Thursday, 7 September 2023

Schools across America bring back Covid MASKS in classrooms amid rise in infections - Conservatives hit back hard

Schools across America bring back Covid MASKS in classrooms amid rise in infections - Conservatives hit back hard

Schools across America bring back Covid MASKS in classrooms amid rise in infections - Conservatives hit back hard





The Talladega City School district in Alabama state urged students to wear masks but stressed that 'masks are encouraged but not required' (file photo)






A slew of schools across America are reinstating mask mandates amid a surge in positive Covid tests - despite evidence they harm children's learning.







New York health officials are also providing free masks to schools in the state in response to rising Covid rates and absences, while face coverings are being strongly encouraged in some classrooms in Los Angeles.


The new calls for masks are a throwback to the dark days of the pandemic and come despite the growing body of evidence that masks were not only not effective at preventing the spread of the virus, but also hampered children's learning, social interactions and natural immunity to other infections.


In Maryland this week, an elementary school principal mandated several days of mask-wearing for a class of kindergartners after at least four people tested positive for the virus. New York’s governor announced a plan to distribute free N95 and KN95 masks to schools this fall, although the state is not requiring their use. And in Alabama, a junior high school in Sumter County declared in late August that mask-wearing would begin again for everyone — students, staff and visitors.


Even though these campuses are the exception, as few schools require masks, lawmakers and presidential candidates have seized on the issue. A group of Senate Republicans unveiled legislation this week to prohibit federal mask mandates on domestic air travel, public transit and public schools through the end of 2024. On Wednesday, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) shared a warning in response to the Maryland elementary school action: “If you want to voluntarily wear a mask, fine, but leave our kids the hell alone.” (The school, Rosemary Hills in Silver Spring, boosted security and kept recess indoors because of online backlash the same day.)


Former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley, who is seeking the Republican presidential nomination, suggested in a Fox News interview Wednesday that mandated school mask-wearing is an attack on parental rights, and former president Donald Trump promised last month that, if reelected, he would “use every available authority to cut federal funding to any school” that imposed a mask rule.


School administrators say they are not eager to relive the bitter fights over masks and vaccination that dominated the first two years of the pandemic. Josh Tovar, a high school principal in Texas’s Garland Independent School District, said his campus is seeing a spike in student and staff infections that is depriving some classes of teachers. But, Tovar said, he would never consider requiring masks again, even if he had that power.


“There’s just a different mentality here in this state in regard to the mask,” he said. “I literally just left a principals’ meeting where we discussed seeing an uptick, but no one mentioned or thought to bring up requiring masks. It’s not on the radar.”


Others are taking half-measures. In Alabama, Talladega City Schools shared a short post in late August encouraging mask-wearing. But officials stopped short of a requirement, said Superintendent Quentin J. Lee, despite the surge of cases in his district and the emails from teachers concerned about infection. The Talladega Facebook post says: “Please note this is not a mask mandate.”


Lee said he wanted to tread carefully because “it’s a very polarized subject.” He still remembers politically and racially tinged complaints about mask-wearing from earlier in the pandemic.


Studies suggest N95 masks may expose people to toxic chemicals. Pictured: California Governor Gavin Newsom joins masked schoolkids in a classroom in August 2021


Since the Facebook post went up, he said, “We’ve had mixed reviews. Some parents have been very appreciative and thankful. Some parents think that it’s a hoax and we shouldn’t be doing it — but that’s why we made it a suggestion.”


The moves toward mask-wearing come as virus rates in the United States are rising by multiple measures, although hospitalizations are far below where they were a year ago. It is difficult to tell how widespread mild cases are because at-home test results are not reported, and many people are not testing, since free tests are no longer widely available.


Still, experts worry people are more susceptible to getting the virus in this latest uptick because most Americans have not received the latest booster — including 80 percent of school-age children — and the newest variants are adept at getting around immunity from vaccinations and prior infections.


In Maryland, Rosemary Hills Elementary School principal Rebecca Irwin Kennedy formalized the mask mandate in a letter sent to parents on Tuesday.


It explained she made the move after 'three or more individuals' caught the virus in the last ten days.


She demanded students don thick N95 masks to 'keep our school environment as safe as possible', despite a recent study finding the mask may expose users to dangerous levels of toxic chemicals.


And while even embattled medical guru Dr Anthony Fauci admits there is a lack of evidence the masks stop the spread of Covid, Kennedy told parents the N95s will only become optional after 10 days.


The letter caused widespread fury among those who see the decision as a slippery slope back to Covid lockdowns, with Donald Trump Jr posting to X: 'DO NOT COMPLY!!!' 


While Covid cases are rising in the US, public health officials say most people are experiencing mild symptoms comparable to a cold or flu.


Children are as likely as adults to get Covid, but their risk of becoming severely ill from the virus is much lower. 


Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) showed 8,000 patients admitted to hospitals nationwide in the last week of August, up 12 percent on the previous seven-day spell and the first week-on-week rise since December.


Despite the rise, rates remain at historic lows. For comparison, there were 150,000 Covid admissions per week at the height of the pandemic in January 2021, and hospitalizations reached as high as 44,000 a week earlier this year.


Rosemary Hills Elementary School in Silver Spring, Md. (Bill O’Leary/The Washington Post) (Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post)


Experts have put the spike down to the natural waning of immunity, which happens around six months after the previous wave of infections.


The decision to return to mask-wearing in Maryland also comes despite experts warning that the highly contagious virus is likely to be a lasting fixture of everyday life, similar to the common cold.


'One thing that Americans must understand: SARS-CoV-2 and its variants are never going away,' Dr Brett Osborn, a board-certified neurosurgeon in West Palm Beach, Florida, told Fox News Digital.


'It is here to stay because its mutation rate is high, just like influenza.'


Rep. Jamie B. Raskin (D-Md.), whose district includes the Montgomery County kindergarten, said a mandate can still be a sensible, “science-based” answer to an outbreak. “Rosemary Hills Elementary addressed a small covid outbreak with appropriate prevention measures that unfortunately, though inevitably, drew the attention of right-wing covid deniers,” he said.


To parent Christina Headrick in Northern Virginia, the fact school officials and politicians nationwide are having conversations about mask-wearing marks a frustrating failure.


Much earlier in the pandemic, Headrick, who has two children in public school, helped launch a parent group and website dedicated to ensuring a safe return to classrooms in Arlington County. The group advocated in particular for improved ventilation and air filtration. Almost three years later, Headrick feels her efforts have gone unheeded — not only in Arlington, but throughout the country.


“The real issue here isn’t mask mandates or not mask mandates. It’s a complete failure to address the core issue, which is our public schools need to have a major upgrade in terms of clean air,” she said.


If her children’s schools ever reinstated mask-wearing to address an outbreak, Headrick said, she would probably be okay with it, so long as officials’ reasoning passed muster. But another part of her would be furious. She always thought masks should be a tool of last resort, when every other method flopped. Instead, they’re at the center of the debate. Again.


“Masks are such a political issue. We’re not talking about the right things,” she said. “I can’t believe we are in this place, still.”






































































































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Wednesday, 6 September 2023

Putin, MbS praise joint extension of voluntary oil supply cuts

Putin, MbS praise joint extension of voluntary oil supply cuts

Putin, MbS praise joint extension of voluntary oil supply cuts





EPA-EFE/YURI KADOBNOV . A day after Russia and Saudi Arabia announced they will extend production cuts until the end of the year, Putin and MbS stressed that the oil output cut agreements help ensure stability in the global energy market. The Kremlin added that the Saudi crown prince also thanked Putin for supporting his country's bid to join BRICS.






Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke over the phone to Saudi Crown Prince Mohamed bin Salman (MbS) and the two officials praised the cooperation between Moscow and Riyadh in the OPEC+ format, the Kremlin said on Wednesday.







The OPEC+ partners say production cuts that will be extended until the end of the year have stabilized the oil market.


The global leaders in oil production, Saudi Arabia and Russia, on Tuesday announced the extension of voluntary oil supply cuts to the end of the year, despite a rally in the oil market and analyst expectations of tight supply in the fourth quarter.


Russia will roll over its decision to reduce oil exports by 300,000 barrels per day, while Saudi Arabia will extend its voluntary oil output cut of 1 million bpd.


Kremlin said the leaders had been highly satisfied with cooperation between their countries within the framework of the OPEC+ group of leading oil producers.


“It was noted that the agreements reached on reducing oil production, combined with voluntary commitments to limit the supply of the commodity, make it possible to ensure the stability of the global energy market,” the Kremlin said in a readout of the call.


"The interaction between the two countries in the OPEC+ format was highly assessed. It was noted that the agreements reached to cut oil production, along with voluntary commitments to limit the supply of raw materials, help maintain stability of the global energy market," the Kremlin said in a statement released following Wednesday's call.


"The parties said they were pleased with progress in multifaceted cooperation between Russia and Saudi Arabia and discussed a number of current issues of further enhancing cooperation in trade, economic, transportation, logistics, and investment areas," it added.


On Tuesday, Riyadh and Moscow announced the extension of voluntary oil supply cuts until the end of the year, sending the price of Brent crude oil – considered the global benchmark for oil prices – up by two percent to $91.08.


This was the highest price since November of last year.


Per their agreement, the Gulf monarchy will continue its production cutback of 1 million barrels per day (bpd) until December. Russia’s oil-export export reduction of 300,000 barrels a day will be extended for the same duration.


The OPEC+ group of nations began cutting production in August last year, starting with a 2 million bpd cut. The massive cut came despite US demands that Gulf nations increase production to offset a fuel crisis stemming from western sanctions on Russia.









































































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Ukraine Loses Up to 285 Military in Donetsk Direction in Past Day

Ukraine Loses Up to 285 Military in Donetsk Direction in Past Day

Ukraine Loses Up to 285 Military in Donetsk Direction in Past Day





©Sputnik/Alexey Mayshev/Go to the mediabank






Ukraine has lost up to 285 military in the Donetsk direction over the past 24 hours, the Russian Defense Ministry said on Wednesday.







During the past day, Russian military repelled 10 attacks by Ukraine in the Donetsk direction, four in the Zaporozhye direction, two in the Krasny Liman direction, one in the South Donetsk direction, as well as two counterattacks in the Kupyansk direction. Also, there is no change in the tactical position of Russian troops in the Zaporozhye direction


"During the fighting in this [Donetsk] direction, the enemy lost up to 285 Ukrainian military, a tank, two infantry fighting vehicles, five vehicles, a Gvozdika self-propelled artillery mount, a Rapira cannon, as well as a control center for unmanned aerial vehicles," the ministry said in a statement, adding that Ukraine also lost over 180 military in the South Donetsk direction.


Additionally, Aerospace Forces of Russia attacked a training base of sabotage groups of Ukrainian troops, the ministry said, noting that the goal was achieved.



Russia's Air Defenses Down Ukrainian Drone Over Bryansk Region



©Photo : Youtube/News-Front



Russian air defenses have thwarted Kiev's attack by destroying a Ukrainian drone over the Navlinsky district of the Bryansk region, Governor Alexander Bogomaz said early Wednesday.


"The air defense forces of the Russian Defense Ministry have foiled an attack by Ukrainian terrorists. An aircraft-type unmanned aerial vehicle has been shot down over the Navlinsky district. There are no casualties or damage. Operational and emergency services are working at the site," Bogomaz said on Telegram.


Ukrainian troops have resorted to drone warfare, targeting civilian infrastructure, in the wake of their military setback. Experts stress that these drone attacks on Russian soil are purely a psychological crutch to prop up the weakened morale of Ukrainian soldiers and serve no meaningful military goal.



British defense chief confirms Challenger 2 tank destroyed in Ukraine



UK Defense Secretary Grant Shapps confirmed that a British Challenger 2 battle tank has been destroyed in Ukraine, in the first such incident in the model’s nearly 30 years of being in service.


"I can confirm, that is correct. It may be the first loss as far as we are aware," Shapps told Sky News, explaining that the tank was hit by the Russian artillery.


UK Defense Secretary Grant Shapps
©Stefan Rousseau/Pool via AP



"We gifted 14 of these Challenger 2 tanks to Ukraine. We accept that in the war zone, there can be material losses," Shapps said, adding that London is not planning to replace the vehicle.


Earlier, The Guardian reported that only one such tank, which entered combat in 1994, was hit in 2003 in Iraq, but that tank was destroyed in a friendly fire incident, not an enemy attack. Meanwhile, the report points out that such statistics can be explained by the small number of tanks produced and their infrequent deployment.


Overall, London shipped 14 Challenger 2 tanks to Kiev this year. The UK itself has 213 tanks of this type. Meanwhile, according to the information presented in the British Parliament in March, only 157 vehicles are combat-ready. Only one country, not counting the UK and Ukraine, uses Challenger 2 tanks — Oman.


According to the Russian Defense Ministry, the Ukrainian army has been making futile offensive attempts since June 4. According to the ministry, in three months, Ukrainian forces have lost over 66,000 personnel and 7,600 vehicles, achieving no success in any direction. On September 4, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that the Ukrainian counteroffensive has failed.













































































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Xi, Putin missing G20 summit not unusual, India's foreign minister says

Xi, Putin missing G20 summit not unusual, India's foreign minister says

Xi, Putin missing G20 summit not unusual, India's foreign minister says





India's Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, delivers his speech in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Post Ministerial Conference with India during the ASEAN Foreign Acquire Licensing Rights Read more






China's President Xi Jinping and Russia's Vladimir Putin skipping this week's G20 summit in New Delhi is not unusual and has nothing to do with India, Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar told the ANI news agency.







Sherpas of the G20 countries are negotiating to build a consensus and arrive at a declaration at the Sept. 9-10 summit in New Delhi, Jaishankar said in the interview, which was aired on Wednesday.


"No, no. I do not think it has anything to do with India," he told ANI, in which Reuters has a minority stake, when asked if Putin and Xi are skipping the summit because they are miffed with India.


"I think whatever decision they make, I mean they would know best. But I would not at all see it the way you would suggest," he said.


Asked if their absence would affect building a consensus and producing a declaration at the end of the summit, Jaishankar said: "We are negotiating right now...the clock did not start ticking yesterday."


But expectations from G20 are "very high" and New Delhi faces the challenge of dealing with a "very difficult world" reeling under the impact of the pandemic, conflict, climate change, debt and politics, he said.


G20 groups the 20 major economies of the world and its leaders aim to try and find solutions to some of the world's pressing problems although a deep geopolitical divide over the war in Ukraine that threatens any progress.


But the absence of Putin and Xi as well as divisions over the war mean it would be difficult to arrive at a consensus Leaders Declaration at the summit, analysts and officials have said.U.S. President Joe Biden will focus on reforming the World Bank and urging other multilateral development banks to boost lending for climate change and infrastructure projects during the summit, the White House said on Tuesday.


Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has said he hopes to discuss digital issues and food security. India has said discussions are underway on a global framework to regulate crypto assets.


















































































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US politician dismisses administration’s claims about transparency of military aid to Kiev

US politician dismisses administration’s claims about transparency of military aid to Kiev

US politician dismisses administration’s claims about transparency of military aid to Kiev





Vivek Ramaswamy AP Photo/Reba Saldanha Vivek Ramaswamy
©AP Photo/Reba Saldanha






US Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy believes that the incumbent government’s claims that all financial and military aid to Ukraine is being carefully tracked are false.







"Of course, the mainstream media and the establishment will say that any money the U.S. sends to support Ukraine is strictly 'itemized and audited,'" the politician wrote on X, a social network formerly known as Twitter. "This is a joke funnier than any Zelensky could have written in his prior career as a comedian."


"Don’t forget that in June, the Pentagon itself discovered an ‘accounting error’ that artificially created an extra $6.2 billion for Ukraine without Congressional approval. The notion that all money and military equipment being sent to Ukraine is being carefully tracked is deeply dishonest," Ramaswamy added.


Members of the Republican Party have repeatedly requested the administration of US President Joe Biden to audit funds allocated for supporting the Kiev government. Republican US House of Representatives member Lauren Boebert said in August US parliamentarians should not approve the White House’s request for additional aid to Ukraine and criticized the lack of audit during the process.


On August 10, Washington requested Congress to approve additional federal spending for fiscal year 2023 ending in September. Of that spending, $13 billion would go for emergency military assistance to Kiev, while another $8.5 billion would be earmarked for economic and security assistance to Ukraine and some other countries. Russian Ambassador to the US Anatoly Antonov said in that context that the White House request demonstrated Washington's desire to help Kiev "to the last Ukrainian." He also said US attempts to defeat Moscow are doomed to fail.


































































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