Friday, January 22, 2021

 

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  • Are COVID vaccination programmes working? Scientists seek first clues

    Vaccinated people in Israel are less likely to test positive for SARS-CoV-2, but a population-wide effect will take time to become clear.
    A medical worker vaccinates a man against the coronavirus disease in Israel

    Vaccines are being rolled out and scientists are looking for signs they are reducing infections.Credit: Ronen Zvulun/Reuters

    As countries worldwide roll out COVID-19 vaccines, researchers are eagerly watching for early signs that they are having an impact on the pandemic. Last week, researchers in Israel reported preliminary figures suggesting that people vaccinated there were about one-third less likely to test positive for SARS-CoV-2 than people who had not received a shot. But scientists say that population-wide effects of immunization will take time to become clear.

    Many factors will determine how soon scientists can detect the impact of vaccines on the pandemic. Among them are the extent of vaccine coverage, the effectiveness of shots at preventing disease and infection, and the rate of viral transmission.

    Israel and the United Arab Emirates are leading the world in vaccine coverage. The two nations have vaccinated roughly one-quarter of their populations — more than two million people each. Other nations, such as the United Kingdom and Norway, have targeted their vaccination programmes at high-risk groups. Britain has vaccinated more than 4 million people, mostly health-care workers and older people, including those living in care homes; Norway has immunized all residents living in nursing homes, some 40,000 people.

    First signs

    The results from Israel are among the first to report the impact of vaccines administered to people outside clinical trials. They provide an early indication that the two-dose RNA-based vaccine developed by Pfizer–BioNTech can prevent infection or limit its duration in some vaccinated people.

    In a preliminary analysis of 200,000 people older than 60 who received the vaccine, compared with a matched group of 200,000 who did not, researchers found that the chances of testing positive for the virus were 33% lower two weeks after the first injection.

    “We were happy to see this preliminary result that suggests a real-world impact in the approximate timing and direction we would have expected,” says Ran Balicer, an epidemiologist at Israel’s largest health-care provider, Clalit Health Services, in Tel Aviv. He expects to get more conclusive results several weeks after people receive their second shot.

    Another analysis, by Maccabi Healthcare Services, found a similar trend, although neither study has been peer-reviewed.

    Clinical trials of the Pfizer–BioNTech vaccine show it to be around 90% effective at preventing COVID-19, and the preliminary data suggest it can also provide some protection from infection. But it will take longer to establish whether vaccinated people no longer spread the virus to unvaccinated people, says Balicer.

    As more than 75% of older people in Israel have been vaccinated, Balicer says he expects to see a drop in hospitalizations among vaccinated older people over the coming weeks.

    Most countries are prioritizing COVID-19 vaccinations for people who have a high risk of getting severe disease and dying. So, the first evidence that shots are working in those countries will probably be reductions in hospitalizations, and then in deaths, says Alexandra Hogan, an infectious-disease modeller at Imperial College London.

    Indirect effects

    If vaccines are effective at preventing infections, then their indirect benefit — protecting unvaccinated people — will be visible only once enough people have been immunized, says Natalie Dean, a biostatistician at the University of Florida in Gainesville.

    Israel will probably be the first country to see this kind of population-wide impact, say researchers. This is because it is using a high-efficacy vaccine and aiming for wide coverage with the explicit goal of achieving herd immunity, when enough people are immune to a virus for its spread to be controlled.

    In some places, the first signs of indirect protection might emerge in specific groups who have been widely vaccinated, such as health-care and long-term-care workers and their families, says Dean.

    But teasing apart the population-level effects of vaccines on a drop in COVID-19 cases from the impacts of other public-health interventions, such as social distancing and lockdowns, will be tricky. “Infectious diseases are very unpredictable — so you end up needing a lot of data to smooth out a lot of unpredictability,” says Dean.

    Challenges ahead

    The effect of vaccines on reducing overall COVID-19 infections will be more difficult to ascertain in regions such as Norway, which have largely brought the virus under control, says Hogan.

    Yet rampant transmission also complicates such investigations, until countries reach high vaccine coverage, adds Dean. Vaccinated health-care workers, for example, might be able to protect their families from infection, but when the virus is everywhere, there will be lots of opportunities for it to enter a household, she says.

    Israel aside, vaccines will not have an impact on viral spread any time soon, says Raina MacIntyre, an epidemiologist at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. “Many other countries are using much lower-efficacy vaccines, which are unlikely to control infection,” she says.

    Modelling work by Hogan shows that vaccines that are less effective at preventing infection will have a smaller impact on transmission in the population. “But even with an imperfect vaccine, that population-level impact on deaths could still be quite substantial,” she says.


    UK

    Herd immunity to Covid-19 may not be achievable even with high vaccine uptake

    The government vaccination programme may not be sufficient to achieve herd immunity – even if everyone in the UK is vaccinated, according to research from the University of East Anglia.  

    Researchers modelled the effectiveness of UK-wide immunisation programmes using the Oxford and Pfizer vaccines, taking into account the highly transmissible new Covid-19 variant. 

    They found that the only way to reach herd immunity for the UK would be to vaccinate almost everyone – including children – with the more effective Pfizer vaccine. 

    They say data for the recently licenced Moderna vaccine would be similar to the Pfizer results. 

    And the study recommends that all health and social care professionals should receive the 95% effective Pfizer/Moderna vaccines to prevent asymptomatic spread to patients and vulnerable people.

    Due to the rapid response nature of this research it has not yet been peer reviewed.

    Covid-19 expert Prof Paul Hunter, from UEA’s Norwich Medical School, said: “Getting vaccinated has a huge benefit to you personally. It greatly reduces the risk of serious illness and reduces your risk of symptomatic disease by an estimated 70% for the Oxford vaccine, or 95% for the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. 

    “But we wanted to find out whether ‘herd immunity’ is a realistic outcome of any immunisation programme with the main vaccines licenced in the UK given that immunisation, even though it can reduce illness, may not prevent all infections. 

    “And importantly, can these vaccines achieve a sufficient level of population immunity to reduce the reproductive R number to below one in the absence of any non-pharmaceutical interventions?”

    The research team used mathematical models of Covid-19 transmission and vaccine efficacy to predict how well the Oxford and Pfizer vaccines will work to bring the R number down and achieve herd immunity.

    They initially found that 69% of the population would need to be vaccinated with the Pfizer vaccine, or 93% of the population with the Oxford vaccine, to bring the R number below one.

    However, when they took into account the new more transmissible Covid-19 variant, they found that vaccinating the entire population with the Oxford vaccine would only reduce the R value to 1.325.

    Meanwhile the Pfizer vaccine would require 82% of the population to be vaccinated to control the spread of the new variant. 

    Asymptomatic transmission

    Modeller Prof Alastair Grant, form UEA’s School of Environmental Sciences, said: “The Oxford vaccine reduces the incidence of serious illness to a greater extent than it reduces symptomatic illness, which is still common in those who have had this vaccine. 

    “Its efficacy against the incidence of asymptomatic infections is lower, reducing its efficacy against all infection from 70.4% to 52.5% for the pooled data. This means that its overall protection against infection is only partial – around 50%.

    “Although asymptomatic cases are less infectious, including this in our calculations still raises R values by 20% or more, from 1.33 to 1.6 for the new variant with a 100% vaccination.

    “This combination of relatively low headline efficacy and limited effect on asymptomatic infections means that the Oxford vaccine can’t take us to herd immunity, even if the whole population is immunised. 

    “Vaccinating 82% of the population with the Pfizer vaccine would control the spread of the virus – but it isn’t licenced for use on under 16s, who make up 19% of the population. 

    “Also, some people will refuse the vaccine, so achieving an 82% vaccination rate will likely be impossible. In the absence of vaccination, ‘herd immunity’ would only occur when 89% of the population has had the virus.”

    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.01.16.21249946v1

     The Truth About Judge Jeanine Pirro And Donald Trump's Relationship

    BY ELIZABETH S. MITCHELL/JAN. 22, 2021 

    Perhaps the very last act Donald Trump made as president was to pardon Albert Pirro, who was convicted of tax evasion and conspiracy nearly 20 years ago for deducting more than $1 million in personal expenses as "business expenses." Why would Trump use the last hour of his presidency to forgive a white-collar criminal whose greed for money, according to ABC News, has been likened to Richard Nixon's lust for power? While Pirro did donate about $2,000 to the Republican National Committee and the Trump campaign in 2020, the pardon likely had less to do with this relatively small donation and a whole lot more to do with who his ex-wife is. 

    The businessman's former wife is Fox News' Jeanine Pirro, who has spent Trump's presidency singing his praises and continually supporting him via the TV network, even when other reporters and programs questioned or criticized the president. In fact, her weekly broadcast on Saturday evenings, Justice with Judge Jeanine, frequently quoted Trump's now-banned Twitter account, and commenters and viewers found her show a safe place to voice their undying support of the president and repeat conspiracy theories and unfounded claims about election fraud (via ABC News).

    Trump's history with Jeanine Pirro

    Donald Trump first became acquainted with the Pirros over 30 years ago when he hired Albert Pirro to serve as a real estate lawyer. At the time, Jeanine Pirro was serving as a Westchester County Court judge, and the couple ran in the same New York City social scene as Trump. Trump remained friends with Judge Pirro over the intervening decades, and long before his own political ambitions, Pirro ran for the Republican senate nomination to oppose Hilary Clinton in 2005. She dropped out of the race, but Trump showed his friendship and support by donating to her campaign at the time, and when she ran the next year to oppose Andrew Cuomo for the New York attorney general seat, he donated to that campaign as well (via Vanity Fair). 

    She gave up her ambitions of pursuing political office for a TV career, landing a headlining role in CW's reality courtroom show Judge Jeanine Pirro, which was canceled in 2011 just before Pirro signed on with Fox. And in 2016, she wrote a book called Liars, Leakers, and Liberals: The Case Against the Anti-Trump Conspiracy, which The Washington Post called "the most gushing" of the "sycophantic" books that had come out at the time about the then-new president. Throughout his presidency, Pirro took the president's side and made sometimes-controversial assertions that landed her in hot water even with her network, but nothing deterred her loyalty and her drive to express it on her show (via Vanity Fair).

    Read More: https://www.thelist.com/317939/the-truth-about-judge-jeanine-pirro-and-donald-trumps-relationship/?utm_campaign=clip






    REVEALED: Fox News' Judge Jeanine lobbied Donald Trump to pardon her ex-husband in dying hours of presidency after she saw he was missing from clemency list


    President Donald Trump announced another pardon with less than an hour left in his term 

    Trump pardoned Fox News personality Jeanine Pirro's fraudster ex-husband Albert Pirro, who used to represent Trump in real estate deals 

    The White House released Pirro's name as the president was landing in West Palm Beach, as he's
     skipping President-elect Joe Biden's inauguration 

    Now CNN reports that 'Judge' Jeanine lobbied Trump directly


    Albert Pirro said he was 'surprised' to get the pardon having gone to bed assuming he was not on the list 

    By NIKKI SCHWAB, SENIOR U.S. POLITICAL REPORTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

    PUBLISHED: 21 January 2021 

    Fox News star Jeanine Pirro lobbied Donald Trump on his last morning in office to pardon her fraudster ex-husband, it was reported Thursday.

    CNN said that the host was in touch with the president after her ex-husband Albert Pirro - a lawyer who had once represented Trump - was missing from the dozens of pardons issued in the early hours of Wednesday morning. 

    Among those who received clemency were Steve Bannon, Trump's former adviser who was indicted on charges of taking $1m from the privately-funded border wall campaign for his own use.

    Albert Pirro had been among those expected to be on the list issued in the early hours of Wednesday morning.

    But when he was not, his ex-wife lobbied Trump directly, CNN reported.

    He ordered aides to their 'total surprise' to have Pirro pardoned, which left them 'scrambling.'

    Ally: Jeanine Pirro has been a vocal defender of Donald Trump, who promoted her book in the Oval Office

    President Donald Trump gave a last-minute pardon to Albert Pirro (left) who was previously married to Fox News personality Judge Jeanine Pirro (right). Here the couple is captured leaving court in 2000 

    Close: Trump's relationship with Jeanine Pirro and her former husband goes back decades. Albert Pirro represented Trump in the 1990s

    The outgoing deputy press secretary, Judd Deere, announced the pardon when Air Force One touched down in Florida saying: 'Today, President Donald J. Trump granted a full pardon to Albert J. Pirro, Jr.'

    Pirro spent 17 months in federal prison after being convicted in 2000 of $1m in tax frau

    Trump ally Matt Schlapp got $750k in unsuccessful pardon push

    Lachlan Markay

    Matt Schlapp. Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    The lobbying firm run by Trump ally Matt Schlapp brought in $750,000 in the final two weeks of 2020 from a former top Trump fundraiser and convicted fraudster who retained Schlapp to lobby — unsuccessfully — for a presidential pardon.

    Why it matters: The substantial sum that the former fundraiser, Georgia's Parker "Pete" Petit, paid to Schlapp's Cove Strategies shows how valuable connections to Donald Trump were in his final days in office for wealthy felons seeking clemency from the outgoing president.

    What's new: Lobbying disclosure records filed on Thursday said Schlapp, a close informal Trump adviser, worked on a "request for a pardon and other public policy issues relating to criminal justice."


    The disclosure filing, which covered the last two weeks of 2020, said that Schlapp had contacted just one government office on Petit's behalf: the Executive Office of the President.

    Petit was not on the list of the nearly 150 pardons and commutations that the White House released during Trump's final days in office.

    Schlapp didn't respond to inquiries about the other policy work he reported performing on the account.


    The backstory: Petit, a former Atlanta health care executive, co-chaired the Trump campaign's 2016 fundraising operation in Georgia.

    A federal court 
    convicted him of securities fraud in November. The charge carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

    Be smart: A host of federal convicts retained lobbyists to try to win clemency from Trump in his final days. But even the most lucrative lobbying contracts didn't guarantee success.
    WHATEVER GOES UP MUST COME DOWN
    Nightmare on Wall Street: Bank of America Warns Record Stock Prices are Sign Bubble is Ready to Pop

    © AP Photo / Michael Probst

    BUSINESS SPUTNIK
    22.01.2021
    by Ilya Tsukanov

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average hit a new all-time high on Wednesday following Joe Biden’s inauguration. The value of stocks has grown steadily since 2009, with the Dow alone tripling in value, notwithstanding economic factors such as high unemployment, stagnant wages, and high debt levels among ordinary Americans.

    Bank of America, the US’s second largest bank with assets worth well over $2 trillion, has warned its customers that the “extreme rally” witnessed on Wall Street is the result of Federal Reserve policy, and that it's fuelling the blowup of a massive bubble that could soon burst.

    “D.C.’s policy bubble is fuelling Wall Street’s asset price bubble,” a note said to have been sent to investors Friday and seen by Bloomberg reads, referring to the Federal Reserve’s support for risk assets, i.e. those assets which are not risk-free.

    “When those who want to stay rich start acting like those who want to get rich, it suggests a late-stage speculative blow-off,” the note adds, referring to the high levels of high-risk speculation among wealthy investors. The letter, penned by BofA eggheads led by chief investment strategists Michael Hartnett, warns that a ‘market correction’, i.e. a drop in stock prices, is expected sometime later this year, with the bank’s so-called Bull & Bear Indicator already coming close to a “sell signal.”

    The bank warns its clients of the coming "volatility events" and compares it to past bubbles, including the 2007-08 housing market collapse and the dot-com bubble of the early 2000s that proceeded it, amid ballooning Central Bank balance sheets in the US and Europe. Bank of America expects the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet to reach the equivalent of 42 percent of GDP in 2021 amid an expected budget deficit of 33 percent of GDP.

    The US budget deficit hit an all-time high of $3.1 trillion in 2020, more than doubling the previously-set record. Before that, the deficit, or the difference between government spending and the amount of money the state collects from taxes and by other means, grew consistently under both Barack Obama and Donald Trump from a post-2008 crisis low of $439 billion in 2015.



    © REUTERS / BRENDAN MCDERMID

    Trump repeatedly criticised Obama over his deficit spending, and even promised to eliminate America’s whopping $20 trillion in debt over two terms during his 2016 campaign. The president appeared to have given up on the campaign promise during his tenure, with federal debt exploding to over $27.8 trillion, i.e. about a third of the total value of the global economy, but the time he left the White House.

    Despite the gargantuan amounts of debt, the US remains in a unique position relative to other nations, with the S dollar’s status as the de facto world currency allowing the Fed to continue printing and exchanging money for physical goods at rates that would send most other nations into Weimar Republic-style inflation and financial ruin. So long as the US is deemed able to continue paying off its debts by creditors, Washington can continue to pursue its deficit spending without large-scale effects beyond manageable inflationary pressures.



    Last week, Joe Biden announced a new $1.9 trillion coronavirus economic recovery plan including $1,400 direct payments to ordinary Americans, as well as billions in new assistance to businesses and banks. Washington already spent about $4 trillion on coronavirus stimulus in 2020.





    Top Iran leader posts Trump-like golfer image, vows revenge




    DUBAI (Reuters) - The Twitter account of Iran’s Supreme Leader on Friday carried the image of a golfer resembling former President Donald Trump apparently being targeted by a drone, vowing revenge over the killing of a top Iranian general in a U.S. drone attack.

    The post carried the text of remarks by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in December, in which he said “Revenge is certain”, renewing a vow of vengeance ahead of the first anniversary of the killing of top military commander General Qassem Soleimani in the attack in Iraq.

    “Those who ordered the murder of General Soleimani as well as those who carried this out should be punished. This revenge will certainly happen at the right time,” Khamenei tweeted on December 16, without naming Trump, who had ordered the strike.

    Earlier this month, Twitter removed a tweet by Khamenei in which he said U.S. and British-made vaccines were unreliable and may be intended to “contaminate other nations”. The platform said the tweet violated its rules against misinformation.

    There was no apparent immediate action by Twitter over the Persian-language tweet on Friday by Khamenei, Iran's highest authority. (here)

    Tensions rapidly grew between Tehran and Washington since 2018, when Trump exited a 2015 deal between Iran and six world powers that sought to curb Tehran’s nuclear programme. Washington reimposed sanctions that have crippled Iran’s economy.

    Iran called for action and “not just words” shortly after Joe Biden was sworn in as U.S. president on Wednesday. Biden has said Washington will rejoin the nuclear deal if Iran resumes strict compliance.

    Twitter takes 17 hours to mobilize after tweet threatening Trump


    By Lia Eustachewich

    January 22, 2021 | NY POST

    It took Twitter 17 hours to suspend an account bearing the name of Iran leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei for posting a death threat to former President Trump.

    The hateful tweet came from @khamenei_site on Thursday — an account later determined to be bogus — and depicted the likeness of Trump on the golf course being targeted by a drone flying overhead.

    “Revenge is inevitable,” said the post, translated from Farsi.

    By mid-Friday morning, @khamenei_site was suspended for violating Twitter rules, with the social media giant later clarifying that the account was fake.

    Several Twitter accounts under Khamenei’s name are currently active — and none are verified.

    The post came a little more than a year after Soleimani, head of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force, was killed in a US airstrike ordered by the Trump administration.An account bearing the name of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei tweeted this image, which depicts the likeness of Donald Trump on a golf course being targeted by a drone.Twitter

    The tweet from the yanked account included the same language found in a Dec. 16 tweet from @khamenei_ir, which appears to be the leader’s official account.

    “Those who ordered the murder of General Soleimani as well as those who carried this out should be punished,” the post said. “This revenge will certainly happen at the right time.”

    Earlier this month, Twitter blocked a tweet from the Khamenei account that cast doubt on the efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines and called the ones made in the US and UK “completely untrustworthy.”

    Twitter took the step earlier this month, following the Capitol riot, of banning Trump’s account from the platform “permanently” because of how his posts were “being received and interpreted on and off Twitter.”The tweet read: “This revenge will certainly happen at the right time.”Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

    The tweets from Trump that triggered the ban were an announcement that he would not be attending President Biden’s inauguration, and another saying, “The 75,000,000 great American Patriots who voted for me, AMERICA FIRST, and MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, will have a GIANT VOICE long into the future. They will not be disrespected or treated unfairly in any way, shape or form!!!”

    “[W]e have determined that these Tweets are in violation of the Glorification of Violence Policy and the user @realDonaldTrump should be immediately permanently suspended from the service,” Twitter said in a statement at the time.

    In recent days, the platform has also vowed a larger “global” crackdown on conspiracy theorist accounts following the Jan. 6 siege.



    Ted Cruz's Paris Climate Agreement Tweet Bashed by Greta Thunberg and AOC

    BY CHRIS BARILLA

    \Despite the fact that less than a day has transpired since President Biden's term as commander-in-chief of the nation began, political adversaries such as Senator Ted Cruz have wasted no time in slamming the earliest decisions the new administration has made.

    Of course, this type of rhetoric against left-leaning policy changes is nothing new to the senator, who has been marred in controversy since he took office, and more recently, since defeating Democratic candidate Beto O'Rourke to uphold his seat and a Republican Senate majority under the Trump presidency. But, how long is Cruz to hold such a powerful government position? Here's a breakdown of his time in the Senate and when his term is supposed to end. 

    SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES

    Although he has had a storied involvement in local politics for much of his adult life, Cruz didn't undertake his most notable endeavor as a U.S. Senator until 2012 (with some assistance from GOP Tea Party members) who he secured a nomination through.

    Once elected, Cruz went on a mission to undo Barack Obama's famed Obamacare plan, becoming the key figure in a 2012 government shutdown that stemmed from deliberations regarding the healthcare effort.

    In 2016, Cruz mounted a Republican primary presidential campaign against Donald Trump, who he lost to in a landslide. Two years later, he was pitted against Democratic nominee Beto O'Rourke for his seat in the Senate, a campaign Cruz decisively won. Beyond his hard-fought political battles, the Texas representative's current term is set to end on Jan. 3, 2025.

    Senator Ted Cruz is adamantly against rejoining the Paris Climate Agreement.

    SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES

    Most recently, Cruz made headlines for a statement and subsequent tweet he penned directly criticizing one of President Biden's first executive actions, rejoining the Paris Climate Agreement

    "By rejoining the Paris Climate Agreement, President Biden indicates he’s more interested in the views of the citizens of Paris than in the jobs of the citizens of Pittsburgh. This agreement will do little to affect the climate and will harm the livelihoods of Americans," Cruz slammed the president's decision by writing to his constituents, including a link to a document that described his stance in more detail.

    The information that Cruz provided essentially suggests that rejoining the agreement would be detrimental to American citizens' earning power and ability to find jobs in the energy sector. The analytics he linked in the press release claim that "the regulations necessary to meet the original commitments under the Paris Climate Agreement would result in the loss of 400,000 American manufacturing jobs and would cost families of four $20,000 in lost income over a nearly 20-year period."

    Democratic representation criticizes Cruz for questioning climate policies.

    SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES

    Since speaking out with his disagreement regarding rejoining the Paris Climate Agreement, Cruz has been met with pushback by prominent left-leaning political figures such as Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and climate activist Greta Thunberg. The former decided to quote Cruz's original tweet about wanting to remain out of the agreement with her own response, questioning her colleague's ethics and referencing the events that transpired on Capitol Hill on Jan. 6, 2021.

    "Nice tweet Sen. Cruz! Quick question: do you also believe the Geneva Convention was about the views of the citizens of Geneva? Asking for everyone who believes US Senators should be competent and not undermine our elections to incite insurrection against the United States," Ocasio-Cortez wrote to Cruz, garnering hundreds of thousands of likes.

    Meanwhile, Greta, who has made a name for herself over the past few years as the youngest and most vocal opposition to climate change, mocked Cruz's statement with her own tweet, "So happy that USA has finally rejoined the Pittsburgh Agreement. Welcome back!" She wrote in response to the Senator's claims that the Pennsylvania city's manufacturing jobs would be deeply affected by the nation rejoining the agreement.
    QAnon Supporters Think Donald Trump Will Be Sworn in as President on March 4

    LIKE END OF THE WORLD CULTS THE DATE KEEPS MOVING

    BY JOSEPH ALLEN

      
    SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES

    Many QAnon believers felt a major shock on Jan. 20 when Joe Biden was successfully sworn in as the 46th president of the United States, replacing Donald Trump. This is in part because most assumed that Trump had some secret plan to maintain power, even after he lost the election and his efforts to overturn the results failed in courts across the country. Now, QAnon believers think something major is in the works.

    What is happening on March 4, 2021

    After Biden was sworn in as president, QAnon supporters began to focus on a new date: March 4, 2021. According to a new theory, this is the day when Biden will be deposed and replaced by Donald Trump, who will be once again sworn in as president. This theory is provably false and is not based in any sort of reality. For Trump to be sworn in as president on March 4, the current U.S. government would have to be forcibly overthrown.
    SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES

    Although an armed mob did descend on the Capitol in order to prevent Congress from certifying the election results on Jan. 6, the election was nonetheless certified, and security in Washington, D.C. has been beefed up substantially in the aftermath of the event. There has also been no indication that military leaders are inclined to throw their support behind former President Trump. 

    Why do QAnon believers think Trump will be sworn in?


    Although the beliefs of QAnon supporters can sometimes take on qualities that are more similar to faith than anything else, the March 4 conspiracy stems from a convoluted scenario involving the military. In this scenario, after Trump's challenges were tossed out of the Supreme Court, and after Congress certified the election, Trump went to the military to present his case for election fraud.

    Because the fraud implicates China, the theory goes, the military will side with Trump. In order to avoid an armed revolt, though, Biden has to be sworn in, but only as a formality. Then, Trump and the military will present their case for the fraud, and the result will be overturned with Trump sworn in on March 4. That date is significant because, until FDR's second inauguration, it was the date for the swearing in ceremony for new presidents. 

    This theory also relates, in some loose way, to the belief that America is no longer a true democracy and is instead a corporation. The theory, as strange as it sounds, suggests that Biden was actually sworn in as CEO and that when Trump takes power on March 4, he will be restoring America to its democratic roots. Apparently, he'll be the 17th president, because America hasn't been a democracy since the Civil War.

    Conveniently, March 4 is a date that is far enough away that it will allow the theory to pick up steam before it is disproved. When March 4 comes, and Biden is still president, some QAnon supporters may be disenchanted. Most, however, will simply glom onto the next conspiracy theory, waiting for one of their prophecies to come true.


    A Million More People Watched Joe Biden's Inauguration Than Donald Trump's

    A Million More People Watched Joe Biden's Inauguration Than Donald Trump's

    More than a million more people tuned in to watch Joe Biden inauguration than Donald Trump's in 2017, according to figures from Nielsen. I'm sure the former POTUS will not be pleased with that news.

    Across the six major TV networks, 40 million people watched the coverage of Biden's inauguration, which included performances from Lady Gaga, poet Amanda Gorman and Jennifer Lopez.

    The data from Nielsen covers the 30-minute period, kicking off at 11.45am local time when Biden formally took the oath of office and gave his inaugural speech.

    Credit: PA
    Credit: PA

    Data from 2017 found that 38.3 million watched the same period during Trump's inauguration.

    But the viewing figures pale into comparison when compared with Barack Obama's inauguration, which pulled in a whopping 51.2 million viewers.

    The figures include those who watched CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBC and Fox News - but don't include anyone who watched it via social media - such as a Facebook or YouTube live stream.

    Figures including these numbers are expected to be released in the coming days, the Daily Mail reports.

    And, of course, one person who almost certainly didn't tune in was outgoing president Trump, who broke tradition and ditched the ceremony in favour of flying back home to Florida.

    Donald Trump being sworn in 2017. Credit: PA
    Donald Trump being sworn in 2017. Credit: PA

    Biden was sworn in as the as the 46th President of the United States, with his Vice President Kamala Harris making history by becoming the first black, the first female and the first Asian American to become VP.

    Biden used his speech to tell his country 'democracy had prevailed' after a troubling few weeks and months.He said: "A new America has risen to the challenge today. We celebrate the triumph not of a candidate, but of a cause, the cause of democracy.

    "The people, the will of the people has been heard and the will of the people has been heeded.

    "We've learnt again that democracy is precious. Democracy is fragile. At this hour, our friends democracy has prevailed."

    He went on to urge US citizens to come together to 'do great things'.

    Credit: PA
    Credit: PA

    "I ask every American to join me in this cause. To fight the foes we face: anger, resentment and hatred, extremism, lawlessness, violence, disease, joblessness and hopelessness.

    "With unity, we can do great things, important things, we can right wrongs.

    "We can put people to work in good jobs. We can teach our children in safe schools. We can overcome the deadly virus. We can reward work and rebuild the middle class and make health care secure for all. We can deliver racial justice and we can make America once again the leading force for good in the world."

    Featured Image Credit: PA


    REPLACE THEM WITH PIRATE CAPTAINS


    City of London to Remove Guildhall Statues of Two Historical Figures For Links to Slave Trade

    © Flickr / Steve Keiretsu

    22.01.2021SPUTNIK


    Since the outbreak of the Black Lives Matter protests last year in response to claims of systemic racism and police brutality in the United Kingdom, the London authorities have put together a commission which is meant to review statues glorifying figures involved in the historical slave trade.

    Statues of two historical figures will be removed from the City of London and moved elsewhere because of their links to Britain's transatlantic slave trade, the city governing body's Policy and Resources Committee announced on Friday.



    Effigies of William Beckford and Sir John Cass will be removed from the City of London Corporation's historic Guildhall headquarters, it has been decided by unanimous vote.

    The City Corporation will also establish a working group to consider what could replace the statues, and will also think about putting together a new memorial to the slave trade in London.

    “This decision is the culmination of months of valuable work by the Tackling Racism taskforce, which has taken a comprehensive approach to addressing injustice and inequality. The view of members was that removing and re-siting statues linked to slavery is an important milestone in our journey towards a more inclusive and diverse City," said City of London Corporation Policy Chair Catherine McGuinness.



    ​The statue of William Beckford, who twice served as Lord Mayor of London in the late 18th century and accumulated vast wealth from African slave labour on plantations in Jamaica, will be taken down, re-sited, and replaced with new art pieces.

    ​Meanwhile, the representation of Sir John Cass (1661-1718) will be returned to the foundation named after him. This is because of the lucrative involvement in the international slave trade which the merchant, lawmaker, and philanthropist had.

    “I’m really pleased the Policy and Resources Committee has agreed what we think is the correct response to a sensitive issue. The slave trade is a stain on our history and putting those who profited from it literally on a pedestal is something that has no place in a modern, diverse City," the City of London Corporation's co-chair of the Tackling Racism taskforce, Caroline Addy, explained.

    ​The move comes after recommendations from the City Corporation’s Tackling Racism taskforce, and it will take place along with new measures intended to increase diversity in staffing, governance, education, business, and policing.



    Recommendations from the taskforce include introducing anonymous recruitment for all pay grades, increased training and a "reverse mentoring" scheme that has been given the green light already.

    The Policy and Resources Committee will also seek to improve diversity in the Court of Common Council – its top decision-making body – including establishing an officer with the specific responsibilities of ensuring member diversity.

    City of London Corporation Tackling Racism Taskforce Co-Chair Andrien Meyers said he is "really proud of the wide-ranging work the taskforce has carried out to promote inclusion in the City Corporation", as well as in "schools and institutions and the City as a whole".

    He expressed his support for the organisation's "commitment to ensuring the Square Mile is a place where people of all ethnicities and backgrounds feel safe and welcome".

    The Tackling Racism taskforce was set up in June last year after the Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests against historical racism and police brutality.

    The City Corporation held a consultative exercise asking individuals their views on statues and other landmarks in the Square Mile which have been linked to slavery, which received more than 1,500 responses.

    Although much of the anger has been directed towards statues of individuals who profited from slavery, there has been criticism leveled at the BLM movement surrounding allegations of trying to scrub out British history and essential figures from the UK's national past.
    Yosemite National Park to remain closed
     after wind damage



    California Winds-Yosemite
    This photo provided by Yosemite National Park shows a boardwalk in the Mariposa Grove in Yosemite National Park was damaged by a fallen ponderosa pine during the Mono wind event on Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2021. Yosemite National Park will remain closed through the weekend after high winds that battered much of California knocked down two giant sequoias and caused millions of dollars in damage. Yosemite National Park via AP

    Thu, January 21, 2021, 7:11 PM

    YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (AP) — Yosemite National Park will remain closed through the weekend after high winds that battered much of California knocked down two giant sequoias and caused millions of dollars in damage.

    The park hoped to reopen Tuesday except for areas south of Yosemite Valley, including one entrance, that will remain shut to visitors, the park said Thursday.

    High winds that began Monday swept through the state, toppling trees and power lines and knocking out electricity to about 300,000 homes and businesses. Utilities also intentionally blacked out tens of thousands of customers to prevent fires erupting from damaged or downed electrical equipment.

    The winds eased Tuesday in the northern and central areas and Wednesday in the south.

    Yosemite was struck Monday night. Two giant sequoias in the lower grove of Yosemite’s Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias were among trees that fell, park spokesman Scott Gediman told the Sacramento Bee.

    Trees also crushed trucks and damaged buildings, including employee homes. Also crushed were a boardwalk and bathroom installed during a $40 million restoration that was finished in 2018, Gediman said.

    Crews were working to repair downed electrical lines, especially in the Wawona community, a south park area that remained without power on Thursday, Gediman said.

    Among the areas closed until deemed safe was the Tunnel View, a scenic viewpoint on State Route 41 in the Wawona area that offers sweeping views of such icons as Half Dome and Bridalveil Fall.

    The park is only open to day visitors. Campgrounds and lodges have been closed for several weeks because the park is trying to reduce the chances of visitors spreading the coronavirus.