Trump sends his best wishes to Johnson: 'Americans are all praying for his recovery'

President TrumpDonald John TrumpOvernight Health Care: US hits 10,000 coronavirus deaths | Trump touts ‘friendly’ talk with Biden on response | Trump dismisses report on hospital shortages as ‘just wrong’ | Cuomo sees possible signs of curve flattening in NY We need to be ‘One America,’ the polling says — and the politicians should listen Barr tells prosecutors to consider coronavirus risk when determining bail: report MORE on Monday praised Boris Johnson as “strong” and “resolute,” offering his best wishes to the British prime minister after he entered intensive care for the coronavirus.

“Americans are all praying for his recovery. He’s been a really good friend. He’s been really something very special — strong, resolute, doesn’t quit, doesn’t give up,” Trump said at the outset of a White House briefing on the virus.

Trump said he spoke with drug companies and asked them to get in touch with London to discuss potential treatments, suggesting he was hoping they could find ways to assist with Johnson’s case.

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“We’ve contacted all of Boris’s doctors, and we’ll see what is going to take place,” Trump said. “But they are ready to go. But when you get brought into intensive care, it gets very serious with this particular disease.”

Johnson, 55, was admitted to the hospital Sunday on his doctor’s advice after he experienced symptoms for more than 10 days following confirmation that he had tested positive for the coronavirus on April 27. 

The prime minister’s condition reportedly worsened over the course of the afternoon, and he was moved to an intensive care unit as a precaution in case he requires a ventilator.

“Intensive care is big stuff,” Trump added later.

A Johnson spokesperson said he remains conscious.

“Over the course of this afternoon, the condition of the Prime Minister has worsened and, on the advice of his medical team, he has been moved to the Intensive Care Unit at the hospital,” a spokesperson said, adding that Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab has been deputized to assume his duties in the meantime.

Johnson, who has been one of Trump’s strongest allies on the world stage, initially took a laid-back approach in addressing the coronavirus in the United Kingdom. He said last month that he shook hands with coronavirus patients at a hospital and downplayed the need for drastic measures. The United Kingdom has since shuttered nonessential businesses.

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Overnight Defense: Trump 'may look into' dismissal of Navy captain | Acting Navy chief stands by speech calling ousted captain 'stupid' | Dems call for chief's firing | Hospital ship to take coronavirus patients

Happy Monday and welcome to Overnight Defense. I’m Rebecca Kheel, and here’s your nightly guide to the latest developments at the Pentagon, on Capitol Hill and beyond. CLICK HERE to subscribe to the newsletter.

 

THE TOPLINE: President TrumpDonald John TrumpOvernight Health Care: US hits 10,000 coronavirus deaths | Trump touts ‘friendly’ talk with Biden on response | Trump dismisses report on hospital shortages as ‘just wrong’ | Cuomo sees possible signs of curve flattening in NY We need to be ‘One America,’ the polling says — and the politicians should listen Barr tells prosecutors to consider coronavirus risk when determining bail: report MORE on Monday said he may look into the dismissal of a Naval captain who was relieved of his duty aboard the U.S.S. Theodore Roosevelt after warning of an outbreak of coronavirus on board in a letter that leaked to the press.

The controversy surrounding the exit of Capt. Brett Crozier was amplified on Monday when acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly told the sailors aboard the ship that the captain was “naive” or “stupid” to think the letter would not leak.

What Trump said: Trump told reporters he hadn’t seen the statement from Modly, but described what he’d heard about it as “strong” and “rough.” He suggested he may personally look into the matter because he believes both Modly and Crozier have good reputations outside the Roosevelt incident.

“I may look into it only from the standpoint that something should be resolved because I’m hearing good things about both people,” he said.

“I may just get involved, if it’s ok with you,” he continued. “And I’m good, believe it or not, at settling arguments. I’m good at settling these arguments. So I may look into it in detail and I‘ll be able to figure it out very fast.”

Trump asserted that Crozier was in the wrong because the letter may have made family members of sailors aboard the Roosevelt anxious and it “shows weakness.”

“There’s nothing weak about us now. Not anymore,” he said. “We have the strongest military we’ve ever had. That ship is incredible.”

Navy chief under scrutiny: Modly is coming under fire for a speech he gave defending his decision to fire the captain of the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier in which he said the captain may have been “stupid” or “naive.”

The speech was delivered aboard the Roosevelt, and a transcript, as well as audio, was leaked to several media outlets Monday.

Crozier was relieved from command of the Roosevelt after a letter he wrote to Navy leaders pleading for help with a coronavirus outbreak aboard the ship was leaked to the media.

In the speech, Modly said that if Crozier didn’t think the letter would leak, he was “too naive or too stupid to be a commanding officer of a ship like this.”

Alternatively, Modly said, if Crozier leaked the letter on purpose, that would be a “serious violation” of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

He also called Crozier’s action a “betrayal” and warned sailors that there is “no situation” in which they should go to the media, alleging “the media has an agenda” that “depends on which side of the political aisle they sit.”

Modly stands by remarks: In a statement Monday afternoon, Modly stood by the speech.

“I have not listened to a recording of my remarks since speaking to the crew so I cannot verify if the transcript is accurate,” Modly said.

“The spoken words were from the heart, and meant for them,” Modly continued. “I stand by every word I said, even, regrettably any profanity that may have been used for emphasis.  Anyone who has served on a Navy ship would understand. I ask, but don’t expect, that people read them in their entirety.”

What does Esper think?: The Pentagon isn’t saying.

Chief Pentagon spokesman Jonathan Hoffman was asked several times during a Pentagon briefing whether Esper still has confidence in Modly.

Hoffman would only say he has not yet talked to Esper about the subject and directed reporters to comments Esper made Sunday, before Modly’s speech created a firestorm.

In an interview on ABC’s “This Week,” Esper said he has “full faith and confidence in” Modly.

Lawmakers lose confidence in Modly: Several lawmakers called for Modly to resign or be fired Monday.

Most were Democrats, but the growing chorus also included independent Rep. Justin AmashJustin AmashHouse Armed Services chairman calls for removal of Navy chief Overnight Defense: Trump ‘may look into’ dismissal of Navy captain | Acting Navy chief stands by speech calling ousted captain ‘stupid’ | Dems call for chief’s firing | Hospital ship to take coronavirus patients Democratic lawmakers call for Navy chief’s firing MORE (Mich.).

“The acting Navy secretary is unfit for office. He should resign or be removed immediately,” Amash tweeted.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), who last week called for an inspector general investigation into the situation on Roosevelt, tweeted Modly should be “should be removed unceremoniously for these shocking remarks.”

Reps. Ted LieuTed W. LieuHouse Armed Services chairman calls for removal of Navy chief Overnight Defense: Trump ‘may look into’ dismissal of Navy captain | Acting Navy chief stands by speech calling ousted captain ‘stupid’ | Dems call for chief’s firing | Hospital ship to take coronavirus patients Democratic lawmakers call for Navy chief’s firing MORE (D-Calif.) and Ruben GallegoRuben GallegoOvernight Defense: Trump ‘may look into’ dismissal of Navy captain | Acting Navy chief stands by speech calling ousted captain ‘stupid’ | Dems call for chief’s firing | Hospital ship to take coronavirus patients Pentagon gets heat over protecting service members from coronavirus Overnight Defense: Lawmakers call for probe into aircraft carrier captain’s firing | Sailors cheer ousted commander | Hospital ship to ease screening process for patients MORE (D-Ariz.), who similarly called for an inspector general investigation last week, on Monday wrote a letter to Esper calling for Modly to be fired.

In a separate statement, Gallego said the speech, which he called an “outrage,” also “revealed the true nature of the firing: spiteful ass covering.”

 

In other coronavirus news…

 

Army pauses basic training: The Army on Monday paused sending new recruits to basic training for at least two weeks in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

“In concert with guidance from the Department of the Army, along with expert assessments from the COVID-19 threat, decisions have been made to pause the shipment of trainees to basic combat training,” U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command head Gen. Paul Funk told reporters at the Pentagon.

Funk added that the pause is “conditions based” and will not affect those already in basic training.

The new rules also will not affect sending trainees to advanced individual training once they graduate basic.

 

Comfort now taking coronavirus patients: President Trump has agreed to allow the USNS Comfort to treat coronavirus patients, New York Gov. Andrew CuomoAndrew CuomoOvernight Health Care: US hits 10,000 coronavirus deaths | Trump touts ‘friendly’ talk with Biden on response | Trump dismisses report on hospital shortages as ‘just wrong’ | Cuomo sees possible signs of curve flattening in NY Manhattan cathedral will serve as coronavirus field hospital Trump confronts most difficult week yet in coronavirus battle MORE (D) said Monday.

“I spoke to the president and he has agreed to our request to treat #COVID patients on the USNS Comfort,” Cuomo tweeted. “This means 1,000 additional beds staffed by federal personnel. This will provide much-needed relief to our over stressed hospital systems.”

Shortly before Cuomo’s tweet, the Pentagon said some patients on board the Comfort and its sister ship in Los Angeles, the Mercy, have already tested positive for the virus.

“Have we had patients who ultimately were determined to have coronavirus on the hospital ships? Yes,” Joint Staff surgeon Brig. Gen. Paul Friedrichs said at a press briefing.

 

ON TAP FOR TOMORROW

The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace will host a virtual event on “Presidential Leadership in Times of Crisis: Foreign Policy, National Security, and Domestic Challenges” at 10 a.m. https://bit.ly/2JL1BqI

The Wilson Center will host a webcast on “Disinformation Amid the Coronavirus Pandemic” at 3 p.m. https://bit.ly/2V65SKK

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ICYMI

— The Hill: Democratic senator rips Navy head’s ‘completely inappropriate’ speech on ousted carrier captain

— The Hill: Pentagon gets heat over protecting service members from coronavirus

— Reuters: Exclusive: Planned $1 billion U.S. aid cut would hit Afghan security force funds

— The New York Times: The growing culture of secrecy at Guantánamo Bay

— Associated Press: Taliban warn peace deal with US near breaking point

Trump adviser warned of coronavirus threat in January

President TrumpDonald John TrumpOvernight Health Care: US hits 10,000 coronavirus deaths | Trump touts ‘friendly’ talk with Biden on response | Trump dismisses report on hospital shortages as ‘just wrong’ | Cuomo sees possible signs of curve flattening in NY We need to be ‘One America,’ the polling says — and the politicians should listen Barr tells prosecutors to consider coronavirus risk when determining bail: report MORE’s trade adviser, Peter Navarro, reportedly warned his White House colleagues about the threat the novel coronavirus posed to the U.S. public in a memo in late January, when Trump was still publicly downplaying the risk. 

Navarro issued another warning in a second memo in February, estimating that up to 2 million Americans could die from the virus, and calling for at least $3 billion to be appropriated to support efforts at prevention, treatment, inoculation and diagnostics, Axios reports

In the first memo, dated Jan. 29 and addressed to the National Security Council and first reported by The New York Times, Navarro reportedly urged an immediate travel ban on China. The same day as the first memo was sent, Trump formed the White House coronavirus task force.

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A few days later, the Trump administration restricted travel from China. 

But Navarro’s strongly worded initial memo, according to the reports, did not match up with the rhetoric Trump was using. The president was still downplaying the threat of the coronavirus outbreak well into February and early March. 

In mid-February, Trump told governors “a lot of people think [the virus] goes away in April with the heat — as the heat comes in,” and as late as March 9 the president was still comparing the severity of the coronavirus to the “common flu” and signaled businesses would not be shut down. 

In the Feb. 23 memo, which was addressed to the White House and attributed to Navarro but not signed by him, Navarro warns that “this is NOT a time for penny-pinching or horse trading on the Hill,” Axios reports. 

In his second memo, Navarro estimated that a “full-blown COVID-19 pandemic” could infect as many as 100 million Americans and kill as many as 1.2 million, the Times reports. 

Navarro’s second memo seemed aimed at the White House task force, according to the newspaper. 

“Any member of the Task Force who wants to be cautious about appropriating funds for a crisis that could inflict trillions of dollars in economic damage and take millions of lives has come to the wrong administration,” the memo reportedly said. 

The Trump administration ended up asking Congress for $2.5 billion, an amount Democrats criticized as too low, and in early March approved a $8.3 billion coronavirus package passed by Congress. 

A White House spokesperson was not immediately available for comment. 

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Ex-CFPB director urges agency to 'act immediately' to help consumers during pandemic

Former Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFBP) Director Richard CordrayRichard Adams CordrayOn The Money: Trump officials struggle to get relief loans out the door | Dow soars more than 1600 points | Kudlow says officials ‘looking at’ offering coronavirus bonds Ex-CFPB director urges agency to ‘act immediately’ to help consumers during pandemic Justices spar over fate of consumer agency MORE on Monday outlined a number of steps that the agency should promptly take to help consumers during the coronavirus pandemic.

In a white paper posted on Medium, Cordray and two other former CFPB officials argued that the agency currently “has been proceeding as if it is oblivious of the new and urgent risks facing consumers.”

“It is relaxing various duties for financial companies and continuing to push the industry to comment on regulatory initiatives at a time when the focus needs to be placed on the grave economic hardship now confronting millions of Americans,” the former CFPB officials wrote. They added that the agency “has the legal authority needed to take urgent steps to prevent many consumers from sliding off the financial cliff.”

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Cordray, who served as the CFPB’s first director from 2012 to 2017 and was appointed by former President Obama, said that a top priority for the agency should be to learn about what’s happening in consumers’ lives and what help they need.

“For example, the CFPB has a first-class consumer complaint response system that provides real-time information from consumers all over the country on what is happening in their lives,” he and his former colleagues wrote. “The CFPB should use it to learn from consumers what exactly is happening and make the answers publicly available.”

Cordray also said that the agency should help prevent people from being evicted or have their homes foreclosed on. He and the other former CFPB officials said that the the agency should monitor banks to make sure they provide the foreclosure relief authorized in the new $2 trillion coronavirus relief law, inform people about restrictions on evictions that state officials have imposed, and monitor mortgage servicers.

Additionally, Cordray urged the CFPB to issue guidance aimed at preventing debt collectors from engaging in abusive behavior, police companies that repossess cars, and work with other federal and state agencies to police coronavirus-related scams.

“The economic crisis emerging in this country creates enormous and unavoidable problems and risks for many consumers,” Cordray and his former colleagues wrote. “It is in difficult times that strong consumer protections are needed the most. The CFPB is well positioned to make a difference for large numbers of Americans, but it must confront the circumstances and act immediately to mitigate the harmful effects of this crisis.”  

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The white paper was addressed to current CFBP Director Kathleen Kraninger and the leaders of House Financial Services Committee and the Senate Banking Committee.

A CFPB spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Sen. Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth WarrenOn The Money: Trump officials struggle to get relief loans out the door | Dow soars more than 1600 points | Kudlow says officials ‘looking at’ offering coronavirus bonds Overnight Energy: Trump floats oil tariffs amid Russia-Saudi dispute | Warren knocks EPA over ‘highly dangerous’ enforcement rollback | 2019 sees big increase in methane levels in air Ex-CFPB director urges agency to ‘act immediately’ to help consumers during pandemic MORE (D-Mass.), who designed the CFPB, highlighted Cordray’s paper on Twitter.

“He’s right: the consumer agency has an important role to play during this economic crisis to protect working families, but @CFPBDirector Kraninger must stop letting the banking industry drive the agency’s agenda,” Warren tweeted.

 

 

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Momentum grows to change medical supply chain from China

Calls are growing for the U.S. to reduce its dependence on China for key medicines and supplies as Americans face widespread shortages in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic.

While the U.S. supply chain’s heavy reliance on Beijing for medical manufacturing has been glaringly apparent for roughly two decades, both lawmakers and administration officials say the virus has exposed just how vulnerable the country is as it leans on China and other nations to help provide the tools necessary to combat the pathogen.

Peter Navarro, President TrumpDonald John TrumpCampaigns face attack ad dilemma amid coronavirus crisis Outgoing inspector general says Trump fired him for carrying out his ‘legal obligations’ Trump hits Illinois governor after criticism: ‘I hear him complaining all the time’ MORE’s economic adviser, pledged this week that the United States would move away from its reliance on other nations and toward building up its own capabilities to produce drugs and medical supplies.

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“One of the things that this crisis has taught us, sir, is that we are dangerously overdependent on a global supply chain,” Navarro said during a White House press briefing, standing next to Trump. “Never again should we rely on the rest of the world for our essential medicines and countermeasures.”

Trump has also indicated he is seeking further independence on supplies, emphasizing in a Thursday meeting with pharmaceutical companies that the virus “shows the importance of bringing manufacturing back to America so that we are producing, at home, the medicines and equipment and everything else that we need to protect the public’s health.”

The concern is bipartisan. Three Senate Democrats backed legislation put forward by Sen. Marco RubioMarco Antonio RubioMomentum grows to change medical supply chain from China Confusion surrounds launch of 9B in small-business loans Trump officials report billions in small business loans on first day of program MORE (R-Fla.) last month that advocates for the U.S. to reprioritize its productive capability in order to achieve less supply chain dependence on China, particularly as it relates to products used in the federal health care system.

Sen. Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth WarrenMomentum grows to change medical supply chain from China Why Gretchen Whitmer’s stock is rising with Team Biden Democrats seize on Trump’s firing of intelligence community watchdog MORE (D-Mass.) and others previously raised concerns about such reliance in early December, urging Defense Secretary Mark EsperMark EsperAircraft carrier commander removed by Navy tests positive for COVID-19: NYT Pentagon staffers told to come to work with face coverings: report Esper faces tough questions on dismissal of aircraft carrier’s commander MORE in a letter to “address the dangers posed by this reliance on foreign drug makers,” months before the coronavirus grew into a pandemic.

Their concerns followed the 2019 annual report from the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, which warned Congress that U.S. consumers, including the military, are “heavily dependent” on China for drugs and active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), arguing that this “presents economic and national security risks.”

But the U.S. also relies on China for key supplies such as masks and gowns to help protect health care professionals from contracting disease as they treat infected patients.

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The Congressional Research Service in a report released last month said that last year China supplied 30 percent of U.S. imports of medical personal protective equipment, which is in dangerously short supply in parts of the country.

Altogether, the U.S. imported more than $12.7 billion worth of pharmaceuticals and antibiotics, medical devices and food products from China in 2018, according to Rubio, who wrote a February op-ed warning about the U.S.’s reliance on China. He noted that these numbers do not reflect APIs. China is believed to supply roughly 80 percent of APIs to the U.S.

Experts say the U.S. is already learning the risks of this dependence the hard way: empty shelves of medicine that won’t get filled as fast as they need to be.

In a further sign of how vulnerable the U.S. is, more than 50 countries, including the U.K. and India, have imposed some sort of export ban on essential medicines amid the pandemic.

And in state-run media outlets, China has threatened to withhold medicine from the U.S.

To many experts and policymakers, the coronavirus serves as a call to action.

“If you withhold medicine, you’re basically threatening to kill the American people. If that is not a warning, I don’t know what is,” said Rosemary Gibson, a senior adviser at The Hastings Center.

“What we’re learning from that is that no matter how many treaties you have, no matter how many alliances, no matter how many phone calls, when push comes to shove you run the risk, as a nation, of not having what you need,” echoed Navarro, who oversees trade and manufacturing policy for the administration.

Navarro said once the coronavirus crisis passes, federal agencies such as the Veterans Affairs Department and the Defense Department should prepare for future crises by stocking up on items such as medicines, masks and ventilators. He also indicated that the Food and Drug Administration would need to work quickly to approve medical manufacturing so that the U.S. can compete with other countries that have cheaper labor and fewer regulations.

And while some experts have raised concerns about the cost-effectiveness of moving medical manufacturing back to the U.S., others have argued that not only will there be major health and national security benefits, but the U.S. also will see great gains both economically and in quality of the drugs it produces.

Generic drugs can be made more quickly, more cheaply and with real-time quality control, all while producing more jobs, said Gibson, who is an author of “China Rx: Exposing the Risks of America’s Dependence on China for Medicine.”

“We can revitalize our economy and put people back to work,” she said.

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Moving manufacturing back to the U.S. could prove a rough transition, coming nearly 20 years after China effectively pushed the U.S. out of the scene.

And experts have described a domino effect in the U.S. of China taking over the global production of key chemicals used in drugs.

Shortly after the U.S. opened up free trade with China in the early 2000s, the last U.S. aspirin plant closed in 2002. The last vitamin C plants shuttered around the same time, and then the last penicillin plant closed in 2004. The Chinese industry, heavily subsidized by the government, put its medical products in global markets while keeping costs low in order to drive out competition, experts say.

Now, companies and manufacturers are scrambling to obtain chemicals that are in short supply.

In addition to the military delivering needed supplies, the Trump administration and state governments have employed a series of methods to help address the shortage, including leaning on foreign countries and U.S. businesses to bring supplies from overseas

The federal government and private companies have teamed up to help bring aid from other countries to the U.S. in what is called Project AirBridge. A spokesperson from the Federal Emergency Management Agency said Wednesday that this project has coordinated four shipments since March 29, with more arriving daily.

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Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker (R), meanwhile, appealed to New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft to help secure a supply shipment from China as the shortage in his state became dire. On Thursday, the New England Patriots team plane arrived in Massachusetts carrying more than 1.2 million N95 masks from Shenzhen, China.

The U.S. government is also pressing more private companies to adapt their supply chains to produce the needed supplies at home. Trump has even made use of the rarely deployed Defense Production Act (DPA) to compel American manufacturers to turn their production lines against COVID-19.

Ford announced on Monday that it would be teaming up with General Electric to manufacture ventilators at its plant in Michigan, where it aims to “produce 50,000 of the vitally needed units within 100 days and up to 30,000 a month thereafter as needed.”

Some of the companies that the government is leaning on to help address the shortage are also finding themselves the subject of the president’s wrath.

Trump on Thursday announced that he would use the DPA to compel 3M, a multinational company that produces equipment for health care workers, to make more respirator masks. He later took to Twitter to attack the company in what appeared to be an effort to pressure it to stop exporting masks to Canada and Latin America, warning that 3M “will have a big price to pay.”

“The narrative we are not doing everything we can to maximize delivery of respirators in our home country, nothing could be further from the truth,” 3M CEO Mike Roman told CNN in response to the president’s blast. 

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The scramble within the U.S. also comes as Beijing is facing accusations of concealing information about the initial COVID-19 outbreak, with Chinese officials downplaying the severity of the virus and denying that it could be transmitted between humans in early January. Those actions could have contributed to many deaths, researchers say, because other countries, including the U.S., lost precious time to prepare for the impact of the virus.

Adding to the scrutiny, Bloomberg News reported Wednesday that a classified U.S. intelligence community report given to the White House showed China has purposely reported false data about its number of coronavirus cases and deaths.

So while officials are calling for the supply chain to be retooled, some experts are also warning that Beijing must first take responsibility for its early handling of the virus, particularly as infection rates surpass 1 million people globally and 258,000 confirmed cases in the United States.

“It is irresponsible on our part to simply go back to business as usual,” said Michael Auslin, a distinguished research fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution.

Many Texas Cities Susceptible To Large Measles Outbreaks: Study

Low and decreasing vaccination rates in Texas schools are making cities both big and small vulnerable to large outbreaks of measles, according to a new study from the University of Pittsburgh. The Texas Pediatric Society asked the university researchers to use Texas as a model for the study to show the possibility of large outbreaks, according to a press release.

Under current 2018 vaccination rates, three Texas metropolitan areas were shown to be vulnerable to large outbreaks. According to the simulation used by researchers, large outbreaks of more than 400 cases occurred in the Austin-Round Rock and the Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington metropolitan areas at current vaccination rates. In Tyler, there’s a potential for an outbreak of more than 100 measles cases.

If vaccination rates in the state were to decrease even further, the expected number of measles cases in an outbreak would surpass 500 cases in the Austin, Dallas and Houston metropolitan areas. A five percent decrease in school vaccination rates was associated with a 40 to 4000 percent increase in outbreak size, the study found.

“At current vaccination rates, there’s a significant chance of an outbreak involving more than 400 people right now in some Texas cities,” David Sinclair, a postdoctoral researcher at the university, said in a press release. “We forecast that a continuous reduction in vaccination rates would exponentially increase possible outbreak size.”

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SEE ALSO: U.S. Measles Outbreak: Here’s Who Needs A Vaccine


Vaccination figures cited in the study show that since 2003, the number of reported conscientious exemptions, which includes personal and religious exemptions, has increased from 2,300 to 64,000 in Texas students. Texas law allows parents to choose to have their children exempt from vaccines for reasons of conscience, including religious beliefs.

In the study, about 64 percent of the cases simulated by researchers occurred in children who had not been vaccinated for religious or personal reasons. But the study also found that 36 percent of measles cases would be in those who had not been vaccinated for medical reasons, had a vaccine that had failed or in adults who had not been vaccinated.

Measles, which was declared eliminated in the United States in 2000, has made a resurgence in recent years. In 2019, just over 1,200 measles cases have been reported in the country, the highest number since 1992.

According to the latest statistics from Texas health officials, 21 cases have been reported in the state this year.

The measles vaccine is highly effective in preventing the disease. The CDC says two doses of the MMR vaccine are about 97 percent effective in preventing measles while a single dose is 93 percent effective in preventing the deadly disease.

The majority of people who get measles are unvaccinated and the disease can spread when it reaches a community where groups of people haven’t received the measles, mumps and rubella, or MMR vaccine, according to the CDC. The agency says more measles cases can occur if there’s an increase in the number of travelers to the United States who have measles or if the disease spreads within pockets of unvaccinated communities.

How A Sharecropper's Son Anonymously Became USC's Biggest Donor

LOS ANGELES, CA — He’s among the most generous philanthropists in Los Angeles History, but few would recognize his name. And that’s just how billionaire B. Wayne Hughes Sr. wants it.

Hughes, the son of a sharecropper who would go onto make his fortune as the Public Storage magnate, has quietly given $360 million to USC between 2010 and 2015. All the donations were anonymous because, according to Hughes, charitable work is its own reward. And, so, without a word of publicity, Hughes became the most generous donor in USC history.

Until now.

A USC publication this week leaked the identity of the university’s biggest benefactor. The extent of his generosity is all the more notable for the lack of buildings or monuments named in his honor. “To walk the USC campus is to be presented with a list of its benefactors. Donor names shout from classroom buildings and dorms, the food court and the swimming pool, the news desk at the journalism school, and even the yard of the Catholic church,” noted the Los Angeles Times. “But for the man believed to have given more money to USC than anyone else, there are no engraved facades or illuminated signs.”

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Hughes, 85, has told associates that publicizing charitable work diminishes it. He “has intentionally chosen to live his life in a way that he avoids the spotlight,” his attorney said.

His reticence about his wealth is a rarity in Los Angeles, where wealth and self-promotion often go hand in hand, according to The Times.

Hughes’ humble approach to philanthropy mirrors his humble roots. He was born to a sharecropper who fled the Dust Bowl of Oklahoma. He grew up in poverty in the San Gabriel Valley, and attended high school in Alhambra before he won a scholarship to USC in the 1950s, sending him on a life-changing journey.

He opened his own real estate firm and invested $25,000 in his first storage unit in the 1970s. It quickly made a profit, and before long his brand, Public Storage, would become synonymous with the industry itself.

His early investors were lifelong friends he made at USC. Those friends inluded Lynn Swann, Marcus Allen, Rodney Peete and O.J. Simpson. He stood by Simpson through his murder trial and according to a defense attorney, worked behind the scenes to help plot a successful court strategy, The Times reported.

Public Storage would become the nation’s largest self-storage company valued at more than $40 billion, according to reports.

But friends say you couldn’t tell Hughes was one of the richest men around. He wears jeans, loves In-N-Out Burger and spent years eating breakfast at the same Coco’s several times a week, the Times reported.

After his son died from childhood leukemia, Hughes donated tens of millions to cancer research and treatment. But he never stopped giving to his alma mater. In 2006, he was finally ready to emblazon a name on a facility at USC. He had the court at USC’s basketball arena named for his late best friend and former classmate Jim Sterkel, the Times reported.

At the time, efforts to find out who donated $5 million for the naming rights went nowhere.

L’art très pluriel de Madagascar s’expose au musée du quai Branly à Paris

«On ne connaît pas les arts de Madagascar. Longtemps, on a considéré qu’ils n’avaient pas la délicatesse des objets asiatiques. On estimait aussi qu’ils n’ont pas la force de l’art africain. Mais ils sont plus discrets, plus délicats. Il faut apprendre à les apprivoiser, à les regarder pour en découvrir leur singularité et leur subtilité», explique Aurélien Gaborit, commissaire de l’exposition du musée du quai Branly.

Une chose est sûre: l’art malgache est très singulier, notamment en raison de ses influences multiples. Située dans l’océan Indien, la Grande Ile a ainsi vu débarquer des populations d’Asie du Sud-Est dès le Ve siècle. A partir du VIIIe-Xe sont arrivées des Bantous venus d’Afrique de l’Est. Madagascar commerce avec les marchands arabo-musulmans qui sillonnent l’océan Indien. Commerce qui lui apporte céramiques chinoises et islamiques, objets en verre venus de Perse. Ces objets inspirent artistes et artisans locaux, comme le montre un fort beau récipient gris à usage funéraire en chloritoschiste, du XVe, dont la forme rappelle les antiques vases tripodes (à trois pieds) chinois.  

Récipient à usage funéraire en chloritoschiste du XIV ou XVe siècle, découvert lors de fouilles archéologiques dans la nécropole de Vohémar (nord-est de Madagascar). Collections du musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac. (FTV – Laurent Ribadeau Dumas)

Autre exemple des influences venues d’Outre-Mer: de saisissants manuscrits en caractères dits «sorabé», caractères arabes adaptés à la langue malgache. Lesquels ont servi à rédiger des formules de devins, des prières coraniques, des textes historiques…

De leur côté, les Européens n’ont commencé à s’intéresser à l’île qu’à partir du XVIe siècle. Au XIXe, leur présence devient pesante avec la colonisation française (à partir de 1895). Laquelle ne laissera pas forcément un bon souvenir, notamment en raison de la sanglante répression qui a suivi la révolte de 1947. Mais dans le domaine artistique, les Malgaches sauront s’emparer de l’influence hexagonale, par exemple dans la peinture. Ou, de manière plus anecdotique, pour des motifs de bracelets en argent qui s’inspireraient… des galons des militaires venus de France.

Bois de lit représentant apparemment un défilé militaire ( Musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac, photo Claude Germain)

Points cardinaux
Constituée par de multiples apports extérieurs, la culture malgache n’en est pas moins très spécifique. Le monde des vivants est ainsi régi par le zodiaque, le vintana. Lequel associe ses 12 signes aux points cardinaux. Ce qui détermine aussi bien l’organisation de la vie quotidienne que l’orientation de l’habitation. «Le Nord-Est indique la direction des ancêtres. Au nord de la maison, séjourne ainsi tout ce qui est sacré, à commencer par l’époux, symbole de l’autorité. Le sud est réservé au profane: serviteurs…», observe Aurélien Gaborit.

Comme les humains, les objets domestiques ont une place déterminée. Et sont ainsi chargés de symboles. A commencer par le lit, dont les bords (bois de lit) sont magnifiquement décorés avec, par exemple, des défilés militaires. On peut aussi trouver sur ce type de meuble des représentations de canards à bosse, animal symbolisant l’énergie sexuelle. Le lit étant par essence le lieu où s’exprime cette énergie…

On trouve également sur ces meubles nombre de représentations de zébus. Venu du continent africain vers le Xe siècle, ce bovidé, très caractéristique de la Grande Ile, est l’un de ceux que l’on observe le plus dans l’art malgache. «Le zébu est un symbole de richesse, mais aussi un symbole religieux, célébré et sacrifié lors des cérémonies et des cultes. Mais c’est par ailleurs un élément utilitaire, utilisé pour la corne, le cuir…», note Aurélien Gaborit.

Différents poteaux funéraires montrant notamment des figures féminines, symboles de fécondité, ou des représentations de colons. (Musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac, photo Gautier Deblonde)

La beauté des poteaux funéraires
Le quotidien et le sacré sont donc très imbriqués dans l’art et la culture de la Grande Ile. «Les croyances, le sacré sont matérialisés par des objets (plats rituels, textiles) impliqués dans des cérémonies qui unissent les vivants et les morts», explique le dossier de presse de l’exposition. D’où la proximité du monde des esprits avec celui des humains. Et l’importance des cérémonies funéraires et des tombeaux.

Symbole artistique le plus caractéristique et le plus raffiné de cette imbrication entre vivants et défunts: les poteaux funéraires en bois, hauts de plusieurs mètres, qui surplombent les tombes. Ces objets pleins de vie représentent des figures humaines, mais aussi des zébus, des oiseaux, des crocodiles… Ils «évoquent la vie des défunts, en exprimant (leur) réussite sociale, leur parcours, leur existence», constate le dossier de presse. Les représentations sont parfois saisissantes de réalisme, comme cet oiseau pique-bœuf qui avale les parasites dans le cou d’un zébu. Ou émouvantes de tendresse, comme ces enfants avec leurs mères.

Etonnants poteaux funéraires… Preuve de leur caractère spécifiquement malgache, ils restent aujourd’hui une tradition bien vivante. Avec des sujets très contemporains. Tels les vols de zébus, fléau qui a fait des milliers de morts à Madagascar. Mais les représentations peuvent être plus pacifiques. Il suffit de voir l’affiche de l’exposition sur laquelle figure un poteau bleu surmonté d’un… avion. On ignore si le défunt voulait montrer qu’il avait voyagé. Ou s’il aurait ardemment désiré voler.

Affiche de l’exposition «Madagascar, arts de la Grande Ile» (Musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac)

 

Daniel Cohn-Bendit: il a fait de « jouir sans entrave », son slogan

En 68, il faisait la révolution en France. En 97, il épousait sagement Ingrid, après seize ans de vie commune. Il est revenu sur la scène politique française pour redonner des couleurs aux écologistes. Et faire partager son appétit de vie et de pouvoir.

Le rire et la voix de Daniel Cohn-Bendit ont retenti tard dans la nuit, ce 7 juin 2009 à La Bellevilloise, un lieu festif de Paris. Et dans son regard bleu, cerclé de drôles de lunettes rondes, se lisait, outre la malice, la jubilation d’avoir été au-delà d’un rêve, celui de réaliser un score à deux chiffres aux Européennes et de frôler le parti socialiste jusqu’à l’égaler.

Avec 16,28 % des suffrages, Daniel Cohn-Bendit, soixante-quatre ans, est redevenu, à plus de quarante ans d’intervalle, le héros d’une certaine France. Une France qui ne se soumet pas, une France qui a envie de se laisser entraîner par ce «bouffeur de vie» comme le nomme avec affection Christophe Girard, l’adjoint PS au maire de Paris en charge de la Culture de Paris, lui-même ancien Vert.

On croyait Dany le Rouge un rien amorti, mais celui qui exaltait les étudiants en 1968 avait encore du ressort pour soulever les foules durant la campagne et les inviter à « vivre autrement, travailler autrement, entreprendre autrement pour avoir plus de plaisir dans la vie».

Manger autrement aussi… l’eurodéputé n’est pas du genre régime! Rebelle, mais jouisseur, «c’est un gentil Gargantua», s’amuse encore Christophe Girard, qui aime à raconter les bons repas entre copains – «Il y a toujours une place pour chacun à la table de Dany» – quand le vin coule à flots, que la bonne chère s’apprécie et que les débats s’enflamment.

Autre passion qu’il partage avec son fils, Bela, dix-huit ans: le football. Ensemble – ils sont si proches que Dany ne supporte pas de s’éloigner de son fils plus de trois jours – ils commentent les matchs, vibrent aux buts marqués. L’ex-leader de 68 rêve de se réincarner en Michel Platini, sacré, avant Zidane, plus grand footballeur français. Fou de sport, il devrait, cet été, commenter pour France Télévision, l’épreuve de marathon au Championnat du monde d’athlétisme de Berlin.
Entre la France et l’Allemagne, pour Daniel Cohn-Bendit, c’est une histoire d’allers-retours. Sur fond d’Europe.

Bien que né en avril 1945 à Montauban de parents juifs allemands réfugiés en France, il opte pour la nationalité allemande afin d’éviter le service militaire français, mais se définit comme un «citoyen européen». «Mon territoire naturel, c’est l’Europe», répète-t-il à l’envi. En 2005, fervent défenseur de la Constitution européenne, il n’hésite pas à venir en France prôner le oui au référendum ce que n’apprécie pas la secrétaire nationale du parti communiste: «Oui, Marie-George, je sais: je suis un juif allemand!», la tance Dany qui habite toujours à Francfort-sur-le-Main, avec sa femme et son fils où ils viennent de déménager pour une maison plus écolo…

Voilà vingt-huit ans qu’il vit avec Ingrid, mais il ne l’a épousée qu’en 1997. C’est elle qui, dans un café new-yorkais avait fait sa demande. Sur le thème: «Tu vas te présenter en France aux Européennes de 1999, je veux que l’on se marie pour montrer que ta vie est en Allemagne.» Le contestataire a fini par dire «oui» dans un petit village de l’Hérault, à Lauret le 29 août 1997.

Il pourrait dire «oui» aussi à son fils qui souhaite le voir prendre la nationalité française, comme l’a toujours eu son frère, Gaby, de dix ans son aîné, le frère protecteur. Français, pour mieux lorgner vers des ambitions hexagonales? Il s’en défend. Mais Dany la provoc bouge encore. On l’a encore vu sur les plateaux de télévision tutoyer tout azimut, invectiver ses adversaires au point de faire sortir de ses gongs François Bayrou. Une stratégie payante, le président du Modem est resté sur le carreau!

Florence Muracciole

Article paru dans Gala, juin 2009

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Sicile : l’Etna en entré en éruption

C’est le plus grand volcan d’Europe en activité. Depuis lundi 24 décembre, l’Etna (Italie) crache un panache de cendres. La colonne de fumée haute de plusieurs kilomètres semble immobile et reste inoffensive. L’éruption attire de nombreux curieux, mais il faut attendre la nuit pour distinguer des coulées de lave au travers des cendres.Aucun risque pour les habitantsPlus de 300 secousses sismiques légères ont été détectées autour du volcan. Pour les autorités, ce réveil de l’Etna n’est pas dangereux. “Bien sûr si la situation évolue, si l’éruption devient plus puissante, cela peut poser problème. Mais pour l’instant il n’y a aucun risque pour les habitants. Le seul problème, ce sont les cendres qui retombent à cause du vent”, témoigne Nicola Alleruzzo, directeur régional de la protection civile au service de sismologie. L’aéroport de Catane tourne au ralenti, car une partie de l’espace aérien reste fermé. Le JT

  • JT de 12/13 du mardi 25 décembre 2018 L’intégrale

Les autres sujets du JT

  • 1

    Noël : l’heure de l’ouverture des cadeaux a sonné

  • 2

    Noël : le message de paix du pape François

  • 3

    Bénévolat : un repas solidaire à l’Opéra Garnier

  • 4

    Solidarité : un brunch de Noël pour les sans-abri

  • 5

    “Gilets jaunes” : un réveillon sur les ronds-points

  • 6

    La Réunion : un Noël de galère à l’aéroport

  • 7

    Noël : à peine déballés, ces cadeaux déjà revendus

  • 8

    Noël : messe de minuit au Mont-Saint-Michel

  • 9

    Isère : vandalisée, une petite station familiale condamnée à la fermeture

  • 10

    Jura : un opticien retrouve des lunettes de Michel Polnareff

  • 11

    Le château de Vaux-le-Vicomte fête Noël