Friday, March 27, 2020

The reporter escaping a herd of bison in Yellowstone National Park is the meme we all need right now


Charles Curtis

March 26, 2020 8:10 am

NBC Montana reporter Deion Broxton was just trying to do a shoot from Yellowstone National Park when he looked over and saw a herd of bison heading in his direction.

So he did what anyone would do in that situation: he uttered, “Oh no, I ain’t messing with you,” packed up and bolted. Smart man.

He then uploaded the footage to Twitter — by the way, he did end up with a shot of the bison in question! — and became a viral star, and of course that means he became a meme.

Here’s a sampling, including some sports takes on the video, starting with the original footage:

There was a herd of bison walking right toward me at @YellowstoneNPS today! pic.twitter.com/sdrBvojpwF
— Deion Broxton KTVM (@DeionNBCMT) March 25, 2020

Here's the video of the bison I shot once I got a safe distance away lol pic.twitter.com/uL3XiR2ISR
— Deion Broxton KTVM (@DeionNBCMT) March 26, 2020


A reporter didn’t want anything to do with the bison that were roaming nearby while he was covering the coronavirus pandemic from Yellowstone National Park, so he packed up and got in his car. What Deion Broxton, who works for NBC Montana, didn’t realize was he recorded his hilarious reaction. “Normally, I'll hit the button and put my gear away,” he told InsideEdition.com “I guess I got so caught up in a moment. I was just worried about my safety.” InsideEdition.com’s Leigh Scheps has more.


TWITTER 


When that one coworker starts coming your way to interrupt your conversation pic.twitter.com/pqlleaGlhe
— PrimaDonna

♒ (@BeamBunnyUp) March 25, 2020


When someone comes within 6 feet of me https://t.co/pxBkGB36Uz
— Erin Donnelly (@erindonnelly) March 25, 2020


When you see April 2020 is coming next. pic.twitter.com/mFiaHDD7Fe
— Red is Not a Flavor (@RedIsNotAFlavor) March 26, 2020


Bison? That's how I am just walking down the sidewalk these days #socialdistancing https://t.co/78TKo2hOdw
— Raphael Mazor (@rmazor) March 25, 2020


The GIF is the best:
I made it a gif for you! pic.twitter.com/q0nuzvjWpu

— Keith Edwards (@keithedwards) March 25, 2020



THIS IS ESPECIALLY FUNNY TO ME SINCE I LIVE NOT TOO FAR FROM THE CANADIAN NATIONAL PARK DEDICATED TO THE BUFFALO AKA WOOD BISON KNOWN AS ELK ISLAND NATIONAL PARK, THE LARGEST WILDERNESS PARK OF BISON IS WOOD BISON NATIONAL PARK IN NORTHERN ALBERTA NEAR THE TARSANDS.


People are spooked after 5,000 respirator masks were found in a crypt underneath a cathedral


Greg Evans in news THE INDEPENDENT 3/27/2020

iStoc

Masks might not have been the must-have item on every fashionista's list but they have quickly become an essential for many people when it comes to trips outdoors, in an attempt to protect us from coronavirus and to prevent its spread.

That being said, they have become quite hard to come by as everyone has tried to grab whatever they could to cover their face. It's now become so bad that care workers and first responders around the world do not have access to the masks, leading companies to donate supplies to those who need it the most.

This is all well and good but the last thing we expected to be writing about in mask-related news, was a crypt underneath a cathedral in Washington DC, being full of respirator masks.

A crypt in the foundations of the Washington National Cathedral, which belongs to the Episcopal Church, was discovered to have at least 5,000 N95 respirator masks, which had been placed there more than a decade ago, during the bird flu outbreak.

Thankfully, they were still in good condition and considering the shortage of masks at the moment they have been removed and distributed to the Children's National Hospital and Georgetown University Hospital.

However, the excavation of the masks from underneath a chuch has people, who were not aware of the entire story, a little freaked out and thinking that this could actually be a plot from a Nicolas Cage movie.  


The story doesn't end there either. Despite housing all of those masks, the crypt is also notable for being the burial place of a few famous faces including former president Woodrow Wilson and author Helen Keller. Martin Luther King Jr also spoke at the cathedral (although he isn't buried there). This place truly has it all going on.


Muslim and Jewish paramedics pause to pray together. One of many inspiring moments in the coronavirus crisis


By Oren Liebermann and Michael Schwartz, CNN  March 26, 2020



Jewish paramedic Avraham Mintz faces Jerusalem, his prayer shawl hanging off his shoulders. Muslim paramedic Zoher Abu Jama kneels facing Mecca, his prayer rug unfurled before him.

Jerusalem (CNN)There was barely any time to pause.

Avraham Mintz and Zoher Abu Jama just finished responding to a call regarding a 41-year-old woman having respiratory problems in the southern Israeli city of Be'er Sheva.
Before that, they were checking on a 77-year-old man. There would be more calls ahead. Of that, there was no doubt.

As the clock neared six in the afternoon, Mintz and Abu Jama realized it may be their only break of the shift. The two members of Magen David Adom (MDA), Israel's emergency response service, paused to pray. Mintz, a religious Jew, stood facing Jerusalem, his white and black prayer shawl hanging off his shoulders. Abu Jama, an observant Muslim, knelt facing Mecca, his maroon and white prayer rug unfurled underneath him.


For the two paramedics, who routinely work together two or three times a week, the joint prayer was nothing new. For so many others, it was an inspiring image in the midst of the global coronavirus pandemic.

A picture of the two men snapped by a co-worker quickly went viral, garnering thousands of likes on social media and appearing in international media coverage. One user responded on Instagram: "I'm proud of all of the rescue services, it doesn't matter from what community or religion." On Twitter, another user said: "One fight! One victory! Let's unite."

"The fact that it is so simple makes it so powerful. I believe that Zoher and I and most of the world understand that we have to raise our heads and pray. That's all that's left," Mintz told CNN. A father of nine who lives in Be'er Sheva, the 42-year-old is a full-time MDA worker who trains volunteers.



For the colleagues, the joint prayer was nothing new. For others, it was an inspiring image.
Abu Jama, a father of seven from the nearby Bedouin city of Rahat, was one of those volunteers. He left his job as a driving instructor to help out as much as possible now. "In terms of belief and personality we believe in the same things and we have something in common," the 39-year-old told CNN. "I believe he is a person that gives and takes the feeling of honor and that is important."

Across Israel, MDA teams have fielded 100,000 calls on peak days, more than 10 times their normal volume, according to Zaki Heller, a MDA spokesman.


In addition to the normal work of paramedics and EMTs, MDA teams are responsible for getting coronavirus patients to hospital or to designated quarantine hotels, carrying out coronavirus tests, collecting blood donations and more. Earlier this month, they even staffed polling stations for those in self-quarantine.

MDA Director General Eli Bin beamed with pride when talking about his team, comprised of 2,500 full-time employees and 25,000 volunteers. "The people of MDA are facing the virus, looking it in the eye. The workers of MDA are working with their hands and their gloves and their masks," he told CNN. "We are the heroes of Israel."

If Mintz and Abu Jama see themselves as heroes, they certainly didn't let it show. They know their job, and they know their faith. "Everyone is afraid of the virus," said Mintz. "So are we, but we have the belief that everything is under the control of God, blessed be He. We both believe this."

Abu Jama echoes his partner. "I believe that God will help us and we will get through this. We should all pray to God to get us through this, and we will get through this world crisis."
The two prayed for about 15 minutes. Then it was back into the ambulance. And back to work.






WHAT IS SURPLUS VALUE? MEMES




SMART PHONE MEME


PANDEMIC LOSERS AND WINNERS MEMES



Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said G-7 foreign ministers agreed with him in a virtual meeting Wednesday that China is waging a "disinformation" campaign about the coronavirus pandemic.

LIKE HIS BOSS, POMPEO LIES G7 DID NOT AGREE (SEE BELOW)

"Every one of the nations that were at that meeting this morning was deeply aware of the disinformation campaign that the Chinese Communist Party is engaged in to try and deflect from what has really taken place here," Pompeo told reporters.

Pompeo said that some Chinese government sources implying the virus is an American bio-weapon was "Crazy Talk."

"China was the first country to know about the risk to the world from this virus," Pompeo said. "And they repeatedly delayed sharing that information with the globe."

"We desperately want to work with every country around the world -- this is a global pandemic. This is something the United States wants to work wit ever core, including China, to keep as ay people alive ad healthy, and then to restore or economies that have been decimated by the Wuhan virus."

"Today is not the day for recriminations and accountability. We need to make clear the information available to everyone in the world," he said. "We still need good information from the Chinese communist party about what has taken place there... but there will be a right time after we manage to address this crisis."


Pompeo attacks Chinese virus campaign at G7 as Europeans seek cooperation
AFP / ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks after virtual Group of Seven talks to journalists, who are spaced out in line with COVID-19 precautions

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Wednesday that the Group of Seven powers were united in opposing China's coronavirus "disinformation," but European allies emphasized cooperation to fight the global pandemic.

Foreign ministers from the major industrialized democracies spoke about the crisis by videoconference, scrapping a meeting scheduled in Pittsburgh, but any hope of showing a common front was eroded by the absence of a joint statement.

Pompeo, a sharp critic of Beijing who has gone on the offensive over what he calls the "Wuhan virus," said he shared a common view with the top diplomats of the other G7 countries -- Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan.

"Every one of the nations that were at that meeting this morning was deeply aware of the disinformation campaign that the Chinese Communist Party is engaged in to try and deflect from what has really taken place," Pompeo told reporters.

Pompeo said that China "has been and continues to be engaged in" a campaign through social media that has included conspiracy theories of US involvement.

"This is crazy talk," he said.

AFP / STR
A man wearing a face mask in Hangzhou, China walks past a bus with a message supporting Italy in its efforts against the COVID-19 coronavirus


A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman infuriated President Donald Trump's administration by suggesting on Twitter that US troops brought the virus to Wuhan, the metropolis where it was first detected late last year.

Scientists widely believe the COVID-19 virus came from a Wuhan meat market that butchered exotic animals.

The virus has killed more than 21,000 people globally, but Beijing has appeared to bring it under control and has sent aid overseas -- including 40 tons of medical supplies to US ally Italy, which has the world's highest death toll.

Pompeo minimized China's efforts and pointed to a US Air Force cargo plane's aid delivery to Italy as well as private US charity efforts.

China is "now making small sales of product around the world and claiming that they are now the white hat in what has taken place," Pompeo said.

But he also said the United States sought cooperation, including with China. The two countries' leaders are set to take part in a virtual summit on the crisis Thursday of the Group of 20 major economies.

"We desperately want to work with every country around the world. This is a global pandemic," Pompeo said.

- France warns not to 'exploit' crisis -
AFP/File / RYAD KRAMDI
French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, seen here on a March 12, 2020 visit to Algeria, has warned not to "exploit" the coronavirus pandemic

The German magazine Der Spiegel, quoting anonymous diplomats, said that the joint statement was scuttled by Pompeo's insistence that it use the term "Wuhan virus" -- a formulation frowned upon by medical professionals who say it is stigmatizing.

Pompeo did not deny the report when asked about it, saying that each minister would speak separately but that they had a "common understanding" on the health and economic crisis caused by the "Wuhan virus."

France and Germany issued statements on the G7 talks that made no mention of China. Canada said China was raised in "broader discussions."

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian "underscored the need to combat any attempt to exploit the crisis for political purposes," a statement said, in likely a veiled response to Pompeo.

Le Drian "expressed the view that the unity of all in order to effectively combat the pandemic must now take precedence over any other considerations," it said.

France called for the G7 to find ways to assist Africa, warning that both the continent's healthcare system and economies were ill-equipped for the global crisis.

Pompeo has accused China of putting the world at risk by initially suppressing news of the virus. Beijing in turn has accused the Trump administration of seeking a scapegoat for its own failures.
SEE

Foreign ministers refuse to go along; WHO has rejected geographic name because of its global reach

U.S. insisting that the U.N. call out Chinese origins of coronavirus

International Criminal Court says Pompeo threatened staff


Trump uses China as a foil when talking coronavirus, distancing himself from criticism


They call it the “Wuhan virus.” 
Trump aides pound on China. Health experts say: Please stop.

Trump officials emphasize that coronavirus 'Made in China'


FINALLY
Trump uses Defense Production Act to require GM to make ventilators WEEKS LATE

MISOGYNIST TRUMP ATTACKS GM'S FEMALE CEO

BY BRETT SAMUELS - THE HILL 03/27/20


President Trump on Friday used the Defense Production Act to compel General Motors (GM) to produce ventilators to combat the coronavirus after days of hesitating to use the powers in the law.

The president in a statement said the federal government had abandoned negotiations with the automaker on ventilator production, complaining that the automaker was "wasting time."

"Our negotiations with GM regarding its ability to supply ventilators have been productive, but our fight against the virus is too urgent to allow the give-and-take of the contracting process to continue to run its normal course," Trump said.

"GM was wasting time," the president asserted. "Today’s action will help ensure the quick production of ventilators that will save American lives."

The Trump administration had reportedly been negotiating with GM to make tens of thousands of ventilators, but talks broke down due to concerns that the price tag would exceed $1 billion.

The president turned his ire on the automaker earlier Friday, singling out CEO Mary Barra for criticism.

"As usual with 'this' General Motors, things just never seem to work out," Trump tweeted. "They said they were going to give us 40,000 much needed Ventilators, 'very quickly'. Now they are saying it will only be 6000, in late April, and they want top dollar. Always a mess with Mary B."

Trump in a separate tweet called on GM to reopen a Lordstown, Ohio, plant that the company shuttered last year and sold in November.

The use of the Defense Production Act gives Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Alex Azar authority to determine how many ventilators are appropriate. The department has not responded to requests for comment about whether they have taken an inventory of the devices.

It was not immediately clear how quickly GM would be able to scale up ventilator production. The company said in a news release earlier Friday that it was partnering with medical device maker Ventec to convert an Indiana GM facility into a ventilator production plant.

The companies said they expected the first ventilators will be available next month with the ability to produce more than 10,000 per month after that.

State leaders have warned they are running dangerously low on the breathing machines as hospital capacity fills up in areas dealing with significant outbreaks. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) has projected the state will need 30,000 ventilators, while Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards (D) has indicated the state will run out in early April.

"We desperately needed the Defense Production Act invoked to ensure the production of life-saving ventilators. We are relieved that just happened. Lives depend on it," Cuomo tweeted Friday afternoon.

Trump invoked the act last week, which gives the president extraordinary powers to compel private companies to manufacture critical supplies in times of crisis. But he had yet to actually use it to ramp up production of masks, ventilators and other materials that hospitals and state leaders have said are dangerously scarce.

The president and his aides had insisted in recent days that the DPA effectively provided leverage and that private companies were producing sufficient supplies. Trump earlier this week also expressed a reluctance to use the act because he worried that doing so amounted to "nationalizing" industries.

Trump on Thursday night questioned some of the requests for ventilators coming from state leaders.

"I have a feeling that a lot of the numbers that are being said in some areas are just bigger than they’re going to be," Trump said on Fox News.

"I don’t believe you need 40,000 or 30,000 ventilators," he added. "You know, you go into major hospitals, sometimes they’ll have two ventilators. And now all of a sudden they're saying, 'Can we order 30,000 ventilators?'"

But as the number of coronavirus cases in the U.S. has risen, the need has become more dire. The U.S. has more cases than any other nation with more than 97,000. Roughly 1,500 Americans had died from the virus as of late Friday afternoon.


https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/489909-trump-uses-defense-production-act-to-require-gm-to-make-ventilators


Trump presses GM, Ford over ventilators


BY BRETT SAMUELS - 03/27/20 THE HILL

President Trump on Friday lashed out at General Motors, pressing it and Ford in a tweet that they should be churning out ventilators to be used to treat patients with the coronavirus.

Trump issued a series of tweets that spurred confusion about his use of the Defense Production Act and muddled his messaging on the need for the breathing machines one day after he questioned whether states were overestimating how many they would need in the coming months.

"General Motors MUST immediately open their stupidly abandoned Lordstown plant in Ohio, or some other plant, and START MAKING VENTILATORS, NOW!!!!!! FORD, GET GOING ON VENTILATORS, FAST!!!!!!" Trump tweeted, referring to a shuttered GM plant that the company sold late last year.

The president in a separate tweet appeared to confirm a New York Times report that the government and GM negotiated a deal that would lead to the production of up to 80,000 ventilators but that it fell through due to unease with a price tag of more than $1 billion.

"As usual with 'this' General Motors, things just never seem to work out. They said they were going to give us 40,000 much needed Ventilators, 'very quickly'. Now they are saying it will only be 6000, in late April, and they want top dollar. Always a mess with Mary B," Trump tweeted, swiping at CEO Mary Barra.

General Motors said in a news release Friday that it is partnering with medical device maker Ventec to convert an Indiana GM facility into a ventilator production plant. The companies said they expect the first ventilators will be available next month with the ability to produce more than 10,000 per month after that.

Barra had faced intense criticism from Trump and lawmakers in both parties in late 2018 and early 2019 after GM announced it would close the Lordstown plant in Ohio, along with four other North American factories. Trump praised Barra in May 2019 as a deal to sell the Lordstown plant to an electric truck company emerged.

A Ford spokesperson said Friday afternoon that the automaker was in contact with the Trump administration seeking guidance on manufacturing and distributing certain products, including ventilators.

Trump added "Invoke 'P'" to the end of one of his Friday tweets, which he later clarified was a reference to the Defense Production Act (DPA). The president last week invoked the DPA, which allows him to compel companies to manufacture critical supplies in times of crisis.

But he has resisted actually using the act to direct companies to make ventilators, masks and other personal protective equipment, even as hospitals and state and local officials warn they are in desperate need of the supplies.

The president has argued that the companies are already producing enough and that the DPA can be used as leverage. His tweets on Friday did not appear to change that stance.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Trump added that the federal government had purchased "many Ventilators from some wonderful companies," saying that he would disclose more information later Friday. The White House coronavirus task force is scheduled to hold its daily briefing at 5 p.m. EDT. Trump often speaks at the briefings.

The tweets amounted to something of an about-face from Trump's comments on Fox News late Thursday when he cast doubt on the need for mass production and distribution of ventilators to states dealing with coronavirus outbreaks.

"I don’t believe you need 40,000 or 30,000 ventilators," Trump said. "You know, you go into major hospitals, sometimes they’ll have two ventilators. And now all of a sudden they're saying, 'Can we order 30,000 ventilators?'"

The U.S. has the highest number of confirmed coronavirus cases of any country in the world, with more than 86,000 as of Friday morning. More than 1,300 Americans have died from the virus, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Updated at 2:12 p.m. Sylvan Lane contributed.

https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/489849-trump-lashes-out-at-gm-ford-over-ventilators


Trump 'doesn't believe' hospitals really need the ventilators they're asking for and haggles over price instead 

Moya Lothian-McLean THE INDEPENDENT 3/27/2020

During the coronavirus crisis, it seems one of the primary problems countries are facing is the lack of ventilators available.

A shortage has struck nations across Europe like Italy, Germany and the UK (who have been criticised for their handling of the issue).

The US is also suffering from a lack of the life-saving machines.

Although the government has a stockpile of 16,000 ventilators, a sharp increase in cases means many more are thought to be needed.

A projection from the American Hospital Association said that up to 960,000 could require ventilators, although not all at the same time.

In New York State alone, Governor Andew Cumo said they need 30,000 more.

And now reports are emerging that Donald Trump’s administration has paused a deal for up to 80,000 ventilators in order to allegedly “haggle” over the price.

The New York Times reports that a joint venture between General Motors and Ventec Life Systems has been called off after the Federal Management Agency said it “it needed more time to assess whether the estimated cost was prohibitive”.

The estimated price tag was $1.5bn ($18,000 per ventilator).

Ventilators were going to be produced by General Motors plants using Ventec’s technology.

Initial projections of 20,000 ventilators produced in the first run were reduced to 7,500, according to the Times.

And Trump’s administration apparently couldn’t decide how many ventilators it wants – or at what price.

Instead of closing the deal, FEMA is apparently still “weighing competing offers”.

Or, as New York Magazine put it: “haggling”.

Trump himself seems confused over the demand for ventilators.

In an interview with Fox News’s Sean Hannity on the 27 March, he said he “[didn’t] believe” that hospitals needed 30,000 ventilators.

“A lot of equipment is being asked for that I don’t think they will need,” he told Hannity.

I have a feeling that a lot of the numbers that are being said in some areas are just bigger than they are going to be. I don’t believe you need 40,000 or 30,000 ventilators. You know, you go to major hospitals, sometimes they’ll have 2 ventilators. And now all of a sudden they’re saying, ‘Can we order 30,000 ventilators?’

This comment was swiftly challenged by people who pointed out New York is currently so overwhelmed it’s putting two people to every one ventilator.

And others chimed in with their concern regarding the suspended ventilator deal.

At an intensely worrying time, the last thing the country needs is the self-proclaimed ‘deal maker’ doing his worst.


---30---

VICE reporter: Stimulus bill not enough for gig workers

Edward Ongweso, a technology reporter at VICE, said on Hill.TV’s "Rising" show Thursday morning that the $2 trillion stimulus package passed in the Senate late Wednesday does little to alleviate the burdens put on gig workers, particularly those who work for ride share companies such as Uber and Lyft.

He noted that in China, DiDi, an Uber competitor in the country, suspended service in the country's Wuhan province and created a fleet just for healthcare workers that was disinfected routinely.

“In the United States Uber did nothing,” he said. “Uber only started to take any sort of action in the last three or four weeks after a massive stock sell-off crashed it to its lowest point.”

Ongweso said Uber classifies its drivers as contractors to avoid spending on employee benefits, claiming that it offers flexibility in return. He said that Uber has acknowledged that if California and New York move to change classification of Uber drivers they will have to change their business model.

Under the Senate stimulus bill, drivers will qualify for at least $1,200 a one-time rebate check. Ongweso noted that apart from seeing a drop in income while still having to work, drivers have more expenses, such as insurance and possible car rental fees.

“I don't think the stimulus package goes far enough. In other countries, they’re covering 60, 70, 80 percent of people’s incomes as another facet of the social distancing effort. Here, $1,200 is not going to do much for two weeks of unemployment.”


---30---
Neil Young: Trump 'A Disgrace to My Country'

Neil Young poses for a portrait at Lost Planet Editorial

 in Santa Monica, Calif. (Photo by Rebecca Cabage/Invision/AP)

NEWLY MINTED AMERICAN SPEAKS HIS MIND 
ENDORSES BERNIE

NEWSMAX

Neil Young on Wednesday released an open letter ripping President Donald Trump as a “disgrace,” saying his “mindless destruction of our shared natural resources, our environment, and our relationships with friends around the world is unforgivable.”

Young, who recently became a U.S. citizen, objected to the the use of his song “Rockin’ in the Free World” at Trump’s rallies, where it’s frequently played. He wrote that despite his lack of legal recourse, it “is not a song you can trot out at one of your rallies. Perhaps you could have been a bass player and played in a rock & roll band. That way you could have been onstage at a rally every night in front of your fans, if you were any good, and you might be …”

He added, “Every time ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’ or one of my songs is played at your rallies, I hope you hear my voice. Remember it is the voice of a tax-paying U.S. citizen who does not support you. Me.”

Young ends the letter with a message expressing his support for Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who is seeking the Democratic presidential nomination.

“One of your opponents has the answers I like,” he writes. “He is aiming at preserving our children’s future directly. He is not popular with the Democratic establishment because, unlike all the other candidates, he is not pandering to the industries accelerating Earth’s Climate Crisis, the end of the world as we know it.
 He is truly fighting for the USA. 
His initials are BS. Not his policies.”

Neil Young: US Citizenship Held Up Over Marijuana Use