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Month: March 2020

They sat silent while Trump lied to the public about the pandemic

Oh look, a top Republican was very well aware of what we were facing weeks ago and just kept fluffing Trump and carrying the party line anyway:

John Amato at Crooks and Liars:

It’s time for another House investigation.

NPR obtained a secret recording from a luncheon that the chairman of the Senate intelligence committee Sen. Richard Burr attended. On February 27 as Trump was lying to the American people about the coronavirus, NPR reports that Burr issued dire warnings to these very wealthy attendees.

“There’s one thing that I can tell you about this: It is much more aggressive in its transmission than anything that we have seen in recent history,” he said, according to a secret recording of the remarks obtained by NPR. “It is probably more akin to the 1918 pandemic.”

Yet publicly Sen. Burr remained much more muted.

Was this at the behest of Donald Trump?

If not then Sen. Burr should be held accountable for not publicly forcing the White House to take aggressive action immediately if he considered it is destructive as the 1918 Spanish flu.

Reporter Tim mack covered the story on NPR’s Morning Edition.

“There will be, I’m sure, times that communities, probably some in North Carolina, have a transmission rate where they say, let’s close schools for two weeks, everybody stay home,” he said.

Tim Mack was asked what Burr said to the public after making these statements in North Carolina and he responded, “Nowhere in press statements or other remarks did Sen. Burr provide warnings about how bad he worried coronavirus would become.”

[…]

On the same day Burr remarkably was candid to his own constituents Donald Trump was telling America a completely different tune.

Trump said, “It’s going to disappear. One day, It’s like a miracle. It will disappear,” It could get worse before it gets better. It could maybe go away. We’ll see what happens.”

The Republican Party’s cowardice and irresponsibility in the face of the Donald Trump threat has reached a new level of danger to the nation.

If you wondered where Dr.Trump is getting his scientific information

This clip from night before last is worth watching if you have the time. But fast forward to about 7:30 to see where the conversation turns to the “exciting” new treatment Trump went on and on about this morning:

Ingraham brings up the exciting new possibility of using hydroxychloroquine to treat the virus. Here’s how it went:

Fauci: We have to be careful, Laura that we don’t assume something works based on an anecdotal report that’s not controlled. And I refer specifically to hydroxychloroquine. There’s a lot of buzz out there, on the internet and social media, about that …

Ingraham: Well, there have been studies on that though…

Fauci: Those studies were not all controlled. What we’re going to do, Secretary Azar, the secretary of HHS, has asked me at NIH, Bob Redfield at CDC, Steve Hahn at FDA, to take a look at all the data and analyze the best way forward. more clinical trials or not, we’ll see. But we’re going to look at the data very seriously.

They are all forced to cater to the imbecile even in this time of crisis because he gets his information from Fox News.

This is not something the scientists are specifically excited about. It’s something that the right-wing fever swamp has been pushing out on Fox and which Trump has directed the scientists to focus on. Clearly, the order came from Trump to Azar to Fauci and the rest.

You’ll notice that Fauci and Redfield are no longer featured in the press conferences. Today he had Stephen Hahn of the FDA up there and he dutifully praised the president and called him “sir” but he wasn’t quite as optimistic as Trump clearly wanted him to be. I wonder if he’ll be back. In fact, the crowd at the dais is noticeably thinner which is a good thing considering the admonitions about social distancing. Unfortunately, it means he talks more and that’s not good. I can’t believe I’m saying this, but I miss Mike Pence. He may be a liar and a sycophant but at least he doesn’t spend most of the time blaming others and ragging on the press. It’s over more quickly if nothing else.

Now, it’s the Morning Trump Show, almost as good as a Trump rally.

Dr. Trump is in the house

Highlights of the atrocity:

He is clearly trying to blame the Governors for his failures. Of course, he is. The rest of the conference was basically him being a snotty bitch.

It’s so bad that the media needs to pull the plug on these conferences as long as this deranged imbecile is running them. They are making things exponentially worse.

Meanwhile, Jared’s got his own response team going, so you can feel confident that everything’s going well:

Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law and a senior adviser, has created his own team of government allies and private industry representatives to work alongside the administration’s official coronavirus task force, adding another layer of confusion and conflicting signals within the White House’s disjointed response to the crisis.

Kushner, who joined the administration’s coronavirus efforts last week, is primarily focused on attempting to set up drive-through testing sites with the help of technology and retail executives, as well as experts in health-care delivery. The goal, officials familiar with the work said, is to have limited testing in a handful of cities running by Friday and to expand the project from there.Trump, White House coronavirus task force briefing in 2 minutesPresident Trump and the coronavirus task force discussed on March 18 the administration’s ongoing efforts to deal with the growing health crisis.

But Kushner’s team is causing confusion among many officials involved in the response, who say they are unsure who is in charge given Kushner’s dual role as senior adviser and Trump family member. Some have privately dubbed his team a “shadow task force” whose requests they interpret as orders they must balance with regular response efforts.

Some members of Kushner’s team are working out of offices on the seventh floor of Health and Human Services headquarters — one floor above the office of HHS secretary Alex Azar — while others are working out of an office in the West Wing of the White House, officials said.

They include representatives of companies such as UPS, FedEx and Flatiron Health, as well as Kushner allies inside the government such as Brad Smith, director of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation.

Two senior officials said some government officials have become increasingly confused as they have received emails from private industry employees on Kushner’s team and have been on conference calls with them, unsure what their exact role is in the government response. Several people involved in the response said the involvement of outside advisers — who are emailing large groups of government employees from private email addresses — also raises legitimate security concerns about whether these advisers are following proper government protocols.

“We don’t know who these people are,” one senior official said. “Who is this? We’re all getting these emails.”

Kushner defended his role in an interview, saying his team’s goal was to bring “an entrepreneurial approach” to the crisis.

“We’re getting things done in record speeds and are doing everything possible to avoid damage and mitigate the negative impacts,” Kushner said. “In America, some of our best resources are in our private sector. The federal government is not designed to solve all our problems; a lot of the muscle is in the private sector and there’s also a lot of smart people.”

And Deborah Birx shreds even more of her credibility by taking time to spout this garbage:

Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, also praised Kushner’s ability to enlist companies and individuals outside government to help in the response.

“The White House recognizes many solutions we will need today and tomorrow to combat this virus reside in the private sector and Jared has been essential in bringing those insights to critical discussions,” she wrote in an email.

But Kushner operates from a nearly untouchable perch within the White House hierarchy, which has worried some officials. Some aides say that regardless of the official organization chart, they know that Kushner can walk into the Oval Office when he wants or call the president late at night, allowing him a final private word after the routine meetings have ended.

Here’s an example of the kind of corporate babble Jared is deploying in this crisis:

“The government is designed to do certain things in certain ways, but this is not a usual circumstance,” Kushner said. “I’m just trying to establish a faster decision cadence, so we can empower them to isolate the problems, agree on the proposed solutions and then empower the proper government department to move quickly.”

God help us.

There have been growing pains within the West Wing and agencies as Kushner largely oversees testing and Pence’s team runs broader aspects of the response, including public relations, public-health guidelines to mitigate the spread of the virus and emergency preparedness to ensure states have the resources they need.

Some officials involved in the coronavirus efforts said they do not know who is in charge and whether Pence’s team has been sidelined. Three senior officials involved in the response said Kushner was generally letting the task force know what he was doing, but that they did not know precisely what he was working on. Kushner regularly briefs the president separately from the rest of the task force, one official said.

I am terrified.

What’s this smoke blowing up my ass?

Trump’s Coronavirus Calendar via The Recount.

Plum Line’s Greg Sargent made a plea Wednesday not to let President “I don’t take responsibility at all” rewrite history before our eyes.

Each day, there is another coronavirus briefing starring Donald Trump. Each day, his team claims progress. Trump claims credit. Nothing much happens. Each day, there is more smoke blown up the national ass. Each day, more people fall sick and die with many, many more on the way.

Birx: “What has been exciting to me … is to see this administration harness the full capacity of the private sector.”

The New York Times reported Tuesday that as requests for help pour into the White House, too little is happening weeks after the pandemic crisis began unfolding here, months after it was clearly on its way. Federal agencies and their combined resources remain sidelined over eight weeks into the crisis:

Even after Mr. Trump committed to supporting the states on Tuesday, the Army Corps of Engineers said it still had not received direction from the administration.

“We need the federal government to play its role,” Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York said Monday. “The federal government has tremendous capacity.”

Much of that capacity is untapped. Hospital ships are at port. The Department of Veterans Affairs, legally designated as the backup health care system in national emergencies, awaits requests for help. The veterans department has a surplus of beds in many of its 172 hospital centers and a robust number of special rooms for patients with breathing disorders.

The sprawling system of emergency doctors and nurses ready to be deployed by the Department of Health and Human Services — known as the National Disaster Medical System — is also still waiting for orders, other than to staff locations where passengers offloaded from cruise ships are being quarantined.

The real heroes are in the hospitals and in the states, governors struggling to fill the leadership vacuum at the top. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown told reporters last Friday the federal response has been completely inadequate.

“We’ve been contacting this administration every single day since [March 3],” she said, “and we have received nothing. Zip. Zero. Nothing from them.”

Sargent adds, “Trump will not take responsibility for whatever we learn about his government’s failures, no matter how bad they are established to be.” He is actively prioritizing his reelection over saving American lives. Any efforts “to reconstruct the actual story, or inform the public about it, or impose accountability for it must be entirely discredited.”

Trump’s first impulse is to treat the pandemic as a public relations problem.

Political scientist Max Skidmore literally wrote the book on presidential responses to pandemics. Skidmore tells Sargent Trump’s dismissal of the disease’s seriousness and his dissemination of disinformation will cost lives:

“We have seen presidents who refused to learn from the past,” Skidmore said. “But one great danger of the Trump presidency is that he’s uninterested in performance as long as he can create the image that he’s been successful. Actual success is irrelevant to him. The image of success is what’s important.”

Timelines exist and video that document the truth. Barry Rubin (@barubin) of The Bulwark has been compiling a greatest hits reel of Trump’s changing story.

Jamie Carter (@JCTheResistance) supplies more from others keeping score:

And so on.

For all the public-private partnership cheerleading in each day’s briefing, out in the field the private sector appears not to be the solution to our problem. For some, it is the problem.

● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

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QOTD: the dumbest man in the Senate

Ron Johnson, R-Wi:

“Right now, all people are hearing about are the deaths. I’m sure the deaths are horrific, but the flip side of this is the vast majority of people who get coronavirus do survive.

“I’m not denying what a nasty disease COVID-19 can be, and how it’s obviously devastating to somewhere between 1 and 3.4 percent of the population. But that means 97 to 99 percent will get through this and develop immunities and will be able to move beyond this. But we don’t shut down our economy because tens of thousands of people die on the highways. It’s a risk we accept so we can move about. We don’t shut down our economies because tens of thousands of people die from the common flu … getting coronavirus is not a death sentence except for maybe no more than 3.4 percent of our population (and) I think probably far less.”

About 38,000 people die in auto accidents each year. 1 to 3.4 percent of the population of the US is many millions of deaths.

Johnson is a millionaire businessman proving once again that you can make a whole lot of money even if you are barely sentient. Is this a great country or what?

Having a little too much fun

All young people believe they’re invulnerable. I did too. But they aren’t:

In general, the U.S. experience largely mimics China’s, with the risk for serious disease and death from Covid-19 rising with age. But in an important qualification, an analysis by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Wednesday underlines a message that infectious disease experts have been emphasizing: Millennials are not invincible. The new data show that up to one-fifth of infected people ages 20-44 have been hospitalized, including 2%-4% who required treatment in an intensive care unit.

Don’t tell those kids in that video that they’re going to kill grandma because they obviously don’t care about that too much. And they won’t believe they’re risking their own health either. I don’t know what would work, honestly, other than shutting the place down.

Most kids aren’t like that, by the way. That’s the dipshit partier faction. Every generation had them. You might even have been one of them, amirite?

The Dark Side turned out to be dominant

I am impressed:

Here’s the WaPo piece to which Foser refers. It’s really great:

Don’t just blame President Trump. Blame me — and all the other Republicans who aided and abetted and, yes, benefited from protecting a political party that has become dangerous to America. Some of us knew better.

But we built this moment. And then we looked the other way.

Many of us heard a warning sound we chose to ignore, like that rattle in your car you hear but figure will go away. Now we’re broken down, with plenty of time to think about what should have been done.

The failures of the government’s response to the coronavirus crisis can be traced directly to some of the toxic fantasies now dear to the Republican Party. Here are a few: Government is bad. Establishment experts are overrated or just plain wrong. Science is suspect. And we can go it alone, the world be damned.

All of these are wrong, of course. But we didn’t get here overnight. It took practice.

Long before Trump, the Republican Party adopted as a key article of faith that more government was bad. We worked overtime to squeeze it and shrink it, to drown it in the bathtub, as anti-tax activist Grover Norquist liked to say. But somewhere along the way, it became, “all government is bad.” Now we are in a crisis that can be solved only by massive government intervention. That’s awkward.

Next, somehow, the party of idealistic Teddy Roosevelt, pragmatic Bob Dole and heroic John McCain became anti-intellectual, by which I mean, almost reflexively opposed to knowledge and expertise. We began to distrust the experts and put faith in, well, quackery. It was 2013 when former Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal said the Republican Party “must stop being the stupid party.” By 2016, the party had embraced as its nominee a reality-TV host who later suggested that perhaps the noise from windmills causes cancer.

The Republican Party has gone from admiring William F. Buckley Jr., an Ivy League intellectual, to viewing higher education as a left-wing conspiracy to indoctrinate the young. In retribution, we started defunding education. Never mind that Republican leaders are among the most highly educated on the planet; it’s just that they now feel compelled to embrace ignorance as a cost of doing business. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, as an example, denounces “coastal elites” while holding degrees from Princeton University and Harvard Law School and having served as a Supreme Court clerk.

The GOP’s relationship with science has resembled some kind of Frankenstein experiment: Let’s see what happens when we play with the chemistry set! Conservatives have spent years trying to cut funds for basic science and research, lamenting government seed money for nearly every budding technology and then hoping for the best. In the weeks ahead, it’s not some fiery, anti-Washington populist with an XM radio gig who is going to save folks’ lives; it is more likely to be someone who has been studying this stuff for decades, almost certainly at some point with federal help or outright patronage.

Finally, there is the populist GOP distrust and dislike of the other, the foreign. Yes, it is annoying that the Chinese didn’t come clean and explain everything to us from the start. But it appears that a Swiss company is helping to jump-start us in testing; and it is a German company that American officials reportedly tried to lure to the United States recently to help develop a vaccine for the virus. We talk about how we need to be independent even as we do all kinds of things that prove we aren’t.

What is happening now is the inevitable result of a party that embraced fear, weaponized xenophobia and regarded facts as dangerous, left-wing landmines that must be avoided.

Over the past few years, when ramming through conservative judges, Republicans have crowed, “Elections have consequences.” That’s true.

It’s something to think about when sitting at home not watching sports and wondering how long it will be until you can find out if that nasty cold you have is something more.

Yes, elections have consequences. Those of us in the Republican Party built this moment. Now the nation must live with those consequences.

Stuart Stevens was a highly successful GOP consultant who was responsible for the management of George W Bush’s highly successful media image. This clear-eyed admission of the blind spot so many of these guys had about the conservative movement is very welcome. It confirms that we weren’t nuts to be pointing it out in real-time.

And I don’t think they are the only people susceptible to this sort of thing. I can easily imagine my own side going the same way and the gyrations many of us would go through to try to rationalize it. It would be of a different character but it could be just as destructive in its own way.

You’ve got to keep your eyes open and recognize that the dark side (which exists in every movement) is usually aggressive and ruthless.

An epic cascade of errors

This piece by Jonathan Chait is the most succinct, yet thorough, rundown of Trump’s massive failures in dealing with this crisis as of today. Keep it bookmarked just in case the media decides that Trump really is a “wartime president” and they give him what he needs to win re-election:

The most efficient first step would have been to prevent the coronavirus pandemic from spreading in the first place. As many reports have widely documented, that first step never took place because the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention failed to deploy an effective coronavirus test. “This is such a rapidly moving infection that losing a few days is bad, and losing a couple of weeks is terrible,” Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, tells Bloomberg News. “Losing 2 months is close to disastrous, and that’s what we did.”

The loss of those two months deprived the government of any chance to prevent the pandemic from sweeping across the entire country. Officials have been forced into reaction mode, deploying blunt measures of closing public spaces to try to slow down the spread. Even so, it is highly likely that, within a few weeks, the number of infected patients will exceed the capacity of the hospital system to treat them.

Washington has had weeks and weeks to prepare for this surge. The three most obvious and foreseeable shortages are hospital beds, respirator masks to protect medical staff, and ventilators (the machines that are needed to pump air into the lungs of patients with the most serious coronavirus symptoms).

You would think the government would have spent the last two months scrambling to produce more of all three. There is no evidence this has happened, and a great deal of evidence it has not.

Begin with the ventilator machines. Jonathan Cohn consulted with a dozen engineers, executives, and physicians about what’s being done to produce a surge of equipment. You might expect an effort equivalent to the frantic production of ships, tanks, and planes following Pearl Harbor. The sources explain to Cohn what sorts of things would have to happen to produce the ventilator surge — regulators would have to fast-track approval of new production facilities, and arrange planes to fly in supplies. That is not happening.

Several members of Congress sent the White House a letter pleading with the president to use the Defense Production Act to expedite production. A reporter asked Trump yesterday if he had done this. Here was his reply:

Well, we’re able to do that if we have to. Right now, we haven’t had to, but it’s certainly ready. If I want it, we can do it very quickly. We’ve studied it very closely over two weeks ago, actually. We’ll make that decision pretty quickly if we need it. We hope we don’t need it. It’s a big step.

“It’s a big step.” They are days away from having potentially thousands of Americans dying, and Trump still hasn’t decided if he’s ready to take the step to ramp up the machines that will be needed to keep them alive.

What about getting more respirator masks and hospital beds? The New York Times has an even more harrowing overview of the federal response — or, more accurately, nonresponse. Governors are begging Trump to send more masks for their hospitals, which have desperate shortages. So far they’ve got nothing of value:

Oregon sent a letter to Vice President Mike Pence on March 3 asking for 400,000 N95 masks. For days, it got no response, and only by March 14 received its first shipment, of 36,800 masks. But there was a problem. Most of the equipment they got was well past the expiration date and so “wouldn’t be suitable for surgical settings,” the state said.

New York City also put in a request for more than 2 million masks and only received 76,000; all were expired, said Deanne Criswell, New York City’s emergency management commissioner.

Experts have proposed preparing the Army to set up mobile hospitals to treat overflow patients — something the Army has done before. A spokesperson reported to the Times that the Army has not been given any orders to prepare for such an eventuality:

“The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is prepared to assist the nation in a time of crisis to the very best of its capabilities, and we are postured to lean forward when an official request is received through the Department of Defense,” Raini W. Brunson, an Army Corps spokeswoman said in a statement. “However, at this time, we have not been assigned a mission.”

They have not been assigned a mission.

What about the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which also has relevant expertise setting up medical facilities during emergencies? “FEMA officials said the Department of Health and Human Services remains in charge of the federal response,” reports the Times, “and it too is waiting for orders from the agency before it moves to ramp up assistance.”

Trump spent weeks publicly downplaying the coronavirus as an overhyped flu, and then treating it as nothing more than a distraction spooking the stock market. Only in recent days has he made a show of acknowledging the virus as a serious health threat. Watching this, we might have clung to the wan hope that his abdication was merely a surface display of incompetence, and that below his level, the government was still functioning. The evidence before us suggests the government actually followed his lead, following the complacent signals he sent — or, at least, has simply floundered for lack of any direction from the top. The closer you look at the inner workings of Trump’s coronavirus response, the worse it gets.

By the way, here’s Trump back in January complimenting the Chinese government for their coronavirus response. His new insistence that it be called the “Chinese virus” and ginning up conspiracy theories about them failing to give any warning is belied by his own record. Not that it matters.

I was writing quite a bit about this stuff right around that time. I was just reading the newspapers and following some blogs that were tracking this thing. If I knew that it was major, he knew. He just didn’t want to deal with it because of his ridiculous “trade war.” Now that the situation has hurtled out of control he’s back to China bashing.

As Chris Hayes said, “if all you’ve got is a wall, everything looks like an invasion…”

Update: And yes, he’s still lying

Let them eat ventilators

The heir to a great fortune who depended on his father to bail him out of all of his bad decisions until he was in his 50s had this to say about the inequities of wealthy, young, asymptomatic athletes getting tested for coronavirus while very ill patients are unable to get one:

NBC’s Peter Alexander: “How are non-symptomatic professional athletes getting tests while others … can’t get them. Do the well-connected go to the front of the line? … Should that happen?”

Trump: “No, I wouldn’t say so, but perhaps that’s been the story of life.”

That’s been the story of his life, that’s for sure.

Highlights of today’s atrocity

As I wrote below, Trump has decided that “taking charge” of the daily briefing makes him look presidential and in command. But it is very difficult for him to do this because he is a pathological liar and an arrogant ignoramus. He’s not helping.

Oh, and in case you are wondering where he’s getting his ideas, wonder not more:

They halted trading during his press conference. As I write this, the market is down 8 percent. We’ve lost all the gains we got during the Trump administration.

They need to shut him up. Every time he speaks everything gets worse.