AMERICA: A SERIOUSLY WOUNDED GIANT.

Carnage: Consumer spending plunged - forcing businesses to close

STRUCTURAL RACISM

 

ECONOMY IN FREEFALL

 

REBOOBLICAN PARALYSIS

 

30 STATES INCL. TEX, FLA & CALIF OVERWHELMED BY CORONAVIRUS

‘There are those in power who are doing their darndest to discourage people from voting’: Obama excoriates Trump and compares him to George Wallace during eulogy for John Lewis and calls for new Voting Rights Act ‘to truly honor’ civil rights icon

Obama said Lewis will be a 'founding father of a fuller, better, fairer America' as he delivered a stirring eulogy for the civil rights icon and longtime Congressman

Obama Praises a Man of ‘Unbreakable Perseverance’

Three former presidents and dozens of other dignitaries were drawn to Ebenezer Baptist Church on Thursday to bid farewell to John Lewis, a giant of Congress and the civil rights era whose courageous protests guaranteed him a place in American history. But even as the funeral looked back over Mr. Lewis’s long life, it also focused very much on the tumultuous state of affairs in the country today.

The most pointed eulogy came from former President Barack Obama, who issued a blistering critique of the Trump administration, the brutality of police officers toward Black people and efforts to limit the right to vote that Mr. Lewis had shed his blood to secure.

Mr. Obama compared Mr. Lewis to an Old Testament prophet and credited him with directly paving the way for the nation’s first Black president. He also took aim at the forces that he said were working against the equality for Black Americans and other oppressed people that Mr. Lewis had spent a lifetime championing.

“Bull Connor may be gone,” Mr. Obama said, referring to the 1960s-era public safety commissioner of Birmingham, Ala., who turned fire hoses and dogs on civil rights protesters. “But today, we witness, with our own eyes, police officers kneeling on the necks of Black Americans.”

George Wallace, the Alabama governor who endorsed segregation and used racist language, may also be gone, Mr. Obama continued. “But we can witness our federal government sending agents to use tear gas and batons against peaceful demonstrators.”

And while insuperable poll tests for Black people may be a thing of the past, Mr. Obama said, “Even as we sit here, there are those in power who are doing their darnedest to discourage people from voting by closing polling locations, and targeting minorities and students with restrictive ID laws, and attacking our voting rights with surgical precision.”

Mr. Obama delivered the eulogy, comparing Mr. Lewis to an Old Testament prophet.

Mr. Obama praised Mr. Lewis in his eulogy as an “American whose faith was tested again and again to produce a man of pure joy and unbreakable perseverance.”

In death, Mr. Lewis drew a bipartisan crowd, including former presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton, although Mr. Trump did not attend. Speaker Nancy Pelosi and dozens of members of Congress were also at the three-hour service, presided over by Ebenezer’s pastor, the Rev. Dr. Raphael G. Warnock, who is running as a Democrat for a Senate seat.

Mr. Bush gave a short, warm speech in which he praised Mr. Lewis’s Christian faith and recalled working with him to establish the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington.

“Listen, John and I had our disagreements, of course,” said Mr. Bush, a Republican. “But in the America John Lewis fought for, and the America I believe in, differences of opinion are inevitable elements and evidence of democracy in action.”

The line was as well received as Mr. Bush himself: Dr. Warnock noted that Mr. Bush was president “the last time we reauthorized the Voting Rights Act.” It was a markedly different tone from the 2006 funeral of Coretta Scott King, Dr. King’s widow, in which numerous speakers criticized the Bush administration while Mr. Bush, then in his second term, looked on.

Mr. Clinton called Mr. Lewis “a man I loved for a long time” and someone who was “on a mission that was bigger than personal ambition.”

He also said that Mr. Lewis had learned a lesson after he was asked by other civil rights leaders to tone down a fiery speech that he had written for the March on Washington in August 1963. “He listened to people that he knew had the same goals say, ‘Well, we have to be careful how we say this because we’re trying to get converts, not more adversaries.’”

In his eulogy, Mr. Obama, among other things, called on Congress to pass a new Voting Rights Act named for Mr. Lewis, for the end of gerrymandering and for the establishment of a national holiday on Election Day to make it easier for working people to get to the polls.

Echoing a favored theme, Mr. Obama also praised Mr. Lewis for understanding that it takes not only faith but hard work to improve the country and keep a healthy democracy on course.

Mr. Lewis exhibited, he said, “that most American of ideas — the idea that any of us ordinary people, without rank or wealth or title or fame, can somehow point out the imperfections of this nation and come together and challenge the status quo and decide that it is in our power to remake this country that we love until it more closely aligns with our highest ideals.”

For that, he said, Mr. Lewis would come to be viewed as “a founding father of that fuller, fairer, better America.”

The sentiment resonated with the crowd that had gathered outside the church. Many dashed over to get a look as Mr. Lewis’s coffin was carried out.

A Collapse That Wiped Out 5 Years of Growth, With No Bounce in Sight

The second-quarter contraction set a grim record, and it would have been worse without government aid that is expiring.

New jobless claims ticked up again last week, following 15 straight weeks of declines from the peak in late March, when the coronavirus shutdowns initially hit

Second set of figures showed new unemployment claims of 1.4 million in last week – second week in a row they have gone up

The percentage decrease in G.D.P. is by far the biggest on record.

The coronavirus pandemic’s toll on the nation’s economy became emphatically clearer Thursday as the government detailed the most devastating three-month collapse on record, which wiped away nearly five years of growth.

Gross domestic product, the broadest measure of goods and services produced, fell 9.5 percent in the second quarter of the year as consumers cut back spending, businesses pared investments and global trade dried up, the Commerce Department said.

The drop — the equivalent of a 32.9 percent annual rate of decline — would have been even more severe without trillions of dollars in government aid to households and businesses.

Data from Europe shows what might have been. Germany on Thursday reported a drop in second-quarter G.D.P. that was even steeper than the U.S. decline. But in Germany, coronavirus cases fell sharply and remain low, which has allowed a much stronger economic rebound in recent weeks.

In the United States, the rebound appears to have stalled. More than 1.4 million Americans filed new claims for state unemployment benefits last week, the Labor Department said Thursday. It was the 19th straight week that the tally exceeded one million, an unheard-of figure before the pandemic. A further 830,000 people filed for benefits under the federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program, which supports freelancers, the self-employed and other workers not covered by traditional unemployment benefits.

In total, some 30 million people are receiving unemployment benefits, a number that has come down only slowly as new layoffs — many of them permanent job losses, as opposed to the spring’s temporary furloughs — offset gradual rehiring. Some economists now fear that the monthly jobs report coming next week will show that total employment fell in July after two months of strong gains. The slow recovery, and signs of backsliding, are taking a toll on consumer confidence, which fell in July after rising in June.

The economic collapse in the second quarter was unrivaled in its speed and breathtaking in its severity. The decline was more than twice as large as in the Great Recession a decade ago, but occurred in a fraction of the time. The only possible comparisons in modern American history came during the Great Depression and the demobilization after World War II, both of which predated modern economic statistics.

Republicans are scrambling to reach a deal on the next coronavirus stimulus package as enhanced unemployment insurance benefits are set to expire on Friday, as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's proposal was rebuked on Monday

Rebooblicans and the White House have just one DAY to come up with a plan to keep unemployment boost for millions of jobless before it expires tomorrow 

  • Many fiscal conservatives, on the other hand, do not want to pass another $1 trillion package in general 
  • ‘We’re nowhere close to a deal,’ 

The White House and Congress have just one day to come up with a compromise on unemployment benefits before the coronavirus-era boost expires on Friday.

After Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell unveiled Republican’s $1 trillion stimulus package on Monday, negotiations stalled on Capitol Hill.

The plan included cutting an unemployment boost included in a previous package from $600-per-week on top of state benefits to $200.

The GOP’s goal regarding unemployment benefits is also to phase out the flat-rate boost 60 days after it’s passed and then cap benefits at 70 per cent of the individual’s pre-coronavirus wages.

The $600-per-week bolstered benefits will run out on Friday as White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows revealed Wednesday, ‘We’re nowhere close to a deal.’

While Trump doesn’t mind stimulus bills with high price tags, there are many fiscal conservatives who will not jump on board another sweeping stimulus package.

Republicans who object to big government spending, like Senators Lindsey Graham, Ted Cruz and Rand Paul, reveal that at least 50 per cent of GOP lawmakers will not vote in favor of any new sweeping legislation.

While McConnell’s proposal appears to be dead on arrival, with Democrats and Republicans rebuking the measure, other GOP lawmakers are looking to reach a compromise with their versions.

Senator Mitt Romney laid out his proposal Wednesday night and Senator Ron Johnson will put out his own proposal later in the day Thursday as lawmakers scramble to agree on something before the benefits’ expiration.

The United States recorded 1,461 new coronavirus deaths on Wednesday, which is the highest one-day spike since the 1,484 recorded on May 27

One person in the US dies every MINUTE from COVID-19 as the death toll surpasses 150,000 – and Florida, California and Texas all set single-day highs for the number of deaths

  • The United States recorded 1,461 new deaths on Wednesday, bringing the total death toll to more than 150,000 
  • It is the highest one-day spike since the 1,484 recorded on May 27
  • Coronavirus deaths across the country are rising at their fastest rate in two months and have increased by 10,000 in the past 11 days
  • Nationally, COVID-19 deaths have risen for three weeks in a row while the number of new cases week-over-week has fallen for the first time since June
  • California, Florida and Texas, the three largest US states, all set one-day records for fatalities from COVID-19 on Wednesday
  • The pace of coronavirus infections has accelerated since late May and the epicenter has moved to the South and West from New York
  • While new infections appear to have slowed, deaths have rapidly risen in July in California, Texas and Florida 
  • Coronavirus testing at a site in Los Angeles last week. The pathogen has infected at least 4.3 million Americans, killing almost 150,000.

DONALD MCNEILL, NY TIMES

Once again, the coronavirus is ascendant. As infections mount across the country, it is dawning on Americans that the epidemic is now unstoppable, and that no corner of the nation will be left untouched.

As of Wednesday, the pathogen had infected at least 4.3 million Americans, killing more than 150,000. Many experts fear the virus could kill 200,000 or even 300,000 by year’s end. Even President Trump has donned a mask, after resisting for months, and has canceled the Republican National Convention celebrations in Florida.

Each state, each city has its own crisis driven by its own risk factors: vacation crowds in one, bars reopened too soon in another, a revolt against masks in a third.

“We are in a worse place than we were in March,” when the virus coursed through New York, said Dr. Leana S. Wen, a former Baltimore health commissioner. “Back then we had one epicenter. Now we have lots.”

To assess where the country is heading now, The New York Times interviewed 20 public health experts — not just clinicians and epidemiologists, but also historians and sociologists, because the spread of the virus is now influenced as much by human behavior as it is by the pathogen itself.

Not only are American cities in the South and West facing deadly outbreaks like those that struck Northeastern cities in the spring, but rural areas are being hurt, too. In every region, people of color will continue to suffer disproportionately, experts said.

While there may be no appetite for a national lockdown, local restrictions must be tightened when required, the researchers said, and governors and mayors must have identical goals. Testing must become more targeted.

In most states, contact tracing is now moot — there are simply too many cases to track. And while progress has been made on vaccines, none is expected to arrive this winter in time to stave off what many fear will be a new wave of deaths.

Overall, the scientists conveyed a pervasive sense of sadness and exhaustion. Where once there was defianceand then a growing sense of dread, now there seems to be sorrow and frustration, a feeling that so many funerals never had to happen and that nothing is going well. The United States is a wounded giant, while much of Europe, which was hit first, is recovering and reopening — although not to us.

“We’re all incredibly depressed and in shock at how out of control the virus is in the U.S.,” said Dr. Michele Barry, the director of the Center for Innovation in Global Health at Stanford University.

With so much wealth and medical talent, they asked, how could we have done so poorly? How did we fare not just worse than autocratic China and isolated New Zealand, but also worse than tiny, much poorer nations like Vietnam and Rwanda?

“National hubris and belief in American exceptionalism have served us badly,” said Martha L. Lincoln, a medical anthropologist and historian at San Francisco State University. “We were not prepared to see the risk of failure.”

Homemade masks for sale in Dinuba, Calif., earlier this month.

Since the coronavirus was first found to be the cause of lethal pneumonias in Wuhan, China, in late 2019, scientists have gained a better understanding of the enemy.

It is extremely transmissible, through not just coughed droplets but also a fine aerosol mist that is expelled when people talk loudly, laugh or sing and that can linger in indoor air. As a result, masks are far more effective than scientists once believed.

Virus carriers with mild or no symptoms can be infectious, and there may be 10 times as many people spreading the illness as have tested positive for it.

The infection may start in the lungs, but it is very different from influenza, a respiratory virus. In severely ill patients, the coronavirus may attach to receptors inside the veins and arteries, and move on to attack the kidneys, the heart, the gut and even the brain, choking off these organs with hundreds of tiny blood clots.

Most of the virus’s victims are elderly, but it has not spared young adults, especially those with obesity, high blood pressure or diabetes. Adults aged 18 to 49 now account for more hospitalized cases than people aged 50 to 64 or those 65 and older.

Children are usually not harmed by the virus, although clinicians were dismayed to discover a few who were struck by a rare but dangerous inflammatory versionYoung children appear to transmit the virus less often than teenagers, which may affect how schools can be opened.

Among adults, a very different picture has emerged. Growing evidence suggests that perhaps 10 percent of the infected account for 80 percent of new transmissions. Unpredictable superspreading events in nursing homes, meatpacking plants, churches, prisons and bars are major drivers of the epidemic.

Thus far, none of the medicines for which hopes were once high — repurposed malaria drugs, AIDS drugs and antivirals — have proved to be rapid cures. One antiviral, remdesivir, has been shown to shorten hospital stays, while a common steroid, dexamethasone, has helped save some severely ill patients.

One or even several vaccines may be available by year’s end, which would be a spectacular achievement. But by then the virus may have in its grip virtually every village and city on the globe.

Credit…Scott McIntyre for The New York Times

Some experts, like Michael T. Osterholm, the director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, argue that only a nationwide lockdown can completely contain the virus now. Other researchers think that is politically impossible, but emphasize that localities must be free to act quickly and enforce strong measures with support from their state legislators.

Danielle Allen, the director of Harvard University’s Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, which has issued pandemic response plans, said that finding less than one case per 100,000 people means a community should continue testing, contact tracing and isolating cases — with financial support for those who need it.

Up to 25 cases per 100,000 requires greater restrictions, like closing bars and limiting gatherings. Above that number, authorities should issue stay-at-home orders, she said.

Testing must be focused, not just offered at convenient parking lots, experts said, and it should be most intense in institutions like nursing homes, prisons, factories or other places at risk of superspreading events.

Testing must be free in places where people are poor or uninsured, such as public housing projects, Native American reservations and churches and grocery stores in impoverished neighborhoods.

None of this will be possible unless the nation’s capacity for testing, a continuing disaster, is greatly expanded. By the end of summer, the administration hopes to start using “pooling,” in which tests are combined in batches to speed up the process.

But the method only works in communities with lower infection rates, where large numbers of pooled tests turn up relatively few positive results. It fails where the virus has spread everywhere, because too many batches turn up positive results that require retesting.

At the moment, the United States tests roughly 800,000 people per day, about 38 percent of the number some experts think is needed.

Above all, researchers said, mask use should be universal indoors — including airplanes, subway cars and every other enclosed space — and outdoors anywhere people are less than six feet apart.

Dr. Emily Landon, an infection control specialist at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, said it was “sad that something as simple as a mask got politicized.”

“It’s not a statement, it’s a piece of clothing,” she added. “You get used to it the way you got used to wearing pants.”

Arguments that masks infringe on personal rights must be countered both by legal orders and by persuasion. “We need more credible messengers endorsing masks,” Dr. Wen said — just before the president himself became a messenger.

“They could include C.E.O.s or celebrities or religious leaders. Different people are influencers to different demographics.”

Although this feels like a new debate, it is actually an old one. Masks were common in some Western cities during the 1918 flu pandemic and mandatory in San Francisco. There was even a jingle: “Obey the laws, wear the gauze. Protect your jaws from septic paws.”

“A libertarian movement, the Anti-Mask League, emerged,” Dr. Lincoln of San Francisco State said. “There were fistfights with police officers over it.” Ultimately, city officials “waffled” and compliance faded.

“I wonder what this issue would be like today,” she mused, “if that hadn’t happened.”

Images of Americans disregarding social distancing requirements have become a daily news staple. But the pictures are deceptive: Americans are more accepting of social distancing than the media sometimes portrays, said Beth Redbird, a Northwestern University sociologist who since March has conducted regular surveys of 8,000 adults about the impact of the virus.

“About 70 percent of Americans report using all forms of it,” she said. “And when we give them adjective choices, they describe people who won’t distance as mean, selfish or unintelligent, not as generous, open-minded or patriotic.”

The key predictor, she said in early July, was whether or not the poll respondent trusted Mr. Trump. Those who trusted him were less likely to practice social distancing. That was true of Republicans and independents, “and there’s no such thing as a Democrat who trusts Donald Trump,” she added.

Whether or not people support coercive measures like stay-at-home orders or bar closures depended on how scared the respondent was.

“When rising case numbers make people more afraid, they have more taste for liberty-constraining actions,” Dr. Redbird said. And no economic recovery will occur, she added, “until people aren’t afraid. If they are, they won’t go out and spend money even if they’re allowed to.”

Credit…Erin Trieb for The New York Times

As of Wednesday, new infections were rising in 33 states, and in Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia, according to a database maintained by The Times.

Weeks ago, experts like Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, were advising states where the virus was surging to pull back from reopening by closing down bars, forbidding large gatherings and requiring mask usage.

Many of those states are finally taking that advice, but it is not yet clear whether this national change of heart has happened in time to stop the newest wave of deaths from ultimately exceeding the 2,750-a-day peak of mid-April. Now, the daily average is 1,106 virus deaths nationwide.

Deaths may surge even higher, experts warned, when cold weather, rain and snow force Americans to meet indoors, eat indoors and crowd into public transit.

Oddly, states that are now hard-hit might become safer, some experts suggested. In the South and Southwest, summers are so hot that diners seek air-conditioning indoors, but eating outdoors in December can be pleasant.

Several studies have confirmed transmission in air-conditioned rooms. In one well-known case cluster in a restaurant in Guangzhou, China, researchers concluded that air-conditioners blew around a viral cloud, infecting patrons as far as 10 feet from a sick diner.

Rural areas face another risk. Almost 80 percent of the country’s counties lack even one infectious disease specialist, according to a study led by Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the chief of infectious diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

At the moment, the crisis is most acute in Southern and Southwestern states. But websites that track transmission rates show that hot spots can turn up anywhere. For three weeks, for example, Alaska’s small outbreak has been one of the country’s fastest-spreading, while transmission in Texas and Arizona has dramatically slowed.

Deaths now may rise more slowly than they did in spring, because hospitalized patients are, on average, younger this time. But overwhelmed hospitals can lead to excess deaths from many causes all over a community, as ambulances are delayed and people having health crises avoid hospitals out of fear.

The experts were divided as to what role influenza will play in the fall. A harsh flu season could flood hospitals with pneumonia patients needing ventilators. But some said the flu season could be mild or almost nonexistent this year.

Normally, the flu virus migrates from the Northern Hemisphere to the Southern Hemisphere in the spring — presumably in air travelers — and then returns in the fall, with new mutations that may make it a poor match for the annual vaccine.

But this year, the national lockdown abruptly ended flu transmission in late April, according to weekly Fluview reports from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. International air travel has been sharply curtailed, and there has been almost no flu activity in the whole southern hemisphere this year.

Assuming there is still little air travel to the United States this fall, there may be little “reseeding” of the flu virus here. But in case that prediction turns out be wrong, all the researchers advised getting flu shots anyway.

“There’s no reason to be caught unprepared for two respiratory viruses,” said Tara C. Smith, an epidemiologist at Kent State University’s School of Public Health.

Credit…Misha Friedman for The New York Times

Experts familiar with vaccine and drug manufacturing were disappointed that, thus far, only dexamethasone and remdesivir have proved to be effective treatments, and then only partially.

According to a database compiled by The Times, researchers worldwide are developing more than 165 vaccine candidates, and 27 are in human trials.

New announcements are pouring in, and the pressure to hurry is intense: The Trump administration just awarded nearly $2 billion to a Pfizer-led consortium that promised 100 million doses by December, assuming trials succeed.

Because the virus is still spreading rapidly, most experts said “challenge trials,” in which a small number of volunteers are vaccinated and then deliberately infected, would probably not be needed.

Absent a known cure, “challenges” can be ethically fraught, and some doctors oppose doing them for this virus. “They don’t tell you anything about safety,” Dr. Borio said.

And when a virus is circulating unchecked, a typical placebo-controlled trial with up to 30,000 participants can be done efficiently, she added. Moderna and Pfizer have already begun such trials.

The Food and Drug Administration has said a vaccine will pass muster even if it is only 50 percent effective. Experts said they could accept that, at least initially, because the first vaccine approved could save lives while testing continued on better alternatives.

“A vaccine doesn’t have to work perfectly to be useful,” Dr. Walensky said. “Even with measles vaccine, you can sometimes still get measles — but it’s mild, and you aren’t infectious.”

“We don’t know if a vaccine will work in older folks. We don’t know exactly what level of herd immunity we’ll need to stop the epidemic. But anything safe and fairly effective should help.”

Still, haste is risky, experts warned, especially when opponents of vaccines are spreading fear. If a vaccine is rushed to market without thorough safety testing and recipients are hurt by it, all vaccines could be set back for years.

Credit…Callaghan O’Hare for The New York Times

No matter what state the virus reaches, one risk remains constant. Even in states with few Black and Hispanic residents, they are usually hit hardest, experts said.

People of color are more likely to have jobs that require physical presence and sometimes close contact, such as construction work, store clerking and nursing. They are more likely to rely on public transit and to live in neighborhoods where grocery stores are scarce and crowded.

They are more likely to live in crowded housing and multigenerational homes, some with only one bathroom, making safe home isolation impossible when sickness strikes. They have higher rates of obesity, high blood pressure, diabetes and asthma.

Federal data gathered through May 28 shows that Black and Hispanic Americans were three times as likely to get infected as their white neighbors, and twice as likely to die, even if they lived in remote rural counties with few Black or Hispanic residents.

“By the time that minority patient sets foot in a hospital, he is already on an unequal footing,” said Elaine Hernandez, a sociologist at Indiana University.

The differences persist even though Black and Hispanic adults drastically altered their behavior. One study found that through the beginning of May, the average Black American practiced more social distancing than the average white American.

The top factor making people adopt self-protective behavior is personally knowing someone who fell ill, said Dr. Redbird. By the end of spring, Black and Hispanic Americans were 50 percent more likely than white Americans to know someone who had been sickened by the virus, her surveys found.

Credit…Dustin Chambers for The New York Times

There was no widespread agreement among experts about what is likely to happen in the years after the pandemic. Some scientists expected a quick economic recovery; others thought the damage could persist for years.

Working at home will become more common, some predicted, while crowded, open-plan offices may be changed. The just-in-time supply chains on which many businesses depend will need fixing because the processes failed to deliver adequate protective gear, ventilators and test materials.

A disease-modeling system like that used by the National Weather Service to predict storms is needed, said Caitlin Rivers, an epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. Right now, the country has surveillance for seasonal flu but no national map tracking all disease outbreaks. As Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, a former C.D.C. director, recently pointed out, states are not even required to track the same data.

Several experts said they assumed that millions of Americans who have been left without health insurance or forced to line up at food banks would vote for politicians favoring universal health care, paid sick leave, greater income equality and other changes.

But given the country’s deep political divisions, no researcher was certain what the outcome of the coming election would be.

Dr. Redbird said her polling of Americans showed “little faith in institutions across the board — we’re not seeing an increase in trust in science or an appetite for universal health care or workers equity.”

The Trump administration did little to earn trust. More than six months into the worst health crisis in a century, Mr. Trump only last week urged Americans to wear masks and canceled the Republican convention in Florida, the kind of high-risk indoor event that states have been banning since mid-March.

“It will probably, unfortunately, get worse before it gets better,” Mr. Trump said at the first of the resurrected coronavirus task force briefings earlier this month, which included no scientists or health officials. The briefings were discontinued in April amid his rosy predications that the epidemic would soon be over.

Mr. Trump has ignoredcontradicted or disparaged his scientific advisers, repeatedly saying that the virus simply would go away, touting unproven drugs like hydroxychloroquine even after they were shown to be ineffective and sometimes dangerous, and suggesting that disinfectants or lethal ultraviolet light might be used inside the body.

Millions of Americans have lost their jobs and their health insurance, and are in danger of losing their homes, even as they find themselves in the path of a lethal disease. The Trump presidency “is the symptom of the denigration of science and the gutting of the public contract about what we owe each other as citizens,” said Dr. Joia S. Mukherjee, the chief medical officer of Partners in Health in Boston.

One lesson that will surely be learned is that the country needs to be better prepared for microbial assaults, said Dr. Julie Gerberding, a former director of the C.D.C.

“This is not a once-in-a-century event. It’s a harbinger of things to come.”

Credit…Brittainy Newman/The New York Times

Much of the U.S. presidential election battleground is now in the ‘red zone.’

Former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. released the fourth piece of his “Build Back Better” proposal in Wilmington, Del., on Tuesday.The virus has been spreading rapidly in four of six key battleground states crucial to the presidential election in November — ArizonaFloridaNorth Carolina and Wisconsin. The states are among 21 recently declared to be in the “red zone” in a report by the federal government because of the substantial number of new virus cases reported there each day.

If the presumptive Democratic nominee and former vice president, Joseph R. Biden Jr., wins the states won by Hillary Clinton four years ago, many combinations of any three of six swing states would be enough to defeat Mr. Trump. In addition to the four swing states labeled “red zones,” the list includes Michigan and Pennsylvania, which have not seen major spikes in cases in recent weeks.

Already many states are revisiting their mail-in voting policies, so that voters will not have to go to polling stations and risk infection. The six swing states have either always allowed relatively easy mail-in voting or have recently made it easier. Currently, eight states allow mail-in or absentee ballots only with an approved excuse. The issue continues to be a point of contention between Democrats and Republicans.

Mr. Trump on Thursday raised the idea of delaying the election until people could “properly, securely and safely vote???”The president, however, does not have the authority to delay Election Day, which by law takes place the Tuesday after the first Monday in November.

recent New York Times analysis also suggests that the increasing number of virus-related deaths is damaging Republican support in some communities.

 

 

Big Tech

The 5 biggest little lies tech CEOs told Congress — and us

No, Google, we’re not really in control of our data. And yes, Facebook, you profit from harmful information.

WASHINGTON POST

Sometimes, it’s the little lies that are the most telling.

Watching the leaders of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google face a filleting in front of the House antitrust panel on Wednesday, I kept a running list of the little half-truths they told.

If I only had a dollar for every time a big tech CEO said they cared deeply about our privacy.

But this time in front of the spotlight, some of the claims didn’t work so well. I’m not talking about the kind of outright lies that could land Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Tim Cook of Apple, Sundar Pichai of Google or Jeff Bezos of Amazon in trouble after taking an oath to tell the truth. But members of Congress, especially Democrats who run the committee and shepherded its months-long investigation, came prepared with questions that poked holes in Big Tech’s aging arguments — talking points that might sound reasonable on the surface, but collapse under scrutiny.

Tech giants’ products may still be very popular with consumers. But more and more of us are separating out what we love to do with our smartphone or smart speaker from the behavior of the company that makes it.

Here are the five biggest little lies that I think have run their course.

Rep. David Cicilline a Democrat from Rhode Island and chairman of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law, wears a protective mask during a hearing. (Graeme Jennings/Bloomberg)

1) You’re in control of your data

Google’s Pichai repeated this tech platitude when pressed by Rep. Val Demings (D-Fla.) over the company’s decision to combine its existing trove of data with the data held by DoubleClick, a big ad network it bought. “We today make it very easy for users to be in control of their data. We have simplified their settings,” he said.

It’s true that Google as well as Facebook and other tech giants offer consumers lots of privacy knobs and switches. But if you don’t know to use them — and if they’re not easy to use — does that really put you in control? Most people don’t think so. In 2019, Pew Research found that 81 percent of Americans think they have very little or no control over the collection of their data — and 59 percent have little or no understanding about what companies do with their data.

Val Demings' police background could complicate her Biden VP ...
Rep. Val Demings (D-Fla.)

Goodbye, Chrome: Google’s Web browser has become spy software

 

I’ve likened the situation to saying anyone can fly a 747 because it has a lot of knobs and controls.Pichai borrowed this line from Facebook’s Zuckerberg, who similarly asserted that consumers are “in control” of their data in his 2018 testimony to Congress no fewer than 45 times.

 

Framing the debate around control actually ignores a bigger issue. Big tech companies like to say they’re collecting all this data to serve us better, when that data also means incredible power — and profit — for them.

While questioning Pichai on why Google wanted the DoubleClick data, Demings said, “You’re saying more user data does not mean the more money that Google can collect?”

“Most of the data today we collect is to help users and provide personalized experiences back,” Pichai replied.

This much is clear: Google is the world’s largest advertising company and the data it collects about us is fuel that powers it. As Demings told Pichai, “Because of Google’s dominance, users have no choice but to surrender.”

While you’re sleeping, your iPhone stays busy. (Washington Post Illustration; iStock/The Washington Post)

2) You have lots of choice

When Rep. Hank Johnson (D-Ga.) asked Apple’s Cook about the total control it has over the iPhone App Store, Cook pivoted to the idea that it faces lots of competition for selling software.

“There is a competition for developers, just like there’s a competition for customers. … Developers, they can write their apps for Android or Windows or Xbox or PlayStation,” he said. “I would describe it as a street fight for market share in the smartphone business.”

But wait: Apple has made switching from an iPhone to an Android phone as painful as possible. (Just try to get your family and friends to switch to a texting platform other than Apple’s proprietary iMessage.) And last time I checked, there weren’t a ton of mobile apps for the now-defunct Windows Mobile store, much less Xbox or PlayStation.

These companies know well that consumers are driven by convenience and use their power over the pillars of our digital lives to make it rather inconvenient to go anywhere else. Yes, you can technically export your data from Facebook and take it someplace else — but few bother trying to get their friends and family to join them.

Pichai in his opening remarks said consumers have more potential sources of information than ever. But that hasn’t reduced our reliance on Google for searches when it’s baked into the most popular Web browser, Google Chrome, and most popular mobile phone software, Google’s Android.

“It is effectively impossible to use the Internet without using in one way or another the services of these four companies,” said Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) in his opening remarks.

Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.

3) We’re not even that big!

In his opening remarks, Bezos pulled out one of Amazon’s familiar retorts to concerns it’s a monopoly: “Amazon accounts for less than 1 percent of the [$]25 trillion in the global retail market and less than 4 percent of U.S. retail.”

But later in the hearing, Rep. Joe Neguse (D-Colo.) asked why Bezos was counting all of retail — even gas stations — as its competition. Amazon accounts for 38 percent of all U.S. online shopping, according to research firm eMarketer, and much more for products such as books.

“Factually, it’s an important distinction,” Neguse said.

Bezos, who tried to draw a vague distinction between a retail “channel” and an overall “market,” didn’t acknowledge what’s obvious to most consumers: Buying things online is not the same as going to a store. When you want to buy something online, Amazon is the place that is most likely to have it — because sellers know its scale can’t be ignored. And especially during the pandemic, buying online versus buying in stores are not equivalent.

(Bezos owns The Washington Post, but I review all technology with the same critical eye.)

Other CEOs also tried this define-the-market strategy during their testimony.

Zuckerberg suggested that Facebook was competing with all products that connect people, not just other social networking companies. “The space of people connecting with other people is a very large space,” he said. That’s true, but excluding YouTube, Facebook is the only social network used by a vast majority — 69 percent — of Americans, according to Pew. Next closest: Facebook-owned Instagram, used by 37 percent of U.S. adults.

“We don’t have a dominant share in any market or in any product category where we do business,” said Apple’s Cook. That’s also true, but the billion-plus people who use iPhones have no choice but to go through Apple to buy apps and services to use on the devices.

4) We only provide you the ‘most relevant’ information

Google wants us to believe that its products only have our interest at heart. “We’ve always focused on providing users the most relevant information, and we rely on that trust for users to come back to Google every day,” Pichai said.

But Rep. David N. Cicilline (D-R.I.) asserted that Google’s business model is actually incentivized to just show, as he put it, “whatever is most profitable for Google.”

The reality is, Google’s answer to queries increasingly involves Google as an answer. A study published earlier this week by tech watchdog news outlet the Markup found that of 15,000 recent popular queries — such as “Alzheimer’s disease” — Google devoted 41 percent of the first page of mobile search results to its own sites and what it calls “direct answers,” which included information copied from other sources. Google spokesperson Lara Levin told the Markup it shouldn’t have counted “answers” as “Google.” (Google makes five times as much revenue through advertising on its own sites as it does selling ad space on outside sites, the outlet reported.)

It’s not just Google that uses its power over the software we rely on for answers to privilege itself. Rep. Jamie B. Raskin (D-Md.) asked Bezos about bias in Alexa, Amazon’s talking virtual assistant that owns more than 60 percent of the smart-speaker market. Amazon’s own Prime Music is the Alexa’s default music service, he noted.

And then Raskin asked why, when a customer asks Alexa to buy batteries, does Amazon’s talking AI recommend Amazon’s own brand?

Bezos’s response to this was honest. “I’m sure there are cases where we do promote our own products. This is, of course a common practice in business. And so it wouldn’t surprise me if Alexa sometimes does promote our own products.”

5) Social media doesn’t profit from harmful information

Toward the middle of the hearing, Zuckerberg agreed with Cicilline that the social network had a responsibility to limit the spread of content that could be harmful to people.

“I’d like to add that I do not believe that we have any incentive to have this content on our service. People don’t like it,” said Zuckerberg.

“We rank what we show in the feed based on what is going to be the most meaningful to people and is going to create long-term satisfaction, not what’s just going to get engagement or clicks today,” he said.

You are probably spreading misinformation. Here’s how to stop.

Then why is misinformation so often among the most-viewed and most-engaged content on Facebook? Cicilline read off several examples that were among the 10 most-shared Facebook posts in 2020. Just this week, a viral video claiming a false cure for the coronavirus racked up 20 million views on the social network before Facebook eventually took it off.

Facebook’s business is built on our attention — having its app or website open in front of us where it can show us ads. It seems intuitive that the more controversial a post is, the more people share it or comment on it. If Facebook has data to the contrary, I’d like to see it.

“It’s about Facebook’s business that prioritizes engagement to keep people on the platform to serve more advertisements,” said Cicilline.

Elsewhere in the testimony, where Facebook’s ownership of Instagram and WhatsApp was a hot topic, Zuckerberg also suggested that being so big helped it to spot and take down harmful information. Scale certainly has its advantages. But isn’t it also possible Facebook would doing a better job if it had competition from Instagram and WhatsApp that might, like Twitter, approach the problem differently?

Then consumers could have real choice.

Trump tweets video full of lies by his new favorite COVID doctor.

Trump defends hydroxychloroquine after doctor claims it will cure COVID. The doctor also blames witchcraft for illness and “people having sex in their dreams with demons.”

VOX

Facebook, Twitter and YouTube have taken down a video spreading false information about a coronavirus “cure” that was shared by  Trump. The clip was viewed millions of times before it was scrubbed from the social media platforms. 

Trump shared the video to 28 million users who have “liked” his page on Facebook and his 84 million followers on Twitter.

Trump was asked about his views on Fauci after he retweeted a message (above) Monday night claiming the doctor misled the public on hydroxychloroquine

The video published by right-wing website Breitbart shows a news conference in front of the Supreme Court steps with South Carolina Republican Rep. Ralph Norman and several people claiming to be doctors who have worked with COVID-19 patients. Dr. Stella Immanuel, one member of the group calling itself “America’s Frontline Doctors,” said hydroxychloroquine, a drug that was touted by Mr. Trump, is a “cure” for coronavirus. “This virus has a cure, it’s called hydroxychloroquine, zinc, and Zithromax,” she said. “You don’t need masks, there is a cure.” 

Mr. Trump also retweeted a podcast featuring former White House strategist Steve Bannon that claimed Fauci was misleading the American public on the drug. That tweet has not been taken down.

Asked about the disputed video at his White House briefing Tuesday, Mr. Trump said: “There was a group of doctors yesterday, a large group that were put on the internet, and for some reason the internet wanted to take them down. And took them off. I guess Twitter took them off, and I think Facebook took them off. I don’t know why. I think they’re very respected doctors. There was a woman who was spectacular in her statements about it and she’s had tremendous success with it.”

Another reporter pointed out, “The woman you said is a great doctor said masks don’t work and there’s a cure for COVID-19, both of which health experts say is not true. She’s also made videos saying doctors make vaccines from DNA from aliens and that they’re trying to create a vaccine to make you immune from becoming religious…”

The president replied, “I can tell you this — she was on air, along with many other doctors. They were big fans of hydroxychloroquine. And I thought she was very impressive in the sense that, from where she came, I don’t know which country she comes from, but she said that she’s had tremendous success with hundreds of different patients. And I thought her voice was an important voice. But I know nothing about her.” Donald Trump, Jr. speaks at the University of Florida. The...The president’s son, Donald Trump Jr., also shared the fake cure video. His Twitter account was temporarily suspended.

Andy Surabian, a spokesman for Donald Trump Jr., responded, “Twitter suspending Don Jr. for sharing a viral video of medical professionals discussing their views on Hydroxychloroquine is further proof that Big Tech is intent on killing free expression online and is another instance of them committing election interference to stifle Republican voices.”

Similar to the conspiracy documentary-style video, “Plandemic,” the clip has resurfaced on different websites and other social media platforms, illustrating the ongoing battle with misinformation. 

  • The tweet was quickly removed by Twitter. However, VICE News was able to find multiple versions of the video still available on all platforms on Tuesday morning.Despite the high-profile nature of the video, Facebook took hours to remove it, highlighting once again that the company, which has over 2.5 billion users, simply cannot control the spread of disinformation on its network. [Vice / David Gilbert
  • [The Daily Beast / Will Sommer]:
  • The conspiracy video that both Trumps chose to promote is objectively absurd: As the Daily Beast reported Tuesday, a doctor featured in the video has argued that the US government is run by “reptilians,” among other bizarre claims.
  • Immanuel is a registered physician in Texas, according to a Texas Medical Board database, and operates a medical clinic out of a strip mall next to her church, Firepower Ministries.
  • Immanuel was born in Cameroon and received her medical degree in Nigeria.In sermons posted on YouTube and articles on her website, Immanuel claims that medical issues like endometriosis, cysts, infertility, and impotence are caused by sex with “spirit husbands” and “spirit wives”—a phenomenon Immanuel describes essentially as witches and demons having sex with people in a dreamworld.
  • “They are responsible for serious gynecological problems,” Immanuel said. “We call them all kinds of names—endometriosis, we call them molar pregnancies, we call them fibroids, we call them cysts, but most of them are evil deposits from the spirit husband,” Immanuel said of the medical issues in a 2013 sermon. “They are responsible for miscarriages, impotence—men that can’t get it up.”

Immanuel’s bizarre medical ideas don’t stop with demon sex in dreams. In a 2015 sermon that laid out a supposed Illuminati plan hatched by “a witch” to destroy the world using abortion, gay marriage, and children’s toys, among other things, Immanuel claimed that DNA from space aliens is currently being used in medicine.

Immanuel claimed in another 2015 sermon posted that scientists had plans to install microchips in people, and develop a “vaccine” to make it impossible to become religious. “They found the gene in somebody’s mind that makes you religious, so they can vaccinate against it,” Immanuel said. Immanuel elaborated on her fascination with witchcraft in her 2015 Illuminati sermon, claiming that witches were intent on seizing control of children.

Stella Immanuel has run the Fire Power Ministries in Houston, Texas, since 2002
Dr. Immanuel has run the Fire Power Ministries in Houston, Texas, since 2002
In her 2015 sermon on the Illuminati’s supposed agenda to bring down the United States, Immanuel argues that a wide variety of toys, books, and TV shows, from Pokémon—which she declares “Eastern demons”—to Harry Potter and the Disney Channel shows Wizards of Waverly Place and That’s So Raven were all part of a scheme to introduce children to spirits and witches.

Immanuel has seized on her newfound celebrity, tweeting a video demanding that CNN hosts and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases chief Anthony Fauci give her jars of their urine so she can test if they’re secretly taking hydroxychloroquine even as they caution against its use.  “I double dog dare y’all give me a urine sample,” Immanuel tweeted in her challenge. [The Daily Beast / Will Sommer]

  • But the coronavirus misinformation problem isn’t just coming from the White House. Over the weekend, the right-wing Sinclair Broadcast Group came under fire for its plan — now abandoned — to air an interview with a conspiracy theorist featured in the Plandemic movie. [Vox / Zeeshan Aleem]
  • Image: Protestors Rally At Oregon State Capitol Against Stay-At-Home Order
  • The video that Trump shared on Monday was backed by the Tea Party Patriots, a fundraising group that has donated more than $24 million to Republicans since 2014. [NBC News / Brandy Zadrozny and Ben Collins]
  • And while Trump continues to amplify baseless coronavirus conspiracies, the pandemic is still running rampant in the US. More than 148,000 people have died of the virus, and a federal report from this past weekend urged 21 states to tighten measures aimed at controlling the virus. [New York Times]

Trump Tries To Appeal To ‘Housewives’ And White Suburbs, But His Views Seem Outdated

Today’s suburbs are multiracial, diverse and highly educated. All-white neighborhoods are practically all gone with Blacks & Hispanics a significant minority. 

NPR

Suburban voters have been growing as a share of the electorate since the mid-1990s, and they have become consequential in presidential elections. They could be determinative in this one too, as they make up roughly half of all voters.

Since George W. Bush’s reelection, the candidate who won the suburbs won the election, except in 2012. Then, Mitt Romney won the suburbs and lost to Barack Obama, showing why it’s even more important for a Republican to win over suburban voters.

Based on national exit polls, here are the percentages of the electorate that were suburban voters in recent elections, plus the margins for each candidate:

2004: 45% (Bush 52%-47%)
200849% (Obama 50%-48%)
201247% (Romney 50%-48%)
201650% (Donald Trump 47%-45%)

You can see that Trump won suburban voters narrowly in 2016, but he has since cratered with them. In recent polling, he’s down by a historic margin, an average of 15 points.

Some recent examples:

ABC News/Washington PostJoe Biden +9
Fox News: Biden +11
CNN: Biden +14
Quinnipiac University: Biden +22
NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist: Biden +25

And it’s especially bad among suburban women. In the latest NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll, 66% of suburban women disapproved of the job President Trump is doing overall, and 58% said they “strongly” disapprove.

That is stunning, considering suburban women have been a particular focus of Republicans in the last 20 years, dubbed everything from “soccer moms” to “security moms” to “Walmart moms.”

Whatever you call them, they’re not in Trump’s corner — and the consequences have been massive for Republicans. They have been unable to pass any major legislative items since Democrats wrested control of the House in 2018. Democrats were able to do so because of their surprising strength in right-leaning suburban districts.

An aerial view of Rancho Palos Verdes, a suburb of Los Angeles.

Daniel Slim/AFP via Getty Images

Trump needs them back, and he’s trying to use fear to do it. Amid COVID-19 spikes, Trump is trying to change the subject, running an ad called “Abolished.” It makes the case that “You won’t be safe in Joe Biden’s America,” because police departments would be defunded — even though Biden has said he’s not in favor of defunding the police.

And Trump seems to be trying to make his case with an anachronistic racial appeal to a declining audience.

Trump has claimed that if his Democratic opponent were elected president, “our suburbs” would be destroyed. In recent weeks, he specifically called out a 2015 Obama-era fair-housing initiative that requires local governments to address historic patterns of racial desegregation.

“Your home will go down in value, and crime rates will rapidly rise,” Trump said. “People have worked all their lives to get into a community, and now they’re going to watch it go to hell. Not going to happen, not while I’m here.”

But the suburbs have grown more diverse since the mid-20th century, when they were overwhelmingly white. The suburbs saw an explosion of growth then, as “white flight” from cities took hold.

Leah Boustan, a Princeton University economics professor and author of the book Competition in the Promised Land: Black Migrants in Northern Cities and Labor Markets, wrote in a New York Times op-ed in 2017:

I compared the patterns of black migration into cities and white departures for the suburbs in 70 Northern and Western metropolitan areas from 1940 to 1970. I found that for every black arrival, two whites left the central city. This figure puts a precise value on what contemporaries already suspected: When black people moved in, white people moved out.

Since then, though, particularly with Latino demographic growth, America’s suburban counties are two-thirds white. A Pew Research Center study from 2018 found the suburbs to be 68% white, 14% Hispanic and 11% Black.

The share of white people was down 8 percentage points from 2000. And in that time, Pew found immigrants made up a quarter of suburban growth.

That kind of appeal, pitting whites against Blacks and Latinos, is outdated, Republican pollster Christine Matthews told NPR’s Tamara Keith. “He thinks it’s basically the planned development of Levittown in the 1960s as opposed to today’s suburbs, which are multiracial, diverse and highly educated,” Matthews said.

Trump’s view of women’s role in — or out of — the home is also antiquated. At his Tulsa, Okla., rally last month, he made up a story for effect that seems to have been a predecessor for the “Abolished” ad now running. He warned of what would happen, in his view, if police were “defunded.”

“Hey, it’s 1 o’clock in the morning,” Trump said, “and a very tough, I’ve used the word on occasion, hombre, a very tough hombre, is breaking into the window of a young woman whose husband is away as a traveling salesman or whatever he may do. And you call 911, and they say, ‘I’m sorry — this number’s no longer working.’ By the way, you have many cases like that, many, many, many.”

Trump also appealed to the “Suburban Housewives of America” in a tweet Thursday, saying, “Biden will destroy your neighborhood and your American Dream. I will preserve it, and make it even better!”

But the percentage of mothers who stay at home has declined significantly from the 1960s, when they were about half of all mothers.

Today they’re about a quarter, according to Pew:

1967: 49%
2016 (latest data): 27%

Trump has a view of America that seems frozen in time. He has said that America has most lived up to his “Make America Great Again” ideal at the start of the 20th century and in the “late ’40s and ’50s,” the postwar boom time. Nonwhites, though, hardly shared in the prosperity — or equality.

There has been a sea change in America in recent decades on everything from views of race and protests to who Americans’ neighbors are. The New York Times, for example, found that all-white neighborhoods are practically entirely gone, compared with their prominence 40 years ago:

In 1980, about a quarter of the census tracts in America were almost exclusively white — 97 percent non-Hispanic white or more — and one-third of white residents lived in such a neighborhood. Those figures are probably undercounts, as the 1980 census lacked tract boundaries for much of rural America. But by the latest census data, just 5 percent of white residents live in such a place, mostly in rural areas.

Fires and Pepper Spray in Seattle as Police Protests Widen Across U.S.

Protesters in Seattle faced a line of police officers after marching in support of demonstrators in Portland, Ore., on Saturday.

From Los Angeles to New York, protesters marched in a show of solidarity with demonstrations in Portland, Ore. In Seattle, they smashed windows and set fires. A shooting at a protest in Austin, Texas, left one man dead.

NY TIMES

A series of strident new protests over police misconduct rattled cities across the country over the weekend, creating a new dilemma for state and local leaders who had succeeded in easing some of the turbulence in their streets until a showdown over the use of federal agents in Oregon stirred fresh outrage.

With some demonstrators embracing destructive protest methods and police often using aggressive tactics to subdue both them and others who are demonstrating peacefully, the scenes on Saturday night in places like Seattle, Oakland, Calif., and Los Angeles recalled the volatile early days of the protests after the death of George Floyd at the end of May.

in Seattle, where a day of demonstrations focused on police violence left a trail of broken windows and people flushing pepper spray from their eyes. At least 45 protesters had been arrested as of early evening, and both protesters and police officers suffered injuries.

Carrying signs such as “Feds Go Home” and shouting chants of “No justice, no peace,” some among the crowd of about 5,000 protesters stopped at a youth detention center and lit several construction trailers there on fire. Some smashed windows of nearby businesses, ignited a fire in a coffee shop and blew an eight-inch hole through the wall of the Seattle Police Department’s East Precinct building, the police said.

The police responded by firing flash grenades, showering protesters with pepper spray and abruptly rushing into crowds, knocking people to the ground. After a flash grenade left one woman with bloody injuries, police officers shoved people who had stopped to help her.

Gunshots can be heard in this video taken live from a protest in Austin, Texas, where one man was shot and killed.

In Austin, Texas, the police said one man was shot and killed just before 10 p.m. during a protest in the city’s downtown. In a live video from the scene, protesters are seen marching through an intersection when a car blares its horn. Seconds later, five shots ring out, followed shortly after by several more loud bangs.

The man who was killed may have approached a vehicle with a rifle before he was shot and killed, Officer Katrina Ratcliff said. Ms. Ratcliff said the person who shot and killed the man had fired from inside the vehicle. That person was detained and is cooperating with officers, she said. No one else was injured.

In Los Angeles, protesters clashed with officers in front of the federal courthouse downtown. Videos showed people smashing windows and lobbing water bottles at officers after protesters said the police fired projectiles at them.

The federal courthouse in Portland has been the scene of nightly, chaotic demonstrations for weeks, which continued again into Sunday morning, as thousands participated in marches around the city, the 59th consecutive day of protests there. Earlier, a group of nurses in scrubs had joined an organized group of mothers in helmets and fathers in hard hats, all assembled against the fence of a federal courthouse where federal agents — a deployment that has been a key focus of the recent demonstrations — have been assembled.

The “Wall of Moms” led a march to downtown Portland, Ore., on Saturday night.

Protesters in several cities said the smoke-filled videos of federal agents firing tear gas and shoving protesters in Portland had brought them to the streets on Saturday. In addition to marching in solidarity with the Portland protesters, the demonstration in Aurora, Colorado was also in response to the death of Elijah McClain, a 23-year-old massage therapist who died several days after officers put him in a chokehold last summer.

In Seattle, protesters in June laid claim to several city blocks, pressuring the police to temporarily abandon a police station in the city’s Capitol Hill neighborhood and establishing a free protest zone that endured for several weeks. When the city authorities finally reclaimed the zone, there was little resistance. And things remained calm. The Seattle City Council began embracing plans to make substantial cuts to the police department budget, restrict the use of tear gas and put the city on a path to reimagining policing.

Police and protesters Saturday met at the same intersection in Seattle where the protests stemming from George Floyd’s death took place.  

Carmen Best, the Seattle police chief, stressed that a number of demonstrators also used violence. Some were tossing concrete blocks from a rooftop to the street below, she said. The coffee shop that was set afire had occupied apartments above it that had to be evacuated, she said.

Trump has seized on the scenes of national unrest — statues toppled and windows smashed — to build a law-and-order message for his re-election campaign, spending more than $26 million on television ads depicting a lawless dystopia of empty police stations and 911 answering services that he argues might be left in a nation headed by his Democratic rival, Joseph R. Biden Jr.

Mr. Biden insisted last week that the president’s pledge to inject a federal law-and-order presence into the already volatile issue of policing shows that he is “determined to sow chaos and division. To make matters worse instead of better.”

The situation has left city leaders, now watching the backlash unfold on their streets, outraged and caught in the middle. Mayor Jenny Durkan of Seattle said in an interview Sunday that the city is in the middle of a self-fulfilling prophecy, with protesters infuriated by the federal presence in Portland smashing windows and setting fires, the very images of “anarchy” that the president has warned about.

Thousands of people returned to the federal courthouse in Portland  on Friday. Some threw fireworks at the officers protecting the building, while others tried to break down the fence surrounding it.

Some cities had welcomed Mr. Trump’s offer to send additional law federal law enforcement agents in to help combat escalating gang violence and drug crime, but insisted they would brook no federal agents on their streets arresting and tear gassing protesters.

Democratic city and state leaders pushed back against the new federal presence, but also expressed frustration that some on the streets were going too far and playing into the president’s gambit.

“No matter how many troops Donald Trump sends into American cities, it’s not going to distract them from their primary concern which is the coronavirus and their health,” said Jared Leopold, a Democratic strategist.

For city officials, the challenge is more immediate than the November election — it is bringing an end to nights of clashes on their streets.

 

Back to School? Maybe Not

“Is it better off returning to physical school? Yes,” said Harvard University education expert Robert Schwartz, “but this administration has made that extremely problematic.”

VOX

  • In a major shift, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday revised its position from just two weeks ago with a new set of guidelines that endorse reopening K-12 schools this fall despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. [New York Times]
  • President Donald Trump has in recent weeks seized on the issue of schools reopening and called for the CDC to modify its previous guidance to make those reopenings easier — which it now appears to have done. [CNN / Maggie Fox and Nick Valencia]
  • School buses in San Francisco. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has published new guidance two weeks after President Trump criticized its earlier recommendations on school reopenings.
  • Thursday’s recommendations stress the negative social, educational, and emotional impacts of not reopening on students, but ultimately leave the decision up to state and local officials. [NBC News / Shannon Pettypiece] Experts also are clear that returning to classroom instruction will be safe only if and when the US gets a handle on its coronavirus outbreak. “Is it better off returning to physical school? Yes,” said Harvard University education expert Robert Schwartz, “but this administration has made that extremely problematic.”

While children infected by the virus are at low risk of becoming severely ill or dying, how often they become infected and how efficiently they spread the virus to others is not definitively known. Children in middle and high schools may also be at much higher risk of both than those under 10, according to some recent studies.

 A large new study from South Korea found that children younger than 10 transmit the virus to others much less often than adults do, but that those between the ages of 10 and 19 can spread the virus at least as much as adults do.

P.S. 20 in Brooklyn. Across the country, educators have confronted a politically charged debate over reopening schools.The new guidelines may only do so much to encourage reopening: According to Education Week, at least 9 of the 15 largest school districts in the US have decided against returning to in-person classes in the fall. [Education Week]

  • Polling also suggests that most people aren’t comfortable with the idea of reopening schools unless major changes are made. According to an AP poll conducted earlier this month and released Thursday, only 8 percent of Americans support schools fully reopening as usual. [AP / Collin Binkley and Hannah Fingerhut]
  • The Trump administration has indicated that it hopes to use the next coronavirus aid package, which is still in the works, to incentivize schools to reopen by conditioning funding on their doing so. [Politico / Nicole Gaudiano, Michael Stratford, and Juan Perez Jr.]
  • Trump leaned into that idea at a press conference Thursday, telling reporters that “if the school is closed, the money” — the White House wants to include about $105 billion for schools in the next relief bill — “should follow the student.” [NPR / Anya Kamenetz]
  • That idea aligns with a bill introduced by Republican Sens. Tim Scott and Lamar Alexander earlier this week. The School Choice Now Act would clear the way for more students to be homeschooled or to attend private schools instead of public schools. [Twitter / Andrew Ujifusa]

WELCOME TO THE SUNSHINE STATE

As virus hit Florida, its governor sidelined scientists to follow Trump

The state’s crisis, experts and officials say, has revealed the shortcomings of a response built on shifting metrics, influenced by a few advisers and tethered to the Trump administration.

Essential work leads to a coronavirus outbreak for one group of immigrants in Florida

Guatemalan laborers, asked to work through the pandemic, are now among the hardest-hit communities in the hard-hit state.