Bernie poised to win the most delegates                                                             
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March 3, 2020

Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.

Biden not dead yet with win in S.C., but Bernie still poised for big Super Tuesday
Former Vice President Joe Biden’s presidential campaign is not dead yet with a win in the South Carolina Democratic presidential primary, throwing the contest into chaos, but Sen. Bernie Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist, still appears poised for a big performance in Super Tuesday on March 3. Voting on Tuesday will occur in 14 states: Alabama, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont and Virginia. Of those, Sanders appears to be leading in California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Texas, Utah, Vermont and Virginia, whereas Biden only seems to have support in southern states with larger African American populations like North Carolina. Biden has to prove he can win somewhere besides the south, or else be consigned as a regional candidacy like George Wallace in 1972. What do you think?

Video: Travel restrictions on China could expand to South Korea and Italy to slow down coronavirus
Travel restrictions on travel from China have slowed down the coronavirus, and that may be expanded by President Trump for South Korea and Italy.

Ross Pomeroy: Five reasons you don't need to panic about the COVID-19 coronavirus
“The CDC's warning is frank and unnerving. It is an impetus for sober and reasoned action. Stock up on a week's worth of frozen/canned food. Restock your medicine cabinet. Practice proper hygiene. Stay home if you're feeling sick. There is no need, however, to panic. If you're feeling in any way anxious about the coronavirus outbreak, here are five facts to help assuage your worries: 1. The number of cases in China is already falling significantly. 2. The vast majority of cases are mild, and the death rate is likely lower than reported. 3. Only one out of every 1,000 people in Hubei Province has contracted the coronavirus. 4. There have been no reported deaths in young children. 5. The world already survived another pandemic just ten years ago.”


 

Biden not dead yet with win in S.C., but Bernie still poised for big Super Tuesday

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By Robert Romano

Former Vice President Joe Biden’s presidential campaign is not dead yet with a win in the South Carolina Democratic presidential primary, throwing the contest into chaos, but Sen. Bernie Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist, still appears poised for a big performance in Super Tuesday on March 3.

Voting on Tuesday will occur in 14 states: Alabama, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont and Virginia.

Of those, Sanders appears to be leading in California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Texas, Utah, Vermont and Virginia, whereas Biden only seems to have support in southern states with larger African American populations like North Carolina. Biden has to prove he can win somewhere besides the south, or else be consigned as a regional candidacy like George Wallace in 1972.

Bernie may still be the frontrunner after Super Tuesday with the lion’s share of the delegates for the Milwaukee convention with early voting that has been under way in the states, but the question remains whether he can get enough delegates to win outright on the first ballot there.

The website Fivethirtyeight.com projects that, based on the current polling for states ahead, Sanders will get about 1,600 delegates, more than any other candidate but still short of the 1991 needed to clinch the Democratic nomination. The Sanders camp fears that on the second or third ballot at the convention, the party establishment will steal the nomination.

This is where Sanders’ failure to knock Biden out of the race in South Carolina will loom large. For now, Biden can claim to finally have a viable yet difficult path to the nomination with his first primary win in 32 years — he ran in 1988 and 2008 without winning any states — after this year finishing fourth in Iowa, fifth in New Hampshire and second in Nevada.

The combination of a long and brutal contest for Democrats without a clear winner, coupled with a divisive convention, and Democrats may not be united coming out of Milwaukee. Either the radical socialist base of the party will be disenfranchised, who may then stay home, or Bernie will win, potentially costing him moderate Democratic and independent votes in the general election.

In the meantime, Biden’s win has made the Democratic primary a real horse race now between Biden and Sanders with Buttigieg fading (he came in a distant fourth in South Carolina), all but guaranteeing this will go on for months more and perhaps even all the way to the convention — all to the benefit of the reelection prospects of President Donald Trump.

Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.


Video: Travel restrictions on China could expand to South Korea and Italy to slow down coronavirus

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To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5X6mdmaTavM


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ALG Editor’s Note: In the following featured column from Real Clear Science, Ross Pomeroy lays out the case for why the American people need not panic about the Chinese coronavirus:

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Five reasons you don't need to panic about the COVID-19 coronavirus

By Ross Pomeroy

The COVID-19 coronavirus that emerged in Wuhan, China back in December 2019 is now spreading globally and will undoubtedly be declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO) very soon. Its ascendance has already rattled stock markets, disrupted the daily lives of millions, and resulted in the heartbreaking deaths of nearly 3,000 people, including the first in the United States on February 29th. With COVID-19's spread now picking up steam outside of China – it has now arrived in at least 60 countries and new cases are rising almost every day –  we can expect its outbreak to get worse before it gets better.

Make no mistake, COVID-19 is a grave pathogenic threat which must be taken seriously. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC):

More cases are likely to be identified in the coming days, including more cases in the United States. It’s also likely that person-to-person spread will continue to occur, including in the United States. Widespread transmission of COVID-19 in the United States would translate into large numbers of people needing medical care at the same time. Schools, childcare centers, workplaces, and other places for mass gatherings may experience more absenteeism. Public health and healthcare systems may become overloaded, with elevated rates of hospitalizations and deaths. Other critical infrastructure, such as law enforcement, emergency medical services, and transportation industry may also be affected. Health care providers and hospitals may be overwhelmed.

The CDC's warning is frank and unnerving. It is an impetus for sober and reasoned action. Stock up on a week's worth of frozen/canned food. Restock your medicine cabinet. Practice proper hygiene. Stay home if you're feeling sick. There is no need, however, to panic. If you're feeling in any way anxious about the coronavirus outbreak, here are five facts to help assuage your worries.

1. The number of cases in China is already falling significantly. Where once the graph of coronavirus cases in China showed an exponential climb, it has now leveled off substantially. Just three weeks ago, China was recording more than 3,000 new cases per day. Officials are now consistently reporting fewer than five hundred, with the number still dropping. Seeing much-improved conditions on the ground, big companies like Starbucks and Apple in China are resuming business activities. The latest (Feb. 29th) World Health Organization (WHO) situation report revealed 435 new cases in China in the previous 24 hours.

2. The vast majority of cases are mild, and the death rate is likely lower than reported. A large study of 72,000 confirmed COVID-19 patients in China found that 81% of cases were mild, another 14% were severe (characterized by difficulty breathing), and 5% were critical. Overall, the death rate was 2.3 percent. More recently, the WHO reported a death rate of 3.8% in China, but noted that it is rapidly falling as standards of care quickly improve. Early on, the city of Wuhan (where the disease originated) was inundated with patients and hospitals could not provide proper care due to overwhelming demand. For Chinese patients whose symptoms started after February 1st, the death rate is just 0.7 percent. (For comparison, the U.S. death rate from 2019-20's annual flu oubtreak is between .06 percent to 0.1 percent. SARS a similar virus to COVID-19, had a death rate of 9.6 percent.) The death rate could be even lower, as very mild cases of COVID-19 that resemble a common cold likely go unreported.

 3. Only one out of every 1,000 people in Hubei Province has contracted the coronavirus. There have been 66,337 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in China's Hubei Province, where the outbreak began in December. That sounds like a lot, but keep in mind that the population of Hubei is 59,170,000. The province is slightly smaller than Nebraska, but with thirty times as many inhabitants. With this sort of population density, it's a positive sign that just .11% (roughly 1 in 1000) of the population has caught COVID-19. Even if there were 53,000 unreported cases, that would mean only one out of every 500 people in Hubei caught the virus. Given the population density in most other countries is significantly lower than in China, we can expect that the coronavirus will have a much harder time spreading in much of the world.

4. There have been no reported deaths in young children. Though the outbreak has endured for more than nine weeks, there still have been no fatalities in children under the age of nine, with almost all infected simply experiencing cold-like symptoms. Moreover, only 2.4% of cases are in individuals under the age of 18. Kids and teenagers have been surprisingly resistant to the virus.

The death rate for people aged 10 to 39 currently stands at just 0.2 percent. Those genuinely at risk from COVID-19 are the elderly. People aged 80 and up have a 14.8% to 21.9% chance of dying if infected.

5. The world already survived another pandemic just ten years ago. Remember H1N1, more commonly known as Swine Flu? This was the most recent pandemic (besides HIV/AIDS, which is still considered a pandemic). It began in early 2009 and lasted through late 2010. Between April 2009 and April 2010, there were approximately 60.8 million cases, 274,304 hospitalizations, and 12,469 deaths in the United States alone! Globally, it likely infected between 700 million and 1.4 billion people, resulting in 150,000 to 575,000 fatalities. While this loss of life was tragic, more than a decade later, many scarcely remember Swine Flu. The same will hopefully happen with COVID-19.

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