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US COVID-19 Cases Top 1 Million, World Wide Pandemic Update

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The number of U.S. coronavirus cases in the United States topped the 1 million mark Tuesday even as several states began taking small steps to reopen for business.

According to the count by Johns Hopkins University, 1 million is by far the largest for any country in the world, where the global number of cases exceeds 3 million.

More than 57,000 Americans have died from COVID-19. According to a count by the Reuters news agency, the coronavirus killed about 2,000 Americans a day throughout April.

  • Known global death toll exceeds 215,000. According to the Johns Hopkins researchers, at least 3,110,219 people have been infected worldwide and at least 216,808 have died since the outbreak began. The numbers are likely to be significant underestimates due to suspected underreporting and differing testing and recording systems around the world.
  • Brazil’s total number of confirmed deaths has now overtaken the WHO’s figure for China as cases accelerate in Latin America’s biggest country. The number of deaths in Brazil has now passed 5,000.
  • Vladimir Putin extended a non-working period in Russia until 11 May, as he warned the rate of infection in the country has not yet peaked. The Russian president made the announcement during a meeting with senior officials and regional heads.
  • France began outlining the schedule for the end of the lockdown. The prime minister, Édouard Philippe said: “Who could have envisaged a France where schools, universities, cafes, restaurants, the majority of businesses, libraries … beaches, stadiums … would be closed?”
  •  The number of confirmed cases in Saudia Arabia passed 20,000 as its health authorities reported 1,266 new infections. The kingdom reported eight deaths, bringing its total death toll to 152.

 

Cuomo Updates NY As Military Flyover Honors First Responders and Medical Personnel

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COVID-19 hospital admissions dipped below 1,000 and military jets soared in tribute above New York City. Meanwhile, city schools are adopting a new grading system.

Here are the latest coronavirus-related developments in New York:

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THE NUMBERS

New COVID-19 hospitalizations in New York state are averaging under 1,000 a day for the first time this month, the latest sign of slowly decreasing pressure on the health care system.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo told reporters Tuesday that hospitalizations and deaths from the outbreak were both continuing to tick down. The daily death toll dropped again, with 335 deaths reported Monday — the lowest daily tally recorded in April and the third straight day under 400.

There have been 17,638 deaths in New York since the outbreak began, according to state figures. The state total doesn’t include more than 5,200 New York City deaths that were attributed to the virus on death certificates but weren’t confirmed by a lab test.

At the peak of the outbreak earlier this month, there had been more than 3,000 new COVID-19 hospitalizations a day, based on a three-day rolling average. The comparable figure released Tuesday was 953.

“It’s still a significant number of people,” Cuomo said. “But overall you see the numbers coming down, so that’s good news.”

The total number of patients hospitalized dropped to 12,646.

With caseloads dropping, the Navy hospital ship USNS Comfort, sent to relieve stress on city hospitals at the height the pandemic, was set to depart Thursday.

Operations also appeared to be winding down at the temporary federal medical facility at the Javits Center. There were 69 patients inside the cavernous Manhattan convention center Tuesday, according to the Cuomo administration. The Pentagon said patients were in the process of being transferred to local hospitals with an expected “completion of mission” around Friday. A Cuomo aide said Javits will be able to be used as a medical center, if needed.

Cuomo traveled to Syracuse, New York, as he continued to sketch out the steps regions of the state need to take to restart local economies. (AP)

Cuomo lashed out today at the WHO, CDC and others.

“Where was the whole international health community?” he asked. “Where was the whole national host of experts, the WHO, the NIH, the CDC, that whole alphabet soup of agencies? Where was everyone? “Where was the intelligence community, with the briefings?” he continued. “Saying this is in China and they have something called an airplane and you can get on an airplane and you can come to the United States?”

MILITARY FLYOVER

Jets from Navy’s Blue Angels and the Air Force’s Thunderbirds flew over New York City in a tribute to the medical personnel, first responders and other essential workers involved in fighting the pandemic.

The planes from the two demonstration squadrons flew in formation over New York and Newark beginning at noon. The planes later fly over Trenton, New Jersey, and Philadelphia.

Pedestrians, cyclists and even police officers patrolling the Brooklyn Bridge pulled out their smartphones to film the flyover on a bright blue-sky day.

“We are incredibly honored to have the opportunity to salute those working on the frontline of the COVID-19 response, we are in awe of your strength and resilience,” said Navy Cmdr. Brian Kesselring, U.S. Navy Blue Angels commanding officer and flight leader.

The flyovers fulfill training requirements for the pilots, who must fly a minimum number of hours to maintain proficiency, according to military officials, who said the squadrons have had to cancel many performances since the virus outbreak. The flyovers do not involve additional costs to taxpayers, officials said. (AP)

Viral Video: Nurse Claims Hospitals in NYC are Killing People

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. (NIAID-RML via AP)

SOCIAL MEDIA GIANT YOU TUBE HAS BANNED THIS VIDEO NUMEROUS TIMES, THE LINK AT THE BOTTOM TO VIDEO MIGHT BE REMOVED. WE TRY TO UPDATE THESE ARE YOU TUBE CENSORS THEM

A you-tube video which was published on Sunday afternoon on a channel called “Jewish Truther” features a young nurse who describes what her fellow nurse ,who is working on the front lines with coronavirus patients, is witnessing on the job.   She describes the ventilators not being used properly, patients not being checked on frequently enough,  she claims patients are not being resuscitated out of the staff’s  fear of catching corona and nurses not changing their PPP,  she describes nurses who do not care and are not fit for the jobs.

We  can not verify the claims in this “whistle-blower”- like video, however it is out there in public and if these claims are true, this needs to  need to be examined further.

She also makes a reference to Dr. Cameron Kyle-Sidell, who was featured on the Jewish Voice earlier in the month, however she incorrectly states his material is banned on you-tube

TJV was hesitant in posting this video because their are no names or locations given, the woman in the video does not identify herself.   If anyone involved with this video would like to discus it further with the Jewish voice, feel free to contact us.

https://youtu.be/Kd7RvUraG4c

Gloomy summer looms as pandemic cancels US festivals, trips

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By PAT EATON-ROBB (AP)

Thelma Uranga is sprucing up her back deck in Chicago, hoping to host some small gatherings to take the place of the summer’s usual neighborhood festivals built on music, food and time with friends.

“People look forward to summer because winter tends to feel like an eternity,” said Uranga, 38. “We were just getting to that point where things kick off.”

Instead, she and many others are “mourning summer 2020” as cancellations pile up because of efforts to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

From Cape Cod to California, festivals are being nixed, businesses in tourist havens are looking at empty reservation books, and people who have been cooped up through a dismal spring are worrying summer will bring just more of the same.

As the weather warms, some already have begun venturing outside in larger numbers, despite guidance to stay home. Government officials say they aim to manage public health risks in a way that allows for a gradual return to normal, but with the course of the outbreak still unknown, nobody is sure what summer will bring.

On a typical summer day, the Ship Bottom Brewing beer house on New Jersey’s Long Beach Island is packed. Bartender Bridget Barlet isn’t expecting anything close to that this season.

“I’m scared even if we do open up, it just won’t be the same, especially if distancing rules are continued,” she said. “A lot of people will still be too nervous to venture back into what life as usual used to look like.”

Youth baseball leagues are holding out hope they will get in a sliver of a season, water parks are unsure if they will be able to open, and restaurants are wondering if it’s worth welcoming dine-customers when social distancing guidelines would slash the numbers they can host at one time.

Little League coach Noah Rouen, 45, of Plymouth, Minnesota, a father of four boys, is hoping there might still be time for a shortened season. After all, he said, 95% of baseball is played without anyone getting within 6 feet of anyone else.

“Those games under the lights, that’s something special for the kids,” he said.

In New Jersey, Gov. Phil Murphy has not indicated when his state’s beaches and casinos will reopen. He said Monday he hoped there would be “some semblance of normal” at the shore this summer but gave no indication when those decisions might be made.

Along Virginia’s coast, a long list of festivals have already been canceled, and the usually bustling Virginia Beach oceanfront sits quiet and empty.

The now-scrapped Something in the Water music festival, organized by musician and producer Pharrell Williams, should have wrapped up Sunday. Late May’s Patriotic Festival, which celebrates the military community, has also been called off.

“It’s surreal and sobering,” said Mike Standing, 50, a Virginia Beach restaurateur and hotel owner. “Our losses will probably take five years to regain.”

Some destinations are taking measures themselves to manage the risks.

At Tony Gore’s Smoky Mountain BBQ & Grill in Sevierville, Tennessee, which opened to dine-in guests Monday, each diner faced the same infrared thermometer gun required of the employees clad in masks and gloves.

“You’ve gotta start somewhere, is the way I look at it,” said Keith Carter, the restaurant’s general manager. “You’ve gotta start getting the business back and start getting the economy headed back in the right direction.”

Tennessee officials, who allowed restaurants to reopen in 89 of the state’s 95 counties starting Monday, have said they are discouraging travelers from out of state and have yet to release guidelines for tourist attractions, such as Dolly Parton’s Dollywood theme park in Pigeon Forge where hundreds of furloughed employees are waiting to get back to work.

Cities and towns across the country also are sorting out what the pandemic will mean for municipal pools, beaches and summer camps.

Can the virus be spread in chlorinated pools? Will day-campers have to remain 6 feet apart while playing? New Haven, Connecticut, Mayor Justin Elicker said he and his staff are working on getting answers — but it’s not easy.

“If businesses open, then parents or guardians will have to work,” Elicker said Monday. “So, we want to be able, as much as we can, to provide opportunities for care and meaningful activities for young people. The challenge is how to do that while at the same time ensuring the safety of the young people.”

Children appear to be among the least affected by the virus, but experts warn that people of all ages can likely play a role in transmitting it. For most, the virus causes mild or moderate symptoms. For some, especially older adults and people with health problems, it can cause more severe illness and lead to death.

In Southern California, the Orange County Fair was canceled Monday for the first time since World War II. Last year, the summer staple drew nearly 1.4 million visitors for its livestock shows, carnival rides, fried food and big-name concerts.

“This is the worst news, just devastating,” chef Linda Johnsen said. Since 2013 Johnsen has owned Filomena’s Italian Kitchen and Market in Costa Mesa, a few blocks from the fairgrounds. She estimated that her revenue jumps between 40% and 60% during the three-week exhibition.

Chuck Rage owns a hotel and a resort in Hampton, New Hampshire, and leases out several businesses on the beach. All his businesses are shuttered due to the state’s stay-at-home order, but he’s hopeful a summer season can be salvaged, even if it’s a bad one.

The one thing that isn’t missing is pent up demand, Rage said.

“I have gotten phone call after phone call,” Rage said. “All my regulars that come every year: ‘I need my Hampton Beach time. I need to come to Hampton Beach. I am sick of being in this house.’”

8 Non-Profits Receive Relief Thanks to Pocono Mountains United Way

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Eight non-profits in Monroe County can continue serving our community through the COVID-19 pandemic thanks to financial assistance from the Crisis Response Fund. Local businesses, foundations and individuals have graciously contributed $166,324 since Pocono Mountains United Way established the fund last month. A special committee, chaired by Pocono Mountains Visitors Bureau President/CEO Chris Barrett, decides which organizations will receive a one-time grant. So far, $36,920 has been distributed to the following non-profits:

 

1) East Stroudsburg University Emergency Response Fund – $5,000

– For ESU students who are struggling to move to online learning and need WiFi hot spots, electronic keys and textbooks. Due to loss of employment, many students need financial support for transportation, rent, necessary medications, and food.

 

2) The East Stroudsburg Salvation Army – $10,000

– For non-congregate sheltering and emergency food for five homeless individuals to be moved into temporary shelter motel rooms through at least April 30, 2020, followed by transition into the Salvation Army’s Emergency Shelter facility on Washington Street. Funding also supports food pantry purchases.

 

3) Feeding Families Ministry Inc. – $2,000

– For gas, extra food pickups, masks, gloves, and food purchases through Second Harvest Food Bank.

 

4) Monroe County Meals on Wheels – $2,120

– For shelf-stable meal items and to purchase approximately 400 frozen meals to be provided to homebound individuals who would not normally qualify but are temporarily homebound.

 

5) Stroudsburg Wesleyan Church – $5,000

– For food pantry operations which have increased to 14-16 days per month. Funds will be utilized to purchase food for distribution, and to begin home delivery of food to those who are elderly/shut-in or unable to come and receive food. The pantry distributes approximately 5,000 lbs of food per week, serving 300-400 families.

 

6) Family Service Association of Northeastern Pennsylvania – $5,000

– For increased call volume from Monroe County residents to provide information and referral services to callers presenting with needs for food, rent assistance, utilities assistance, and information related to COVID-19.

 

7) Northampton Community College Foundation – $5,000

– For the Spartan Aid Fund to support Monroe Campus students by providing emergency relief in the form of technology, food, utilities, or other resources that support student progress toward their degrees and certificates.

 

8) Women’s Resources of Monroe County – $2,800

– For costs associated with installing and upgrading internet WiFi in shelter for children to do schoolwork and for additional food expenses for residents.

 

Click here to learn more about the Crisis Response Fund or donate. Pocono Mountains United Way commits that 100% of donated funds will be used to support crisis response efforts with 0% overhead fees assessed by United Way or the recipient organizations.

 

 

Questions over Kim’s health highlight intelligence limits

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By KIM TONG-HYUNG (AP)

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s prolonged public absence has led to rumors of ill health and worries about how it could influence the future of what one analyst calls Northeast Asia’s “Achilles’ heel,” a reference to the North’s belligerence and unpredictable nature.

But there’s a basic question debated by the media and government intelligence services: Are the rumors even true?

The exact state of Kim’s health matters because it could determine the stability of the dynastic government in Pyongyang and the security of nuclear weapons that the nation has repeatedly threatened to use on its neighbors and the United States.

It’s a problem that outside nations have faced for decades. Gathering intelligence on perhaps the world’s most secretive, suspicious and difficult-to-read country is incredibly difficult. And there’s probably nothing North Korea guards more closely than information on Kim’s health, which is only likely shared among a small portion of the elite, including his powerful sister, Kim Yo Jong.

At the heart of the intelligence shortcomings about North Korea is its extremely closed nature. But there is also plenty of blame leveled in South Korea at efforts there.

Supporters of South Korea’s liberal government, which remains eager for inter-Korean engagement, lament the previous decade of conservative rule, when exchanges between diplomats, government and business leaders, aid groups and others stopped under hard-line policies toward North Korea’s nuclear ambitions. This, they say, deprived spies of high-quality information sources.

Conservatives, meanwhile, blame liberals for supposedly downsizing espionage operations while pursuing inter-Korean rapprochement. They say such networks have been difficult to rebuild.

South Korea’s government has repeatedly played down unconfirmed media reports that Kim is in fragile health following heart surgery, saying it has detected no unusual activity in North Korea or any emergency preparation by its ruling Workers’ Party, military and Cabinet. Without specifying its sources, South Korea’s presidential office said it believes Kim is handling state affairs normally at an unspecified site outside the capital, Pyongyang.

U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters Monday that he has a “very good idea” about Kim’s health but couldn’t talk about it and wished him well.

“I do know how he’s doing, relatively speaking,” Trump said at the White House. “You’ll probably be hearing in the not-too-distant future.”

Some experts say South Korea, as well as its regional neighbors and ally Washington, must begin preparing for high-level instability that could come if Kim is sidelined by health problems or even dies. That could include North Korean refugees flooding South Korea or China or military hard-liners letting loose nuclear weapons.

Planning for those are worst-case scenarios is crucial because nobody knows for sure what’s happening, said Nam Sung-wook, a North Korea expert at Seoul’s Korea University who termed the situation the “Achilles’ heel of international politics in Northeast Asia.”

“He could very well be OK and reappear in North Korean state media again, but considering his weight and worsening shape, the risks linked to his health will sharply increase as he gets older,” said Nam, a former director of a think tank affiliated with South Korea’s main spy agency.

Kim is overweight, reportedly smokes heavily and has other health problems.

Questions about Kim’s health have been raised since he missed the birthday celebration of his late grandfather and state founder Kim Il Sung on April 15, the country’s most important holiday.

Kim, who is in his mid-30s, was last seen in public on April 11, when he presided over a meeting discussing coronavirus prevention and electing his sister as an alternate member of the political bureau of the ruling Workers’ Party. State media have since reported that he sent greetings to Syrian President Bashar Assad, Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa.

On Monday, the official Rodong Sinmun newspaper said Kim sent a message of gratitude to workers building tourist facilities in the coastal town of Wonsan, which is where some speculate he is staying. No photos of him were published.

South Korean intelligence and North Korean state media reports suggest that Kim could have suffered some sort of medical setback but likely not a life-threatening one, said Du Hyeogn Cha, a senior researcher at Seoul’s Asan Institute for Policy Studies.

The root problem may be the shaky nature of South Korean intelligence.

“Even after decades of work, South Korea has yet to build a reliable intelligence network to gather information on the North,” said Cha, an ex-intelligence secretary to former South Korean President Lee Myung-bak. “It’s clear our government has some level of information on the North, but not enough to make a confident statement about where he is and whether he’s fully healthy.”

Finding out is important because incapacity at the top could lead to bogged-down decision-making that could boost the hard-liners who emerged following the collapse of Kim’s second summit with Trump in February last year. The Americans at that summit rejected North Korean demands for major sanctions relief in exchange for a partial surrender of the North’s nuclear capabilities.

The National Intelligence Service, Seoul’s spy agency, has said it can’t confirm whether Kim had surgery. If Kim emerges well in state media, he would join past North Korean officials who were incorrectly reported incapacitated by outside media.

“Kim Il Sung shot dead” remains perhaps the most famous newspaper headline in South Korean history. The 1986 Chosun Ilbo story was initially backed by a South Korean military statement that North Korea had announced the demise of its founder over loudspeakers at the mine-strewn border between the rival nations. But hours later, Kim Il Sung appeared at Pyongyang’s airport to greet a Mongolian delegation.

Another big problem is that for decades South Korea didn’t have a strong grip on the location and health of North Korea’s top leadership, according to Cheon Seong Whun, a presidential secretary during the South’s previous conservative government.

“Anybody who says they know something for certain is just writing a novel,” Cheon said.

Supreme Court Dismisses Challenge to New York Gun Law

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FILE - In this March 16, 2020, file photo, a tree blooms outside the Supreme Court in Washington. The Supreme Court ruled Thursday, April 23, that sewage plants and other industries cannot avoid environmental requirements under landmark clean-water protections when they send dirty water on an indirect route to rivers, oceans and other navigable waterways. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)

The Supreme Court on Monday refused to hear a challenge to a New York City law restricting the rights of handgun owners to carry their weapons outside the home.

The 6-3 decision sends the case back to the lower courts — a move that pleases gun control advocates who were afraid that the conservative-majority court would rule against them.

The case centered on the New York City gun licenses that let handgun owners carry their locked and unloaded weapons only from their homes to several shooting ranges within city limits.

Attorneys for the city argued that the law was a matter of public safety and did not infringe on the Second Amendment right to bear arms.

A group of gun owners, backed by Trump administration lawyers, challenged the law, arguing that it was too restrictive.

But after the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case, New York amended the law to allow people to carry their guns to places outside the city, including second homes, gun clubs, target shooting ranges and where hunting is allowed.

The court decided not to hear the case Monday, saying the changes to the law makes the challenge moot, and sent it back to the lower court for any further challenges and arguments.

Three conservative justices — Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Clarence Thomas — dissented.

“Petitioners got most, but not all, of the prospective relief they wanted,” Alito wrote, saying gun owners can still seek damages.

Gun control advocates are pleased the court decided not to rule on the case.

“Today’s decision rejects the NRA’s invitation to use a moot case to enact its extreme agenda aimed at gutting gun safety laws supported by a majority of Americans,” said Hannah Shearer, litigation director at the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

But the National Rifle Association, the country’s premier gun rights group, said the court Monday accepted what the NRA calls New York City’s “surrender” and admission of wrongdoing. It calls on the city to reimburse the plaintiffs’ legal fees.

Affordable Care Act ruling

In another case, the court ruled 8-1 Monday in favor of health insurance companies seeking $12 billion from provisions in the Affordable Care Act, or “Obamacare,” that allows them to collect losses incurred by offering coverage to uninsured Americans.

The court threw out a lower court decision that ruled Congress had suspended the payment provision.

Writing for the majority, Justice Sonia Sotomayor said denying payment to the insurance companies would be a “bait and switch.”

“The government should honor its obligations,” Sotomayor wrote.

Alito was the only dissenter, writing that paying off “has the effect of providing a massive bailout for insurance companies that took a calculated risk and lost.”

The provision that would reimburse insurance companies for losses was in effect under the Affordable Care Act from 2014 until 2016. (VOA News)

Dianne Lob & HIAS Are Wrong for CPMJO Leadership

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Just like leaves falling down in Autumn, the numbers of real, vibrant, forceful, pro-Israel, pro-Jewish survival groups are dropping like flies. They are wilting, dying and rotting. It’s not the traditional Jew hating of others who are responsible for this tragedy, it’s due to the stupidity, cowardice and politicization of these groups. They are no longer proud of their “Jewish” label. They now proudly wave the flag of the Progressives to mollify and ingratiate themselves to the real Jew hating crowd who look at them and chuckle.

 

We’re going to dig into the moral demise of the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations (CPMJO). This group is the umbrella group for 53 Jewish American organizations. Groups including AIPAC, Hadassah, ADL, JWV, ZOA, ORT…. you name the group and its probably a member. And by the way, throw in Americans for Peace Now,  whose membership in the group in 1993  started the root rot. Downhill ever since.

 

The CPMJO recently saw fit to place the crown on Dianne Lob, the former president of HIAS to run unopposed for the position of Chairman of the Exec Board. She will run the show and in no time, we Jews will have lost this major support group. A few years back, The Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA), another huge Jewish umbrella group fell under the domination of J Street, the Far Left supporter of BDS and the radical Progressive Left. The real fighters for our Jewish/Israel survival can now be counted on the fingers of our right hand.

 

This Lob gal served as former chairman of HIAS which once stood for Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society. It was a Jewish group funded by Jews way back in 1881. In 2014 it renamed itself, merely HIAS, dropping any hint of its Jewishness. That identification was an embarrassment to its crowd evidently. But it still recruits Jewish money although it spends all of its time also  taking government bucks to bring into this country Muslims. No Jews; they no longer need any help although they are fleeing Europe in droves and the few left in Iran, Syria and Egypt are surely doomed. But HIAS is heroically bringing in Muslims to the USA by the planeload.

 

Under Ms. Lob’s reign in HIAS, that group allied itself with the Jew hating Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), a branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, Islamic Relief, Jewish Voice for Peace, IfNotNow and other groups pushing the BDS movement. Ms. Lob defended publicly, Linda Sarsour, the Jew hating Democrat political activist who has brazenly called for Israel’s destruction and who allies herself with Louis Farrakhan. If seated to run the CPMJO, Ms. Lob will surely work to transform that group into another ADL, now progressively run by a protege of both George Soros and Barack Obama, Jonathan Greenblatt.

 

Our Jewish defense organizations organized for the past 100+ years to support and defend American Jews and Israel are falling by the wayside. They have been enveloped and transformed by the ever growing Jewish Progressive movement within our own communities. Polls indicate that Jews are no longer interested in Israel, Jewish history, raising children in the faith or even holding sacrosanct traditions such as marriage in the Jewish faith or the commemoration of our holidays. This move by the President’s group is an ominous one. The lack of outrage among the majority of its members says it all. We are in deep trouble.

From left: Conference of Presidents CEO William Daroff, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, executive vice chairman Malcolm Hoenlein and chairman Arthur Stark speaking at the 2020 Conference of Presidents Summit in Jerusalem. Source: Conference of Presidents via Twitter.

Israel’s coronavirus death toll rises to 202; infection rate continues to drop

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Magen David Adom medical team members, wearing protective gear, are handling a Coronavirus test sample at a drive-through site for Coronavirus testing samples collection, in Tel Aviv, on March 22, 2020. Photo by Flash90 *** Local Caption *** ?????? ????? ????? ??? ??? ???? ???? ????? ???? ????? ??? ???? ????? ?????? ?????

Israel’s coronavirus death toll reached 202 on Monday, while the number of confirmed cases hit 15,466, according to the Israeli Health Ministry.

Although the number of fatalities continues to rise, the recovery rate in Israel has now exceeded the number of new diagnoses for the 11th day in a row, according to a Ynet report.

There are 129 COVID-19 patients currently in serious condition, including 96 on ventilators, while 79 are in moderate condition and 8,260 are showing minor symptoms.

A total of 6,796 people have recovered from the virus, while 383 are receiving treatment in hospitals and 5,331 are under home quarantine, according to the report. There are another 1,775 receiving treatment in hotels.

Meanwhile, the country’s education system will reportedly start to open gradually on Sunday, with the first phase seeing kindergartens and day-care centers accepting smaller groups of children on alternate days, according to Arutz Sheva.

Children in first through third grade would be taught five days a week in smaller groups, noted the report.

(JNS)

Israel mourns 23,816 fallen on annual Remembrance Day

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YAAKOV LAPPIN (JNS)

Israel is mourning its 23,816 fallen soldiers as Remembrance Day for Fallen Soldiers and Victims of Terrorism (Yom Hazikaron) is held, for the first time, without visitors at military cemeteries across the country due to restrictions in place during the coronavirus pandemic.

The Defense Ministry’s Families and Commemoration Department said that in the past year, 42 people have been recognized as fallen soldiers. In addition, 33 wounded Israel Defense Forces’ veterans have died as a result of their injuries.

A siren blared out across Israel at 8 p.m. on Monday evening, and a second siren will sound at 11 a.m. on Tuesday morning.

Across 52 military cemeteries located around the country and at the memorial site for fallen Bedouin soldiers in the lower Galilee, the IDF deployed honor guards who stood next to a memorial torch. A senior officer saluted the fallen.

A siren blared out across Israel at 8 p.m. on Monday evening, and a second siren will sound at 11 a.m. on Tuesday morning.

Across 52 military cemeteries located around the country and at the memorial site for fallen Bedouin soldiers in the lower Galilee, the IDF deployed honor guards who stood next to a memorial torch. A senior officer saluted the fallen.

A prayer for the fallen was delivered by IDF Chief Rabbi Eyal Moshe Karim and other senior defense-establishment representatives.

The Defense Ministry’s Families and Commemoration Department placed a flag at half-mast, with a “Remember” ribbon tied around it at the grave of every fallen soldier, as well as flowers and a memorial candle.

The central Remembrance Day ceremony was held at the Western Wall with limitations on number of participants that could attend.

Last week, Defense Minister Naftali Bennett ordered the defense establishment to prepare a different kind of program to mark the day in the shadow of the coronavirus pandemic and its restrictions.

Bennett arranged for a number of IDF soldiers to be stationed in shifts at Mount Herzl National Hall for the Fallen and to read the names of all of the fallen since the establishment of the state.

In a message sent to bereaved families, he stated in recent days, “This is a holy day in the State of Israel, a day in which the entire nation connects with the memory of the fallen. Every year, around a million-and-a-half Israelis gather at the cemeteries during the time that the siren sounds. This mighty participation is testimony to the mutual solidarity that exists in the Israeli public and to the respect the public feels for those who have sacrificed themselves for the country.”

He noted, however, that in the shadow of the corona pandemic, “gathering a million-and-a-half people in the space of a minute, or an hour, represents a real danger to life. Therefore, we are forced this year, with great sorrow, to prevent the public and the families from coming to the cemeteries on Remembrance Day itself,” he said.

In the days preceding Yom Hazikaron, immediate relatives of the fallen were able to visit the cemeteries. Bennett described the decision as “unbearably difficult,” though added that “it is necessary.

New York Pandemic Update From Gov. Cuomo, Numbers Continue to Decline

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  • Mr. Cuomo said on Monday that 337 more people had died of the virus in New York State, while NJ saw an additional 106 deaths
  • The one-day tolls were less than half of what the two states reported at their peaks.
  • The shutdown order will be extended beyond May 15 in many parts of the state, Mr. Cuomo said on Monday.
  • He said the state is still seeing 1,000 new cases per day.
  • “I will extend them in many parts of the state but in some parts of the state, in some regions, you could make the case that we should unpause on May 15,” Cuomo said at his daily briefing from Albany. “But you have to be smart about it. … There is no light switch.”
  • Cuomo said decisions will be made and monitored based on rates of hospitalizations, antibody testing, diagnostic testing and data on infection rates. Regional officials need to be prepared to make sure there are enough workers to trace the contacts of infected people, enough places to isolate infected people and enough hospital capacity, AP summarized
  • He issued a warning to his colleagues who will be overseeing the reopening in the coming weeks: “If you are not smart you will see that infection rate go right back to where it was, right where we were 58 days ago.”
  • He described the reopening as turning a valve. How much to turn the dials will be based on four factors: hospitalization rate, antibody testing, diagnostic testing, rate of transmission.
  • Preliminary results from an antibody survey of New York residents found that 14.9% of the state is positive for Covid-19 antibody. The sample size of the survey was 7,500. Cuomo said the state will test 1,000 NYPD officers and 1,000 FDNY workers for antibodies. He said this is part of the state’s effort to prepare for the virus to return later this year. “Anticipate an issue in the future,” he said, noting that he spoke to Trump this morning.
  • In a radio interview on WAMC later in the day, Mr. Cuomo said he hoped to decide this week whether New York schools would reopen before the end of the school year. He said he would coordinate with Mr. Murphy and Gov. Ned Lamont of Connecticut on the decision, as well as on whether summer school would be held in the three states, NY Times pointed out
  • With over a million New Yorkers out of work because of the virus and the related shutdown, food banks across the state are experiencing huge jumps in demand — as much as 40 percent upstate, 100 percent in New York City and 200 percent in Westchester County, Mr. Cuomo said. He said the state would provide food banks with $25 million in emergency aid.
  • He also noted that some dairy cooperatives upstate were dumping milk because the market could not consume it.“This is just total waste to me,” the governor said. “We have people downstate who need food. We have farmers upstate who can’t sell their product. We have to put those two things together.”  To that end, he said, the state would start an initiative to buy products from upstate farms and direct them to food banks.
  • We have to use this moment to reimagine and be smart and grow,” Cuomo said. “This is one of these moments if you look back in history sometimes it takes a crisis to wake people up.”He closed by praising the leadership of Kentucky governor Andy Beshear, a Democrat in a conservative state who he said “stood up” to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. “It takes guts. You don’t get that from a typical politician,” Cuomo said. “So thank you, Governor.”

Is The W.H.O. A Puppet of China?

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By Lieba Nesis 
On Sunday April 26th House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy referred to the World Health Organization (WHO) as the “Wuhan Health Organization” a term that has raised the ire of numerous Democrats.  President Trump’s decision to withhold funding of $400 million due to the organization’s pro-China bias, with China contributing a measly $40 million to the WHO’s coffers, was widely condemned by the international community.  A closer look at the WHO reveals that they not only turned a blind eye to the dangers of the virus, but deliberately misled the global community in order to protect their staunchest ally-China.
The biggest villain in this dreadfully misinformed scenario-is WHO director Tedros Adhanom.  A late January meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, who backed Tedros’s campaign in 2017,  led Tedros to declare on January 30th “as you know, I was in China just a few days ago, where I met with President Xi Jinping. I left in absolutely no doubt about China’s commitment to transparency and to protecting the world’s people.”  As for Trump’s Wuhan travel ban, Tedros declared on January 31st, it would have “the effect of increasing fear and stigma with little public health benefit” while repeatedly praising China’s transparency and efforts.  These statements were made nearly a month after heroic doctor Li Wenliang was reprimanded for sharing the news of human-to-human transmission.  Dozens who called out the Chinese government for its deceit disappeared under the tyrannical regime that so inspires Tedros.  When questioned about whistleblower Wenliang’s supposed death from coronavirus in February, Tedros remarked, “it is very difficult, given the facts, to say that China was hiding.”
Examining the incipient stages of the disease reveals a massive Chinese cover-up.  The illness which began at the latest in early November, was only acknowledged by China on December 31st.  On January 9th the WHO advised against the application of any travel or trade restrictions on China.  On January 15th two contradictory messages were delivered by the WHO one which said “there is no clear evidence of human-to-human transmission … and no infections among health care workers.”  However, that same day they acknowledged that a man from Japan who hadn’t visited the wet market where the disease had originated, was hospitalized with the virus-thereby, confirming human-to-human transmission.
This was the beginning of dangerous inconsistencies on the part of the WHO who refused to call the disease a global health emergency at meetings on January 22nd and 23rd. Finally relenting with a public health emergency declaration on January 30th Tedros remarked, “the Chinese Government is to be congratulated for the extraordinary measures it has taken to contain the outbreak.”  Tedros waited until March 11th, when more than 118,000 cases had been reported in more than 114 countries to label the disease a pandemic-fearing that up until that point the disease had not yet inflicted enough severe out of control damage to warrant the term.  As late as February 14th Tedros was busy in the Congo discussing the end of the Ebola virus while the world was in major crisis mode due to the exploding virus.  Tedros appeared via video and urged the public to unite with solidarity instead of stigma and again praised China.
One of the staunchest proponents of the Chinese propaganda machine is Dr. Bruce Aylward who co-led the WHO China Joint Coronavirus Mission to Wuhan in February-which had 12 Chinese members as part of the 25-person delegation.  As Assistant Director General of the WHO, Aylward returned from his February trip to Wuhan remarking that the big message from China was that lock down of cities was unnecessary-the exact opposite of China’s actions.   He also allowed Chinese personnel to change his original report which termed the disease a “dangerous pathogen” to  the more benign “new pathogen”.  His partiality towards China was further exposed when he hung up on a Hong Kong reporter who asked if Chinese nemesis, Taiwan, would be allowed membership in the WHO.  His response to a question on February 24th as to whether China censored early data was “I didn’t look.” Finally as late as March 12th Aylward declared in an interview, “travel bans generally aren’t part of the armamentarium you bring to bear on something like this…  What we found as a general principle, a pretty robust principle-is that it doesn’t help to restrict movement.”  The incomprehensibility of this statement after the disease had wreaked global havoc due to porous borders, underlines the organization’s one-sidedness.  The distorted WHO should not only be defunded but declared defunct before thousands more die due to their rampant pro-Chinese bias.

Virus is expected to reduce meat selection and raise prices

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BY DAVID PITT (AP)

Meat isn’t going to disappear from supermarkets because of outbreaks of the coronavirus among workers at U.S. slaughterhouses. But as the meat plants struggle to remain open, consumers could face less selection and slightly higher prices.

Industry leaders acknowledge that the U.S. food chain has rarely been so stressed and that no one is sure about the future, even as they try to dispel concerns about shortages.

On Sunday, the meat processing giant Tyson Foods ran a full-page advertisement in the New York Times and other newspapers outlining the difficulty of producing meat while keeping more than 100,000 workers safe and shutting some plants.

“This means one thing — the food supply chain is vulnerable,” the statement said. “As pork, beef and chicken plants are being forced to close, even for short periods of time, millions of pounds of meat will disappear from the supply chain.”

Company spokesman Gary Mickelson said the Tyson family thought it was important to explain their perspective.

“The letter encourages government leaders to unite to address food supply chain challenges,” Mickelson said. “We are taking a proactive approach to balance safety and production by moving aggressively with testing and plant closures when necessary.”

COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, has infected hundreds of workers at meat-processing plants and forced some of the largest to close and others to slow production. While the output at beef and poultry plants has diminished, pork plants in the Midwest have been hit especially hard. The viral outbreaks have persisted despite efforts by the meat companies to keep workers at home with pay if they become sick.

The 15 largest pork-packing plants account for 60 percent of all pork processed, so when even one of those plants closes for days or weeks, the consequences ripple across the industry. That has become abundantly clear with two of the nation’s biggest plants now closed: Tyson suspended operations at its plant in Waterloo, Iowa. And Smithfield Foods halted production at its plant in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Each plant can butcher nearly 20,000 hogs a day. Some plants have reopened days after cleaning.

The result is that the nation’s pork processing capacity had declined by about 25% as of last week, said Steve Meyer, an industry economist with Kerns and Associates in Ames, Iowa.

Sarah Little, a spokeswoman for the North American Meat Institute, an industry trade group, said: “It’s down across the board right now, so the next couple of weeks we should see how the system works. It’s never been tested like this before.”

Nationally, although the reduced meat supply is expected to cause consumer prices to rise, expectations are that the increases will be slight. The U.S. Department of Agriculture said late last week that it expects beef prices to climb 1% to 2% this year, poultry as much as 1.5% and pork between by from 2% and 3%.

The agency acknowledged that consumer buying patterns change weekly and that some products face supply-chain disruptions that could affect prices. But the USDA said its planned $3 billion purchase of fresh produce, dairy and meat should help stabilize prices. The government will work with food distributors to provide the purchased products to food banks, community and faith-based organizations and other nonprofits serving the needy.

The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union, which represents 1.3 million food and retail workers, said last week that 13 U.S. food-processing and meatpacking union workers in the U.S. have died and that an estimated 5,000 are sick or have been exposed to the virus while working near someone who tested positive.

Marc Perrone, the union president, said 13 plants in Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Pennsylvania, South Dakota and Wisconsin and Alberta, Canada, have been closed at least temporarily because of the pandemic. Those union plants represent about 10 percent of beef production and 25 percent of pork production, the union said.

The union is urging state and federal officials to ensure that workers have access to protective equipment, mandate social distancing at work and halt federal waivers that allow faster line speeds.

Many employees of the meatpacking plants fear going to work, said Margarita Heredia, who has worked at the JBS pork processing plant in Marshalltown, Iowa, for 11 years. She joined a UFCW union call with reporters to discuss the pandemic’s effects on workers.

Heredia credited the company with improving sanitation, including treating hallways and common areas with bleach and placing hand sanitizer stations around the plant. JBS also now takes workers’ temperatures and encourages those who are sick to stay home. But she said the company increased pay by $4 an hour from April 20 through May as an incentive for healthy employees to go to work.

“Even then, we’re still shorthanded, but we are trying to do our best,” she said.

The national slowdown in meat processing has surfaced in federal statistics. The daily cattle slaughter for the week of April 13 fell nearly 24 percent from the same period a year ago. Pig slaughter was down 13 percent. And given the most recent plant closures, those figures have likely fallen further.

So far, the meat-processing industry has been able to shift production to open plants to keep a stream of meat moving through the supply chain, said Little, of the meat institute. Some plants that closed have reopened after deep cleanings.

“When one plant goes off-line, the others in the region can try and pick up the slack,” Little said.

The situation would be more dire if not for record amounts of meat in cold storage, though much of the meat was intended for restaurants that now are largely closed.

The USDA last week reported 921 million pounds of chicken in storage and 467 million pounds of boneless beef, including hamburger, roasts and steaks. Before much of that meat could be sold at markets, it would need to be repackaged because restaurants buy in greater bulk than individuals. Some of the meat would need to be cut by grocery store meat cutters and packaged for customers to take home.

In late March, the USDA eased restrictions to allow for meat that had been intended for commercial food use to be diverted into the grocery store channels for consumers The industry sought these changes in mid-March after brief meat shortages caused by the coronavirus panic sent people scurrying to grocery stores.

Industry reports indicate that fresh pork purchases surged 102 percent for the week ending March 22 compared with the same period a year earlier. Beef sales were up 91 percent. Chicken purchases grew by about 71 percent earlier in March before slowing. Still, chicken, pork and beef purchases are still about 30 percent above year ago levels in recent reports.

“By and large, there’s been enough food,” said Jayson Lusk, an economist at Purdue University. “You might not get your exact variety that you want or the exact type you want, but there’s been food available if you have the money to buy it “

NY Mandate Requiring Nursing Homes to Accept Recovering COVID Patients Was a Huge Mistake

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by Jared Evan 

New York state mandate requiring nursing homes to accept those recovering from COVID-19, even if they still might be contagious, may have been a major contributor of senior deaths in nursing homes.

The NY Post reported that: city nursing homes ravaged by the coronavirus were warned about disturbing patterns of unsanitary behavior long before the deadly outbreak, The Post has found.

It would seem clear that even before the coronavirus pandemic nursing homes in NY have had major issues.

The Post review of nursing home inspection reports from the state Health Department show 13 facilities with at least 10 coronavirus deaths as of Wednesday were cited for a total of 18 infection-control failures since March 2016.

The infractions were as recent as Jan. 31 at Terence Cardinal Cooke Health Care Center in East Harlem, where 20 have died. The New Jewish Home on the Upper West Side, where 24 have perished, had the most violations of the sample, with three.

In total, 413 residents of those 13 homes have succumbed to the virus, among more than 2,000 citywide — a scourge Gov. Cuomo has declared a “feeding frenzy.”

So it would seem the State was quite aware of the conditions with nursing homes based on these inspections , but they went ahead anyway by forcing these facilities to take more patients with COVID, facilities without the most sanitary conditions, creating a breeding ground for disease.

Three states hit hard by the pandemic — New York, New Jersey and California — have ordered nursing homes and other long-term care facilities to accept coronavirus patients discharged from hospitals. The policy, intended to help clear in-demand hospital beds for sicker patients, has prompted sharp criticism from the nursing home industry, staff members and concerned families, as well as some leading public health experts, NBC reported.

As it turned out, there was no actual need to force nursing homes to take patients with corona. Nursing homes are not hospitals.  They were being forced to keep recovering coronavirus patients to clear the way for extra bed space in hospitals which were never needed.

Clearly this was a decision based on franticity, not logic.  Most of the predictive models were wrong as to the extent of the corona virus, while NYC has seen around 13,000 deaths and 160K cases, these numbers were nowhere near the models government used to make decisions such as the nursing home debacle. There is no hospital space shortage, the Navy Comfort ship left NYC, because those extra beds were not needed.

“Nursing homes are working so hard to keep the virus out, and now we’re going to be introducing new COVID-positive patients?”  David Grabowski, a professor of health policy at Harvard Medical School., told NBC news, he believes that states should create COVID-only facilities for recovering patients discharged from hospitals.

“The existing places that can really do this safely in terms of staffing and building space to keep them separate are in the minority,” he added.

In NY State, Governor Cuomo is playing the blame game. He is committed to running an investigation into NY nursing homes & shifted the blame to the facilities as opposed to the government.

At his Sunday press conference Cuomo insisted that nursing homes could transfer those ill with the virus to another facility if the centers lacked such things as quarantine space, proper protective equipment and staff.

Asked by a reporter at his daily briefing Sunday if there was anything contradictory about his statements, the governor replied, “No.”

“A nursing home can only provide care for a patient who they believe they can provide adequate care for,’’ Cuomo said. “If they cannot provide adequate care for a patient, they must transfer that patient.”

Cuomo’s response contradicts what is actually happening. The CEO of a hard-hit Brooklyn nursing home, where 55 patients have died from the coronavirus, told The Post last week that he had been warning state Health Department officials for weeks he had staffing and equipment issues — yet received little help.  He made requests for patients to be removed but was denied.

In other words, nursing homes had to take recovering covid-19 patients, risking infection of their existing population of seniors and later request to transfer them? One must wonder if this scandal will quickly vanish in the pages and airwaves of NY media. Cuomo is a Democrat and is the hero in the media narrative, and when you are picked the Democratic party hero, scandals such as a deadly disease spread to our state’s seniors tend to vanish.

 

 

 

 

 

What You Need to Know today About the virus Outbreak

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A.P

Shrieks of joy ring out on the streets of Spain as children are allowed to leave their homes briefly for the first time in six weeks. The country has the second-highest number of confirmed infections behind the United States.

As Italy prepares to emerge from the West’s first and most extensive coronavirus lockdown, it is increasingly clear that something went terribly wrong in Lombardy, the hardest-hit region in Europe’s hardest-hit country.

The billions of dollars in coronavirus relief targeted at small businesses may not prevent many of them from ending up in bankruptcy court.

Church services are resuming in certain states, including Montana, where a general stay-at-home order is expiring.

With limited supplies of coronavirus tests available, the Pentagon is focusing first on testing those performing duties deemed most vital to national security.

 During the pandemic, Detroit — the nation’s largest majority black U.S. city — is grieving collectively.

— A few states may have found a way to help slow the spread of the coronavirus in nursing homes by converting some of them into “recovery centers” set aside mostly for residents who have left the hospital but still might be contagious or lack immunity.

— British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is returning to work after recovering from a coronavirus infection that put him in intensive care, with his government facing growing criticism over the deaths and disruption the virus has caused.

— The U.S. Census Bureau needs more time to wrap up the once-a-decade count because of the coronavirus, opening the possibility of delays in the drawing of new legislative districts.

— New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo says the 367 deaths from the coronavirus reported Sunday are less than half the nearly 800 deaths that occurred in a single day during the pandemic’s peak in the state. It is the first time this month that the statewide daily death toll has been below 400.

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WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:

For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia. The vast majority of people recover.

Here are the symptoms of the virus compared with the common flu.

One of the best ways to prevent the spread of the virus is to wash one’s hands with soap and water. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends first washing with warm or cold water and then lathering soap for 20 seconds to get it on the backs of hands, between fingers and under fingernails before rinsing off.

Phones should also be washed. Here’s how.

TRACKING THE VIRUS: Drill down and zoom in at the individual county level, and you can access numbers that will show you the situation where you are, and where loved ones or people you’re worried about live.

Missouri Becomes First State to sue Chinese Communist Regime for Pandemic

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Photo Credit: welcometochina.com.au

By   (Washington Free Beacon)

Missouri attorney general Eric Schmitt is “confident” he will secure damages from the Chinese government for its responsibility in unleashing the coronavirus pandemic.

While congressional Republicans have floated legislation to allow American citizens to sue China for mishandling the coronavirus, Schmitt on Tuesday made Missouri the first state to file a lawsuit against the communist nation. The suit says the Chinese government must be held liable for the “enormous loss of life, human suffering, and economic turmoil” brought on by the deadly disease. Schmitt estimates that the virus has caused tens of billions of dollars in economic damage in the Show-Me State alone.

“The fact is, by the cover-up, by the deception, by the lies, by the silencing of whistleblowers, by the hoarding of protective equipment, by not informing the world about how deadly the virus would be, a pandemic was unleashed on the world,” Schmitt said in an interview with the Washington Free Beacon. “All of that certainly points to the Chinese government for its malfeasance, and we want to hold them accountable for that.”

Schmitt’s lawsuit identifies multiple defendants, including the Chinese Communist Party, the nation’s health and emergency ministries, provincial and city governments in Hubei and Wuhan, and the Wuhan Institute of Virology, a superlab which some U.S. officials suspect played a role in the outbreak. The suit outlines an array of facts highlighting China’s abuses in the early stages of the outbreak that resulted in an “unnecessary and preventable” pandemic.

“During the critical weeks of the initial outbreak, Chinese authorities deceived the public, suppressed crucial information, arrested whistleblowers, denied human-to-human transmission in the face of mounting evidence, destroyed critical medical research, permitted millions of people to be exposed to the virus, and even hoarded personal protective equipment,” the suit says.

The Republican AG expressed confidence in the suit’s legal merit, saying he expects other states to launch similar efforts in the near future.

“We feel confident in our legal case and think that other states are probably going to follow suit,” he told the Free Beacon.

While Missouri has not been hit as hard by the virus as some of the urban epicenters of the pandemic in the United States, the state ranks among the top half in coronavirus cases, according to the CDC. More than 6,000 Missouri residents have been diagnosed with the disease, which emerged in China in December. Schmitt said that those responsible for the outbreak must compensate victims of the virus and the “tremendous” economic devastation brought on by public shutdowns.

I represent 6 million Missourians. We’ve got over 6,000 cases now, over 200 deaths. It’s a tremendous impact,” Schmitt said. “The human toll of people losing loved ones, not being able to visit family suffering from the virus, [and] not attending funerals. That’s not even mentioning the economic impact. People living paycheck to paycheck can’t feed their families now. All because the Chinese government lied about this.”

China could typically claim immunity from the lawsuit under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, which inhibits the ability to sue sovereign nations in U.S. courts. Schmitt said that blanket immunity should not apply, pointing to the exemptions made for commercial activities. The law states in part that a foreign actor may lose its immunity by partaking in commercial activity outside of America that has a “direct effect” in the United States. The regime’s behavior in suppressing the existence of the disease, as well as hoarding medical equipment made by American companies in China, forfeited those legal protections.

“We’re essentially claiming a public nuisance,” Schmitt said. “In our complaint, we allege that by being engaged in the hoarding of protective equipment, by being engaged in running hospitals, by being engaged in running the virology lab, China is pulled out of the normal protection that they may be able to claim.”

Schmitt has taken further steps to advance the suit past immunity claims. The lawsuit names non-state actors as defendants, which could limit China’s ability to claim sovereignty.

“One thing that’s unique about our lawsuit is that we also name non-state actors, in addition to the Communist Party,” Schmitt said. “The assertion there is that the Chinese government is running everything anyway, so they don’t get to claim immunity because they have a non-state actor in charge of the actions or inactions that led to these damages that we’re asserting.”

Sen. Tom Cotton (R., Ark.) and Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R., Texas) introduced legislation in April to create a new exception specifically related to damages caused by China’s pandemic response. Schmitt said the merits of his suit should suffice even if the bill is not passed.

“I think our complaint is strong,” he said.

The case was filed in U.S District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri on Tuesday.