Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Marianne Faithfull on Her Chloé Cameo—and the Biopic of Her Life That Starts Filming Later This Year

BY LUKE LEITCH March 5, 2020

Marianne Faithfull and Lucy Boynton at ChloéPhoto: Dominique Charriau / Getty Images

“In the 1960s, and until very recently, you could not be beautiful and clever at the same time… if you were pretty, you were obviously just a bimbo. A dolly bird. A sex object. Blah blah blah. And that was obviously why Mick liked me, at least that’s what they thought. But it wasn’t.”

Marianne Faithfull is holding court in her Paris hotel room not long after her surprise appearance at Natacha Ramsay-Levi’s Chloé show. In a fashion week rich in righteous feminist foment (most explicity at Christian Dior, most implicitly at Alexander McQueen), the direction chosen by Ramsay-Levi was palpably the most affecting. The Chloé show and collection aimed to tell a “multitude of female stories” partly through the breadth of Ramsay-Levi’s work, and partly via the creative voices of a chorus of female collaborators.

Alongside the artists Rita Ackermann and Marion Verboom, Faithfull was a comrade in that Chloé cohort. As she explains, her contribution to the show—providing vocals over the composition of French musician Jackson Fourgeaud (aka Jackson and His Computerband)—began entirely by chance. “It was really strange. I bumped into Jackson and Natacha quite a long time ago now, on the Eurostar. We started chatting, and we became friends. And I didn’t really know much about them. I guess they knew a bit more about me. Jackson, you go on and explain what happened next.”
Fourgeaud (wearing a handsome padded olive Chloe greatcoat) said: “That was about a year and a half ago. Then when we were working on the music for this show we thought of Marianne and that maybe this was the moment to try and work together.”
Mick Jagger and Marianne Faithfull, 1967 Photo: Getty Images

The result was Faithfull’s readings, full of both pathos and passion, of a selection of poetry chosen by her and Ramsay-Levi. These included verse by Louisa May Alcott, Byron, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Christina Rossetti, and William Butler Yeats. As Fourgeaud observes: “all the poems sort of talk about dancing and music. And weirdly, they go into different territories too; you have politics, in some of them you have sensuality, some of them you have death…”

“It was a really nice selection,” adds Faithfull. By another serendipitous coincidence her work with Chloé is closely related to her next planned recording: an album of recited Romantic poetry co-produced with Warren Ellis of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds.

Faithfull’s own life story reads like an epic, in which she is buffeted by fate and prejudice but eventually surmounts it after many tribulations. It is a tale she told in her 1994 autobiography, Faithfull, and which after years in development will this October go into production as a movie starring Lucy Boynton (who is also co-producing) and directed by Ian Bonhôte (McQueen).

“I never thought the biopic would happen,” says Faithfull: “we sold the rights to various different directors, some of them rather good actually, but all they ever wanted to do was sensationalized rubbish. Yeah: so I didn’t let anybody do it. And now that it’s happening I am quite stunned. Then I met Lucy on the show and I liked her very much—and she’s so beautiful.”

Between 1964, when she was first spotted at a Rolling Stones party by the band’s manager (who later recalled her as “an angel with big tits” and “a face that can sell”) and 1972, when she was living homeless and heroin-addicted on the streets of London (she would later say making herself as unattractive as possible was a way to deflect the male gaze) Faithfull’s life as chart-topping musician, movie star, and “muse” was played out in public via the tabloid press of a profoundly prurient age. She kindly recounts some of the key stories (including of a notorious drugs bust alongside the Rolling Stones whose front-page moment seemed like a darkly comic twist of destiny when you consider that her great-great uncle was the author of Venus In Furs), but asks me not to repeat them here. They are all in the book, after all, and will very likely be in the movie too.

Faithfull unapologetically carved her own romantic destiny, but unlike the men around her who did the same she was castigated for it. “I lost my good name. And I only just got it back. Keith’s (Richards) book was a great help, in fact: He is very kind about me. And it is very simple, when he mentions me it is as a fellow musician.”
Singer Marianne Faithfull, 1967
Photo: Getty Images

To be valorized for your looks but also simultaneously trivialized because of them, says Faithfull: “was awful and kind of made me wish I didn’t have those looks at all. Now I do appreciate whatever looks I have left, but the effect that that had on me then was that I just put myself down. I always knew I wasn’t a bimbo and a sex object.”

Faithfull is a veteran from an age which saw itself as progressive but which now seems antediluvian in its attitude to women: “Free love” was a narrative that sounded win-win but left only the males unburdened by judgment. Still both beautiful and clever, it is fascinating to hear Faithfull’s war stories from that long-gone frontline in sexual politics. As for Chloé’s harnessing of her talents, well, we’d be quite happy to have a recording of that performance, too.

Chloé


Hong Kong Pet dog that tested for coronavirus dies after returning from quarantine virus-free
QUARANTINE KILLED THE DOG TWO WEEKS IN A KENNEL AWAY FROM ITS COMPANION AND IT WAS OLD. TERRIBLE WAY TO DIE. BUT 
March 18, 2020 By Lina Saigol
Hong Kong’s Authorities were notified by the owner of the 17-year old Pomeranian that the dog had died on Monday.

Dogs wearing masks are seen in a stroller in Shanghai on February 19, 2020. Getty Images
The Hong Kong pet dog that was tested for coronavirus has died two days after being released from a government quarantine having been declared virus-free.
The Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD) in Hong Kong said it was notified by the owner of the 17-year old Pomeranian that the dog had died on Monday.
“The owner expressed that she didn’t wish to let her dog undergo postmortem to confirm its cause of death,” the AFCD told MarketWatch in an emailed statement.
News in February that the dog had tested “weak-positive” for Covid-19 sparked panic that domestic dogs and cats could be transmitters of the virus.
The AFCD had initially tested the dog on Feb. 26 and quarantined it for the standard 14 days after detecting low levels of the Covid-19 from its nasal and oral cavity samples.
Five more samples were subsequently collected from the dog for tests, as well as a blood sample and the AFCD said on March 12 that the result was negative. “The negative result indicates that there is not a strong immune response and that there are not measurable amounts of antibodies in the blood at this stage,” the department said.
The dog’s owner, a 60-year-old woman, was confirmed to be infected and hospitalized on February 25. She recovered and returned home on March 8, according to the South China Morning Post.
The AFCD noted that the genetic makeup of the virus found in the dog and its close human contacts were very similar. “The sequence results indicate that the virus likely spread from the infected persons and subsequently infected the dog.”
Some animal welfare experts have suggested that dog’s death could have been caused by the stress of being quarantined and separated from its owner.
The department stressed that there is currently no conclusive evidence that pet animals such as dogs or cats can spread COVID-19 or that pet animals can be a source of infection to people. “This is, however, a rapidly evolving situation and information will be updated as it becomes available,” it added.
Both the World Organisation for Animal Health and the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention have said there is no evidence that companion animals such as cats and dogs can spread the virus. “Therefore, there is no justification in taking measures against companion animals which may compromise their welfare,” the animal health organization said.

The World Small Animal Veterinary Association (WSAVA), the professional body that represents more than 200,000 veterinarians worldwide, has urged its members to continue to wash their hands when interacting with their pets.

Idexx Laboratories IDXX, -5.049%, the veterinary diagnostic company said last week that it has seen no positive results in pets to date of SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus strain responsible for the coronavirus disease 2019 or Covid-19 respiratory outbreak in humans.

The Maine-based company evaluated thousands of canine and feline specimens during validation of a new veterinary test system for the Covid-19 virus. “The new test results align with the current expert understanding that the virus is primarily transmitted person-to-person and supports the recommendation against testing pets for the Covid-19 virus,” the company said.


Traffic piles up at European borders as worldwide coronavirus count tops 200,000

By David Rising and Chris Blake, Associated Press
PA Media: World NewsMarch 18, 2020






Desperate travellers in cars and trucks are choking European borders, creating huge traffic jams as they try to get home before borders shut, or to deliver critical supplies to help nations cope with the quickly spreading coronavirus.

It came as Johns Hopkins University said the total number of confirmed cases worldwide has passed 200,000.

The Johns Hopkins Centre for Systems Science and Engineering’s online tally showed 201,436 cases, with 8,006 deaths, and 82,032 patients listed as recovered.

View photos

(PA Graphics)More

Hungary overnight opened its borders in phases, seeking to alleviate some of the pressure from eastern Europeans trying to return home. Bulgarian citizens were first allowed to cross the immigrant-phobic country in carefully controlled convoys, then Romanians had a turn.

But by early Wednesday on the Austrian side of the border, trucks were backed up for 17 miles and cars for nearly nine miles as rules allowing only Hungarians or transport trucks through the border kicked back in.

The traffic jam on the Czech-Polish border – at the northern Nachod-Kudowa-Slone crossing – was more than 30 miles long on Wednesday, up from 25 miles on Tuesday.

European Union leaders have been working on how to make sure food, medical supplies and other essential goods keep flowing but so far borders have been clogged.

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(PA Graphics)More

They are also trying to figure out ways to allow seasonal agricultural workers, needed to keep the production of food going, to travel back and forth across essentially closed borders.

The UN’s International Labour Organisation estimates that fallout from the outbreak could cause nearly 25 million job losses and drain up to 3.4 trillion dollars of income by the end of this year.

The Geneva-based agency said “an internationally co-ordinated policy response” could help mitigate losses through worker protections, fiscal stimulus and support for jobs and wages

Unesco said about half of the world’s student population is now out of school because of the pandemic.

The latest school closures cover 102 countries with smaller, localised shutdowns in others for a total of 850 million students, from pre-schools to universities. A week ago, school shutdowns covered just 15 countries, the United Nations agency said.

Nations around the world are facing the same issues, and President Donald Trump announced the US and Canada had agreed to close their border to non-essential traffic, but assured that trade would not be affected.



In south-east Asia, the causeway between Malaysia and the financial hub of Singapore was eerily quiet after Malaysia shut its borders, while the Philippines backed down on an order giving foreigners 72 hours to leave from a large part of its main island.

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The Johor–Singapore Causeway lies empty (AP)More

President Donald Trump’s administration is considering a plan to immediately return to Mexico all people who cross America’s southern border illegally, according to two sources.

The coronavirus is now present in every US state after West Virginia reported an infection.

Increasingly worried about the economic fallout of the global shutdown, the US, the UK and the Netherlands announced rescue packages totalling hundreds of billions of pounds, while longtime International Monetary Fund critic Venezuela asked the institution for a 4.2 billion dollar loan.

Major Asian stock markets fell back on Wednesday following early gains after Wall Street jumped on Mr Trump’s promise of aid.

In Brussels, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said there had been “a unanimous and united approach” to the decision to prohibit most foreigners from entering the EU for 30 days.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said European leaders agreed in a conference call to the commission’s proposal for an entry ban to the bloc — along with Norway, Switzerland, Iceland and the UK — with “very, very limited exceptions”.

But so far, EU efforts to smooth the transition have failed.

On Wednesday, thousands of trucks remained backed up in Lithuania on roads into Poland, after Warsaw ordered strict measures that include testing every driver for Covid-19 symptoms. The line of trucks was 37 miles long on Tuesday night.

Elsewhere, droves of Malaysians endured hours-long traffic jams as they sought to get into Singapore before the border closure. More than 300,000 people commute daily to Singapore to work and many have chosen to stay there during the lockdown.

Malaysia’s restricted movement order came after a sharp spike in coronavirus cases to 673, making it the worst-affected country in south-east Asia.

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(PA Graphics)More

The self-governing island of Taiwan said on Wednesday that it too would ban foreigners from entry and Taiwanese would have to self-quarantine at home for 14 days.

In Thailand, Bangkok’s notorious red light districts were due to go dark after a government order closing bars, schools, cinemas and many other venues.

In Italy, the hardest hit nation after China, infections jumped to 27,980 on Tuesday. With 2,503 deaths, Italy accounts for a third of the global death toll.

Spain, the fourth-most infected country, saw cases soar by 2,538 on Wednesday, bringing the total to 13,716, with 588 deaths, 67 more than on Tuesday.

Some bright spots emerged. Wuhan, the central Chinese city where the virus was first detected late last year and which has been under lockdown for weeks, reported just one new case for a second straight day.

---30---
BERNIE WILL REMAIN IN THE PRIMARY THROUGH THE PANDEMIC PROMOTING ITS CURE; MEDICARE FOR ALL

THE REALPOLITIK IS THAT BERNIE DRIVES THE DEMOCRATS AND BIDEN LEFT
THE LONGER HE STAYS IN.

Bye, bye Bernie

Rick Newman
Senior Columnist
The Bernie Sanders revolution is winding down.

After three weeks’ of thumping in Democratic primary elections, Sanders is poised to drop out of the race. The Vermont senator would have to win 70% of the vote in remaining elections to overtake former Vice President Joe Biden—and he’s been winning far less than 30%. With the coronavirus outbreak metastasizing, dropping out has become an ethical imperative that will turn upcoming Democratic primaries into formalities, allowing more people to stay home and reduce the risk of spreading the virus.

So barring a catastrophe, Joe Biden will be the Democratic nominee running against President Trump in the general election that essentially begins now. Yet Sanders has had an indelible impact on the Democratic Party that could resonate for years. He pushed radical ideas like “Medicare for All” and the Green New Deal which may never get enacted in the form Sanders prefers but have changed the way Democrats and many voters in general think about what the government should and can do.

Biden now leans more to the left than he did as a senator, and as President Obama’s vice president. After the Obama administration got the Affordable Care Act (ACA) passed in 2010, it basically pulled back from any further reforms to the way Americans get health care. While debating the ACA, Democrats tried to pass a “public option” plan similar to Medicare for people who couldn’t find affordable coverage in the private market. But they didn’t have the votes, even when Democrats controlled both houses of Congress.
 DEMOCRATS VOTED AGAINST ACA/OBAMA CARE, THEN THEY SPENT FOUR YEARS RUNNING AWAY FROM IT WHEN THE GOP LABELED IT OBAMACARE, THEY WERE LESS ENTHUSIASTIC THEN OBAMA HOPED FOR. THE ACA WAS THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION AND THE CATO INSTITUTES BASED REPUBLICAN LITE PLAN
OBAMA HOPED HE COULD GET THE GOP TO PASS. NO SUCH LUCK, IT DID HOWEVER SABOTAGE THEM EVEN TO THIS DAY, THEY CANNOT COME UP WITH AN ALTERNATIVE TO THEIR OWN PLAN

That’s part of the reason the ACA provides subsidies for lower-income Americans to buy insurance in the private market but does not provide new ways to enroll in a government plan.

That ground has clearly shifted. Biden rejects Medicare for All, arguing that Americans don’t want to eliminate all private insurance. But he backs a public option of the sort Congress couldn’t pass a decade ago. That has become the least radical position among Democrats, and shifts in public sentiment seem to back this up. With health care costs gobbling up an increasing portion of the typical family budget, support for a single-payer health-care plan like Medicare for All has risen—but support for a Biden-style public option has risen by more.

Sanders deserves some credit for that. His relentless sloganeering since the 2016 presidential campaign has nearly made “Medicare for All” a household phrase, which is important in popularizing the whole concept. He has made similar inroads with the Green New Deal, the far left plan to eliminate carbon fuel and aggressively tackle global warming. Like Medicare for All, the Green New Deal goes much further than most Americans prefer. It would dramatically disrupt the energy and transportation industries and replace free-market innovation with government-dictated solutions. But the environmental plan is also pushing moderates into a more aggressive stance on climate change.

Biden doesn’t favor the Green New Deal, but his climate plan is also more aggressive than the positions of the Obama administration. Biden aims for net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, a longer timeframe than the Green New Deal calls for but still an aggressive target. Biden wouldn’t ban hydraulic fracturing and other forms of drilling as Sanders would, but he’d establish powerful incentives to move away from carbon fuel. Even this agenda could be hard to get through Congress, but if Biden wins the presidency and tries, Sanders can legitimately claim to have helped get it on the agenda.

Sanders, 78, may become a less visible political presence. He clearly relished the attention he got as a competitive presidential candidate, but he’ll be 82 by the time the 2024 presidential campaign rolls around. If he lost twice and still tried to run again as an octogenarian, it could end up embarrassing. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts is in a position to carry the Sanders revolution forward. She’s a spry 70 and could end up with a prominent role in a Biden administration.


Still, the Sanders-Warren revolution did hit a ceiling,
with Biden and other moderate Democrats winning far more votes in the primaries than the super-liberal Sanders and Warren. That’s why Biden ran away with the race once four other moderates dropped out and he consolidated the moderate vote. Sanders and Warren excited their supporters, but they badly overestimated how many there might be. The lesson for Biden as he goes up against Trump is that Americans want some change, just not too much.

IT AIN'T OVER TILL IT'S OVER 

Coronavirus will finish Trump’s presidency


Rick Newman
Senior Columnist
Yahoo FinanceMarch 16, 2020

President Trump’s fear of Joe Biden seems well-founded, especially since Biden is now favored to move into the White House in 2021, by some estimates.

“With Trump facing an unlikely reelection, this means it is most likely at this point Joe Biden will win the general election in November,” Washington, DC research firm Sandhill Strategies predicted in a March 16 analysis. The coronavirus outbreak has triggered a bear market in stocks and a likely recession, which is a death sentence for presidential reelection hopes. “No U.S. President has won reelection in recent history after a period of economic downturn,” Sandhill points out.

Biden hasn’t officially clinched the Democratic presidential nomination yet. But that seems inevitable, barring an unforeseen turn in the race. He handily leads Bernie Sanders in the delegate count, and Sanders himself seems to be tacitly acknowledging his inevitable dropout.

Recessions are funny things, because economists only declare them months after they start. And the formal definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of shrinking GDP, which hasn’t happened yet. Real GDP, adjusted for inflation, grew 2.3% in the last quarter of 2019, and it’s running around 1.6% in the current quarter. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said “I don’t think so” when asked on March 15 if the U.S. economy is in a recession.

But the coronavirus is causing an abrupt economic shock that some economists think is more unnerving than the 2008 financial crash, which caused the worst downturn since the Great Depression. Widespread closures and cancelations seem certain to lead to losses and layoffs, already reflected in a stock market down 28% in less than a month. A manufacturing survey hit its lowest level since 2009 on March 16, a sign of the carnage to come. “This feels much worse than 2008,” Harvard economist Jason Furman, who worked in the Obama White House, told Vox recently.

Since the coronavirus crisis is a single-issue shock—due entirely to a known unknown—it’s possible markets and the economy will bounce back sharply once the crisis is over. But nobody knows when it will end, and the economic damage will compound as businesses lose revenue and struggle to pay rent and other bills. Some will default on loans and go under. The recovery will come too late for some.

Congress is poised to pass one stimulus bill this week, and possibly a larger one soon. If structured correctly, it will help. Still, for all its durability, the U.S. economy is heavily dependent on consumer spending, which accounts for roughly 70% of all activity. And that spending is plunging as people stay home and retailers close.
Recessions and elections

President Trump has earned poor marks for his early handling of the outbreak, when he downplayed the epidemic and said, “we have it totally under control.” But Trump’s performance may not matter, since recessions create reelection losers, period. George H.W. Bush had an 85% approval rating in 1991, after the resounding U.S. victory in the Persian Gulf War. Yet he lost reelection in 1992 because of a relatively short and mild recession that ended before the election but produced a “jobless recovery” and many months of economic anxiety.

With more than 7 months till the election, surprises could still tilt the election back in Trump’s favor. Betting site Smarkets shows a surge in Biden’s odds of becoming president during the last two weeks while Trump has slumped. Yet the site has the two candidates essentially tied, with each man about 45% likely to win.

Sandhill Strategies expects other realignments in the November elections. If Biden does well, that would raise the odds of Democrats taking control of the Senate. Even Mitch McConnell, the wily Senate majority leader, could lose reelection. But Sandhill thinks Democrats could also lose control of the House as voters go after incumbents en masse. That would violate the usual pattern of down-ballot candidates riding the “coattails” of the presidential winner, since many voters simply vote for all candidates in their chosen party. Yet that might be the least shocking thing in a year of momentous surprises.

COVID-19
PRISON INMATES SEEK COMPASSIONATE RELEASE
America’s nearly 7,000 jails, prisons and correction facilities are an ideal breeding ground for the coronavirus, as dangerous as nursing homes and cruise ships but far less sanitary. That has prompted some inmates to plead for compassionate release or home detention. Among them are President Donald Trump’s former personal attorney, Ponzi schemer Bernard Madoff, the former head of the Cali drug cartel and dozens of inmates at New York City’s Rikers Island, part of a jail system that lost an employee to the virus this week.
https://news.yahoo.com/whats-happening-inmates-seek-release-130145412.html
ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE

WAR-RAVAGED MIDDLE EAST COUNTRIES FACE NEW SCOURGE
COVID-19

Long-running wars and conflicts across the Middle East have wrecked potential defenses against coronavirus outbreaks, leaving millions vulnerable in Yemen, Libya, Syria, Afghanistan, the Gaza Strip and elsewhere. Health care systems have been gutted; war has damaged key infrastructure. Several of the countries are carved up among opposing factions, rival claimant governments or armed groups, impeding any possible nationwide strategies to protect public health. Further complicating the response in countries with long-running conflicts, hundreds of thousands of people driven from their homes by fighting are crowded in close quarters in tent camps or improper housing.

https://news.yahoo.com/whats-happening-inmates-seek-release-130145412.html
Image result for DRAGON LADY TERRY AND THE PIRATES


President Donald Trump drew backlash Monday night after posting a tweet using the phrase "Chinese Virus."

Kimmy Yam, NBC News•March 17, 2020

After giving an address Monday afternoon in which he said the country may be headed toward recession and urged social distancing, he later tweeted his confidence in and support for various sectors while including the offensive remark.

"The United States will be powerfully supporting those industries, like Airlines and others, that are particularly affected by the Chinese Virus. We will be stronger than ever before!" he wrote.

Many officials, including the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, have criticized the phrase as inaccurate and potentially harmful in promoting racist associations between the virus and those from China.

The comments prompted massive backlash from many social media users, including New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, who said the tweet was misplacing blame and could put more Asian Americans in danger.

If you’re looking for someone to pin this crisis on, try the guy who made up a phony Google website or promised testing kits that he STILL hasn’t delivered.

Our Asian-American communities — people YOU serve — are already suffering. They don’t need you fueling more bigotry. https://t.co/jjcO7treC2
— Mayor Bill de Blasio (@NYCMayor) March 17, 2020

And I hate bringing more attention to the fact that he said Chinese virus... but I’d like us to continue to look out for our Asian brothers and sisters who are experiencing attacks against them because people are assuming they have the virus because they are Chinese https://t.co/NPvwUKn95Q
— aj rafael (@ajRAFAEL) March 17, 2020

Trump just tweeted “Chinese virus” Say hello to 25 years of Asian American kids taking hell for no sin of their own. He knows exactly what he’s doing.
This guy is a nightmare. A pig.
— Nate McMurray for Congress 2020 (@Nate_McMurray) March 17, 2020

Mr. President: This is not acceptable. Calling it the "Chinese virus" only instigates blame, racism, and hatred against Asians - here and abroad. We need leadership that speaks clearly against racism; Leadership that brings the nation and world together. Not further divides. https://t.co/wPTcnoO5QU
— Eugene Cho (@EugeneCho) March 17, 2020

Chinese officials condemned Trump's comments, saying his tweet smeared China.


"The U.S. should first take care of its own matters," said Geng Shuang, a spokesman for China's Foreign Ministry.

Trump has previously referred to COVID-19 as a "foreign virus," and he has also retweeted a supporter who used the term "China Virus." His newest reference comes days after CDC Director Robert Redfield agreed at a House hearing that it was "absolutely wrong and inappropriate" to use labels like "Chinese coronavirus," as the virus had expanded beyond China to other parts of the world. There were roughly 3,500 confirmed cases of the illness in the U.S. as of Monday night.

Many others have condemned the practice of identifying the illness by location or ethnicity, including the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, which called on its fellow legislators to "help us prevent hysteria, ignorant attacks, and racist assaults that have been fueled by misinformation pertaining to the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19)" by sharing only confirmed and verifiable information.

While some, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., publicly condemned the racism tied to the pandemic, others, such as House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., have continued to use the offensive language, pointing to outlets that have used similar wording.

The Asian American Journalists Association released guidelines for responsible reporting in February to curb "fueling xenophobia and racism that have already emerged since the outbreak."

Rep. Grace Meng, D-N.Y., previously told NBC News that it's possible that several GOP legislators have continued to use the rhetoric to distract from Trump's handling of the pandemic. She said it's likely that officials are using China or Asian Americans as scapegoats "versus actually dealing with the problem at hand."

Along with the virus' spread, there has been an increase in racist incidents and discrimination targeting Asian Americans. Two Hmong guests endured harassment and were later barred from staying at first a Super 8 and then a Days Inn in Indiana. In California, an Asian teen was bullied, assaulted and sent to the emergency room over fears surrounding the pandemic.

De Blasio held a media roundtable Wednesday to condemn coronavirus-related discrimination against Asian communities in New York.

"Right now, we've seen particularly troubling instances of discrimination directed at Asian communities, particularly in Chinese communities," he said. "This is unacceptable."






OF COURSE HE DOES
  Trump defends using term 'Chinese virus,' calling it a response to China blaming US military for coronavirus
HE CALLED IT THAT BEFORE THE CHINESE MADE THEIR US MILITARY CLAIM Image result for FU MANCHU LABhttps://andyoucallyourselfascientist.com/2016/12/01/the-mask-of-fu-manchu-1932/

SURPRISED HE DID NOT INVOKE THE "YELLOW PERIL" TROPE

Business Insider•March 17, 2020

President Donald Trump defended his use of the term "Chinese virus" during a press briefing Tuesday.

Trump said he decided "to call it where it came from" rather than argue with the Chinese government, a representative of which recently said without evidence that the US military might have brought the virus to China.
"We urge the US to immediately correct its mistake and stop making unwarranted accusations on China," a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said Tuesday.

President Donald Trump defended his use of the term "Chinese virus" during a press conference on Tuesday, calling it a response to a Chinese government spokesman's "false" accusation that the US military might have brought the coronavirus to Wuhan, the Chinese city where it first appeared.

"China was putting out information, which was false, that our military gave this to them," the president said.

"Rather than have an argument, I said I have to call it where it came from, and it did come from China. So I think it's a very accurate term," Trump added, referring to the term "Chinese virus," which he has used in some recent tweets.

During the press briefing, the president called China "the source" of the virus.

A biker passes by a wall of paintings of old shops in Wuhan in central China's Hubei province, March 4, 2020 Feature China/Barcroft Media via Getty Images

While the coronavirus, which causes the illness COVID-19, first appeared in central China, the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs has been deeply critical of assertions that the virus originated in China.

"Some US political figures have recently been connecting the coronavirus with China. We express strong indignation and objection to such stigmatization," Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said at a briefing Tuesday. "We urge the US to immediately correct its mistake and stop making unwarranted accusations on China."

Facing criticism, the Chinese government has been trying to shift the blame beyond its borders, to the US in particular.

Last week, Zhao Lijian, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, suggested on Twitter that "it might be the US Army who brought the epidemic to Wuhan."

Demanding transparency from the US, he said the "US owe us an explanation!"

The US Department of State summoned the Chinese ambassador to protest the spokesman's remarks, and the Department of Defense issued a statement strongly condemning the Chinese government's decision to "promulgate false and absurd conspiracy theories about the origin of COVID-19 blaming U.S. service members. "

"Our military did not give it to anybody," Trump said Tuesday.   

Critics have accused Trump of xenophobia and scapegoating through his use of the term "Chinese virus." Some have argued that he is creating an unnecessary stigma. "I think saying our military gave it to them creates a stigma," Trump countered during the briefing Tuesday afternoon.

Image result for FU MANCHU LAB


China’s State-Run (REDUNDANT) Press Appears to Chastise Trump for Labeling Coronavirus ‘Chinese Virus’

Lindsey Ellefson and Lawrence Yee,
The Wrap•March 17, 2020



Xinhua News, China’s state-run press, appeared to chastise President Trump after he referred to the coronavirus as the “Chinese Virus” in a tweet Monday night.

“Racism is not the right tool to cover your own incompetence,” Xinhua responded in a tweet, which didn’t link to any other news story and include any other context.
Racism is not the right tool to cover your own incompetence pic.twitter.com/LmGDyPsULt
— China Xinhua News (@XHNews) March 17, 2020

The virus, which is now a global pandemic, originated in Wuhan, China. The World Health Organization has mandated that “the name of the disease could not refer to a geographical location, an animal, an individual or group of people. It also needed to relate to the disease and be pronounceable. This choice will help guard against the use of other names that might be inaccurate or stigmatizing.”

Also Chinese and Asian Americans have reported being subjected to harassment and even violence as the pandemic spreads. Trump declared the coronavirus pandemic a national emergency during a White House press conference just last Friday. In late February, Trump downplayed the risk, saying the virus would “within a couple days [it is] going to be down to close to zero.”

Trump’s “Chinese Virus” label is consistent with his practice of disparaging foreigners. Axios says such language employed by the Trump administration “subtly frames other national security issues as problems created by foreigners.”


Trump’s handling of the crisis has been widely criticized. For instance, Meghan McCain went off on him during Monday’s episode of “The View,” hitting him hard for his administration’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

“The mixed messaging coming out of the White House right now is not only irresponsible but it’s downright dangerous,” the co-host said.

McCain also criticized GOP Rep. Devin Nunes for encouraging people to go out to eat Sunday, which directly contradicts recommendations from the World Health Organization and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that Americans practice social distancing. She criticized Trump as someone who “can’t even handle not shaking hands,” a reference to his numerous handshakes at a press conference Friday where he announced the designation of coronavirus as a national emergency. That, too, is in contrast to advice from experts, who largely suggest minimizing contact to avoid spreading the virus
Read original story China’s State-Run Press Appears to Chastise Trump for Labeling Coronavirus ‘Chinese Virus’ At TheWrap




Read original story China’s State-Run Press Appears to Chastise Trump for Labeling 
COVID-19 DEMANDS MEDICARE FOR ALL
central issue of his platform: the lack of affordable public health care in the United States. 
https://news.yahoo.com/bernie-sanders-staffers-say-its-time-for-some-hard-decisions-after-another-trio-of-losses-031748313.html


Both Sanders and Biden have canceled a slew of live campaign events since March 10. And while some on Sanders’s team feel that the coronavirus has eclipsed the primary and slammed the door shut on his candidacy, they also feel that it raised awareness around a central issue of his platform: the lack of affordable public health care in the United States. 
One senior Sanders campaign source who is aware of the senator’s conversations about his future plans described this time in the campaign as an “unprecedented moment.”
“History tells us we can’t trust the political establishment in a time of crisis to look out for working people and low-income people,” the senior campaign source said, adding, “We’re going through a viral pandemic that could kill hundreds of thousands of Americans. Right now, Bernie Sanders has the largest, most powerful progressive platform in the country. … To describe this moment as uncharted would be an understatement.”
Mr. Sanders did not deliver a speech about the primary results, but earlier in the evening he broadcast his own online address calling for sweeping government action to remedy the economic damage of the crippling virus, including an initiative to give people $2,000 monthly payments for the duration of the crisis.
“We must make certain that this health and economic crisis is not another moneymaking opportunity for corporate America and for Wall Street,” Mr. Sanders said, eschewing any mention of the primaries
There's reportedly 'a lot of pressure' on Biden to pick Warren as running mate

Tim O'Donnell, The Week•March 17, 2020


One thing is clear about former Vice President Joe Biden's potential running mate: he's going to pick a woman. But there are several candidates for the job that present intriguing arguments for his campaign advisers, Politico reports.

But there's also Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). It's no secret Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) both desperately want Warren's endorsement, but it may be somewhat of a surprise to hear that Biden's team is facing "a lot of pressure" to add her to the ticket, an adviser said. Warren and Biden don't line up too precisely on policy — the former tends to veer more in the progressive lane — but Biden has made some overtures recently, including supporting Warren's bankruptcy reform plan, so it's possible she's under legitimate consideration for the opening. Read more at Politico.



NEW YORK TIMES:  
Over the weekend Mr. Biden held a phone call with Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, his progressive former rival, and endorsed liberal policies on higher education and bankruptcy reform in an effort to woo the left.