions remaining in federal funding awaiting takers.  “There is $140 billion in money left that can be accessed by these institutions to do lending,” said Beth Goldberg, the Small Business Administration’s New York district director.

“We’re seeing a dramatic slowdown in terms of volume this week.  When the loan program opened up, we had hundreds of applications pouring through the website. Now it’s a handful a day,” said Wendy Cai Lee, President of Piermont Bank. “Today we had one,” she added.

As reported by Crain’s, during the webinar lenders admitted that though the first round of  PPP loans in the first two weeks of April were a “disaster”, people should not give up as the current second round is a whole different story.  “It really was a tale of two different disbursements,” said Randy Peers, President of the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce. “Round 1 was a total disaster, and Round 2 was very, very successful.”   Peers said that in the first round only 4 percent of the 600 small businesses in Brooklyn that they surveyed received funds, but in the second round, a whopping 92 percent of applicants received PPP funds.

“We’re basically, in many respects, flying blind because we’ve never seen in modern history a sudden and near complete shutdown of the economy. We just don’t have good benchmarks to guide what might be happening,” Goldberg had conceded during a council meeting in April. “We’re in an economic and financial environment that’s changing rapidly.”  Goldberg was appointed by the SBA in 2015 as District Director for New York, after 30 years of experience in both private and government sectors.

Across the country, there were 4.4 million PPP loans made for a total value of $513 billion, as of May 16.  Still, there is $140 billion more still available and awaiting applicants.  The SBA has also shelled out over $6 billion under the Economic Injury Disaster Loan program, according to Goldberg.  The EIDL, however, has run out of funds, and would require Congress to pump in more money.  “These loan products are great to sustain business and get through this time, but what we’re hearing now is a need for additional capital to restart and take advantage of the economic opportunities that are arising,” said Jonnel Doris, acting commissioner of the Department of Small Business Services.

 

Abbas’s Empty, Worn-out Threats

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Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas delivers a speech regarding the Coronavirus outbreak (COVID-19), at the Palestinian Authority headquarters, in the West Bank city of Ramallah, May 5, 2020. Photo by Flash90

Caroline Glick- JNS

Tuesday evening, Palestinian Authority and PLO chairman Mahmoud Abbas announced that the P.A. is renouncing the peace deals it signed with Israel along with its agreements with the United States. According to several left-leaning Israeli television commentators and retired generals, his speech was an earthquake. It was a calamity of epic proportions. Most importantly, it was a reason to bury the government’s plan to apply Israeli law to the Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria and to the Jordan Valley.

But the truth is not at all what they claim. This isn’t an earthquake. It isn’t even a hiccup. It isn’t a calamity. It just a tired, recycled, empty threat.

Abbas had no problem remembering his lines Tuesday night because he’s given the same speech, word for word, a half dozen times (aside from the throwaway sentence blasting President Donald Trump’s peace plan and Israel’s sovereignty plan). The first time Abbas gave it was in September 2015 in his address to the United Nations General Assembly.

As was the case Tuesday night, so every other time Abbas gave this speech; shortly after he walked offstage Israeli leftists said the sky was falling. But then the truth started filtering in.

After the first news cycle passed, Abbas’s lackeys clarified that he didn’t mean it. There is no plan to make his declaration operative. He’s just trying to send a message—that is, a threat—to Israel and America.

The same state of affairs prevailed following Tuesday’s “I’m ditching the peace deals” speech. After the Israeli media and the leftist former generals wailed and sounded dire warnings about what will befall the country if the government doesn’t abandon all of its plans, the Palestinians made clear that this week too, he didn’t mean it. Abbas’s advisers and lackeys said it was simply his way of “warning” Israel and America. For their part, local leaders and militia chiefs shrugged their shoulders and said they heard about the speech from the Israeli media.

Set aside for a moment the fact that Abbas’s speech this week was a complete joke, and consider what would actually happen if he implemented his declaration and officially abrogated all the agreements he and his predecessor Yasser Arafat signed with Israel since 1993.

The fact is that nothing would change at all.

Since 1994, when they began governing the Palestinian areas in Judea and Samaria and Gaza by force of the agreements they signed with Israel, the Palestinians have systematically and continuously breached every single substantive commitment they made to Israel. Most notably, the Palestinians agreed to fight terror. Instead, for the past 27 years the Palestinian Authority under both Arafat and Abbas has incited, financed and directed terrorism against Israel.

In every sphere of authority Israel transferred to it, the Palestinian Authority has used its powers—military and civilian—not to govern Palestinians and advance the cause of peace, but to wage a multidimensional war against the Jewish state and its citizens. From diplomacy to planning and zoning, from sewage treatment to education and religious affairs, the P.A. has continuously breached every article and annex in the agreements it signed with Israel in order to harm the Jewish state and its citizens.

So again, if Abbas actually carries through on his tired threat and cancels the agreements, it won’t make a bit of difference to anyone. Those deals have all been long been dead in the water.

One of Abbas’s lines that always terrifies Israeli leftists is his threat to cut off security cooperation between Palestinian and Israeli security forces. The Israeli left’s Pavlovian response to that is to say that if that happens, rivers of blood will flow and anyone who doesn’t immediately give in to all of Abbas’s demands, they say, will have the blood of Israeli soldiers and civilians on their hands.

Setting aside the moral obscenity at the base their practice of blaming their political opponents for the Palestinians’ aggression, the leftists’ claim is substantively wrong on two counts. First, as former defense minister Moshe Ya’alon has said repeatedly over the years, the Palestinians don’t protect Israelis. The Israel Defense Forces protects Israelis. The Palestinians benefit far more from their security coordination with the IDF than the IDF benefits from its security coordination with them.

Second, the security coordination between Israel and Palestinians has little to do with Abbas. Under the Oslo deals, the P.A. formed more than a dozen militias, all charged with overlapping duties and authorities. Over the years Israel’s security cooperation with each of these militias has been a function of how the various forces’ local commanders on the ground view their personal interests. A commander of the preventive security force in Jenin or Qalqilya, for instance, may view his personal interests as advanced through tight cooperation with Israeli security forces and Israeli civilian leaders in the Israeli communities surrounding them.

A military intelligence commander in the south Hebron Hills, on the other hand, may prefer to cooperate with his brother-in-law or cousins in Hamas than with Israel.

In both cases, the local militia bosses make their judgments with little connection to Abbas’s position on the matter.

If the Abbas abrogates the agreements with Israel, his actions will be met with the same indifference by local commanders that they are met with today.

This is not to say that Abbas is irrelevant. He is relevant in two arenas: The first arena is the international arena. Abbas leveraged the Oslo agreements to invent a paper state called “The State of Palestine.”

Palestine-on-paper exists to advance the PLO’s political and propaganda war against Israel and to legitimize terror attacks against Israelis and Jews. Palestine-on-paper files fabricated war crimes charges against Israelis. Palestine-on-paper leads the international campaign to transform Israel into an economic, social and diplomatic pariah state.

In keeping with Palestine-on-paper’s continuous war against Israel, during his latest “I quit the agreements” speech, Abbas called on the nations of the world that have yet to recognize Palestine-on-paper to do so.

Another thing that won’t change if Abbas actually abrogates the agreements is the P.A.’s demand for money. If Abbas formally ends the peace deals, that doesn’t mean he won’t expect Israel to collect taxes for him and transfer him the money. He can be trusted to keep the demands for cash up no matter what happens.

This brings us to the second arena where Abbas plays an outsized role. Abbas, an 83-year-old kidney patient, sits on a goldmine worth billions of dollars. The funds that Abbas controls are comprised of his personal wealth, P.A. funding from foreign governments, and tax revenues that Israel collects and transfers to the P.A.’s bank account.

No one knows who will take control over the money after Abbas dies or otherwise quits the stage. But who that person (or persons) is will determine to a great degree how Palestinian clan leaders, mayors and local security chiefs behave going forward. If Abbas is succeeded by people aligned with Hamas or by members of Hamas, it will have a major impact on the behavior of commanders on the ground. Some will choose to join Hamas and turn their guns on Israel. Some will cling to Israel ever more tightly. Israel will fight the commanders who side with Hamas and help those who stand with it.

If a PLO apparatchik—or as Abbas hopes, one of his sons—takes over, it is likely that they will continue using money to grease the gears of power as Abbas has. If this is the case, little is likely to change in Israel’s relationships with commanders on the ground.

Although Abbas’s latest empty threat is no reason for concern, his remarks—and the left’s predictable response—should serve as a reminder that Israel needs to develop a reality-based policy for dealing with the Palestinians for the day after Abbas—who is old and sick—leaves power. The first challenge for Israel’s leaders in forging such a policy is to base it on reality.

The peace deals Israel signed with the Palestinians in the 1990s failed utterly because they never reflected reality. Those deals, like the peace process itself, were an expression of the Israeli left’s ideological aspirations. Arafat and Abbas were never interested in making the left’s dreams of appeasement-based peace come true. But they were prepared to lie to their Israeli fans in exchange for cash, power and international standing.

Israel’s post-Oslo policy towards the Palestinians needs to recognize the basic fact that deals—all deals—can succeed only if they are predicated on reality. The purpose of deals is not to transform reality, but to serve as a means for the sides to the agreement to advance their common goals.

Israel would be better off signing 15 reality-based, limited agreements with 15 local Palestinian leaders and security bosses from Hebron in the south to Jenin in the north than one big peace treaty with the PLO, which will only use it as a means to escalate its war against Israel while cultivating its ties with the Israeli left, the European Union and the Democratic Party in America.

Beyond agreements, a critical aspect of a reality-based Israeli policy towards the Palestinians is the question of funding. What Israeli interest is advanced by transferring billions of dollars in tax revenues to the P.A.? Should Israel continue to transfer the funds? Would Israel be better served by transferring the funds directly to local Palestinian leaders than continuing to transfer them to the P.A.’s bank account in Ramallah?

As Israel gets closer to the July 1 date to begin applying Israeli law to the Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria and to the Jordan Valley, threats from those who have prospered by perpetuating the peace fraud will multiply and escalate. There is no reason to listen to the prattle. Israel and its allies should maintain a steady course forward and concentrate on how to build a new framework for relations with the Palestinians built not around catering to Abbas and his lies but towards building durable ties with those on the ground who recognize the value of good relations with Israel.

Caroline Glick is an award-winning columnist and author of “The Israeli Solution: A One-State Plan for Peace in the Middle East.

Inside Israel’s War on the Coronavirus

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  (Washington Free Beacon)

The Israelis are known for their preparation. Threatened each day by a bevy of terror groups, the Jewish state has had contingency plans in place for most circumstances. Except one: the coronavirus pandemic that wrecked economies and sickened millions.

Israel, like many other smaller nations, had not developed plans to confront a global pandemic. But as the coronavirus swept across the world, Israeli society mobilized in a fashion only seen in times of war. Hotels, for instance, were converted into makeshift hospitals and the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) deployed across the country to help communities test for the illness and enact quarantines. Military technologies typically employed in times of combat were quickly converted to facilitate communications needed to keep the country running.

Israeli military officials told the Washington Free Beacon that this quick response—which included the entire government and military—helped to stave off the virus and potentially save many lives. In a country of nearly 9 million people, Israel has had just more than 16,000 confirmed cases of the virus, with 277 dying from it. As infections continue to increase across the globe, Israel’s numbers have remained relatively flat, even as its Arab neighbors continue to struggle with the illness. Nearly half a million cases are centered in the Middle East in countries such as Iran and Turkey (with 120,000 and 150,000 cases, respectively), where the governments have struggled to contain the virus.

Israeli technological innovation, long a centerpiece of the country’s economy, is helping the world combat the coronavirus. In addition to its work on new types of ventilator systems, Israel’s military, government, and private sectors are developing new tools for detection and treatment. Israeli technology also is powering software that can help detect the virus from a safe distance.

In one clear sign of the country’s success, the U.S. State Department chose Israel as the location of its first foreign trip in more than a month. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo landed there last week and discussed, among other things, lessons the United States could learn from Israel’s response to the virus.

“The secretary is making this trip because he recognizes the United States and Israel have much to learn from each other as we address current threats, whether those threats stem from a global pandemic or from Iran’s malign regional influence,” David Schenker, the State Department’s assistant secretary for Near Eastern affairs, said prior to the trip.

Technology has played a vital role in Israel’s strategy, according to Captain Doris, commander of the country’s Sprint Project, a massive online meeting place that was established within 24 hours of the outbreak (Doris’s last name was withheld for security reasons). The virtual network connected hundreds of Israeli military, civilian, medical, and technological experts together so they could tackle pressing problems posed by the virus without coming into direct contact with one another.

Among other breakthroughs, the Sprint Project spurred the creation of a new type of ventilator specifically manufactured to aid those infected with COVID-19 who are experiencing severe breathing problems. The know-how for this technology has been shared with manufacturers across the world.

Doris said this “open innovation model” employed “the wisdom of the crowd” to tackle some of the most pressing issues caused by the virus. Doctors presented the online group with their problems, and teams of experts have been working to tackle them.

Other projects included compressing oxygen from the sea to help patients, particularly the elderly, who were suffering from breathing issues. Other efforts were supported by Israel’s Intelligence Directorate, which helped to create the new ventilators.

“The coronavirus has a lot of bad things and it’s a disaster, but also it gave us a lot of opportunities on the technological field,” Doris said.

The response also included a massive on-the-ground operation jointly run by the IDF and Israeli police service.

“It does help to be what we call a mobilized society,” Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, head of the IDF’s international media branch, told the Free Beacon.

The IDF and the country’s defense establishment utilized their international ties to import much needed supplies.

Instead of buying weapons or defensive equipment, “we’ve been buying medical gear and equipment,” Conricus said.

While the IDF’s “number one priority is to maintain combat readiness and maintain our continuity of operations so we can continue to defend along all of our borders,” the country’s fighting force mobilized to help the most at-risk communities battle the pandemic, Conricus said.

Initially, more than 6,000 IDF members were quarantined to prevent the virus from potentially spreading across the force. At present, just around 700 still remain in quarantine, with that number decreasing daily. Around 300 service members were infected with the virus, according to Conricus, who said there were no casualties.

This “very radical approach of isolating the combat units” prevented the coronavirus from crippling the fighting force at a time when Iranian-backed terror groups continue to wage attacks on Israel’s borders. It also differs from that of other nations, including the U.S., which experienced severe outbreaks of the virus inside the military.

“When we compare this to other militaries, it is a statistic we are happy with,” Conricus said.

IDF personnel also assisted in transporting more than 25,000 testing kits to different labs across the country. A small portion of the force, around seven to eight hundred troops, assisted police in enforcing lockdowns that were put in place early on.

As with the United States, there were challenges in ensuring the ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities adhered to strict quarantine procedures. In New York City, one of the hardest hit areas of America, Mayor Bill de Blasio has repeatedly threatened Orthodox Jewish communities with severe penalties for assembling on the streets, causing outrage in the Jewish community.

Acutely aware of this potential tension point, the IDF shifted tactics when it approached Orthodox populations.

“We didn’t go there trying to circumvent or trying to replace local authorities. We went there in a supporting position where we worked through the local authorities with their guidance and support and not instead of,” Conricus said. “We weren’t perceived as a threat.”

A similar tactic was employed with Israeli-Arab communities and territories in the West Bank of Israel controlled by the Palestinian Authority. The IDF, “from day one,” worked with PA officials to provide testing kits and disinfectants to area hospitals, which still have not reached maximum capacity as a result of the virus.

In the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, Israel has worked with international aid groups including UNICEF and the World Health Organization to coordinate the delivery of needed supplies. It has not provided any direct aid to Gaza due to the Hamas government’s refusal to engage with Israel.

“Israel has been facilitating that aid into the Gaza Strip,” Conricus said. “We understand we have a shared interest” with the Palestinians in avoiding a massive pandemic in Gaza.

Another challenge unique for Israel is the massive disinformation campaign that has alleged Jews are to blame for spreading the virus. These anti-Semitic allegations have been a hallmark of the rhetoric emerging from some Palestinian leaders and other Arab countries.

Still, Conricus said, Israel has worked with Arab populations inside and outside of the country “with complete disregard of whatever smear campaign is going on.”

NYS Announces $100M in Pandemic Relief Funding for Non-Profits & Small Landlords

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- Governor Andrew Cuomo announced the New York Forward Loan Fund, in which the state will dole out $100 million in relief for nonprofits, small landlords and mom-and-pop small businesses

By Ilana Siyance

On Friday May 22, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced the New York Forward Loan Fund, in which the state will dole out $100 million in relief for nonprofits, small landlords and mom-and-pop small businesses.  The initiative is particularly geared towards small businesses owned by minorities and women, and others who were left out of the funds made available by the federal government.  “The federal definition of small business has what many could consider large businesses, but we’re going to focus on true small businesses,” Cuomo said.

As reported by Crain’s NY, the governor specified that the state’s flexible and affordable loan program will be made available to companies with no more than 20 employees, which make an annual revenue that is less than $3 million.  Those businesses which have already received money from the Small Business Administration will not be eligible for these state funds.  The federal government, through the SBA, has pumped money into the economy via two huge programs aimed at helping small businesses struggling due to the extensive shutdown caused by the pandemic.  While federal funds are still available now, Cuomo said that many minority-owned small businesses have been denied these funds.  “Minority-owned businesses face a far greater risk and have received less in federal relief,” said Cuomo.  Businesses interested in applying for the state loan should visit esd.ny.gov/nyforwardloans.

“Small businesses are the engine of the New York economy, but they are now facing some of the toughest challenges in this pandemic,” said Governor Cuomo. “Helping our small businesses is a top priority, and we are starting the New York Forward Loan Fund and making more than $100 million available to provide loans to small businesses, focusing particularly on minority and women owned businesses that have faced even greater risks and received less in federal relief throughout this pandemic.”

New York State will start giving out the COVID-19 pandemic relief loans as of May 26.  The loans will be distributed through banks, including community development financial institutions, which lend to smaller companies that have reportedly had trouble attaining funds from the large mainstream banks. Cuomo did not yet mention where the state will get the millions for the fund, particularly while the state is going through its own budget crisis.  Cuomo has frequently said that the State’s financial woes will escalate if it doesn’t receive added relief from Washington.

 

 

Landlords & Activists Call on DeBlasio to Enact Property-Tax Freeze

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Landlords, activists and trade groups are banding together to ask NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio to freeze property taxes amid the extensive shutdown caused by the novel coronavirus. Photo Credit: AP

By Hadassa Kalatizadeh

Landlords, activists and trade groups are banding together to ask NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio to freeze property taxes amid the extensive shutdown caused by the novel coronavirus. Civil rights activist Hazel Dukes, who previously served as the national president of the National Association for Advancement of Colored People has joined in the effort, saying that minority landlords are particularly susceptible. “Temporary fixes like mortgage deferrals are not enough,” Dukes, 88, said in a statement. “Mayor de Blasio has to provide the meaningful lifeline of a property-tax freeze to prevent  the American dream of homeownership from becoming a nightmare.”

The pandemic has led to the shutdown of all nonessential business, which has led to a spike in unemployment. The shuttered businesses have not been paying employees and like a chain reaction these factors have led to nonpayment of rents, hurting the real estate industry. As reported by Crain’s NY, landlords and property owners have it particularly rough during this pandemic and its ensuing shutdown, as rent-collection rates have dropped abysmally. Landlords now maintain that since they have not been paid, they therefore do not have the means to pay their mortgages, tax bills or upkeep on their properties.
Data from the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce has revealed that roughly forty-five percent of small businesses missed all or a portion of their rent payments over the last two months. In the month of May, Vornado Realty Trust publicized that it received rent from only 20 percent of its retail tenants.

Property taxes are up since 2014 when Mayor de Blasio took office, as per data from the NYC Department of Finance, and experts predict they could be further on the rise with the city looking for ways to increase its revenue. “Our community of homeowners is not positioned to absorb new costs in the form of increased taxes,” said Mary Ann Rothman, executive director of the Council of New York Cooperatives and Condominiums. The group of property owners is asking to be allowed to pay their taxes with monthly payment plans to avoid bankruptcy, and for interest penalties to be lowered from the current 18 percent down to 3 percent.

Hotel owners have also joined landlords in the effort to beseech the Mayor. The hospitality industry understandably is experiencing low occupancy levels due to the shutdown and halt in tourism. Hotels have been used during this pandemic as shelter for health care workers, Covid-19 patients and the homeless. “It’s  essential  and only fair that the city does everything it can to keep hotels in business,” Vijay Dandapani, president and CEO of the Hotel Association of New York City, said in a statement. “We  need immediate property-tax relief.”

The Mayor’s office has yet to comment. Earlier this month, however, the city’s Department of Management and Budget told Crain’s that a relief in property-tax would be unlikely, and it projected $180 million in delinquent payments this summer.

Brit-American-Israeli Nobel Prize Winner Michael Levitt: “Lock-Downs May Have Cost Lives”

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Nobel-prize-winning scientist from Stanford said in an interview published Sunday that, according to his models, the lock-downs didn’t save lives, but actually caused more deaths, Zero Hedge pointed out.

Prof Michael  Levitt, a British-American-Israeli who shared the Nobel prize for chemistry in 2013 for the “development of multiscale models for complex chemical systems”, has said for two months that the planet will beat coronavirus faster than most other experts predict.

Levitt’s projections on the pandemic were much closer to the mark than the often quoted Nile  Ferguson of  Imperial College coronavirus models. The Jewish Voice previously reported on Ferguson’s projections.  Ferguson’s model projected 2.2 million dead people in the United States and 500,000 in the U.K. from COVID-19  if social distancing and other measures were not taken.

As early as march, Levitt warned that Ferguson’s projections had over-estimated the potential death toll by “10 or 12 times”, Zero Hedge reported.

Instead of helping the situation, Fergusons’ projections created an unnecessary “panic virus” which spread among global political leaders, Prof Levitt told the Telegraph in a recent interview.

“I think lockdown saved no lives,” said the scientist, who added that the Government should have encouraged Britons to wear masks and adhere to other forms of social distancing.

“I think it may have cost lives. It will have saved a few road accident lives – things like that – but social damage – domestic abuse, divorces, alcoholism – has been extreme. And then you have those who were not treated for other conditions.”

Having assessed the initial outbreak in China and from the infected Diamond Princess cruise ship, he predicted by March 14 that the UK would lose around 50,000 lives. Prof Ferguson’s modelling that same week estimated up to 500,000 deaths without social distancing measures.

“I think that the real virus was the panic virus,” Prof Levitt told the Telegraph. “For reasons that were not clear to me, I think the leaders panicked and the people panicked and I think there was a huge lack of discussion..

The 73-year-old has no background as an epidemiologist, but he assessed the outbreak in China and prepared a paper based on his own calculations. Most countries, he predicted, would suffer a Covid-19 death rate worth around an extra month in excess deaths over the calendar year, The Telegraph reported.

“In Europe, I don’t think that anything actually stopped the virus other than some kind of burnout,” he added. “There’s a huge number of people who are asymptomatic so I would seriously imagine that by the time lockdown was finally introduced in the UK the virus was already widely spread. They could have just stayed open like Sweden by that stage and nothing would have happened.”

Professor Levitt has now analysed the data from 78 nations with more than 50 reported cases of coronavirus. His investigations proved the virus was never going to achieve the type of exponential growth that the researchers at Imperial were predicting at the same time, according to The Telegraph.

In early May, Levitt was interviewed on “Unherd” an online news program broadcast on YouTube, where he made a similar argument as he does in the Telegraph interview

You can watch that interview below.

 

 

 

 

 

Hong Kong police fire tear gas, water cannon at protesters

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A protester is detained by riot police during a demonstration against Beijing's national security legislation in Causeway Bay in Hong Kong, Sunday, May 24, 2020. Hong Kong police fired volleys of tear gas in a popular shopping district as hundreds took to the streets Sunday to march against China's proposed tough national security legislation for the city. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

By ZEN SOO (AP)

Hong Kong police fired tear gas and a water cannon at protesters in a popular shopping district Sunday, as thousands took to the streets to march against China’s move to impose national security legislation on the city.

Pro-democracy supporters have sharply criticized a proposal, set to be approved by China’s rubber-stamp parliament this week, that would ban secessionist and subversive activity, as well as foreign interference, in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory.

The pro-democracy camp says the proposal goes against the “one country, two systems” framework that promises Hong Kong freedoms not found in mainland China.

Crowds of demonstrators dressed in black gathered in the Causeway Bay district on Sunday, chanting slogans such as “Stand with Hong Kong,” “Liberate Hong Kong” and “Revolution of our times.”

The protest was a continuation of a monthslong pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong that began last year and has at times descended into violence between police and protesters.

Police raised blue flags, warning protesters to disperse, before firing multiple rounds of tear gas. They later fired a water cannon at the demonstrators.

At least 180 people were arrested, mostly on charges of unlawful assembly, police said.

They also said that some of the protesters threw bricks and splashed unidentified liquid at officers, injuring at least four members of the police media liaison team. They warned that such behavior is against the law and that police would pursue the matter.

Earlier in the afternoon, prominent activist Tam Tak-chi was arrested during the protest for what police said was unauthorized assembly. Tam said he was giving a “health talk” and was exempt from social-distancing measures that prohibit gatherings of more than eight people.

The bill that triggered Sunday’s rally was submitted at the opening of China’s national legislative session on Friday. It would bypass Hong Kong’s legislature and could allow mainland agencies to be set up in the city, sparking concern that Chinese agents could arbitrarily arrest people for activities deemed to be pro-democracy.

Speaking at an annual news conference during the legislative session, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Sunday that Hong Kong affairs were an internal matter for China, and that “no external interference will be tolerated.”

“Excessive unlawful foreign meddling in Hong Kong affairs has placed China’s national security in serious jeopardy,” Wang said, adding that the proposed legislation “does not affect the high degree of autonomy in Hong Kong.”

“It does not affect the rights and freedoms enjoyed by Hong Kong residents. And it does not affect the legitimate rights and interests of foreign investors in Hong Kong,” he said.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has called the proposal “a death knell for the high degree of autonomy” that Beijing promised the former British colony when it was returned to China in 1997.

Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong prior to its handover to China, lamented what he called “a new Chinese dictatorship.”

“I think the Hong Kong people have been betrayed by China, which has proved once again that you can’t trust it further than you can throw it,” Patten said in an interview with The Times of London.

Patten is leading a coalition of at least 204 international lawmakers and policymakers who are decrying the proposed legislation. In a statement, the coalition called it a “flagrant breach” of the Sino-British Joint Declaration, a 1984 treaty that promised Hong Kong a high degree of autonomy even after the handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997.

President Donald Trump’s national security adviser, Robert O’Brien, said it appeared that China was violating the 1984 treaty.

“And I can’t see how Hong Kong remains the Asian financial center if the Chinese Communist Party goes through and implements this national security law and takes over Hong Kong,” O’Brien said Sunday on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

“That would be a tragedy for the people of Hong Kong, but it will also be very bad for China,” he said.

Bernard Chan, a top-level Hong Kong politician and delegate to the National People’s Congress in Beijing, defended the national security legislation pushed by China, saying it was written into Hong Kong’s Basic Law — the city’s mini-constitution — but never enacted.

Chan expressed concern that Hong Kong would inevitably face economic hardship given trade frictions between the U.S. and China.

“I think we are definitely the collateral damage being dragged into this thing. But then, I don’t think there’s any alternatives,” he said.

“But with or without this law, honestly, the U.S. and China are always going to be continuing this loggerhead for quite some time to come,” Chan said. “China will remain as a threat to the U.S. in terms of the … world economic dominance.”