From Sarah (Crooked) <[email protected]>
Subject What A Day: 'Cron with the wind
Date December 17, 2021 11:21 PM
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Happy 23rd month of March 2020!

Friday, December 17, 2021
BY SARAH LAZARUS & CROOKED MEDIA


** -Donald Trump ([link removed]) , Christmas understander
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Season's greetings! The What A Day team will be hibernating in a big hollow tree until Monday, January 3. Happy holidays, stay safe, and see you in 2022.

The Omicron variant has begun to live up to its highly transmissible reputation in the U.S., prompting shifts in mitigation strategies and complicating risk calculations as we approach the [DEL: 23nd month of March 2020 :DEL] “new year.”

* Researchers at Harvard Medical School now say the Omicron variant is the culprit ([link removed]) behind the current surge in cases in the northeast, an abrupt shift from expert opinion just a few days ago. New York City’s positivity rate has doubled in three days ([link removed]) , triggering a wave of cancellations and closures, and the CDC estimated that Omicron accounted for 13 percent of cases in New York and New Jersey as of Wednesday.

* We’re likely at the start of a huge wave of new infections across the country, just as millions of Americans prepare to crowd airports and attend holiday gatherings. Fortunately, there’s reason to hope that it will recede faster than earlier waves, and leave considerably less destruction in its wake. The Omicron surge in Gauteng, South Africa appears to have already peaked ([link removed]) , and only 1.7 percent of confirmed cases required hospitalization in the second week of the wave, compared with 19 percent in the same week of the Delta wave. Excess deaths are also far below their previous peak.

* A couple of caveats to that promising news: South Africa has a relatively young population, and results in other countries may vary. Secondly, any uptick in hospitalizations is a dreaded outcome for U.S. hospitals already filled to capacity ([link removed]) with unvaccinated patients. Medical centers in Michigan have once again begun canceling scheduled surgeries ([link removed]) , and Minnesota hospitals took out full-page ads ([link removed]) in state newspapers on Sunday pleading with residents to protect themselves: “We’re heartbroken. We’re overwhelmed.”

March 2020 vibes abound, but public-health officials are hopeful that booster shots and rapid tests will keep the damage and disruptions to a minimum.

* The Biden administration embraced a new strategy ([link removed]) on Friday to use increased testing to keep kids in the classroom as case numbers rise: Rather than requiring mandatory quarantines for unvaccinated students exposed to a COVID-positive classmate, those kids can stay in school if they test negative at least twice in the week after an exposure. The CDC released two reports highlighting school districts in Lake County, IL, and Los Angeles County that have used a “test-to-stay” approach successfully.

* Two years into the pandemic, many Americans hoping to employ a test-to-stay strategy in their everyday lives still face cost and accessibility barriers. The Biden administration’s plan to have insurers reimburse people for rapid tests won’t go into effect until January 15 ([link removed]) and won’t cover tests purchased in the meantime, rendering it useless for facilitating testing over the holidays. Some state leaders are trying to pick up the slack: Gov. Kathy Hochul (D-NY) announced Thursday that her administration will create a portal where residents can request that test kits be sent to their homes ([link removed]) , joining several other states with similar initiatives.

The Omicron wave brings with it some confusing considerations: It seems more mild, but also, it demonstrably spreads like the wind. We have more tools and information to protect ourselves, but also, we’re completely exhausted. More data will help inform individual choices, but it’s evident that taking some extra precautions over the next few weeks will be worth the effort.

This week on With Friends Like These, Ana Marie Cox’s old friends and band members Rhett Miller and Murray Hammon join for a conversation about songwriting, falling into friendship love and how a band is like an open marriage. New episodes of With Friends Like These drop every Friday. Listen and follow wherever you get your podcasts ([link removed]) .
[link removed]

Virginia Democrats might not codify abortion rights in their final weeks in power because some of them already have vacations booked ([link removed]) , in one of the biggest embarrassments for the party since Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE) pushed to truncate Trump’s post-insurrection impeachment trial so he could enjoy his Valentine’s Day. Democrats could call a lame-duck legislative session in the next month to prevent Glenn Youngkin from restricting abortion access when he takes office, but alas, one state senator is in Africa, others are in Europe, and majority leader Dick Saslaw should be in Hawaii by now. “They’re not going to be able to get back; flights are booked this time of year,” said Saslaw, who has known since November that Virginia Democrats are about to lose their trifecta. The travel conflicts are something of an excuse: Older Democrats in the state Senate have hang-ups about doing state
business outside of regular legislative sessions, while younger members of the state House and outside activists recognize that a) this time is part of their term, b) this legislation is critical, and c) Republicans wouldn’t hesitate for even a moment.
* The Senate parliamentarian has determined that Democrats’ immigration-reform provisions in the Build Back Better Act ([link removed]) violate Senate budget rules, a problem that Senate Democrats could overcome by canning her.

* The Johnson & Johnson vaccine is not effective against the Omicron variant ([link removed]) , according to a new study (which hasn’t yet been peer-reviewed). Neither are China’s Sinopharm or Russia’s Sputnik V vaccines.

* Pfizer announced that two doses of its vaccine did not trigger a robust immune response in kids ages two to five ([link removed]) , and will expand clinical trials to include a third dose.

* Here’s the 2024 GOP presidential frontrunner going on an extended antisemitic rant ([link removed]) about how American Jews “no longer love Israel” (which used to have “absolute power over Congress”) and “run the New York Times,” once again eliciting zero condemnation from the major party he still leads.

* A federal judge threw out a settlement between Purdue Pharma and the Sackler family ([link removed]) that would have shielded the Sacklers from opioid lawsuits, ruling that those protections weren’t permitted under the bankruptcy code.

* Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell now says “the public needs to know” the January 6 committee’s findings ([link removed]) , after opposing the creation of the committee back in May.

* Brandon Stratka, a Trump ally who spoke at a January 5 rally and pleaded guilty to storming the Capitol ([link removed]) , has given investigators evidence that they said “may impact the government's sentencing recommendation.” Let’s go, Brandon.

* A viral TikTok trend warning about nationwide school violence on Friday prompted a number of school districts to close ([link removed]) and others to heighten security, though federal law enforcement officials said they had no evidence pointing to credible threats.

* The Senate has confirmed diplomat Nicholas Burns as ambassador to China ([link removed]) , after the position sat vacant for more than a year.

* Mysterious scammers targeted prominent female journalists in India with fake job offers at Harvard University ([link removed]) , a hoax that Harvard has been strangely uninterested in addressing.

* Folks…what a year ([link removed]) .

Young Americans have turned on President Biden ([link removed]) (or, “feel that Biden is in his flop era”), according to weekly polling by the Economist and YouGov. As of the latest poll in mid-December, an average of 29 percent of Americans under the age of 30 approve of the job Biden’s doing, while 50 percent disapprove. That net-approval rating of -21 is the worst of any age group, and it’s a dramatic reversal from the beginning of the year, when The Youngs gave Biden a net approval rating 32 points higher than did The Olds. It’s difficult to isolate what issue(s) caused the slide (many young voters said their top concerns were climate change and health care), but an unfulfilled campaign promise to cancel at least $10,000 per borrower in student debt surely hasn’t helped. The federal freeze on student loan payments is set to expire next month
([link removed]) , and while top Democrats have been urging the Biden administration to issue another extension, the White House said this week that it’s still preparing to restart payments on February 1. Anyway, maybe this will fix it? ([link removed])
[link removed]

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Try Jura today, and support our tiny island community. Go to jurawhisky.com/Lovet ([link removed]) t and use code LOVETT10 to receive $10 any Jura you buy. As they say in Scotland - Slàinte Mhath (Slanj-ee Vah)! Gaelic for good health.

The EPA ([link removed]) will direct $1 billion in infrastructure funds to clean up more than four-dozen toxic Superfund sites.

President Biden ([link removed]) has nominated another Native American judge, Sunshine Suzanne Sykes from Navajo Nation, to serve on the federal bench.

Civil rights leader Claudette Colvin ([link removed]) has finally had her juvenile record expunged, after 66 years.

Let’s hear it for Jamie Raskin, a much better Person of the Year ([link removed]) .
[link removed]

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