You will notice that three of the top five are in Florida. But we cannot tell from this data whether there is a direct connection between the TSA job, the airport where the person works and the infection. It might just be that the number of infections is a reflection of the number of infections in that community. The numbers also show more cases where more workers are stationed, such as New York City and Los Angeles. In other words, it is not a surprise that you will find the most cases where you find the most people.
Prepare for a federal government shutdown
Is this just a dramatic move to ratchet up tensions for the weekend news programs or should we really begin girding for a federal government shutdown? Congress has a week to come to an agreement on an appropriations bill.
The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget answers questions you hoped you would not have to ask:
The Federal News Network, which covers issues related to federal employees, explains:
Shutdowns are when most workers and contractors are sent home without pay, while others are forced to work, but also without pay. Shutdowns tend to happen at the start of the fiscal year, which is October 1. And they tend to last longer than experts usually predict. In December 1995, the shutdown lasted 21 days. That meant delayed paychecks and retirement benefits for millions of feds. Merry Christmas from the folks you sent to represent you.
Shutdowns are not just an inside-the-beltway problem. Most of the federal workforce and the much bigger group of contractors, is in New York, Pennsylvania, Utah, Alabama, Texas and California. In many communities, the federal government — an IRS or social security service center, military base, federal prison or VA facility — is the financial heartbeat of the community. Most people there, and for that matter most people here, don’t understand or appreciate the legal and legislative game that triggers a shutdown.
While members of Congress and the White House are using the threat of a shutdown to win a budgetary or political victory, the pawns are you. Career federal workers and millions of contractors. Politicians continue to get paid. Furloughed feds usually get reimbursed for the time they were locked out of their jobs. But it can take weeks or even months to get the back pay. Or the first full annuity payment after retirement.
Extended furloughs can really put a damper on the holiday season. Not to mention food and rent obligations while there is no money coming in.
Then there is the debt ceiling issue, which is different from the appropriations bill. Congress has until sometime in October to increase the national debt ceiling or the government will be in default. Economists warn that would be devastating. The debt ceiling does not authorize new spending, but instead allows the government to pay for legislation that lawmakers already passed under both Presidents Trump and Biden.
The immoral, impolite, dark and popular online collection of anti-vaxxers who died of COVID
Slate’s headline will rock you back: “The Unbelievable Grimness of HermanCainAward, the Subreddit That Catalogs Anti-Vaxxer COVID Deaths.”
Online communities that name and “celebrate” the deaths of people who oppose COVID-19 vaccines are growing. The groups that once were tiny now have thousands, in one case 278,000 members. The leader of one group had a message to journalists; who members “don’t want to F-ing be here.” One brutal site posts photos and quotes from people who died from COVID-19 while rejecting vaccines and other safety measures. The site says, “The goal of this list is educational. Please share to help keep more people from making the same mistake.”
Slate explains the prevailing tone of the Reddit community that is growing by the tens of thousands daily:
If that rate is any indication, rage is growing toward anti-vaxxers deliberately prolonging the pandemic out of an anti-social and deadly understanding of their rights. Now, it’s true that not everyone on the subreddit assents to its spiteful premise: One exhausted nurse wrote a long post about how much one of her anti-vax patients suffered, as an attempt at counterbalance. She acknowledged her own compassion fatigue but also urged readers to think harder about how we got to this sorry pass. Plenty of the discussions do orbit around that basic question. But most of the comments are angry. A collection of screenshots generally elicits a common sentiment: The person got their just desserts.
Lest you think that these are just vicious and angry posts about people caught in the clutches of the pandemic, Slate writer Lili Loofbourow, who has been plowing through the subreddit’s posts, says reading the evolution of COVID-19 victims’ thought processes from being virus deniers or anti-vaxxers to COVID-19 victims has been instructive:
I understand the disease more deeply because I have read so many viciously curated “stories” in which ordinary people blathering about politics end up narrating their decline from it — with help from their families — as optimistically as they can. They are younger than COVID patients used to be. Trying to put a positive spin on things. Soliciting prayers. Generally avoiding conversions. They do not expect to die. It’s relentless reading. And it keeps ending up the same way. Only health care workers have seen this many people decline and die.
Loofbourow adds that as unfair, indecent and unkind as the posts can be, and despite the fact the site makes no attempt to persuade or convert anybody, their darkness may serve as “as a truly frightening look at what COVID can really be like. What hundreds of stories about deaths told through mean-spirited screenshots reveal is that the disease — when it gets bad — is worse than even the most pro-vax person really understood.”
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