Showing posts with label Donald Trump. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Donald Trump. Show all posts

Saturday, March 14, 2020

At the think tanks, scientists talk coronavirus



From left, Ron Klain, Nancy Messonnier, Anthony Fauci, and Helen Branswell at the Aspen Institute, Feb. 11, 2020/Photo by Patricia Leslie

Last month at the Washington offices of the Aspen Institute, scientists, journalists, and members of the medical establishment got together to talk coronavirus which that day had received an official name for the disease from the World Health Organization, COVID-19.

On the panel was Anthony Fauci, MD, man-about-town, omnipresent television personality, and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, who said the development of a vaccine for the virus would take approximately 18 months (not "very close" or "soon" as President Trump said Feb. 25, 2020).

At the time the animal which was suspected of starting it all (supposedly at an illegal "wet market" in Wuhan, China) had not been identified other than online and at the WHO website as a possible snake (a word left unsaid publicly at the Aspen that day), or a pangolin, an endangered species the Chinese like to eat and value for its supposedly medicinal qualities.

In the Q and A after the presentation, an audience member asked if the virus came from an animal, and Dr. Fauci said "likely." The animal most often now linked to the disease is the bat.

The virus, Dr. Fauci said, may have "jumped" from a bat to a cat to a human (calling Dr. Seuss), an example of a zoonotic disease originating in an animal and transferred to a human (or, vice-versa). (Wash your hands after touching animals!)

On the panel with Dr. Fauci were Ron Klain, JD, former White House ebola response coordinator; Nancy Messonnier, MD, director, National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; and Helen Branswell, infectious disease and public health reporter, STAT News, who served as moderator.
 

The scientists said studies are underway to determine the best disinfectants for surfaces to combat the disease, and on March 12, the Environmental Protection Agency (whose budget Trump proposes to slash by 26 percent), published a list of them.

Dr. Messonnier praised the military for housing the quarantine victims from cruise ships docking in California.

A panel member reported seeing on the news a group of Metro riders shunning a person of Asian descent, a practice which will lead to more discrimination in schools and other places, Mr. Klain said, speculating these incidents are likely to escalate.

John Bolton (yes that John Bolton whose book was due this month but has been delayed until May pending White House review) was Trump's ax man who, about 18 months after Trump took office, shut down the White House National Security Council's liaison for disease control, Mr. Klain said.
 

The panel seemed in a hurry to broadcast the scientific community's assessment of coronavirus and its dangers to the world.

Dr. Fauci said staff from the Centers for Disease Control, Health and Human Services, the Food and Drug Administration, and the National Security Council, scientists, and doctors talk daily and sometimes more than once a day.

Said Dr. Fauci: Multiple generations have coronavirus, and people need to be warned about the risks. "It's relatively likely it will come here."



"It's not a feasible policy to quarantine, " said Mr. Klain, urging that responses to the outbreak come from the scientific and medical communities rather than policy wonks. "It's a bit of a mixed bag to prepare the U.S." for the disease. "Public leaders need to get on top of this," he said.  Getting Congress to allocate money to prepare hospitals will be "a challenge."
 
Dr. Fauci said more information from China was urgently needed, but the Chinese then were not cooperating: "We really need to know the scope of this," Dr. Fauci said.

Dr. Messonnier said the scientific and medical communities wanted to slow the spreading illness and to prepare for the possibility of a pandemic (which according to Merriam-Webster, occurs over a wide geographic area and affects an exceptionally high proportion of the population, and one month later, here we are).

She issued the usual admonitions to avoid disease: Wash hands (to the tune of "Happy Birthday"), etc., and to scattered laughter, said: "There's only so much worrying we can do, right?"

"We live in a connected world," Mr. Klain said, with people and goods arriving daily from outside the U.S. According to Dr. Fauci, It's "an impossibility" to keep out all the Chinese who want to come here since 22,000 of them enter the U.S. every day.

Dr. Fauci said travel bans will "never" exclude all Chinese from entering the U.S., and bans make no sense if the illness is already here, which it most certainly is.

Travel bans only "buy a window of time"
for delay. 
 
Dr. Messonnier said it will take a year to develop a vaccine which, Dr. Fauci added, usually takes six to eight years.
 

Coronavirus can be "really serious" for the older population and those with underlying illnesses, Dr. Messonnier said.
 

"We are taking this very, very seriously. The situation can change," Dr. Fauci said.

Mr. Klain: "If it gets worse, it will reflect on health care.'

The pharmaceutical companies take big risks that the vaccines they develop won't work, noted Dr. Fauci, but lest anyone forget, "big pharma" makes big money, reminded a member of the audience.

Except in the cases of ill persons and health care workers, panel members said face masks were almost totally unnecessary, and no one In the packed Aspen house of attorneys, physicians, journalists, and interested onlookers wore one.

It was not until the beginning of this year that the panelists were aware of the disease which, for some victims, begins with pneumonia.
 

At the time of the panel presentation, 43,000 had been struck by the disease, with 13 of them in the U.S. Today the worldwide number is 169,610 with 3,782 in the U.S. Deaths number 6,518.

In testimony before the U.S. Congress last week, Dr. Fauci said the coronavirus was ten times as lethal as the seasonal flu.

Last month Trump proposed cutting the NIH budget by seven percent and the National Science Foundation by six percent, which includes a reduced number of grants for research. Also, he wants to cut the CDC budget by 16 percent and HHS, almost 10 percent. At the same time he proposes to increase money for "wall" construction by $2 billion for 82 miles to make it the most expensive wall in the world.

Is it safe to conclude that Trump values things more than he values people?

Maybe, the bats have come home to bite Mr. Trump.

patricialesli@gmail.com



Thursday, July 4, 2019

July 4, 2019 on the National Mall with signs of the times

Trump at the CodePink tent at the National Mall July 4, 2019. By the time I arrived, the weather had put a stop to the Trump Blimp...aaarrrggggghhh/Photo by Patricia Leslie
 
The Washington Monument resembles a photo below on the National Mall, July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
The sign on the left of the cage reads: "Cage Trump    Not Babies" and the one in front: "Investigate Trump Taxes." A man sat in a lawn chair nearby to guard the cage at the National Mall July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
On this sign TRUMPS is an acronym for "Traitor, Racist, Unqualified, Misogynist, Pathetic, Sad, so sad" at the National Mall July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie

These ladies are having a good time with selfies with Trump on the toilet.  The sign says "No Military Parade     For the Dear Leader     We're NOT Nazi Germany     North Korea    The Soviet Union" at the National Mall July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie

This sign identified the button cart as "The Roving Anti-Trump Band Wagon" at the National Mall July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
This sign says: "Make America Lawful Again," at the National Mall July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Her t-shirt reads "In Our America   Women are in charge   OF THEIR OWN BODIES   Science is real.  BLACK LIVES MATTER   Diversity is celebrated   Kindness is everything   LOVE IS LOVE    ENOUGH IS ENOUGH" at the National Mall July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Trump on the toilet drew lots of attention at the CodePink tent at the National Mall July 4, 2019.  The woman in the t-shirt is at far right.  

A few feet away I struck up a conversation with a man who was with his wife and three young children, ages three months, about 15 months, and not three years old. The mother, with infant strapped to her chest, dragged a huge Trump flag. The father, about 30 years old, said he liked my "Make Love   Not War" sticker I was wearing from CodePink.  "Would you like me to go get you one?" I asked him,  He wanted one, and I went and got four for all members of the family, save the youngest, and when I returned, we put the stickers all over the family members. He said he liked Trump but not war and didn't support Trump's attacking Iran, if he does.  I told him CodePink was quite anti-Trump, and he said he didn't care, that he liked the message.  Under thunder and lightening, the family stood in the rain without an umbrella. I tried to think of a shelter for them but could not come up with anything near the Washington Monument, and it was after the museums' closings.
  
Soon the three-year-old took my umbrella from my hand and wanted to keep it.  After a few minutes I got my umbrella back, said goodbye and left to see if I could find an umbrella for them. (You know how they are always around at the Metro stations, but this was not a Metro station and there were no umbrellas!)  

All I could find was ice cream and hot dogs.

Should I give them my umbrella?  I wrestled with the dilemma. My camera!  My phone! Getting wet.

After a few seconds I remembered a rain poncho I had stuck in my bag and went back to the family, now absent the father and oldest child, while the mother stood in light raindrops. She said yes, she would like the poncho so I helped her put it on while she covered her baby, asleep and head bobbing, in a blanket in its carrier which hung from her neck.  Meanwhile, the 15-month old stood in the rain uncovered.  I said goodbye again.  

I am still bothered by that family standing in the rain!  I believe it was the newborn with the bobbing head while his mother retrieved a bottle and bent to fetch items the other children had dropped on the grass which got to meWhen present, the father seemed totally oblivious to his family in the rain, but maybe that was just me, an old grandma, worrying about strangers and their needs which, I hope, are far less than what I imagine, and they are just fine/Photo by Patricia Leslie
  At the CodePink tent at the National Mall July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
The man on the left at the CodePink tent wore a braid of sleeping squirrels or a raccoon with a big tail at the National Mall July 4, 2019 /Photo by Patricia Leslie
 At the CodePink tent, this woman lifted her rain poncho to show her sign at the National Mall, July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
This couple told me the Baby Trump balloons were free down at Constitution and 17th, but by the time I got there, no more balloons! July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
On 17th at the edge of the White House grounds, this woman was happy with her new Baby Trump balloons.  Maybe the grimacer was unhappy he didn't get one? July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
 The Baby Trump balloons were almost as plentiful on 17th as the spawning trash on 17th, July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
 Happy families festooned with Baby Trump balloons on the Ellipse, July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie
The Executive Office Building festooned for July 4, 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie

Sunday, March 17, 2019

The Trumps came to church today



A spring bouquet is coming to St. John's Episcopal Church, Lafayette Square, Washington, D.C./Photo by Patricia Leslie

Melania is of slighter build and thinner than she appears. She was wearing what looked to me like an ivory-colored, double-breasted coat dress.  

The Trumps arrived 10 or 15 minutes early for the 11 a.m. service at St. John's, and I did not see them enter the church and never saw her face.

They sat almost shoulder-to-shoulder in the "President's Pew" (where all presidents sit when they attend St. John's) with a woman (Secret Service?) at the end of the row. Trump leaned over and exchanged pleasantries with the woman from time to time, and she smiled.

He never took off his (dark blue or black) overcoat during the service, at least while I was there.  (I left the service early since I had already attended the 9 a.m. service, but I wanted to see the Trumps at 11 a.m. since word traveled fast at church that they were coming this morning!)

When he first sat down, Mr. Trump looked all around the church, up, down, and straight ahead.  The Trumps struck me as lovey-dovies (!) since they, or rather he exchanged words often with his wife, leaning over towards her several times before the service began.  She sat ramrod straight.  

From my vantage point five rows back, I could not really see Melania since someone had the nerve to sit in front of me (!) and block my view, but I could easily see Trump.

He is a big man.  

At first, I do not think he sang the hymns, but towards the end, he may have been singing with the rest of us.

He held the bulletin with the hymns in front of him and looked down, and I think I saw his mouth moving. However, in true Episcopalian fashion, he may have just been mouthing the words or barely whispering them.  We don't have much of a reputation for singing in the pews.

Until my view was blocked, I do not think she sang. 

The Rev. Bruce McPherson, the interim rector, delivered a sermon about St. Patrick (Happy St. Patrick's Day, everybody!) and the obligations we have as Christians to speak up against hate speech, no matter where we are, what line we are standing in, or who is around us.  He said this was hard to do, and admitted he had passed up many opportunities himself, but in the wake of New Zealand, we need to speak up.  

It takes courage, he said, but that is what leadership is about. 

At the beginning of his sermon, he said something about a fox which, he said, does not have the connotation now that it had then.

It was the same sermon the Rev. McPherson gave at 9 a.m. so there was no hidden meaning for the Trumps, like I suppose some might suspect.

When you are the center of attention and are used to lecturing those around you rather than being a listener, I imagine the roles are hard to swap.  

After two or three minutes of the sermon (about 15 minutes long, in the usual Episcopalian tradition), Trump seemed to fidget a little, looking a little left, a little right, and for a half-second, I wondered if he would get up and march out, but soon he became enamored by the content, as were the rest of us, and he listened.  

There were no sounds. Everyone was glued to Rev. McPherson's words. Including at least one of the three agents who sat in the row behind the president and Mrs. Trump.

From the pulpit, Rev. McPherson said that he admired the Islamic faith, and he quoted this line from Islam:  "You are God, and I am not."

It was an excellent sermon, and I hope we all go out and follow Rev. McPherson's advice.

Every Sunday at church when we say out loud "the Prayers of the People," the same lines are said: We pray for "Donald, our president," members of the U.S. Congress and the Supreme Court, and peoples of nations who are experiencing extreme difficulties, such as those in Venezuela and in New Zealand.

During silent prayers today, someone said out loud (which anyone can do but it is rare in the silent Episcopalian custom for anyone to say out loud anything alone at St. John's), "we pray for Donald and our nation."
 
Before the Trumps arrived, the Secret Service brought in the dogs to scope out the place, but I was at a meeting upstairs and missed them, which I really wanted to see! Maybe, the next time.

Rather than orange, I would call Donald's hair color,  suntanned blonde.  If you have seen her photos lately, you have noticed the blonde streaks in Melanie's hair.

Were you there?  What else can you add? Maybe it's not appropriate for me to write about their "personal time" at church, but the way I look at it, anytime the President of the United States goes public, it's our, the people's, time.

patricialesli@gmail.com



Saturday, April 29, 2017

People's Climate March best signs and more

 President Trump left his hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue to greet 200,000 marchers at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 President Trump was also seen in front of the White House at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 In front of the Newseum at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie


Across the street a giraffe made an appearance to ask for help saving the environment at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 In front of the National Gallery of Art on the way to the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie

 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie

 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 Security and barriers in front of the Trump International Hotel.  As they passed, marchers from the People's Climate March shouted "Shame!  Shame!" April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 In front of the Trump International Hotel, the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 President Trump welcomed security to his hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 President Trump (on left) welcomed marchers to his hotel at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 Many wanted to have their photograph taken with President Trump at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017,  Occasionally, a head popped from behind the sign Mr. Trump wore and made remarks/photo by Patricia Leslie
"Glamberger" helped welcome marchers, too, to Trump's hotel at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 Security at the Trump International Hotel for the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 Flags fly, marchers shout, and security remains calm at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 In front of the FBI Building at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 Music was galore at the People's Climate March.  In the center are a trombonist and a French horn player and somewhere, a percussionist. April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 Vegans had a message, too, at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 A Bernie supporter at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017.  It was a balmy 91 degrees Fahrenheit with humidity added "some" discomfort. About a third of Pennsylvania was shady, and marchers took advantage of low walls to sit a spell and renew energy before they resumed their walks.  I saw one woman with a bloody foot being helped by other marchers.  She was wearing flip flops (dumb!)/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 Coming up 15th on the east side of the White House at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 Security on White House grounds at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 The People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
On 15th near the W Hotel.  About this time (2 p.m.) came orders for everybody to "sit down!" The reason?  I didn't get the message at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
What a nice man who fanned the woman sitting at the White House at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie

Rounding the corner from 15th to Pennsylvania Avenue and arrival at the front of the White House at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
In front of the White House at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
 Lafayette Park and the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
  Lafayette Park and the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
  Lafayette Park and the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie
There was a bear at Lafayette Park who stood beside this girl whose sign says "Protect Arctic Wildlife Refuge, We Stand with Gwichin" (?) at the People's Climate March, April 29, 2017/photo by Patricia Leslie

patricialesli@gmail.com

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