Exposing the Big Game

Forget Hunters' Feeble Rationalizations and Trust Your Gut Feelings: Making Sport of Killing Is Not Healthy Human Behavior

Exposing the Big Game

Small, But Welcome, Good News From Canada

by Barry Kent MacKay in BlogCanadaCoexisting with Wildlife on July 27, 2020

https://www.bornfreeusa.org/2020/07/27/small-but-welcome-good-news-from-canada/

Matthews, Sue / Public domain.

Amid the worldwide tsunami of bad news and sadness one searches for a trickle of positivity; something to celebrate.

For some time there has been a group, operating under the banner of the Pacific Balance Marine Management (PBMM), that has been lobbying to convince the government, and to garner public support, to legalize a commercial hunt for seals and sea lions on Canada’s west coast. The argument is the usual one – too many sea lions eating too many salmon (of commercial value, of course) in a region in need of employment and revenue. In an effort to seem to be attune to rapidly growing public awareness of just how badly our species has damaged the ecosphere upon which the survival of us all depends, a nuance was added: the seals and sea lions were eating fish needed by endangered orcas, whose own survival was thus compromised.

Fishermen commonly scapegoat any species that eats fish, blaming them for declines in the fish they want, seeing each desired fish consumed by something else as one belonging to them as if by divine right. Governments are motivated to go along with the idea in the hope of absolving themselves from accountability for the real threats to commercial fisheries, such as oil pollution, plastic pollution, toxic waste, nutriment overloading from agriculture and other human waste products, climate change, damage to breeding grounds from politically advantageous commercial development, and, to a huge degree, overfishing.

It is not seals and sea lions that threaten salmon, but deforestation that degrades upstream breeding habitat of salmon, the dams put across rivers, and the relentless pursuit of profit; and lately, it seems, the dissemination of disease and parasites from coastal fish farms. The two species food chains envisioned by the would-be seal killers fail to take into account a complexity of multi-species interactions within a dynamic environment that is difficult for non-scientists to comprehend, and so, it is hoped, is ignored, along with the scientists.

Once we realized that the science did not support PBMM claims, we pointed out that the notorious east coast commercial hunt for harp seals demonstrated that there was nearly no market for seal products, notwithstanding decades of effort in research and development into commercially viable seal products and efforts to find markets, funded by Canadian tax dollars.

Last year, a video that showed fishermen lobbing explosive devices into a pack of west coast sea lions went viral. Charges were laid.

And then, the headless sea lions started to appear. Bodies, reportedly including at least one of the endangered Steller’s sea lion, began to wash ashore along Vancouver Island’s coastline. There is a market for the intact skulls of mature sea lions.

There are only seals, no sea lions, on the east coast (and the seal skulls are often bashed or shot to kill the animal at any rate) but for skulls of the northern fur seal, Steller’s sea lion, and California sea lion, and maybe even the smaller harbor seal, all found on the west coast, there is some demand.

The good news? Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans, which manages marine mammals, has confirmed that no permits will be issued to PBMM or anyone to allow commercial hunting of west coast pinnipeds – seals, fur seals, and sea lions. Of course, we must remain vigilant. But for now, our west coast pinnipeds remain protected in Canada!

Orca who carried her dead calf for more than 1,000 miles is pregnant

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/orca-who-carried-dead-calf-1000-miles-is-pregnant/

JULY 28, 2020 / 6:32 AM / CBS/APhttps://www.cbsnews.com/embed/video/?v=a1868626732568dd7f4b07740245c7ea#1VZtb9xEEP4rliUQoGy8a%2Fv8clKFElpEoFShbZAgrk7r3fHdEr%2FhXSc5qvx3Zny%2Bu7T9UCgCCZ103peZ3ZlnZp7Zt74cXdfXcusv3TDCiX9rNHT%2B8q1vHDTWX16%2F9d22B3%2Fp33baP%2FGNxqGUsVBhFrKo4gsWi7xkZZZxJrlcaBULKOMQZZv%2B%2FiVUF6Rxddm03fYi%2FeXFj5CVP12cb%2F%2F49ffz1fflz6qUpVuhtK3HNUpCVXWDY65jG6h7pgbjjJJ1vWXQatmuYQDNukFJizrOuJpsezYpea7zSMk7KnlHJW%2BvpOEGVXBQjXX9SSco2XYtbb%2F%2BFG1nGrBONr2%2FFIsoSfIkTyPOOVo2DtKZrqWN8Dh9Lkuo8RYeLiPCtd7NWzQfA9LINViKmCWgN871dlkERaBK28KdFac4MHgfWnSquqYINmNZBKYIhiIIuciKgOdFIAR%2BkzjPhFCM50nK4oSnLJMxTiPF4ziCVHBeBG4zNmUrTV0ESczvowTXKimrUvCMR7zMJKR6IbRUEqIwVDIOQ7pDCEb29NJtmNqYtutumEgWizjlbD7o9Ld%2Bjf5t%2FnNHRJjx%2BzTExQRynkalSirgWpThIl6EsVJRleVRrjT8HU8eTvx%2BgFsDd1dD%2FY5Ltq%2BNglPZ1OtT0xWB7NGNW4RpKr8i%2BFi5FMF8cBH4h5p9dP7d3d3pDNsOqt0FCE1lanCdtej017YbBwVPTC81s24A2Zh2%2FTm59eSz8NsGtJH07e%2FxnwDGD8%2FxTwj6i0SaRyHPEeJ42hFitYdlNcOy2sGSrJws8d7TJhqzvcHh%2F8liLO9GOqK%2BnkI3lWUR3LOmh%2FXVy%2BcoMb4X4g8cmkP71%2Fltiq2xF03fWQeDv6xkbZGikbCNmiia6iSTUaqSRclUqWMWlwq5mOuEVSUHqcI0F2l2ZFeyiCrMwCAHtUHav96tvcFclQO07jWd%2FkI2RGvfnL968Vj6fLvbuN7tvMEEh97YTuOawDtAWiIvX9CFsG7wuN3G2GO%2BWntwAf09UwpXzutO3RyozF5ZGF6NpUVUStAHcdt3re2GvdwG7s%2BeQiXHmiLCT%2FDnT6vnx9UoP4kXJ4uc%2BHaQ6gbzhCDDSFjVDTCNMQORdxc8S5DS49nfOV7E8gkufUVX4qS1K%2BtWa0KFQrpbkf1Kkr8viuDMf0A0mvH%2Bcuh6GNz2B0Bw%2FTBOQctFgqmnxSLO41yEUSSjxH9AxBtwcmJuNNHBektjXNt0epdpmBHTsXPwKpBupPRQ1BiA2vHcm9FghIjgPvZEHGIN4eCQevcbZErV1TWoXf4e1LDK3jsbi83YVd2t16BXpn3Cic0eI2nss5ZKRO9fDnLARK7hbET7B2r6137EsQvoUrFEZpIJASHLtQgZx9KsIJOcl5wy7x3VfYrNxeN9sTFaQ%2BuV29q08OUj%2BellgU%2BRLOHRgqWZUixWeLzMS8F0HOWhSqXI09Q%2FqFyO5VN0jyLDQ86wMYSZJzj21SVPjmL7vk516N1tOk%2FJYTDYwzcweBqkxoW68rCSvQazyXMb2XriBJu41yBdWc9YDzN%2B3copJPtT98FqHWK%2BmlenF8kttoN5W4O9wRKfav8p3JKpPhXnei9AqKzoeUZVht%2FvDJHDtT9awoZWXu0CjLKjnYVmXaxCqiVzC94dlP5MJhOQVco1ZBHSRwjVLlgS33eMh8iTGaKc7qrpET9Mp9emMVhx8cHNVxNJ78iGeBxlykG2%2BrKWjnh0um2O7opsWx1dpul8%2BCxBV4KszdhQ1vVDR%2F3guE0KKAItAYW7mvL08D57v%2B9%2BQMo0KgIKM8MwsznMjELMKMQMXwqcTTFlxrJ9TCdqntrNZYcWINYzvjUqztH6V%2B%2BmC2ac%2FtlBEzV81NRP6V0PD38C

An orca known as Tahlequah, who raised worldwide concern when she carried her dead calf for 17 days and more than 1,000 miles almost two years ago, is pregnant, scientists said. Casey McLean, the executive director of Sealife Response, Rehabilitation and Research (SR3), confirmed the pregnancy, CBS affiliate KIRO-TV reported.

Tahlequah’s pregnancy carries special meaning for a region that grieved the death of her calf with her.

The southern residents frequent Puget Sound, are struggling to survive, and most pregnancies are not successful. Tahlequah’s baby was the first for the whales in three years. The southern residents have since had two more calves, in J pod and L pod. Both are still alive.

A baby orca whale is seen being pushed by her mother July 24, 2018, after being born off the Canadian coast near Victoria, British Columbia, in this photo provided by the Center for Whale Research.
A baby orca whale is seen being pushed by her mother July 24, 2018, after being born off the Canadian coast near Victoria, British Columbia, in this photo provided by the Center for Whale Research.DAVID ELLIFRIT/CENTER FOR WHALE RESEARCH VIA AP

The current population of the southern resident orcas is 72.

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post on the nonprofit’s website says that the majority of recent pregnancies have not resulted in successful births, due to a lack of access to Chinook salmon prey. About two-thirds of all southern resident pregnancies are typically lost, researcher Sam Wasser of the Center for Conservation Biology at the University of Washington has found.

pregnant-whale-photo-july-2020.jpg
L72 pregnancy photo courtesy SR3 – Sealife Response + Rehab + ResearchSR3 – SEALIFE RESPONSE + REHAB + RESEARCH

Several of the juveniles in the pods also are looking thin, Fearnbach said.

“There are stressed whales out there, critically stressed,” she said.

Trending News

Boaters should respect the whales’ space and give them the quiet they need, Fearnbach and Durban said. Whales use sound to hunt, and boat disturbance and underwater vessel noise is one of the three main threats to their survival, in addition to lack of adequate, available salmon and pollution.

First published on July 28, 2020 / 6:32 AM

The clashes in Portland, explained


BY GRAHAM KATES

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/portland-protests-federal-agents-clashes-explainer/

JULY 28, 2020 / 11:56 AM / CBS NEWShttps://www.cbsnews.com/embed/video/?v=a1868626732568dd7f4b07740245c7ea#vVZtb9s2EP4rgj7swxBapN5lYBiStNuKtUHQtMCwqDAo8mQzoV4mSo7TIv99R0m207RDh7VdgiAUeW987u45fnD50Det5vfusu8GOHG3SkLjLj%2B4qofKuMvrD25%2F34K7dLeNdE9cJXEZQFBAGnACpaAkDOOEpLhFyiALYiFiXiYlylbt7jWUL6zG%2BfnunGabv65%2BuXx%2F0%2Fx6Vt5K%2BmrzpwC5Pr%2Bp3%2F%2BB0kYPa5Rsu6YH00NniGjqXtUDkL4hQnOzIXeq35ASJHRcE76GujdE1aRtul7z2sbXq17baC8PZpy9GadvnNGMY804sxkHzSwWC1SVcIuKuCgHrf%2BTHQzHUbVzeQxH8LqpleD6zbex16sKtXnVuksWZVGaZmlI8QejHzreq6Z2l1l8%2FHrJC9DolrJlEKO%2Bnr5rvCHmskIfxibb2Bxt%2Br41y9zLPVGYGu5MsMCFQne9EgvRVLm3GYrcU7nX5Z5PfZp7NMEV%2FhVZSKOEJSQoEp%2BEQZZhRUQxEQULMyEikJnMvX4zVEXNlc69OKS7IEYLZcGBxX4pBS2LImI%2BTYMoLWPfl2UYAbc%2B%2FIRATWDLa0Min%2FlhTGb9xU27xmttPhu%2F%2Fx3jZ35Kd4k1Ecc8ilKRBimw0C%2BZ4CgvojSACJgPyb%2B4wMMJlj1sFdy97fRHNzGtVgIWvNLrhWpyj7cY%2FdbHP9unufelvsq92XDuuYfmfmQfu00usLPHk8WM24TV%2FIGuEK2NNk8hY0mcpnGaBSylQe7Za0VsNQpW3Fb4ogqGdO%2FV%2F9%2Fdlk1X8R7d8taCOLZD7u1I1cL67euXKDE8Afvu7u7jWGaQv4aSRtyVeVG1jbXgLkuuDfIssq4SI8%2BOhEqjlBdRSpIolYQx8EkmmU8oZWkJKae0oEeKhC3Uql4TG6gtfoW%2BO7FBDr%2Fenznj2TusK95hSG%2BstwteWQY6P7tyns9SF08snN1PQtefSr3DIoVWmUbiOcNYgBvLNi6zgcG6QjfTwdBizRlzuCrX%2BlQI3DnTjbg9kI95a6C7GgojOlWAPIibtqlN0%2B3lNrA7fQYlH7TNJT3BX3fcPTvuBtlJGJ1EmSXIjotbDNpCizk0oulgXGMBBpRGNEV2FOGEw8WcaUvUMW79aF3iR21Wpl%2BtLVozxrjD2xW3973IvVP34cFye2trynyOetg%2FUs9e68u9u%2BCyWO0qG1A17HBwtND1978D5tn1wwQkj%2BKAJZJFYRZmzA8Cjhz%2FgEmvoOcjrSMaPazv7Rr3No2c2gFwltgbzPVUAu%2BHDiQRdmrAOGemmY%2BRYzZsZo%2BTFZfIQrg49Mdug60qGq1BTE12UEN6f2I7935WZqWb9RrkStU%2FUUt%2Bj5OmzPOaF9oWxPQi4R1iqOF0wPg7%2B5i4dpMoC2VE7fvDT0lIeYxszQRJBYQhYyzhWWGL%2FyPVfWWvO77hlXOL0ZhHQuMzhTOR%2BZkISFYWkoRRiQ%2BbIGW2LUtk9TAQmXAPKpdD8Qyt2HQgRRGaED9xfH%2FJwmUUHsX2o7%2FfwDTnYZzqe4Y4cWCHLzBVj8Dvdfb41z3CuJp3bZ0eYJ6gABmFLEYoCh%2BnVwh%2BTAoaUhKXGY3TqAhCYPaWR709Dm1jR4vTgSVK5wcHc6Dw2XEzGPQFVkfi5BD7UCSYWyStkc2ewdZe2rX0st4L2LJf2Vej5QP8%2F5uydHftDiPKdudqCgBlBzMLzbrIF7br1RacOyjcmR7HlJQJlfjWLPCCUE7UyIMS0fYzxtKQpcnU948YbrSuVaWQG8IDpFfN0IkR1MI4c1sXHSbgUvPeYjC6m%2Ft3ZYNbHe9sP2frs4T1CVyrobJViyOiVPrRsVVAEai305tWug%2BPXoNPx%2Fwnk2cagfsSIfMEMk8HzVxOZF9B3ThuKpCKXzYYAqI9I6yByzlf39e59TAj9ZWWRnb5YrDfZkY%2FPPwN

You’ve seen the videos: armored police shooting objects into crowds in Portland, teargassing the city’s mayor and beating protesters who stand in the way of their tactical advances. But why are federal officers in Portland, and have they fueled violence as critics and city officials claim? 

How did Portland become the epicenter of protests against police violence?

Portland had seen nearly 40 consecutive nights of protests against police violence and systemic racism after the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police, but city officials say the nightly demonstrations were dwindling when the Department of Homeland Security decided on July 4 to increase its presence around Portland’s federal courthouse.

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What happened at the federal courthouse?

On the night of July 3, a small group of people shattered a glass door at the federal building, which is within a block of both the Multnomah County Justice Center — home to a local jail — and a city police precinct, both of which had been earlier focuses of anti-police violence protests. Prosecutors later accused the group of attempting to set a fire.

The incident prompted the Department of Homeland Security to act on an executive order issued a week earlier by President Trump, authorizing the agency to prioritize enforcement against the “vandalism of government property.” In the weeks since, the federal presence — dubbed “Operation Diligent Valor” — has ballooned to include at least 114 federal officers not usually stationed at the courthouse. 

Police Reform & Racial Justice 

As local officials decried the federal government’s dramatic response to vandalism, blaming it for reigniting protests, dozens have been arrested at the nightly demonstrations, and at least one man claims to have been pulled by unidentified federal agents into an unmarked minivan while walking blocks away. He said he was released without charges.

Dozens more protesters, journalists and federal agents have been injured — one protester holding a stereo over his head suffered a fractured skull after being shot by a U.S. Marshal in the head with a so-called less than lethal projectiles. Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler was among those tear-gassed, and in a viral video, Christopher David, a 53-year-old Navy veteran, was shown being beaten by federal officers. In court documents, federal officials said at least 28 officers have been injured.

How much damage has been done to the courthouse?

Officials have estimated at least $50,000 in costs to clean up graffiti, broken glass and fix security equipment.https://58097a8ef6bbc07fd0603b0093cf5f60.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

Are Portland police and federal officers working together?

The Portland City Council on July 23 voted to bar city police from working with federal law enforcement. They had previously coordinated responses to the protests.

Portland Protests Continue Unabated Despite Federal Law Enforcement Presence
Federal police confront protesters in front of the Mark O. Hatfield federal courthouse in downtown Portland as the city experiences another night of unrest on July 26, 2020.SPENCER PLATT/GETTY

Who are the federal police stationed at the Portland courthouse?

Though courthouse protection is typically the purview of the Federal Protective Service and the U.S. Marshals, “Operation Diligent Valor” includes agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), according to a federal court declaration by Gabriel Russell, who is commanding the operation. The group includes members of an elite unit called the Border Patrol Tactical Unit, according to officials.

Why is Border Patrol allowed to patrol a Portland courthouse?

Portland, like most of the United States’ major cities, falls within the so-called “100-mile zone” that defines CBP’s jurisdiction, according to the University of Illinois Springfield professor Deborah Anthony, who has studied the agency’s expanding operations in that corridor. She said CBP is free to operate within 100 miles of any border or coastline, a swath of land that’s home to roughly two-thirds of the country’s population.

“It’s based on a statute from the 1940s that says border agents can search the border for aliens within a reasonable distance of the border or an external boundary. In 1953, a (Department of Justice) regulation determined that that was a hundred miles. Nobody seems to really know why they came up with a hundred miles, but that’s essentially been the rule ever since,” Anthony said.

At the time there were about 1,000 border agents nationwide, compared with roughly 21,000 today.

Can they really detain anyone inside the 100-mile zone?

No, Anthony said. “What they are supposed to be doing within that 100 miles is very limited. The charge of customs and border protection is facilitating trade customs and immigration law. And so they really are not supposed to be doing other types of operations, crime control, things like that, even within the 100 miles.”

She said the agency’s involvement in an operation like “Operation Diligent Valor” in Portland is unusual. “It’s the first I’m aware of because as far as I’m aware, it has nothing to do with immigration.” 

Why is the attorney general sending federal officials to Chicago, Kansas City and Albuquerque?

While President Trump appeared to have conflated the two operations on July 20, they are not exactly the same. His executive order and the Portland operation are ultimately focused on enforcement of federal law, on federal property. Attorney General William Barr’s July 22 announcement pertained to officials with the FBI, U.S. Marshals Service, DEA, and ATF potentially assisting local police in the enforcement of local laws, with an effort toward curbing crime in those cities.

Can federal officials go to cities and enforce local laws?https://58097a8ef6bbc07fd0603b0093cf5f60.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

Only if they’re invited, according to Ohio State University law professor Peter Shane. “There’s no kind of overarching statutory authority for federal agencies, in general, to send federal officers to assist in local law enforcement,” Shane said. “If there is a request for federal help, the federal government can provide that help, but there has to be a request.”

Have the cities requested federal help?

No, the mayors of all three cities were among 14 to sign a letter condemning Homeland Security’s role in Portland, and the mayors of Albuquerque and Kansas City have explicitly said they are not asking for federal cooperation in local law enforcement. The U.S. Attorneys in both cities have said federal agents will be focused on violent federal crimes. Chicago’s mayor, Lori Lightfoot, said federal agents will be allowed to “work in partnership” with Chicago detectives investigating gun homicides.

Carbon Emissions Are Chilling The Atmosphere 90 Km Above Antarctica

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

main article image
Noctilucent clouds, Kuresoo bog, Soomaa National Park, Estonia. (Martin Koitmäe/Wikimedia/CC BY 4.0)
JOHN FRENCH, THE CONVERSATION
28 JULY 2020

While greenhouse gases are warming Earth’s surface, they’re also causing rapid cooling far above us, at the edge of space.

In fact, the upper atmosphere about 90 kilometres (56 miles) above Antarctica is cooling at a rate 10 times faster than the average warming at the planet’s surface.

Our new research has precisely measured this cooling rate, and revealed an important discovery: a new four-year temperature cycle in the polar atmosphere. The results, based on 24 years of continuous measurements by Australian scientists in Antarctica, were published in two papers this month.

The findings show Earth’s upper atmosphere, in a region called the “mesosphere”, is extremely sensitive to rising greenhouse gas concentrations. This provides a new opportunity to monitor how well government interventions to reduce emissions are working.

View original post 672 more words

Dr. Anthony Fauci says he and his family have been receiving ‘serious threats’

PUBLISHED FRI, JUL 24 20202:45 PM EDTUPDATED FRI, JUL 24 20208:24 PM EDTJasmine Kim@JASMINEJHKIMKEY POINTS

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/24/dr-anthony-fauci-says-he-and-his-family-have-been-receiving-serious-threats.html?recirc=taboolainternal

  • “There are people who get really angry at thinking I’m interfering with their life because I’m pushing a public health agenda,” he said during a podcast interview with CNN commentator David Axelrod.
  • Fauci and his family have been assigned a security detail after “serious threats” against his wife and his daughters were made. 
Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Anthony Fauci (L) speaks as Response coordinator for White House Coronavirus Task Force Deborah Birx looks on during the daily briefing on the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, in the Brady

Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Anthony Fauci (L) speaks as Response coordinator for White House Coronavirus Task Force Deborah Birx looks on during the daily briefing on the novel coronavirus.Mandel Ngan | AFP | Getty Images

White House coronavirus advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said Friday that he and his family are receiving hate mail and “serious threats” from people angry over his advice on the pandemic. 

“There are people who get really angry at thinking I’m interfering with their life because I’m pushing a public health agenda,” he said during a podcast interview with CNN commentator David Axelrod. “The kind of not only hate mail but actual serious threats against me are not good.”

Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and his family have been assigned a security detail after threats were made against his wife and daughters. 

“I mean, really? Is this the United States of America? But it’s real. It really is real,” he said. 

Fauci revealed that he has previously been targeted for his work on finding treatments for HIV/AIDS. However, he said, “it’s really a magnitude different now because [of] the amount of anger.”

“I’ve seen a side of society that I guess is understandable, but it’s a little bit disturbing,” he added. 

Fauci has become one of the most trusted and recognizable infectious disease experts in the nation. Known for his candid advice, Fauci has often opposed President Donald Trump in recommending school closures, state lockdowns and the use of face masks in public areas where social distancing isn’t possible. He was also a key advisor to the White House in recommending the closure of businesses early on in the outbreak in the U.S. 

He told Axelrod that the attacks are a reflection of the “divisiveness of our society at [the] political level.” He asserted that the coronavirus pandemic is a public health issue that should not be politicized. 

In the past, President Donald Trump and other White House officials have criticized Fauci’s advice on Covid-19. During an interview earlier this month with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, Trump said “Dr. Fauci’s a nice man, but he’s made a lot of mistakes.”WATCH NOWVIDEO01:38Dr. Anthony Fauci warns the coronavirus will never be eradicated

“They’ve been wrong about a lot of things, including face masks,” Trump said. “Maybe they’re wrong, maybe not. A lot of them said don’t wear a mask, don’t wear a mask. Now they’re saying wear a mask. A lot of mistakes were made, a lot of mistakes.”

Fauci, who is a key member of the White House’s coronavirus task force, was also not invited to Trump’s press conferences on the pandemic this week. 

“What we are talking about are fundamental principles of public health, and I don’t see how people can have animosity to that,” he said. “The hostility against public health issues is difficult to not only understand but difficult to even process.”

Fauci said he understands the negative economic consequences of shutting down the country for a prolonged period of time. He and other health officials are working on reopening America safely “in a measured fashion,” he said. 

Fauci says there are early signs coronavirus outbreaks are brewing in Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

KEY POINTS
  • White House health advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said Tuesday there are early signs that a coronavirus outbreak could be brewing in Indiana, Ohio, Tennessee and Kentucky.
  • The so-called positivity rate, or the percentage of tests run that are positive, appears to be rising in those states — an early indication that the outbreak is worsening, Fauci said.
  • “That’s a surefire sign that you’ve got to be really careful,” Fauci said during an interview with ABC’s “Good Morning America.”
Director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases Dr. Anthony Fauci testifies before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce on the Trump Administration's Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic, on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, June 2
Director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases Dr. Anthony Fauci testifies before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce on the Trump Administration’s Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic, on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, June 23, 2020.
Kevin Dietsch | Pool via Reuters

White House health advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said Tuesday there are early signs that a coronavirus outbreak could be brewing…

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Maryland increases bear hunting permits

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

Maryland increases bear hunting permits

Prompted by a growing population of black bears, the Maryland Wildlife & Heritage Service has bumped up the number of bruin hunting permits for the upcoming season in October.

“There will be 950 permits this year,” said Harry Spiker, the agency’s black bear project leader. The 2018 and 2019 seasons each had 800 permits available.

Spiker said the bear population continues to expand by 12% annually. “Using several models, we estimate the state’s bear population at 2,500. And that doesn’t count cubs,” he said during a recent telephone interview.

There are no other changes to the Oct. 26-30 bear hunt…

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Covid-19 only a the dress rehearsal for pandemics

https://www.bizcommunity.com/Article/196/858/206652.html

27 JUL 2020SAVE | EMAIL | PRINT |  PDF   Some scientists feel that the current Covid-19 pandemic, which has already infected more than 16-million and killed more than 600,000 worldwide, is only a dress rehearsal for an even bigger pandemic.Covid-19 only a the dress rehearsal for pandemicsProfessor Robert Bragg, researcher in the Department of Microbial, Biochemical and Food Biotechnology, and Professor Aliza le Roux, assistant dean: natural and agricultural sciences and associate professor: zoology and entomology at the University of the Free State (UFS), warn about future pandemics, saying that humans’ interaction with animals and lack of learning from the past are the reasons for this.

Another researcher, Dr Martin Nyaga, senior lecturer/ researcher: next generation sequencing (NGS), agrees with Bragg and Le Roux about new viruses and says viruses will keep emerging due to their general nature.

More pandemics might be on the cards

“There is a feeling among some scientists that this could just be a dress rehearsal for the real big pandemic. Many virologists, including me, have been predicting an influenza pandemic for many years. Mankind has been warned about the coming pandemics for many years, but people seem to want to listen only when they are in the midst of a pandemic.

“The bird-flu virus, Influenza H5N1, has a mortality rate of around 60-65%, but it has not yet developed human-to-human transmission. If it does, we could be in for a really serious pandemic,” says Bragg.

Humans’ need for affordable meat on a regular basis is creating the perfect breeding ground for more diseases like this. “This means our demand for meat is driving cheaper and less controlled agricultural practices, cramming more animals into smaller spaces, feeding them less and less natural fodder.

“Remember mad cow disease? Have you seen chicken batteries? We should not blame ‘exotic’ eating practices, but look at our own. If we could see eating meat as a ‘treat’ and not a daily ‘right’, we can reduce pressure on the environment and reduce the speed at which another zoonotic virus can evolve,” says Le Roux.

Nyaga says that more viruses are possible in other organisms as well. “In as much as research on viral particles continues, more outbreaks are possible within not only the coronavirus domain, but also any other class of organisms. The ever-changing nature of viruses, mainly due to mutations and other mechanisms of genetic diversity, could occur through chain of transmission, including via the intermediate hosts. This kind of antigenic mutations could make the general population vulnerable due to lack of immunity against the new strains of emerging strains or completely novel viruses.”

Origin of SARS-CoV-2 and other diseases

According to Bragg, the previous coronavirus that led to SARS and caused major concerns, also started in a wet food market in China – just like Covid-19. That virus was traced to a civet cat meat. This virus had a very high mortality rate but could only be transmitted when a person showed clinical signs. Therefore, measuring the temperature of people was useful and beneficial.

“There are many other examples of serious human pandemics which was spread from animals to humans. Another good example is the Ebola virus, which has also been traced to people eating bats in Africa. Yet another example is HIV, which is believed to have spread to man as a result of the consumption of chimpanzee meat.

“The most serious has been the 1918 Spanish flu, which started off in pigs and spread to man. All of these have to do with the mistreatment of animals by man.

Learning from past pandemics

Le Roux says past pandemics can teach us how to respond from a public health perspective. “If we found treatments that worked before, we can use that as a starting point for current treatments. But if we can’t even control human behaviour (learning from past mistakes), think of how much more challenging it is to develop a vaccine against a virus that is so adaptable.”

Prof Bragg adds: “Mankind should also have learned lessons from the 1918 pandemic, but man is notoriously slow at learning lessons from the past. Each generation wants to make their own mistakes. One can only draw parallels from the people who defined lockdown regulations in 1918 to celebrate the end of the First World War and the demonstrations currently underway in the USA.

“The celebrations in 1918 caused more deaths than have occurred during the four years of the First World War. I predict that within a week or two, the number of cases and mortalities in the USA (and around the world) are going to skyrocket,” says Bragg.

Knowing the animals involved

Nyaga explains that identification of the source (reservoir hosts) and the intermediate host(s) is crucial in devising strategies, including palliative measures and designing drugs or vaccines against a potential pathogenic agent such as SARS-CoV-2. This will help in understanding the genomic dynamics and likely immunological responses that could be triggered along the chain of transmission to humans, and more importantly, how the compounds in the therapies can terminate the different stages of viral replication.

Le Roux says she is not sure if a vaccine would be developed based on knowledge of a host species, but there is the possibility that (depending on the species) we can use some of the host’s antibodies to develop our own antibody therapies. “But generally, the knowledge can help more long-term planning on how to avoid future host shifts to humans. If we know where the virus originated, we can study that species or group of species better, and understand how the mutations occurred, etc. It would help us with future prevention more than current mitigation, I think.”

Research in the fight against Covid-19

According to the experts, various research efforts are afoot on the control of the disease. These range from the development of a vaccine, development of antiviral drugs, and the development of monoclonal antibodies or antibody fragments. Research is also needed on improved, faster, and cheaper diagnostic tests to test for the presence of the virus as well as for the detection of antibodies against the virus in people. This last test is needed to demonstrate the efficacy of vaccines as well as people in the population who have recovered from the virus.

Bragg says research on the epidemiology of the virus is also needed. How far it can spread and how long it can survive are critical questions, particularly when talking about social distancing. Much of the current information is based on guesswork. “Worldwide, research efforts are gaining an understanding of the virus and how it is causing disease in humans. If you think that this virus was unknown before December 2019, mankind has very quickly learned a lot about this virus and there are many very interesting articles coming out on what receptors the virus binds to and how the virus causes damage to the host and overcomes the host defence mechanisms.”

Nyaga says while the understanding of SARS-CoV-2 and Covid-19 is still in its infancy, results are already emerging on the molecular dynamics and immunological perspectives of the virus. With the characterisation of the genomic sequences of the virus, it has been possible to design several vaccines, including the inactivated virus, viral vectors, nucleic acid-based and protein-based vaccines. A good number of them are currently under clinical trials for possible WHO qualification towards global use. “Just recently, a clinical trial on one of these vaccines, called ‘the South African Ox1Cov-19 Vaccine VIDA-trial’, was on schedule locally to be championed by the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg,.”

According to him, effective prevention essentially requires an in-depth understanding of the clinical severity of Covid19, the extent of transmission and infection, and the efficacy of treatment options in order to accelerate the development of diagnostics and treatment options.

Bragg says that the socio-economic impact of the virus is very serious at this stage. The final number of human cases and fatalities are still a long way from completion. This virus is going to be with us for quite some time and the mortality rate in some countries with high levels of HIV and TB could become very high.

Hunters will have more opportunities to harvest deer this season

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

Hunters can start planning ahead for the deer season with the release of the 2020 Minnesota hunting and trapping regulations handbook, now available on the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources deer hunting page at mndnr.gov/hunting/deer, according to a press release.

“This season, hunters in general will see more chances to harvest deer,” said Barbara Keller, DNR big game program leader. “These opportunities are due to increases in deer populations in much of the state and as part of our response to chronic wasting disease in southern Minnesota.”

Hunting licenses go on sale Aug. 1, and are available at any DNR license agent by telephone at  888-665-4236 or online at mndnr.gov/buyalicense.

The popular youth deer hunting season continues and will happen statewide Oct. 15 through Oct. 18. During last year’s inaugural statewide youth season, nearly 5,700…

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