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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sylvester80 who wrote (1229272)5/11/2020 11:39:18 PM
From: puborectalis3 Recommendations

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  Respond to of 1576793
 
Dr. Anthony Fauci will warn the Senate on Tuesday that the U.S. risks "needless suffering and death" if the economy reopens too soon, the New York Times reported Monday night. Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the face of the U.S. public-health response to the coronavirus pandemic, will testify before a Senate committee Tuesday morning via video conference. Fauci emailed a Times reporter Monday night with what he planned to say, namely "the danger of trying to open the country prematurely." Fauci warned in the email that if states reopen without following the White House's guidelines -- which many states are already doing -- they will run the risk of more outbreaks around the country. "This will not only result in needless suffering and death, but would actually set us back on our quest to return to normal," he told the Times.



To: sylvester80 who wrote (1229272)5/12/2020 12:03:31 AM
From: puborectalis5 Recommendations

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Melinda Gates says US coronavirus response is ‘chaos,’ gives Trump administration a D-minus grade
PUBLISHED FRI, MAY 8 202011:02 AM EDTUPDATED FRI, MAY 8 202012:02 PM EDT

Jasmine Kim @JASMINEJHKIM

KEY POINTS

“We have governors who are stepping up, luckily, but now we have 50 different homegrown state solutions instead of a national response,” Melinda Gates said in an interview with Politico.Gates said that once testing and contact tracing are in place, states can then start thinking about slowly reopening places in a safe and healthy way.The co-chairman of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation told Politico that in order to fight the health crisis, far more money is needed for testing and contact tracing.