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#cnn coronavirus town hall
lorphic-news · 2 years
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Dr. Deborah Birx Admits White House COVID-19 Vaccine Efficacy Claims Were Based on "Hope" Not Science
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Dr. Deborah Birx, who served as the COVID-19 response coordinator under former President Donald Trump for the United States, testified for the first time on Thursday (June 23) before a House panel about her time in charge. Appearing before the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis, Birx revealed that the Biden administration's COVID-19 vaccine efficacy claims were based on "hope"—not science—such as when President Joe Biden overstated the efficacy of vaccines by telling Americans in a CNN town hall, "You’re not going to get COVID if you have these vaccinations." Read the full article
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mfreddii · 4 years
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Summer Paradise🏖️🇮🇹 which place is your favourite??
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factcheckdotorg · 3 years
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sutrala · 3 years
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ICYMI: Jen Psaki Does Clean-up on Biden Vaccine Messaging Flub, Exposes Bigger Problem in the Process http://dlvr.it/S4JZHn
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newsresults · 3 years
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Watch the entire CNN coronavirus town hall
Watch the entire CNN coronavirus town hall
Vaccine rollout stumbles as states grapple with supply issues Dr. Anthony Fauci and CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky discuss the coronavirus vaccine rollout with Anderson Cooper and Dr. Sanjay Gupta. CDC director warns against all forms of non-essential travel Dr. Anthony Fauci and CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky warn against all forms of non-essential travel to prevent the spread of…
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kp777 · 4 years
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techmaqofficial · 4 years
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Watch the entire CNN coronavirus town hall CNN's Randi Kaye, Sara Sidner and Will Ripley break down the latest Covid-19 numbers CNN's Anderson Cooper and Dr.
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ecoorganic · 4 years
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Watch the entire CNN coronavirus town hall New CDC forecast predicts 135,461 deaths by July 11 CNN's Anderson Cooper and Dr. Sanjay Gupta discuss the latest on the coronavirus pandemic around the world as a new US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention forecast projects 135,461 coronavirus deaths in the US by July 11.
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freeindependentnews · 2 years
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https://www.wnd.com/2021/11/ted-cruz-blasts-big-birds-appearance-cnn-town-hall-government-propagandafor-5-year-old/
“Sesame Street” has become a propaganda arm of the Biden regime, Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas charged Saturday.
On Saturday, the Twitter account of the "Sesame Street" character Big Bird tweeted a message telling children to be vaccinated against the coronavirus.
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saywhat-politics · 4 years
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At the rally, Trump ridiculed former Vice President Joe Biden for social distancing at campaign appearances with America’s death toll over 200,000. Also on Thursday, Biden held a town hall meeting on CNN where he spoke in-depth about the challenges of a coronavirus vaccine.
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sleepysera · 3 years
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Feb. 17 Headlines
WORLD NEWS
Myanmar: Protests held across country despite UN fears of violence (AP)
“‘In the past, such troop movements preceded killings, disappearances, and detentions on a mass scale,’ he said in a statement issued by the U.N. Human Rights office in Geneva.”
United Arab Emirates: UN to inquire about Princess Latifa (BBC)
“Princess Latifa has accused her father of holding her hostage in Dubai since she tried to flee the city in 2018. In secretly recorded videos shared with the BBC, Princess Latifa said she feared for her life.”
China: Steps up online controls with new blogger rules (AP)
“The latest move is in line with ever more restrictive regulations under President Xi Jinping that constrict an already narrow space for discourse. The Chinese leader has made ‘digital sovereignty’ a central concept of his rule, under which authorities have set limits and increased control of the digital realm.”
US NEWS
Texas: Deaths mount as winter storm leaves millions without power (BBC)
“A huge winter storm sweeping across the southern US has killed at least 21 people and left millions without power. Millions of people in the state, which rarely experiences such low temperatures, have been struggling to cope with the lack of power and frigid conditions.”
Biden: Feb. 16 Town Hall (CNN)
“President Biden took questions from Americans about multiple aspects of the coronavirus pandemic, including vaccines, school reopenings and economic recovery. Biden said things may be back to normal by next Christmas, but he cautioned that he did not want to ‘over promise anything.’”
Native Americans: Embrace vaccine, virus containment (AP)
“The trend owes itself both to a harsh reality — Native Americans and Alaskan Natives are four times more likely to be hospitalized from COVID-19, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — and tradition. Community before self has long been a core principle in Native American culture.”
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phroyd · 4 years
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The virus death toll in the U.S. surpasses 200,000.
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The death toll in the United States from the coronavirus pandemic passed 200,000 on Tuesday as the first day of fall brought questions about what may be ahead.
More deaths have been announced in the United States than in any other country, and reports of new coronavirus cases have climbed in the U.S. and parts of Europe in recent days, suggesting an uncertain new phase in the crisis.
Some estimated in March that fewer than 500 would die over the course of the pandemic. “More like 60,000,” the leading U.S. authority on infectious disease predicted in April. “Anywhere from 75,000, 80,000 to 100,000 people,” President Trump said in May.
But even as the toll has gone from hazy estimates to cold realities, the sheer scale has remained hard to grasp. More than 200,000 dead is such an enormous loss — nearly two and a half times the number of U.S. service members to die in battle in the Vietnam and Korean Wars  — obscuring the accretion of individual tragedies: a hard-working single mother, a Hall of Fame pitcher, a D-Day veteran, an inseparable couple and a picket line troubadour.
Now that 200,000 people have died — which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had discussed in March in internal documents as a low range for a worst-case scenario — infectious disease specialists are scrambling to determine how the pandemic could evolve in the months ahead.  
Fewer new cases have been detected weekly since a summer surge in the South and West peaked in late July. But the nation’s caseload is again growing, especially in states in the middle of the country like Wisconsin, Montana and North Dakota. Early months of the pandemic had affected mainly urban, coastal areas. The virus is spreading more broadly now, through rural communities and college towns. The arrival of flu season and the prospect of cooler fall air — likely to send many people indoors — have added to fears about what the coming months may bring.
Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the country’s top infectious disease expert, said he worries about the country entering the cooler months without having a handle on the virus. The country is seeing an average of about 40,000 new cases a day based on a seven-day average, according to a Times database.
“Those are the things that I get concerned about as we get into October and November and December,” Dr. Fauci said Tuesday on CNN. “I’d like to see us go into that at such a low level that when you have the inevitable cases you can handle them.”
Trends can change quickly. Early in April, around 800 people were dying each day, but that soon climbed. For two weeks, from April 13 to April 27, daily deaths calculated as a seven-day average stayed at more than 2,000. Nearly 800 deaths are currently being reported in the country each day. Some epidemiologists say the death toll could climb to 300,000 by the end of the year in the United States.
The painful milestones have come quickly: 50,000 deaths in April, 100,000 by May, and now 200,000, even as some states, such as Arizona, have shown how quickly both cases and deaths can decline by embracing mitigation efforts.
The United States has the highest total number of deaths across the globe, though a handful of countries in Europe and Latin America have seen more deaths per capita.
Still, the persistently high death numbers in the United States stand in stark contrast to mortalities in other high-income countries. Italy, once the center of the pandemic, reported 17 deaths on Monday; Germany reported 10 deaths the same day. In the United States that day, 428 people were reported to have died of the virus.
In recent days, countries that saw fewer cases this summer have seen the virus surge once more. Around the world, at least 73 countries as of Sunday were seeing upticks in newly detected cases as scientists race to find a vaccine and new treatments.
[Source: NYTimes]
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promin01 · 3 years
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In Milwaukee, Biden Offers Reassurance, and Tries to Avoid Mention of ‘the Former Guy’
In Milwaukee, Biden Offers Reassurance, and Tries to Avoid Mention of ‘the Former Guy’
WASHINGTON — In his first official trip away from Washington since taking office, President Biden on Tuesday offered reassurance to Americans about the availability of the coronavirus vaccines and optimism that his $1.9 trillion relief bill was the kind of ambitious plan that could restore the American economy. “Now is the time we should be spending,” he said at a CNN town hall in Milwaukee,…
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sutrala · 3 years
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Jen Psaki Does Clean-up on Biden Vaccine Messaging Flub, Exposes Bigger Problem in the Process http://dlvr.it/S4F6PH
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