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Month: November 2021

Trusted messengers

“There’s no heavier burden than a great potential,” Peanuts‘ Linus said famously. You know the Beltway conventional wisdom by now. Whatever Democrats accomplish, it’s bad news for Democrats. People expect better and are sorely disappointed when Democrats fail to live up to their potential. And Republicans? They seem always to act like Republicans. They speak of personal responsibility and liberty, but their actions suggest they mean freedom from scruples, from truth, from accountability, from upholding their Constitutional oaths. There is no bottom, as Digby says.

Democrats Thought They Bottomed Out in Rural, White America. It Wasn’t the Bottom.

That was the headline Saturday at the New York Times. And in a rare, less-snarky moment, Twitterati Jeff Tiedrich observed :

What Astead W. Herndon and Shane Goldmacher found in Virginia after Democrats lost the governorship last week is that “old country folk” don’t know and don’t care:

“Look at some of those rural counties in Virginia as a wake-up call,” said Steve Bullock, the Democratic former governor of Montana who made a long-shot 2020 presidential run, partly on a message that his party needed to compete in more conservative parts of the country. “Folks don’t feel like we’re offering them anything, or hearing or listening to them.”

That was the consensus among about 100 attendees of the National Rural Strategy Session Saturday hosted by former Iowa congressional candidate J.D. Scholten of RuralVote.org. But why they won’t listen is the problem. It’s a longstanding joke here in Western North Carolina that Raleigh thinks the state ends in the west at Statesville. (There’s another four-hour drive before you hit Tennessee beyond Murphy.) Zoom conference leaders aren’t waiting for Democrats to show up again in rural places.

“If you don’t show up in 60 percent of the country, you don’t win, and that’s not going to happen anymore.” – Gov. Howard Dean (2006)

For 40 years Democrats have neglected rural areas to focus on bluer cities where statewide campaigns get more bang for their campaign buck. With that approach, they can win statewide races in states with enough of their population clustered in cities. But they lose control of state legislatures whose members are elected in districts, many of them made up of clusters of thinly populated rural counties.

Back in Virginia:

Many of the ideas and issues that animate the Democratic base can be off-putting in small towns or untethered to rural life. Voters in Bath County, many of whom are avid hunters and conservative evangelicals, have long opposed liberal stances on gun rights and abortions. Some Democrats urge the party to just show up more. Some believe liberal ideas can gain traction, such as universal health care and free community college. Others urge a refocus on kitchen-table economics like jobs programs and rural broadband to improve connectivity. But it is not clear how open voters are to even listening.

Rural voters feel neglected and disenfranchised. This message was consistent across reports from rural organizers/polling on Saturday. Progressives need to speak less and listen more. Half of rural voters don’t trust politics or either major party, polls show. Finding trusted messengers is essential in rural organizing, and candidates from the area who know the area, its people and issues. Creating trust does not happen in an election-year push. While many rural concerns are common everywhere, each region has unique ones. Communicating that we understand them is one way to build trust.

Second, rural does not mean White. Many rural areas such as Eastern North Carolina and Southern Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi are heavily Black. West of the Mississippi River are many regions populated by First Peoples. Progressive organizers in such places need to look more like the people to whom they are reaching out.

Virginia again:

But while some Democratic politicians now recognize the scope of their rural problem, the words of voters in Bath County expose the difficulty in finding solutions. In interviews with a dozen white, rural voters who backed Mr. Youngkin, policy was less important than grievance and their own identity politics. And the voters, fueled by a conservative media bubble that speaks in apocalyptic terms, were convinced that America had been brought to the brink by a litany of social movements that had gone too far.

But rural Americans are not all Foxbots, surveys show. There is low trust in national media and national politicians. Many national Democratic initiatives people like they don’t associate with Democrats. And if they think about them at all, rural voters tend to assume policies they like originated with Republicans.

But the politically urgent problem for Democrats is that rural America has moved faster and further from them in the last 20 years than urban America has moved away from Republicans. From 1999 to 2019, cities swung 14 percentage points toward the Democrats, according to a 2020 Pew Research Center report. At the same time, rural areas shifted by 19 percentage points toward the Republicans. The suburbs remained essentially tied.

Amanda Litman, the executive director of Run for Something, which looks for Democrats to run for local offices nationwide, said it could be challenging to recruit candidates in deep red small towns — and to lure money into what are most likely losing causes.

“We just have to try and lose by less,” she said. “And ‘investing to lose by less’ is not a fun sell to Democratic donors. But it is what it is.”

This is a chronic problem reinforced by misunderstanding of rural communities (see above).

Rural voters “feel like Democrats look down on rural America,” Montana Democrat Monica Tranel said in her campaign launch video.

Presenter Anthony Flaccavento writes:

In this context, Hilary Clinton’s “basket of deplorables” statement and Barack Obama’s description of people “clinging to their guns and bibles” becomes proof, in the minds of many, of liberal contempt.  So too the oft-heard refrain from well-meaning liberals, “Why do these people vote against their own interests?”

As I’ve said, that’s a lefty dog whistle for “stupid.” Please stop.

(I may write more about Saturday’s conference once the recording is online.)

Headline o’ the week

That comes from one of the most incomprehensible articles I’ve ever read. It’s by Ben Domenech and Emily Jashinsky at the Federalist. I think they may have been celebrating Youngkin’s monumental, landslide, world-changing election victory with a bit too much champagne. I couldn’t make heads nor tails out of it. However, that headline seems to be their point.

Lol. The idea that the right just discovered the culture war is hilarious. Truly unbelievable.

Their point, as far as I can tell, is that the GOP establishment has been telling them that they shouldn’t deploy these issues because they are bad for them, which is clearly untrue. I know I don’t have to spell that out. I’ll just note this one from the fairly recent past.

“Baby parts”

Behind the closed doors of the Capitol, members of the House held the first congressional hearing on Planned Parenthood’s involvement with the sale of fetal tissue. This hearing, dubbed the “Select Investigative Panel on Infant Lives” by the conservative representatives behind it, was a wide-ranging discussion of the morality of abortion that Democratic lawmakers protested was more like a witch hunt than an objective discussion.

Four of the six people called to testify at Wednesday’s hearing were openly anti-abortion, and the discussion often veered into territory that left lawmakers at a loss for words.

“In our society, have we reached a point where there is an Amazon.com for baby parts, including entire babies?” Rep. Diane Black (R) asked at one point. No one knew quite how to answer.

The hearing was scheduled after a anti-abortion group created a series of videos that claimed Planned Parenthood profited off selling baby tissue — a campaign that sparked investigations into the organization across the country. According to chair Rep. Marsha Blackburn, the Tennessee Republican who led the recent congressional fight to defund Planned Parenthood, the purpose of the hearing was to discuss “ethical issues that surround procuring and selling baby body parts” — an illegal act that Planned Parenthood never participated in, according to each of the nearly 30 states that have investigated the health organization.

Although these videos have now been discredited due to their highly edited content, and two of the videographers involved have been indicted in Texas for tampering with government evidence and other crimes, GOP representatives were still eager to pursue the issue. They brought a handful of experts — the majority of which were openly anti-abortion — to talk about this unfounded crime.

Yeah, nothing “culture war” about that. Lol.

BTW: Blackburn tried to take credit for her “baby body parts” work in her recent campaign and twitter banned the ad. They relented and let it back on later. They said it was “inflammatory.” But that wasn’t the only problem. It’s also a flat out lie.

Election integrity for thee …

Josh Marshall comments on this weird story:

A rather bizarre development in Virginia. On election day Glenn Youngkin’s 17 year old son twice tried to vote illegally. Indeed, he attempted to do so – twice – in a precinct where his family doesn’t even live.

The younger Youngkin went to vote in a precinct at the Great Falls Library in Fairfax County. He presented his ID which identified him as a 17 year old. The voting official realized who Youngkin was and told him that people under the age of 18 are not allowed to vote in Virginia. She offered to register him for the next election but he left. He then returned about 20 minutes later and insisted he be allowed to vote because an unidentified friend of his, also 17, had been allowed to vote. The precinct captain, Jennifer Chanty, again told him that he was not eligible to vote.

State officials say – I think rightly – that there is no crime because the younger Youngkin didn’t try to falsify his identity or age. So he didn’t break the law since he wasn’t allowed to vote.

Check out the guy who built his campaign around the issue of “election integrity” and parental rights defending his snotty little brat:

Asked about the incident a spokesman for Gov-Elect Youngkin attacked people “pitching opposition research on a 17-year old kid who honestly misunderstood Virginia election law” while Youngkin was trying to unite the state.

He’s 17, not 7. And he is either a moron or he was playing games. I vote for the latter.

Lord of the Flies

We are having a societal breakdown:


At least eight people have died and 17 others, including a 10-year-old child, have been transported to the hospital after being trampled at a panic-fueled stampede Saturday night in Houston, Texas. The crush happened during the opening-night set of Astroworld Festival founder Travis Scott, whose livestream was halted as the panic ensued. More than 300 of the 50,000 people in attendance were reportedly treated at a field hospital on the grounds that day.

Police say at least 11 of those hospitalized suffered cardiac arrest after trying to escape a yet unknown source of panic during Scott’s set, which featured a special appearance from Drake. “We had scores of individuals that were injured,” Houston Fire Chief Sam Peña told reporters early Saturday morning. He said the mass casualty incident happened at around 9:15 p.m. local time when the crowd began to “compress toward the front of the stage,” according to CNN. “People began to fall out, become unconscious and it created additional panic,” he added.

Chief Lt. Larry Satterwhite, who was working near the stage, described the scene to reporters. “It seems like it happened with just over the course of a few minutes. Suddenly we had several people down on the ground experiencing some type of cardiac arrest or some type of medical episode. We immediately started doing CPR.”

He said medical staff onsite were so overwhelmed they had to ask people in the crowd to administer CPR to revive injured concertgoers.

Earlier in the day Friday at around 2 p.m. local time, hundreds of eager and rowdy concertgoers had stampeded the entrance of the Astroworld Festival, just outside of NRG Park, knocking over fences and metal detectors ,and appearing to overwhelm understaffed security teams guarding the perimeter. No major injuries were reported from the rush.

This sounds like a living hell:

In a lengthy Instagram post, an attendee named Seanna said people were packed in so tightly that they struggled to breathe as soon as Scott’s performance began.

“Within the first 30 seconds of the first song, people began to drown — in other people… The rush of people became tighter and tighter. Breathing became something only a few were capable of. The rest were crushed or unable to breathe in the thick hot air.”

She said her friend began to “gasp for breath” and tried to leave but there was nowhere to go. “The shoving got harder and harder… People began to choke one another as the mass swayed. It became more and more violent. We began to scream for help.”

She said scores of people around her began screaming as they struggled to breathe, and some people collapsed. “We begged security to help us, for the performer to see us and know something was wrong. None of that came. We continued to drown… Once one [person] fell, a hole opened in the ground. It was like watching a Jenga Tower topple. Person after person were sucked down.”

She said more people were pushed or sucked into the pile of people and trampled on. Others were shrieking and had “terror in their eyes.” She managed to get to a filming platform to alert a cameraman that people were dying but he “told me to get off the platform, and continued filming.”

This isn’t the first time there has been a crush like this at a concert. When if happened back in the 1970s at a Who concert, they changed the rules and outlawed Festival seating. I don’t know when they started to allow it again but this was probably the inevitable result.

I don’t recall this kind of thing happening in that earlier incident, however:

Outrageous.

Razing Arizona

Trump took credit for Virginia by saying that the Democrats made a mistake by running against him. He’s very popular, you see, and running against him makes people want to come out to vote for him — or his surrogates and endorsees. You’ve got to hand it to him. He’s nimble.

The media and many Democrats agree that running against Trump is a bad idea so I’d guess we won’t see that going forward. Instead, they’ll run on kitchen table issues, so that will be nice an familiar.

But, as much as both parties would like to put Trump behind them, he won’t let them:

Former President Donald Trump is scheduled to attend a fundraiser next week for Arizona Republican Blake Masters, marking his first foray into the state’s contentious GOP Senate primary.

The fundraiser, according to an invitation obtained by POLITICO, is being held Wednesday night at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, a popular venue for candidates seeking to build goodwill with the former president. While Trump this fall endorsed candidates for Arizona governor and secretary of state, he has so far publicly stayed out of the Senate race.

“From time to time, the president attends candidate events at his properties prior to an endorsement in the race,” said a person familiar with Trump’s thinking on the matter.

It’s unclear whether Trump intends to endorse Masters or is still weighing other candidates in the Senate primary. The private reception costs $2,900 per person, though donors or couples raising $25,000 ahead of the event can also have their photo taken with Trump, according to the invitation.

The fundraiser’s host committee includes prominent tech entrepreneurs and investors like billionaire Peter Thiel, David Sacks and Joe Lonsdale, along with conservative donors Rebekah Mercer, Darren Blanton and J.J. Cafaro.

Thiel has donated $10 million each to super PACs supporting Masters and J.D. Vance, the “Hillbilly Elegy” author and Thiel business associate running for Senate in Ohio.

Masters runs Thiel’s tech investment firm Thiel Capital, as well as the nonprofit Thiel Foundation.

The Arizona Republican Senate field is currently led by state Attorney General Mark Brnovich, who is already being attacked on air by the pro-Masters super PAC, claiming Brnovich is soft on border security.

Masters and Brnovich have both angled to demonstrate loyalty to Trump, despite Brnovich being chided by the former president earlier this year as “lackluster.”

Brnovich last fall joined Republican Gov. Doug Ducey and Arizona’s secretary of state in certifying election results in the state Biden narrowly won. Trump, in a statement earlier this year, said Brnovich was not doing enough as attorney general to support a GOP-led “audit” of the Maricopa County election results.

“[Brnovich] must put himself in gear, or no Arizona Republican will vote for him in the upcoming elections,” Trump said.

Jim Lamon, another Republican in the race, has expressed support for the partisan audit.

The television ads against Brnovich — which knock his “failed” illegal immigration enforcement — appear to be having some effect, even as Brnovich leads legal fights on red-meat conservative issues like President Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate for businesses and welfare for immigrants in the country illegally.

A recent internal poll commissioned by the pro-Masters Saving Arizona super PAC found that Brnovich’s unfavorable rating had increased from 9 percent to 20 percent since the launch of the ad.

The Fabrizio Lee polling summary, obtained by POLITICO, said one-third of the 800 Republican primary voters surveyed had seen the ad. Brnovich’s negative rating went up to 32 percent among those who had viewed it.

In a primary matchup, 26 percent of voters still said they would vote for Brnovich, compared to 14 percent for Masters — though Masters’ vote share had nearly tripled since Fabrizio polled the question in August.

While Trump has avoided making an endorsement in the Arizona Senate primary, the former president has been outspoken about keeping Ducey from receiving the nomination, should the governor decide to get in the 2022 race.

It couldn’t happen to a nicer bunch of Republicans.

Now hire a good PR firm

A real PR firm, not a Sears PR firm. The DNC, DSCC, and DCCC need to dump their inside-the-Beltway shops filled with former Hill cronies and hire the kind of marketing professionals who make their money outside politics where if you fail your friends aren’t there to catch you. How many times do we have say it?

Pick up a megaphone.

Take the freakin’ gloves off.

Because this ain’t beanbag and Republicans aren’t playing. Except for keeps. Literally.

Finally

You knew without looking that Politico’s spin on House passage of Joe Biden’s infrastructure bill Friday night would accent the negative. They didn’t disappoint.

At CNN, news of eight people crushed to death and 300 injured by a surging crowd at the Astroworld Festival in Houston pushed to the side passage of the long-awaited $1.2 trillion bill for rebuilding U.S. bridges, pipes, ports, and for expanding broadband internet access.

But the Washington Post places the news up top below the banner:

The bipartisan 228-to-206 vote marked the final milestone for the first of two pieces in the president’s sprawling economic agenda. The outcome sends to Biden’s desk an initiative that promises to deliver its benefits to all 50 states, a manifestation of his 2020 campaign pledge to rejuvenate the economy in the aftermath of the coronavirus pandemic and “build back better.”

The path to passage proved littered with political conflict, pushing to the limits a fractious party with still-widening ideological fissures. Democrats initially hoped to approve the infrastructure bill on Friday along with a separate, roughly $2 trillion proposal to overhaul the nation’s health care, education, immigration, climate and tax laws. Doing so would have advanced two spending initiatives that have been stalled on Capitol Hill for months.

Thirteen Republicans voted with Democrats on (who knew?) “Joe Biden’s Communist takeover of America.”

Six progressive Democrats voted against the bill, including the four original members of The Squad: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, plus two new members, Jamaal Bowman of New York and Cori Bush of Missouri.

When I first saw the raw count on C-Span, my assumption was that the Democratic dissenters were moderates or conservatives from red districts. Former congressman Heath Shuler from my red district repeatedly voted against his caucus to show his independence for the conservative folks back home when Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a master vote-counter, knew his No vote did not matter for passage. That is what’s happening here, only on the left. Progressives were intent on not voting for the infrastructure package without also voting on the larger Build Back Better reconciliation package, now delayed. This is how prominent progressives demonstrate their displeasure without sinking the bill. So far this morning I spot no statements from the group.

Economist Michael Hudson wrote late Thursday that the Democratic Party is unreformable, echoing complaints from many on the left who believe the party hopelessly in thrall to corporate money. He cites what has been cut from the original BBB bill to satisfy “neoliberal Clintonite centrists” the likes of Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona.

“The Democratic role is to protect the Republican party from challenges from the left,” he writes. “The fear is that the bipartisan $1 trillion business-friendly infrastructure bill will be passed, leaving the BBB’s social programs abandoned.” The first happened Friday night, and the second may yet happen.

But Hudson adds, “The failure to solve this problem seems to be a duplicitous ploy of President Biden and the Democrats’ quasi-Republican Clintonite core.”

Really? First, as I’ve noted before, there is no The Democrats. Manchin and Sinema notwithstanding, that Democrats secretly want to sink Joe Biden’s signature legislation is drifting into conspiracy territory, no matter how many on the left have convinced themselves that’s what’s actually at work. It’s stunning that with how tenuous Democrats’ control of Congress is — and with zero margin for error in the Senate — some of us still expect the caucuses can magically strongarm people like Manchin and Sinema into submission. If the first premise reflects conspiracy thinking, this second is magical thinking. And using Democrats’ failure to work the magic as confirmation of the first premise confirms the fact that conspiracy theories are not the sole province of QAnon. As Anat Shenker-Osorio said recently, “Motivated cognition is a hell of a drug.”

Those duplicitous House Democrats delivered Biden’s infrastructure package Friday night.

Pelosi had enough votes to pass to allow The Squad to make its statement of protest without screwing the rest of the caucus. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York won’t have that luxury when it’s time in the Senate to vote on BBB.

Friday Night Soother

On Saturday, October 16, at 3:29 a.m., Buffalo Zoo’s greater one-horned rhino Tashi gave birth to a beautiful baby girl! This is Tashi’s fifth calf but the first with Buffalo’s previous male George. That rhino dad now resides at another AZA accredited facility.

Animal care and veterinary teams got their first look at the calf early Saturday morning, where she received her first physical exam. This included weight, checking her vitals, cleaning her belly button (umbilical cord attachment site), and bloodwork. She came in at a whopping 130 lbs! Over the last few weeks, the team has closely monitored Tashi and the calf. So far, mom and calf are doing great.

Tashi’s pregnancy was based on a recommendation from the greater one-horned rhino Species Survival Plan (SSP) through the Association of Zoos and Aquariums. SSP’s are designed to maintain genetically diverse and stable captive populations of species. The Buffalo Zoo is a long-time participant in this program, resulting in five rhino calves (4 females and 1 male) over the past 17 years.

Not much not to like

Gosh, remember last month when the media went absolutely nuts over the supposed failing economy because the jobs numbers didn’t meet expectations? How Joe Biden’s catastrophically failed presidency was probably irretrievable? (Yes, my sarcasm matches the hysteria of the coverage.)

Well, guess what?

Economy Adds 531,000 Jobs in October Unemployment Falls to 4.6 Percent

The economy added 531,000 jobs in October, as the unemployment rate fell to 4.6 percent, a level not reached following the Great Recession until February of 2017. The jobs numbers for the prior two months were also revised upward by 235,000 to bring the three-month average to 443,000.

It’s also worth noting that private sector employment grew even more rapidly, adding 604,000 jobs. The hours worked index, which only measures private sector employment, has risen by 1.2 percent in the last three months, which would translate into 498,000 private sector jobs per month, if there were no change in hours. Many employers who are unable to hire are likely increasing the hours for the workforce they have.

Unemployment Falls for Most Groups

The drop in the unemployment rate was much larger than most analysts has expected, especially after a 0.4 percentage point decline in September. It has fallen by1.3 pp since June. The least educated saw the largest drop in unemployment with the rate falling by 0.5 pp for those without a high school degree to 7.4 percent and 0.4 pp for those with just a high school degree to 5.4 percent. The unemployment rate for college grads edged down 0.1 pp to 2.4 percent, which is 0.3 pp above its pre-pandemic average.

The unemployment rate for Blacks and Asian-Americans was unchanged at 7.9 percent and 4.2 percent, respectively. It fell 0.4 pp to 5.9 percent for Hispanics.

Wage Growth Remains Strong

We continue to see strong wage growth, especially for low-paid workers. The average hourly for production and non-supervisory workers has risen 5.8 percent, in the low-paid leisure and hospitality sector it has risen 12.4 percent. However, wage growth is slowing somewhat in the leisure and hospitality sector. The annual rate for the last three months (August, September, October) compared with the prior three months (May, June, July) was 9.7 percent, although it accelerated slightly for production workers overall to 6.6 percent.

Manufacturing and Construction Have Strong Growth, Again

The manufacturing sector added 60k jobs, following a gain of 31k in September. Construction added 44,000 jobs after adding 30,000 in September. The sectors are now down 2.1 percent and 2.0 percent, respectively, from their pre-pandemic levels. This compares to a falloff of 2.3 percent for the private sector as whole. That reverses the normal pattern where these sectors are hit hardest in a recession.

Strong Job Growth in Hard-Hit Service Industries

Most of the hardest hit industries showed good job growth in October. Air transportation added 9.2k jobs, but is still down 9.2 percent from its pre-pandemic level. The motion picture industry added 11.3k jobs and is now down 20.9 percent. The temp sector added 41.1k, while arts and entertainment added 21.9k jobs. They are now down 16.0 percent and 11.4 percent, respectively from pre-pandemic levels. Hotels added 23.2k jobs, while restaurants added 119.4k leaving them 14.9 percent and 6.4 percent lower than their pre-pandemic levels.

Nursing homes added 11.8k jobs, but employment is still 14.2 percent below pre-pandemic levels. Child care facilities added just 0.7k jobs in October, leaving employment 10.1 percent below pre-pandemic levels. This presumably corresponds to a roughly 10 percent drop in child slots, which means many parents of young children face even greater than normal difficulties finding care if they want to work.

State and Local Education Shed 65,000 Jobs

This sector continues to lose jobs even with children back in school pretty much everywhere. This could reflect difficulty in hiring, as governments often can’t raise wages as rapidly as in the private sector. Employment in the sectors are now down 7.9 percent and 4.6 percent from pre-pandemic levels, respectively.

The Number of Unincorporated Self-Employed Edged up by 24k

The October figure is 643k (7.3 percent) above the 2019 average. This presumably reflects people taking advantage of the pandemic to change career paths.

Share of Long-Term Unemployed Falls

The share of long-term unemployed (more than 26 weeks) fell sharply in September to 31.6 percent. However, it is still well above normal levels, which would be under 20 percent

October Report is Solidly Positive

There is not much to not like in this report. The overall picture in both surveys is overwhelmingly positive. If we can keep up this pace of growth we will get back the jobs lost in the pandemic by next summer. The unemployment rate is already below many economists estimates of NAIRU. And workers have more freedom to change jobs than at any point in the last half century

The rise in index of aggregate hours since July, is equivalent to adding 498k private sector jobs a month.

That’s from Dean Baker.

I’m sure this spells doom for the Democrats for some reason. I’ll wait for the Sunday shows to tell me why.

Another Game Changer

I truly hope this is for real:

A course of pills developed by Pfizer can slash the risk of being hospitalized or dying from COVID-19 by 89% if taken within three days of developing symptoms, according to results released Friday by the pharmaceutical company.

In a study of more than 1,200 COVID-19 patients with a higher risk of developing serious illness, people who took Pfizer’s pills were far less likely to end up in the hospital compared to people who got placebo pills.

None of the people who got the real pills died, but 10 people who got placebo pills died, according to results summarized in a Pfizer press release.

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said in prepared remarks that the data suggest the pill-based treatment, if authorized, could “eliminate up to nine out of ten hospitalizations.”

Infectious disease experts cautioned these results are preliminary — only described in a press release and not in a peer-reviewed medical journal — but they represent another promising development in the search for effective and easy-to-administer COVID-19 pills.

This will eliminate the vast, vast majority of the vaccine breakthrough deaths which means COVID will essentially no longer be a deadly disease except in rare cases in the wealthy countries. For the rest of the world, I assume that vaccines will remain the gold standard and hopefully the vaccines will be long term eventually to solve that problem.

There is light at the end of the tunnel.