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

Petition: Ban Live Animal Markets

 

https://act.pcrm.org/onlineactions/ylSnzlcDcEWM_AzIB7_sPQ2?emci=41bc0b98-9472-ea11-a94c-00155d03b1e8

The Physicians Committee is calling on the surgeon general to use his authority to ban live animal markets in the U.S. and to seek agreements for the same action internationally.

As you know, COVID-19 takes a particular toll in individuals with hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and lung diseases. Recently, Dr. Anthony Fauci predicted that coronaviruses are likely to recur seasonally, rather like influenza. This is of particular concern, given that circulating viruses can, through a process of genetic reassortment with other viruses, create new and virulent strains to which the population has no prior immunity. This was the reason for the influenza A pandemics that began in 1918 and spawned particularly deadly recurrences in 1957 and 1968, in addition to the annual recurrences that relate to more modest viral mutations. Just as influenza A is an avian virus, coronaviruses are animal viruses that pass into human populations though live animal markets.

Please sign on today and help us shut these markets down.

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Friend of pastor arrested for keeping megachurch open announces big Christian Woodstock

MANCHESTER, NH - FEBRUARY 10: Supporters cheer as U.S. President Donald Trump leaves a rally at Southern New Hampshire University Arena on February 10, 2020 in Manchester, New Hampshire. New Hampshire holds its first-in-the-nation primary tomorrow. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

“When we finally got to Woodstock we had fluid in our lungs …”

On the heels of his friend Rodney Howard-Browne’s arrest for defying orders against hosting large gatherings, evangelist Jonathan Shuttlesworth is defying orders against hosting large gatherings.

Howard-Browne was arrested yesterday for refusing to close his Tampa, Florida, megachurch even as the deadly coronavirus continues to circulate throughout the country, presumably nowhere near its peak of infection. And now, Shuttlesworth seems determined to one-up him.

Right Wing Watch

@RightWingWatch

Right-wing evangelist Jonathan Shuttlesworth, a close friend of Rodney Howard-Browne, says he intends to hold a large Woodstock-like Christian gathering in defiance of stay-at-home orders.

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SHUTTLESWORTH: “I’m going to announce it, but we’re going to hold an outdoor Easter blowout service — not online. A national gathering. You come from all over, like Woodstock, and we’re going to gather and lift up Jesus Christ. I’m not ashamed that Dr. Rodney got arrested. I’m ashamed that when they wanted to arrest preachers for having church, in the entire state there was only one to come for.”

Quick question: Jesus Christ can’t lift himself up? He needs a phalanx of wheezy devotees to do it for him?

It’s hard to overstate just how bad an idea this is. Thousands of people — many of them presumably elderly — would be gathering together in close quarters, hugging, shaking hands, high-fiving, and whatnot.

They would then take the virus back home and reseed the towns and cities they came from. It’s like they’re a snake-handling cult, but this time they’re bringing their snakes with them to Kroger.

Shuttlesworth might want to check out this video, which details the theoretical spread of the virus due to Florida spring breakers:

Tectonix GEO@TectonixGEO

Want to see the true potential impact of ignoring social distancing? Through a partnership with @xmodesocial, we analyzed secondary locations of anonymized mobile devices that were active at a single Ft. Lauderdale beach during spring break. This is where they went across the US:

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So, yeah, terrible idea, dude. Presumably he’s already taken the brown acid.

Also, Diamond & Silk are convinced the coronavirus case numbers are being fudged to hurt Trump because … well, just because:

Jason Campbell@JasonSCampbell

Diamond & Silk are speculating coronavirus deaths are being inflated to make Trump look bad

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Got that?

Of course, trying to follow their logic is like chasing a Ding Dong down a sewer grate. It’s not worth it, and you shouldn’t even bother.

But this is what we’re still dealing with. Virus deniers were bound to be out there, I suppose, but these nuts have the ear and the sympathy of the pr*sident.

And now more than ever, that’s just dangerous.

Trump Hands Coronavirus Briefing To MyPillow Exec Who Tells Americans To Read Bible

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mypillow-trump-coronavirus-white-house-briefing_n_5e82738dc5b62dd9f5d46e3b?fbclid=IwAR02rDuKN-tlvM7bIXNo-qzGEbPHI53E9RA-5bpqJNO4IarUFUBVr0OXR1A

 

The president again paraded corporate executives at the White House briefing meant to inform Americans about the COVID-19 pandemic.

President Donald Trump used Monday’s White House daily briefing on coronavirus to again parade out private company executives — including MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who used the platform to praise Trump and tell Americans amid a global pandemic to “read our Bibles.”

During the briefing — meant to inform Americans about COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus — Trump handed the podium to several CEO’s of private sector companies to tout their efforts to produce sanitizer, masks and other gear for workers amid the pandemic.

MyPillow CEO Lindell said his bedding company would be dedicating 75% of its manufacturing to producing cotton face masks, aiming to get up to 50,000 a day by end of this week. He then said he would read something he wrote “off the cuff.”

“God gave us grace on Nov. 8, 2016, to change the course we were on,” Lindell said, referring to the day Trump was elected. “God had been taken out of our schools and lives. A nation had turned its back on God.”

“And I encourage you to use this time at home to get back in the ‘Word,’ read our Bibles and spend time with our families,” he added, touting “our great president” and “all the great people in this country praying daily” as key to getting through the pandemic.

After Lindell finished his remarks, he went to shake Trump’s hand, but the president, observing a social distancing practice he had been ignoring earlier this month, did not reciprocate. When Trump took back the podium, he said he “did not know he was going to do that, but he’s a friend of mine and I do appreciate it.”

HuffPost did not immediately get a response from the White House for comment.

The U.S. currently has the highest number of confirmed COVID-19 cases of any nation worldwide, with more than 155,000 reported as of midday Monday and more than 2,400 people dead. States and hospitals across the country have been struggling to test, treat and support the ballooning number of people with the illness.

Chris Sommerfeldt

@C_Sommerfeldt

After hyping his company for a few minutes, Mike Lindell, the founder of MyPillow, says “God gave us grace” by electing Trump.

This is for some reason happening at a White House briefing on the coronavirus that has killed thousands of people in the U.S.

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Others at Monday’s briefing included executives from tech company Honeywell, which intends to produce N95 masks in new facilities; sleepwear company Jockey International, which is donating scrubs to New York doctors; and Procter and Gamble, which will make hand sanitizer.

The president cued up the speakers by saying: “We’re gonna introduce you to some of the greatest business executives in the world today.”

Earlier this month, Trump also used a White House briefing when he was still downplaying the potential threat posed by the coronavirus to praise various corporations and turn the microphone over to their executives.

In Lindell’s “off the cuff” remarks on Monday, he complimented Trump for “just a few short months ago” having the “best economy, the lowest unemployment, wages going up” in the U.S.

Earlier this month, a record 3.3 million Americans applied for unemployment benefits in one week — more than quadruple the previous record set in 1982 — as businesses nationwide were forced to shutter to combat the further spread of the coronavirus.

Media Won’t Talk About Meat Market Origins of Virus

A Meat and Dairy Industries Article from All-Creatures.org

FROM KindlyThrive.com as posted on JaneUnchained.com
March 2020

kindly thrive

The real story is: the abuse of animals in the food system is at the heart of this global debacle that is fast destroying our economy, killing a growing number of people and making hundreds of millions of people live in miserable isolation… To talk about a global pandemic without discussing its origins – in depth – is like holding a murder trial without ever mentioning the defendant. It’s irresponsible. It’s morally reprehensible. It’s stupid.

Lying by omission is one way to define “fake news.” By that definition, virtually all the mainstream news you are watching is fake. The networks essentially refuse to discuss the origins of the catastrophic coronavirus! Sure, you may hear news hosts make oblique and passing references to “live markets” as they urge you to hunker down in your homes and get out the Purell. But, that – obviously – does not tell the full story. The real story is: the abuse of animals in the food system is at the heart of this global debacle that is fast destroying our economy, killing a growing number of people and making hundreds of millions of people live in miserable isolation! This is, indeed, mother nature’s revenge. Not my phrase. That’s how an expert in zoonotic diseases described it.

I’m not always a fan of the New York Post. But, I must give them props for telling it like it is in their investigative story about live meat markets just like the one in Wuhan, China, where this pandemic began. Here is their description of the average “live market,” aka meat market.

“In stall after stall, a mix of live and dead animals, which run the gamut from the known (pig, ox, duck, chicken) to the rare or unknown due to the condition of the carcass — stare back at you. In the wet areas of the market — usually reserved for fish and sea creatures and where the ground is slick with water and often blood — the stink is worse. The animals that have not yet been dispatched by the butcher’s knife make desperate bids to escape by climbing on top of each other and flopping or jumping out of their containers (to no avail). At least in the wet areas, the animals don’t make a sound. The screams from mammals and fowl are unbearable and heartbreaking.”

Thank you New York Post. My question is: why are we not hearing similar, accurate descriptions from news anchors at the major networks? To talk about a global pandemic without discussing its origins – in depth – is like holding a murder trial without ever mentioning the defendant. It’s irresponsible. It’s morally reprehensible. It’s stupid.

Experts believe that the virus originated in bats in China, then spread to other animals, animals whom people ate. Here’s how NPR describes the insidious process: “Patients who came down with disease at the end of December all had connections to the Huanan Seafood Market in Wuhan China. The complex of stalls selling live fish, meat and wild animals is known in the region as a ‘wet market.’ Researchers believe the new virus probably mutated from a coronavirus common in animals and jumped over to humans in the Wuhan bazaar.”

OK, so props to NPR too. But, what about the more popular cable news networks? Why aren’t they dividing in deep and consistently connecting the dots between this hideous virus and the killing of animals for food? One answer may lie in what you see and hear in between the news segments. I’m talking about the commercials. Watch them! They are overwhelming advertisements for meat, dairy and pharmaceuticals. These happen to be the very industries that would collapse if consumers starting thinking realistically about the cruelty and bloodshed that goes into producing the ribs, burgers, wings, eggs, milkshakes and bacon that they have been conditioned to consume. Are American slaughterhouses much better than Asia’s live markets? There is still lots of blood, feces and body parts. No way around that. Meat doesn’t fall from the sky. The fact is: there is no nice way to kill someone who doesn’t want to die. Slaughter, by its very definition, is a nasty, grotesque business.

So, the news media continues to dance around the primal issue at the heart of this mind-boggling catastrophe, the likes of which we have never seen. Now, it is time we ask ourselves: what is the cost of ignoring this essential aspect of the coronavirus story? If we do not learn from this monumental calamity, could we be bound to repeat it? Through our society’s willful ignorance, could we be setting the stage for something even deadlier? It’s not the first time a virus or disease linked to food animals has wreaked havoc. Remember mad cow disease? Remember swine flu, which is still ongoing in China, decimating millions of pigs before their body parts can be gobbled down someone’s throat? Remember the avian flu? The philosopher George Santayana famously said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

That wise philosopher also said, “All living souls welcome whatever they are ready to cope with; all else they ignore…” Right now, we – as a culture – are still ignoring the truth staring us in the face: the killing of animals for food is having a devastating impact on our world. It’s a leading cause of human illness, meaning heart disease and cancer. It’s a leading cause of climate change, habitat destruction, wildlife extinction, water pollution and water scarcity. It’s a leading cause of human world hunger because animals eat so much more than they produce as meat or dairy. Now, add to the list, it is causing the most disruptive virus of our lifetimes.

When will the mainstream media have this conversation? Hopefully, before it’s too late.

Firsthand Look Inside Asia’s Busiest Wet Markets

Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals

Also see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPRkZbGvRsg

Unpacking COVID-19’s Visual Narrative 

According to a 2019 Pew Research Center studyover half of American adults consume the majority of their news from social media. Sentient Media analyzed the social media presence of three major news organizations to better understand how they’re portraying Asia’s wet markets to their followers. Here is what we found:

  • The New York Times has over 70 million followers across Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. NYT has covered wet markets on its website, but its social media platforms are lacking in photos that show Asia’s wet markets and more specifically, photos of the animals being bought and sold at these markets. In 2006, NYT actually suggested visiting wet markets as a tourist destination.
  • The Washington Post has 23 million followers across the same three platforms. Not only are images of wet markets neglected on WashPo’s social channels, but the website’s overall coverage of wet markets is thin. One article mentions the plummeting chicken prices in India, as many consumers are no longer purchasing meat from wet markets, but not a single photo of wet markets is present. An article about the Chinese food system’s role in pandemic prevention seemed promising, but instead of gruesome wet market photos, the article displays three grinning men holding live goats in their arms. This image far from captures the fear, confusion, and pain animals endure inside wet markets.
  • HuffPost has over 11 million followers on Twitter alone and more than 23 million across all three major platforms. Unsurprisingly, on HuffPost’s social media channels, there is a severe lack of multimedia reporting on wet markets. If you search “wet markets” on HuffPost’s website, the lack of search results is also concerning. One article mentions wet markets, and even provides a photo of seafood being sold—which is commendable—but the image does not fully capture the disarray of Asia’s wildlife markets.
These three news outlets have the combined potential to reach over 116 million people—around two-thirds of the U.S. population—across three social media channels. Why aren’t news outlets using their online reach to report the truth about the live animal markets behind COVID-19?

Mainstream media can reach millions, even billions of people around the globe each day through print and online articles, blogs, and social media. Viewers trust these outlets to report the whole truth and operate in their best interests, but that is not always the case. Sentient Media believes in reporting the truth and being accountable—values we expect to share with major media outlets.

As we have seen with COVID-19 coverage, mainstream media outlets are neglecting to show a main component of why we are in the midst of a pandemic in the first place. It is time to lift the veil on Asia’s wet markets and report the uncomfortable truth.

View the photo essay here

Covering COVID-19
With the worst global pandemic we’ve seen in over a century, it’s more important than ever to make sure the truth is reported in its entirety, not just what’s convenient.

Help us share the facts during these uncertain times and make sure the world knows our species cannot survive if we continue our exploitation of the planet and nonhuman animals.

Coronavirus and sex: What you need to know

Two people with face masks on in bedImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES

If I have sex can I catch coronavirus? You might have thought about it but been too embarrassed to ask.

To separate the facts from myths, we’ve put your questions to health experts.

Dr Alex George is an A&E doctor and former Love Island contestant. Alix Fox is a sex journalist, presenter of BBC Radio 1’s Unexpected Fluids show, and co-host of The Modern Mann podcast.

Alix Fox and Dr Alex GeorgeImage copyrightPAUL COCHRANE/JESSIE WHEALEY
Image captionAlix Fox and Dr Alex George answered some of the questions around sex and coronavirus that are being searched for online

Is it safe to have sex during the coronavirus outbreak?

Dr Alex George: If you’re in a relationship… living with that person, and sharing the same environment, it shouldn’t change your situation. However if one of you is displaying symptoms of coronavirus then you should maintain your social-distancing and isolate, even within your home. In an ideal world everyone would stay two metres apart – even in their own house, but we realise this may not be realistic.

Alix Fox: It’s also really important not to assume that if you are experiencing mild symptoms of coronavirus it will be the same for your partner. So, if you’re showing any symptoms whatsoever do try and stay away from your lover.

What about sex with new people?

Dr Alex: I certainly wouldn’t advise having new sexual partners at the moment, because the risk is you could pass on the virus.

Alix Fox: Don’t forget as well, some people who are carriers of the virus won’t have any symptoms. So even if you feel absolutely fine… you could still pass on the infection to someone and they could pass it on to other people via close contact and kissing.

Coronavirus: What you need to know graphic featuring three key points: wash your hands for 20 seconds; use a tissue for coughs; avoid touching your face

I kissed someone I recently met, and they’ve gone on to develop symptoms. What should I do?

Dr Alex: If you’ve kissed or been in contact with someone who you think has gone on to develop coronavirus, make sure you self-isolate.

Keep an eye on your symptoms. If you are developing symptoms, then be extra careful. Go online to the nhs.uk website. Only call the 111 service if your symptoms are so bad that you need medical support from us.

Alix Fox: We should be responsible with each other, and for ourselves in our relationships. If you’re somebody who has developed symptoms, and you know that you’ve kissed people recently, you should let them know. And even if you’ve kissed someone and they’ve got symptoms and you haven’t, you should also self-isolate.

I wasn’t using condoms with my partner before coronavirus, should I start now?

Alix Fox: The answer depends on why you weren’t using condoms.

If you weren’t using condoms because you have both been tested for STIs, or you’re in a heterosexual relationship prior to menopause and are using another kind of contraception to prevent an unplanned pregnancy, then that’s fine. But if you weren’t using condoms because you were relying on something like the pull-out method – or you were taking chances with STIs – then it’s even more important that you use condoms now.

Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
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Can I get coronavirus by touching someone else’s vagina or penis?

Dr Alex: If you are going to touch each other’s genitals it’s likely that you will potentially be kissing at the same time – and we know the virus is passed through saliva. Essentially, any possibility of transfer of coronavirus – from your mouth to your hands, to genitals, to someone else’s nose or mouth – increases the risk of passing on coronavirus. We want to cut this back to the absolute minimum. So, no contact between a partner that you’re not living with is really important.

How can I maintain a relationship at a time like this? I don’t want to be single now.

Alix Fox: This whole pandemic is prompting a lot of people to rethink what a good sex life is and what constitutes as an enjoyable, pleasurable exchange. I’ve heard of people writing erotic stories to each other, and people who are dating but quarantined in different places taking advantage of the time and the distance. A lot of people have been getting really creative. If you use your imagination a little bit there are lots of ways you can have a sexy time without being face-to-face with somebody.

It’s also important to remember that right now… some people might be discovering that they or their partners have different libidos. You might find yourself in a situation where you were only going on a date once a week, and suddenly you’re living under the same roof. You might find that you want sex when your partner doesn’t, or vice versa. It’s important to communicate this in a respectful, compassionate manner. Living together does not mean that you’re entitled to sex whenever you want. And for anybody who is in a situation where they’re with a partner and they’re not having a good time, because they feel like they’re being forced into sex, there are helplines available for that.

Am I more at risk of catching coronavirus if I have HIV?

Alix Fox: Dr Michael Brady at the Terrence Higgins Trust has provided some really great advice on this. If you are already on regular medication to manage HIV, and you have a good CD4 count (number of white blood cells to fight infection) and an undetectable viral load (the amount of HIV in the blood) then you’re not considered to have a weakened immune system. This means you run no additional risk of contracting coronavirus. So, if you’re HIV positive, continue taking your meds as you would do. Make sure that you follow the same rules as everybody else when it comes to things like isolation.

Live coronavirus updates: Trump extends social distancing guidelines as governors warn of shortages

President Donald Trump announced Sunday that he’s extending his administration’s guidelines on social distancing during the COVID-19 outbreak until April 30. The move marks a significant change for the president, who said last week that he wanted to see much of the country return to normal by Easter, April 12, despite warnings from top health experts that easing guidelines could cause widespread death and economic damage.

Meanwhile, in an interview with “TODAY” on Monday morning, White House coronavirus response coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx said she’s “very worried” about every city in the U.S., saying 100,000 to 200,000 American deaths would be the outcome of a response that works “almost perfectly,” according to projections.

Birx’s stark message comes after a weekend where the governors of Michigan and Louisiana warned of a lack of resources to respond to the crisis and said that shortages of ventilators and protective equipment could overwhelm hospitals as soon as this week.

The global death toll is now nearly 35,000, and there are more than 140,000 confirmed cases in the U.S., according to Johns Hopkins University.

Full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

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Johnson & Johnson to start human trials of coronavirus vaccine in September

Johnson & Johnson announced Monday that it has selected a coronavirus vaccine candidate to test in humans.

The experimental vaccine will begin the first phase of human clinical trials in September, and if the testing goes as planned, the first round of vaccines could be administered under emergency authorization in early 2021, according to the company.

Johnson & Johnson has been working on a potential vaccine for COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, since January. In an interview with the “TODAY” show, the company’s chairman and CEO Alex Gorsky said it’s a candidate “that has a high degree of probability of being successful.”

J&J also revealed plans to devote more than $1 billion for vaccine research, development and testing in partnership with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Service’s Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority.

Economy will be back on track by June, says Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin

The government will provide eight weeks of payroll to small businesses, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told Fox Business on Monday, for a total of around $350 billion.

If those funds do not prove to be enough, “we will go back to Congress” to negotiate for more, he said.

The economy will likely surge back by June, Mnuchin said, adding that the stock market with “absolutely” return to its previous highs. For long-term investors, the U.S. is still a great bet, he said, echoing the message frequently disseminated by Larry Kudlow, President Donald Trump’s top economic adviser.

Mnuchin said the administration hopes to release further instructions for small businesses later on Monday.

Facebook commits $100 million for news organizations

Facebook has announced a $100 million commitment to support news organizations covering the coronavirus pandemic, bolstering last year’s $300 million investment in local news.

Facebook will give $25 million in emergency grant funding for local news through the Facebook Journalism Project and $75 million in additional marketing spend in select news outlets.

The coronavirus pandemic has forced advertisers to cut their budgets, depriving news outlets of much-needed revenue and raising existential questions about the long-term health of the industry, particularly at the local level.

Spain surpasses China’s total number of cases

Spain Extends Stricter Coronavirus Lockdown As Death Toll Continues To Rise
An ambulance driver disinfects a healthcare worker outside Gregorio Marañon Hospital on Monday in Madrid.Xaume Olleros / Getty Images

Spain has become the third country to surpass the total number of reported coronavirus infections in China.

The country’s health ministry announced 6,398 new cases Monday, bringing the total to 85,195 cases.

That number is higher than China’s reported 81,470 cases as of Monday.

The U.S. currently has the most confirmed coronavirus cases with 142,801 infections. Italy is second with 97,689 coronavirus cases.

Birx predicts up to 200,000 deaths if U.S. acts ‘almost perfectly’

The White House coronavirus response coordinator said Monday that she is “very worried about every city in the United States” and projects 100,000 to 200,000 American deaths as a best case scenario.

In an interview on “TODAY,” Dr. Deborah Birx painted a grim message about the expected fatalities, echoing that they could hit as high as 2.2 million without any measures, as coronavirus cases continue to climb throughout the country.

“I think everyone understands now that you can go from five to 50 to 500 to 5,000 cases very quickly,” Birx said.

Read the full story here.

Israel’s Netanyahu to self isolate after aide tests positive

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is self-isolating after one of his aides tested positive for the coronavirus.

The prime minister’s office said Monday that Netanyahu and his close staff would remain in isolation until an epidemiological investigation into his contact with the aide had been completed. The ministry of health and the prime minister’s personal physician would determine the day to end the isolation, Netanyahu’s office said.

The announcement came as Israel’s longest-serving prime minister is currently negotiating to form an emergency unity government with his chief political rival, Benny Gantz. It looks set to allow Netanyahu to retain power. Israel has recorded more than 4,300 positive cases, including 482 in the last 24 hours, according to the health ministry. Fifteen people have died in Israel due to the disease.

Tokyo Olympics rescheduled to start in July 2021

The Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games that were postponed last week because of the coronavirus pandemic have been rescheduled for next summer.

The games will open on July 23 and close on Aug. 8, 2021. The Paralympics will be held Aug. 24 through Sept. 5, 2021.

They were originally scheduled to take place between July 24 and Aug. 9 this year, but Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and the International Olympic Committee agreed last Tuesday to postpone the games, as countries around the world struggle to contain the epidemic that has claimed more than 34,000 lives and forced millions around the world into lockdowns.

Read the full story here.

Hearses, songs and drones: How Colombian police get the coronavirus message across

U.S. military contractor tests positive for COVID-19 on S.Korea base

Another American military contractor at the U.S. Camp Humphreys base in South Korea tested positive for COVID-19 on Monday, officials said, bringing the total to five.

The U.S. citizen is currently in isolation at his residence, off the military base, and last visited the camp on March 27, according to a statement from the United States Forces Korea (USFK).

Officials said they were undertaking contact tracing to determine if anyone else had been exposed to the virus. This makes the 13th case of coronavirus for U.S. Forces in Korea, according to an NBC News count.

La-Z-Boy furloughs 70 percent of its workforce, slashes executive pay

La-Z-Boy is furloughing 70 percent of its workforce and closing all U.S. factories, stores, and warehouses until at least April 13, the furniture maker announced on Sunday.

In addition to cutting senior management salaries by 50 percent, and by 25 percent for other staff, the company said it will also freeze its 401(k) match.

“While the decisions made were extremely difficult and we deeply regret the impact they will have on those affected and their families, they are deemed necessary as we face one of the most challenging periods in our history,” said Kurt Darrow, chairman, president and CEO of La-Z-Boy.

La-Z-Boy is one of the largest employers in Michigan, with around 6,800 people.

Italy Has Its Worst Day Of The Coronavirus Pandemic With 919 Deaths Friday

Topline: Italy continues to be the country hardest hit by the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Its Civil Protection Agency shared Friday it had recorded 919 deaths in the past 24 hours, making it the worst day yet in the country, according to Reuters.

  • The 24-hour record follows a briefing with Silvio Brusaferro, head of Italy’s national health institute, in which he warned that the country has yet to reach the peak of infections, though he noted there were signs of slowdown in the number of people contracting the illness.
  • Italy has experienced the deadliest outbreak of the coronavirus with 9,134 total deaths, followed by another European country, Spain, which also recorded its worst day of the pandemic Friday with 769 deaths for a total of 4,934.
  • Italy’s confirmed cases of 86,498 surpassed China, where it’s believed the outbreak began. The Mediterranean country of 60 million is currently behind the United States’ 97,028, which surged past both yesterday to become the country with the most confirmed cases of the coronavirus.
  • After the previous peak on Saturday, there was a decrease in Italian fatalities on Sunday with 650 and Monday with 602, but the toll rose back up again Tuesday to 743.

Tangent: In some good news, a 101-year-old Italian man was released Thursday after recovering from the virus. The respiratory disease is particularly deadly for elderly people, and Italy has the second-oldest population in the world. In total, 10,950 people in Italy have beat the virus.

Key Background: Italians have been on lockdown since March 6. Its worst hit area is its most populous, the Lombardy region, accounting for 59% of the fatalities nationwide. Hospitals are expectedly packed and running short on supplies. A doctor died last Friday after having to work without protective gloves, according to the Washington PostAccording to Johns Hopkins University, there are 585,040 confirmed cases of the coronavirus worldwide and  26,819 deaths.

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Trafficked pangolins can carry coronaviruses closely related to pandemic strain

New research finds that Sunda pangolins, like the one pictured here in Vietnam’s Cuc Phuong National Park, could be possible hosts for future new coronaviruses.

PHOTOGRAPH BY SUZI ESZTERHAS, MINDEN PICTURES

Scientists and advocates say this new research is yet another reason to crack down on the illegal trade in these scaly mammals.

New research finds evidence that a small proportion of pangolins carry coronaviruses related to the strain responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a paper published March 26 in the journal Nature.

This makes pangolins the only mammals other than bats known to be infected by the closest relatives of the novel coronavirus. While the work neither proves nor disproves that pangolins are linked to the current pandemic, it does indicate that they could play a role in the emergence of new coronaviruses.

“If there is one clear message from this global crisis, it’s that the sale and consumption of pangolins in [live animal] markets should be strictly prohibited to avoid future pandemics,” says Paul Thomson, a conservation biologist who co-founded the nonprofit Save Pangolins.

Bats are the most likely reservoir of the novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV, according to the World Health Organization, but it likely jumped to another species before spilling over into humans.

Pangolins—endangered, scaly, ant-eating mammals found in Asia and Africa about the size of domestic cats—are known to carry coronaviruses, Dan Challender wrote in an email. Challender heads the pangolin specialist group of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, which sets the conservation status of species. It’s not surprising, therefore, that they’ve become a focus in the search to understand where the novel coronavirus came from, he says.

These six Sunda pangolins were seized from a rental property in Guangzhou, China. Researchers say that the illegal trade in live pangolins and pangolin meat must be stopped to prevent the spread of disease.

PHOTOGRAPH BY XIAO CHIBAI, NATURE PICTURE LIBRARY/MINDEN PICTURES

Although international commercial trade of all eight species is strictly forbidden, pangolins are believed to be the most trafficked mammal in the world. The scales of thousands of pangolins are smuggled every year for use in traditional Chinese medicine, and their meat is considered a delicacy by some people in China, Vietnam, and elsewhere in Asia. Because coronaviruses can be transmitted by certain bodily fluids, feces, and meat, the trade in live pangolins for food is a greater concern for disease spread than contact with scales.

In China, it’s illegal to eat pangolin, but it can still be found on restaurant menus there. Pangolins were also regularly available for sale at live animal markets until January 26, when fear of the novel coronavirus spurred the government to order them all closed.

Genetic similarities

The new paper finds that the genetic sequences of several strains of coronavirus found in pangolins were between 88.5 percent and 92.4 percent similar to those of the novel coronavirus.

Starting with tissue samples from 18 Sunda pangolins seized in anti-smuggling operations in 2017 and 2018, researchers tested for the presence of coronaviruses. They found it in samples from five of the 18 pangolins. They repeated the process later with samples from other seized pangolins, finding coronaviruses in a portion of those individuals as well. They then sequenced the genomes of those viruses and compared them to SARS-CoV-2.

Cautious in their wording, the researchers note that the genomic similarities “are not sufficient to suggest” that pangolins are the intermediate host that passed SARS-CoV-2 from bats to humans. But they don’t rule it out, either. The paper concludes, however, that pangolins should be considered as possible hosts for future new coronaviruses.

“I welcome the study,” Challender wrote. “Further research is needed on these viruses in pangolins, but importantly on other species too, which may have played a critical role in the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 to humans.”

Closing Wet Markets Isn’t Enough

Mar 24, 2020 at 2:44 PM
Subject:
To:
While shutting down wet markets in China slowed the spread of COVID-19, it
is not enough to prevent future disease outbreaks.
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Coronavirus Should Make You Reconsider Eating Meat
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Reading Time: 4 minutes

COVID-19 is not the first zoonotic pandemic humans have encountered, and if
we do not address the glaring issues within our global food system, it will
not be the last. Animal exploitation has been at the root of several major
pandemics throughout history. Until we address this threat, another deadly
outbreak is not only probable, it’s inevitable.

Though China’s wet markets have been the focal point of COVID-19
discussions, Americans’ demand for meat presents an unspoken risk. The
average American consumes twice as much
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meat
as the average Chinese person. With 99 percent of farmed animals
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in the United States living on factory farms, the odds of another zoonotic
outbreak are high.

Intensive farming conditions are breeding grounds for disease
<https://sentientmedia.us18.list-manage.com/track/click?u=1bbac603898e2a21fc6e8d07b&id=0aea07855b&e=5a33979c9d>.
Whether we are ready to admit it or not, there is no fundamental difference
between the risk industrial animal agriculture and the risk wildlife trade
pose to public health. Both lead to unsanitary conditions, untreated
diseases, and the transmission of diseases from animal to animal, or in the
case of COVID-19, from animals to humans.

Zoonotic diseases have been around for centuries. One of the most
destructive zoonotic outbreaks before COVID-19 was the Spanish Flu of 1918,
started by an H1N1 virus that is believed to have at least partially
evolved inside poultry farms
<https://sentientmedia.us18.list-manage.com/track/click?u=1bbac603898e2a21fc6e8d07b&id=d50304580b&e=5a33979c9d>.
The
Spanish Flu infected one-third of the world’s population
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and killed at least 50 million people worldwide.
*A Short History of Zoonotic Disease*
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– *1989: *HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, was likely spread to humans
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through the hunting, butchering, and consumption of HIV-infected primates
in West Africa.

– *1998: *The Nipah virus was spread to humans through intensively
farmed pigs that were first infected by bats in Malaysia. While active,
Nipah killed over half of the humans infected with the virus.

– *2003:* A SARS outbreak infected over 8,000 people and cost the global
economy an estimated $40 billion. Civet cats at a wildlife market in
Guangdong, China were identified as the likely vector for transmission of
the SARS virus to humans.

– *2009:* The H1N1 swine flu epidemic, which killed upwards of 500,000
people, evolved from a strain of avian flu—or “bird flu”—that spread to
humans. Earlier this month, a subtype of the bird flu virus, H5N8,
was discovered
on a German poultry farm
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.

– *2014:* Ebola claimed the lives of over 13,000 humans. The virus has
been traced to fruit bats and primates butchered for food.

– *2019-present: *Coronavirus, which was likely passed from animals to
humans in a wildlife market in China, has infected more than 378,000 people
to date.

*Learn more about the history of zoonotic disease
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Today, zoonotic diseases infect about 2.5 billion people every year. Even
during unexceptional years, these pathogens kill approximately 2.4 million
individuals—*more than gun violence, car crashes, and drug abuse,
combined.* According
to the CDC, *3 out of every 4 new or emerging infectious diseases *found in
humans
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come from animals.

The risk of contracting and spreading infectious diseases is not isolated
to wild animal food sources like bats, camels, and salamanders; these
diseases are found in cows, pigs, and chickens too. Scientists from the
European Society for Clinical Virology, the European Society for Veterinary
Virology, and the Society for General Microbiology warn that cattle could
be the source of the next devastating outbreak
<https://sentientmedia.us18.list-manage.com/track/click?u=1bbac603898e2a21fc6e8d07b&id=053955de88&e=5a33979c9d>
.

Since COVID-19 first made global headlines in late December, China has
taken some proactive steps to reduce the spread of disease, such as closing
the market in which the virus is believed to have originated and banning
the consumption of wild animals. But these preventative measures are not
enough.

Read the full story here
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*Covering COVID-19*
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With the *worst global pandemic we’ve seen in over a century*, it’s more
important than ever to *make sure the truth is reported in its entirety*,
not just what’s convenient.

*Help us share the facts* during these uncertain times and *make sure the
world knows our species cannot survive* if we continue our exploitation of
the planet and nonhuman animals.
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*Correction: Friday’s edition of Sentient Today incorrectly stated that
farmed animals are pumped full of antibiotics to minimize viruses
spreading. The purpose of antibiotics is to minimize the spread of
bacteria, not viruses.*
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[image: Twitter]
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[image: Website]
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[image: Instagram]
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[image: LinkedIn]
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