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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: abuelita who wrote (177786)9/5/2021 6:24:54 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
maceng2

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217764
 
I meant 'something' doesn't seem right, but hard to say exactly what'

More of the same below that makes me feel weary. The global vaccine / vaccination efforts seem somewhat haphazard, flying an airplane whilst building it, but already committed to the design, and not keeping agnostic. I understand why medicine should impact politics, as same as why return should impact investment. I hesitate when politics run medicine, and investment seem to impact return.
bloomberg.com

Fauci Cites Possible Delay for Moderna Booster: Virus Update

6 September 2021, 05:38 GMT+8


We're tracking the latest on the coronavirus outbreak and the global response. Sign up here for our daily newsletter on what you need to know.

Anthony Fauci said U.S. booster shots against Covid-19 are likely to start only with the vaccine by Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE, while the Moderna Inc. shot may be delayed. White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain pushed back against criticism that the Biden administration is rushing booster shots ahead of scientific evidence.

The Group of 20 are set to pledge to do more to tackle the impact of the pandemic on mental health as ministers meet in Rome this weekend.

The U.K. is looking at requiring vaccine passports for entry to big venues by this month, though has yet to make a decision on shots for healthy schoolchildren. Italy will decide by the end of the month whether vaccines will become mandatory.

Key Developments
Global Tracker: Cases pass 220.5 million; deaths exceed 4.5 million
Vaccine Tracker: More than 5.46 billion doses administered
Delta surge means this is as good as it gets for global growth
They suffered through Covid, and still don’t want the vaccine
One vaccine makes more antibodies than another. Does it matter?
Battered by Covid, cities fight for survival




Israel to Brief U.S. on Pfizer Boosters (5:05 p.m. NY)
Israel, the first country to widely roll out booster shots, will brief the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as decides on additional Covid vaccine doses in the U.S., Reuters reported.

Officials with Israel’s Health Ministry will brief U.S. counterparts on Sept. 17, days before President Joe Biden has said he wants to begin a widespread booster campaign.

The briefing will be confined the Pfizer Inc-BioNTech shot used in Israel -- and which officials say is likely to be rolled out first in the U.S. as a booster.

Argentina Cedes Brazil Match Over Broken Quarantine (4:44 p.m. NY)
Argentina walked off the field in a World Cup qualifiying match after Brazilian health officials stopped the game because three players violated quarantine. The game against Brazil was scoreless when play was suspended in the seventh minute. Four Argentine players will be fined and deported after breaking quarantine, the Associated Press reported.

Ohio Judge to Rule on Ivermectin Case (3:50 p.m. NY)
An Ohio judge is set to issue a ruling involving ivermectin, a drug often used to treat parasites in livestock. The case is one of a handful around the U.S. involving the use of the drug to treat Covid-19 patients.

At issue is whether a hospital must continue, against its wishes, to administer the drug to a 51-year-old man who contracted Covid-19 and was placed on a ventilator. His wife sued to force the treatment.

Michael Oster, a judge in Butler County, temporarily let stand an order that UC Health must administer the medicine, though almost all medical experts warn against it as ineffective as an anti-viral and possibly harmful.

Oster ruled on Friday that the hospital could discontinue the treatment if the patient suffered negative side effects, and that he would make a final decision by Monday.

Government Can’t Convince on Vaccines, Kentucky Governor Says (2:10 p.m. NY)
The U.S. is “well past” the point where unvaccinated Americans are going to listen to a government official and take the vaccine because of it, Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

“We’re probably past even the point where a local official, a pastor or others” could do so, he said. People are “going to have to call or go see that person they love and care about that is unvaccinated and they’re going to have to put their relationship with that person on the line,” Beshear said.

The Democratic governor has gone head-to-head with the state’s Republican-led legislature on the subject of masks. State officials in Kentucky, which is currently battling one of the worst outbreaks in the U.S., have limited the governor’s emergency powers. Almost 58% of people in Kentucky have gotten at least one shot, compared with the U.S. average of 62.3%, according to the Bloomberg Vaccine Tracker.

Boosters Likely to Start With Pfizer: Fauci (12:31 p.m. NY)
President Joe Biden’s chief medical adviser said U.S. booster shots against Covid-19 are likely to start only with the vaccine by Pfizer Inc.and BioNTech SE, while the Moderna Inc. shot may be delayed.

“The bottom line is very likely at least part of the plan will be implemented, but ultimately the entire plan will be,” Anthony Fauci said Sunday on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

Fauci’s comments may lead to more clarity on the administration’s stance after Biden ran into resistance by medical experts who advise U.S. regulators over what they view as political interference in the review process.

Delta Peaking in U.S. South, Medical Dean Says (9:57 a.m. NY)
The delta variant wave is showing signs of peaking in the U.S. south, where it has driven infections and hospitalizations to records, Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health said.

The spread in the Midwest is unlikely to be as bad, largely because of higher vaccination rates and tools such as more testing, he said on “Fox News Sunday.” He also defended President Joe Biden’s drive to widely administer boosters, a plan that has been criticized for getting ahead of scientific evidence.

“It is clear to me that this is probably going to end up being a three-shot vaccine package,” he said, adding that the evidence was stronger for older and more medically vulnerable people than for the young and healthy.

Biden Isn’t Rushing Boosters, Klain Says (9:30 a.m. NY)
President Joe Biden’s administration remains hopeful that booster shots will kick off in the U.S. in about two weeks, though it will need approval by regulators and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain said.

Klain pushed back against criticism that Biden is attempting to rush booster shots ahead of scientific evidence. Officials from the CDC and the Food and Drug Administration were involved in setting the week of Sept. 20 target date, he said on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday.

“We still are hopeful that at least one of the vaccinations could be available that date,” Klain said.

Israel to Restart Tourist Group Program (9:08 a.m. NY)
Israel will restart a pilot program on Sept. 19 allowing organized tourist groups of five to 30 people to visit the country. Tourists must have proof of a second Israel Health Ministry-recognized vaccination within the past six months, or have had their third vaccination, to qualify for entry.

They will also have to present a negative PCR test and will undergo a serological test at the airport upon landing. The Tourism Ministry said it hopes to allow individual tourists into Israel in the near future.

BOE Said to Drop Staff Return Policy (8:42 a.m.)
The Bank of England has reversed a policy that was scheduled to start in September encouraging staff to return to the office at least one day a week, a person familiar with the matter said.

The BOE has now told staff that there’s no longer an expectation to come in and that they can choose to return on a voluntary basis, the person said. That’s because of a recent surge in Covid-19 cases in the U.K.

Germany’s Vaccine Contribution (8:30 a.m. NY)
Germany is seeking to provide 100 million vaccine doses to global inoculation efforts by the end of this year, DPA reported Sunday, citing Health Minister Jens Spahn.

“That’s as much as we’ve used in our country so far,” Spahn said on the sidelines of a G-20 meeting of health ministers in Rome.

Italy to Decide on Compulsory Vaccine (6:58 a.m NY)
Italy will decide by the end of September whether vaccines will become mandatory for all people aged 12 and over, Public Administration Minister Renato Brunetta said. A law will be passed if the country hasn’t reached a vaccination level between 80% and 90%, he said. At the moment, the level is about 71.5%, government data show.

G-20 to Do More to Tackle Mental Health (5:35 p.m. HK)
The Group of 20 are set to pledge more action to tackle the fallout of Covid-19 on mental health, according to a draft statement seen by Bloomberg. Health ministers meeting in Rome this weekend will acknowledge the consequences from isolation to unemployment to food insecurity, and that the pandemic has exposed gaps in mental health systems.

The impact has disproportionately hit groups including women, older people, persons with disabilities, as well as the poorest and most vulnerable, the draft showed. Ministers will therefore pledge to increase access to services and to better integrate mental health into their broader health care systems.

Pfizer Safe for Cancer Patients: Study (5:09 p.m. HK)
An Israeli study among 330 actively treated cancer patients found that 88% developed antibodies after two doses of Pfizer’s vaccine, compared with 97% among a control group of healthy patients. The researchers measured the antibody response two months after the second inoculation.

The study at Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center also found no significant side effects among cancer patients receiving active treatment. The proportion who didn’t develop adequate antibody responses was highest among those receiving chemotherapy as a single drug, compared with those treated with immunotherapy and targeted therapy as single drugs.

German Cases Now Exceed 4 Million (4:27 p.m. HK)Germany has now recorded more than four million cases since the pandemic began, according to the RKI public health institute. Health officials registered more than 10,400 infections in the 24 hours to Sunday.

U.K. Looking at Vaccine Passports for Big Venues (4:26 p.m. HK)The government is “looking at by the end of September” requiring vaccine certification for entry to large venues where infection risk may be higher, Vaccines Minister Nadhim Zahawi said in an interview with Sky News.

He also said the government hasn’t yet decided on whether to roll out vaccines to healthy 12- to 15-year-olds, but if the move does go ahead, then parental consent would be needed.

— With assistance by Ian Fisher, Alexander Michael Pearson, Alisa Odenheimer, Tassia Sipahutar, and Reade Pickert

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
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To: abuelita who wrote (177786)9/6/2021 9:34:57 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
3bar
Mick Mørmøny

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217764
 
Rex Murphy: Trudeau is a one-man lighthouse of virtue-signalling for faults not his own

What a pointless election

Aug 31, 2021



Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau departs Ottawa on Aug. 22, 2021, en route to campaign in Atlantic Canada. Trudeau has been pressed on Afghanistan on every day of the campaign so far.

Perhaps within the shadowed cloister where the prime minister’s super smart political ferrets dwell, it was thought “clever” to call an election in August, during a pandemic, two years in from the last one, and during the gift of Afghanistan to the Taliban.

But clever can very quickly become cute, and cute is not a nice word. It is not a generous word. It lives very close to sneaky, sly and tricky. Cute is always wrapped around personal advantage and gain, and is so close to what is referred to in common terms as “pulling a fast one” as to be shorthand for it. Cute is also the very opposite of generous, public-minded, worthy and noble … well, actually noble isn’t even in the same semantic country as cute. I can imagine what they would be pleased to call their strategy session.

“Hey, if we call it in August, two years before we really have to, with Canadians exhausted from all the toils and anxieties of COVID, weary to numbness from lockdowns and ever-changing mandates, and of course so very many in the deepest distress over job losses, the failure of small businesses built up over the years, their children out of school for over a year, and stressed to breaking point from the imposed claustrophobia of the pandemic — well, let’s just say, in that atmosphere the population will let the premature call just slide by. Who notices a stream when the flood waters are high?

It’ll be just one more irritation alongside so many other, bigger more serious concerns, they’ll hardly notice we didn’t have to call it, we have no real reason to call it (except of course that it looks really good for us if the polls hold) and we can grab a majority, four full years, and an impotent opposition.”

If such was the thinking, and we have been given no grounds to assume any differently — two weeks in the Liberals have given no substantial reason for why this thing was called — then it is a grotesque misreading of the Canadian electorate. It is the thinking of political charlatans, opportunistic before all else.

Canadians are not (most times) intense about their politics, but when serious matters are at stake, when the honour of the country is subdued and bypassed in favour of political advantage, they can get very serious indeed, and they will present a strenuous recoil to any attempt to stampede them into making an electoral choice on spurious and contrived grounds.

Then there is Afghanistan. The political arm of this government can plan, prepare, and be ready-as-hell when their political fortunes are at play. However, when the gravest of events occur, the safety of its citizens and its allies in a far-off country is on the line, then it’s all scramble, confusion, bureaucratic fudge and straight on-the-line incompetence. There were warnings by the dozen, from generals and the bottom ranks some months and even years ago, to prepare for the evacuation from Afghanistan of our citizens and allies. To use a choice phrase, did the government have their backs?

Here’s the phrase for it: Just Not Ready. To which I’ll add: At All. Would that Christie Blatchford were still writing. It would take her judicious fury to match the shame of this moment.

The flaw in our current leadership is blatantly clear. Mr. Trudeau is a one-man lighthouse of virtue-signalling for faults not his own. The light dims catastrophically however, when events on an historic scale are mismanaged on his watch. You may put it in a capsule sentence. The calling of this needless election during days of international crisis and pandemic is one of the most careless and self-centred acts of Canadian politics of which we have record.

The events in Afghanistan are not a play, the people abandoned are not extras; the soldiers of our country who went a world away on a mission nominated by our country, should not, cannot, and must not be blithely passed over, relegated to the back of the political hall during this, for them most arduous and emotional moment; nor should they be denied a direct address from the Prime Minister, telling them in real language — not the concoctions of some “communications team” or the doctored script of hired spin doctors — telling them the value of what they have done, of the sacrifices they made, the lives they shed on that far away battle field.

Boris Johnson, however he is regarded, has done precisely this. He has centred the Afghanistan evacuation in his remarks to British soldiers. Here in Canada it’s a one-time 500 dollar gift to seniors, and a sitting cabinet minister with remarks not worth the pulp that was mashed to print them on, referencing the sadistic Taliban, against whom our soldiers fought, died, were lamed and traumatized, as “our brothers.” Try building that back better.

It is terrible and Pontius Pilate-cruel to “wash your hands” of people who took such great risk to help our soldiers and now to leave them defenseless and exposed to the predictable barbarities of the Taliban. This will be a very hard memory for those of our soldiers whom they helped and befriended to live with.

Dishonour is the eclipse of conscience, and is the negation of every soldier’s creed.



To: abuelita who wrote (177786)9/6/2021 6:58:17 PM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

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jazzlover2
Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 217764
 
Women: Know Your Limits!




To: abuelita who wrote (177786)9/7/2021 2:07:00 AM
From: Maple MAGA 3 Recommendations

Recommended By
gg cox
Mick Mørmøny
pak73

  Respond to of 217764
 
Go CANADA!

Pork On Your Fork

Well Said Mayor Dorval, Quebec mayor.

"PUT SOME PORK ON YOUR FORK"

A commercial promoting pork says:

"PUT SOME PORK ON YOUR FORK"

The MAYOR REFUSES TO REMOVE PORK FROM SCHOOL CAFETERIA MENU AND EXPLAINS WHY:

Muslim parents demanded the abolition of pork in all the school canteens of a Montreal suburb.

The mayor of the Montreal suburb of Dorval has refused, and the town clerk sent a note to all parents to explain why.

"Muslims must understand that they have to adapt to Canada and Quebec, its customs, its traditions, and its way of life, because that's where they chose to immigrate.

"Muslims must understand that they have to integrate and learn to live in Quebec. "They must understand that it is for them to change their lifestyle, not the Canadians who, so generously, welcomed them.

"Muslims must understand that Canadians are neither racist nor xenophobic. Canada accepted many immigrants before Muslims showed up (whereas the reverse is not true, in that Muslim states do not accept non-Muslim immigrants)."

"Just like other nations, Canadians are not willing to give up their identity or their culture.

"And, if Canada is a land of welcome, it's not the Mayor of Dorval who welcomes foreigners, but the Canadian-Quebecois people as a whole.

"Finally, they must understand that in Canada ( Quebec ) with its Judeo-Christian roots, Christmas trees, churches and religious festivals, religion must remain in the private domain."

The municipality of Dorval was right to refuse any concessions to Islam and Sharia.

"For Muslims who disagree with secularism and do not feel comfortable in Canada, there are 57 beautiful Muslim countries in the world, most of them under-populated and ready to receive them with open halal arms in accordance with Sharia.

"If you left your country for Canada, and not for other Muslim countries, it is because you have considered that life is better in Canada than elsewhere. We will not let you drag Canada down to the level of those 57 countries.

"Ask yourself this question - just once: "Why is it better here in Canada than where you came from?"

"A canteen with pork on the menu is part of the answer."

If you came to Canada with the idea that you will displace us with your prolific propagation and eventually take over the country, you should pack up and go back to the country you came from. We have no room here for you and your ideology.

If you feel the same, forward it on.

Your Everyday Freedom is Not Free, Your Military Paid For It!