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American Academy of Pediatrics Backtracks on Science About Opening Schools Amid Teachers Union Revolt

If you are looking for the quintessential example of how our response to coronavirus is being driven by politics, not prudence or science, look no further than the sudden and inexplicable flip-flop of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) on reopening schools.

The anatomy of a political flip-flop and the politicization of our children

In June, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) put out an unambiguous statement “strongly” advocating “that all policy considerations for the coming school year should start with a goal of having students physically present in school.” It noted, based on all the available research, that not only are children not at risk from the virus, but they do not contribute to community spread. “Although children and adolescents play a major role in amplifying influenza outbreaks, to date, this does not appear to be the case with SARS-CoV-2.”

This is not the type of statement that can change over the course of a few weeks. It’s built upon consistent data from the beginning of the year showing that children are less vulnerable to COVID-19 and contribute less to its community spread than that of the flu. But as I lamented at the time, barely anyone in the media covered the AAP’s statement because it didn’t fit the narrative of the cult of coronavirus panic.

In the ensuing days, as more states discussed reopening schools, teachers’ unions throughout the country have vigorously protested. You know, they so much want to be teachers that they want to ensure schools are shut. Once this became a political circus, the AAP dropped all its science and prudence and gave in to the pressure. Something interesting happens when people like President Donald Trump and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis support reopening schools. That becomes an untenable position for any “prestigious” institution to hold. If Trump and DeSantis voiced support for children playing with puppies, the Left and the media would find something wrong with that too.

On Friday, the AAP published “updated” guidance on reopening schools, with a completely changed tune. In a press release announcing the update, the Academy is clearly responding to President Trump’s call for reopening when it stresses the need for local decision-making: “Local school leaders, public health experts, educators and parents must be at the center of decisions about how and when to reopen schools, taking into account the spread of COVID-19 in their communities and the capacities of school districts to adapt safety protocols to make in-person learning safe and feasible.”

While the updated guidance still says the Academy “strongly advocates” for the “goal of having students physically present in school,” the press release, which was designed to speak to the media, clearly waters down the original, unqualified call for schools to open. It adds that “schools in areas with high levels of COVID-19 community spread should not be compelled to reopen against the judgment of local experts. A one-size-fits-all approach is not appropriate for return to school decisions.”

Gee, what changed in just a few weeks? Has the fatality rate or transmissibility among kids gone up? Nope. It’s just “orange man bad.” The AAP took a swipe at Trump’s threat to cut off federal funding to schools that fail to reopen:

Reopening schools in a way that maximizes safety, learning, and the well-being of children, teachers, and staff will clearly require substantial new investments in our schools and campuses. We call on Congress and the administration to provide the federal resources needed to ensure that inadequate funding does not stand in the way of safely educating and caring for children in our schools. Withholding funding from schools that do not open in person fulltime would be a misguided approach, putting already financially strapped schools in an impossible position that would threaten the health of students and teachers.

The AAP asserts, “Science should drive decision-making on safely reopening schools,” but offers no scientific data to explain its flip-flop or its veiled attack on Trump for taking the position the AAP itself staked out before it became political.

Of course, unlike the original statement, which reflected the AAP’s true belief, untainted by politics, this one was picked up by the media everywhere.

Why is it that every time conservatives cite a prestigious institution, that institution is forced to walk back its position? We saw this recently with Michigan State researchers walking back research showing police shoot more white people per capita than black people after it was cited in essays by prominent conservatives.

The science is settled on low risk to and from children

Just how absurd is shutting schools for COVID-19? A study from the Consumer Product Safety Commission found that 13,837 children are hospitalized every year due to playground accidents, three times the number that have been hospitalized for COVID-19, and children have less of a chance of dying from COVID-19 than from getting struck by lightning. In fact, children 5-14 are 24 times more likely to die from homicide than from COVID-19, and that is unfortunately a growing concern in America’s inner cities.

Here is a powerful presentation from Yinon Wiess showing the risk (or lack thereof) of COVID-19 to children in the scheme of different ways they could die throughout the school year.

We need not speculate about the ability of school children to live normally during coronavirus. Sweden never closed its primary schools. The results? According to one analysis, at most only 14 children in Stockholm were hospitalized for what could possibly have been COVID-related ailments, and only one child with serious underlying conditions who tested positive wound up dying, “but the relevance for the outcome is unclear since other pathogens were also identified in post-mortem testing.”

A report by the Public Health Agency of Sweden found no measurable difference of outcomes in children between Sweden and Finland, even though Finland closed its schools. “Closure or not of schools had no measurable direct impact on the number of laboratory confirmed cases in school-aged children in Finland or Sweden,” concluded the report, even though Sweden, in general, had more cases among the population than Finland. “The negative effects of closing schools must be weighed against the positive indirect effects it might have on the mitigation of the covid-19 pandemic.”

They also found that the comparison “does not show any increased risk for teachers” because “the role of children in propagating this infection is likely to be small.”

Numerous countries have conducted studies that have yet to find child-to-adult transmission (UK, Australia, Switzerland, Canada, Netherlands, France, Ireland and Taiwan), but the most painstaking study is the one conducted by Iceland. Researchers sequenced all the genomes from samples of every positive case and tracked the mutation patterns. They concluded that “even if children do get infected, they are less likely to transmit the disease to others than adults. We have not found a single instance of a child infecting parents.”

It’s not that it’s impossible for children to ever transmit to adults, but the contribution of children is likely so low that it makes no sense to socially isolate and abuse them as part of any mitigation strategy.

As an article in the AAP’s own medical journal stated, “Evidence and experience argue that children, particularly school-aged children, are far less important drivers of SCoV2 transmission than adults.” In the article, titled, “COVID-19 Transmission and Children: The Child Is Not to Blame,” the authors concluded, “Therefore, serious consideration should be paid toward strategies that allow schools to remain open, even during periods of COVID-19 spread.”

If anything, this will allow countries to achieve herd immunity quicker through the lowest-risk population while assuming a level of risk that is lower than what we blissfully accept every flu season without batting an eyelash.

So, what sort of science is the AAP suddenly examining? The science of mob rule.

Last week, the United Teachers Los Angeles published a list of demands before schools can reopen, including mandatory mask-wearing, tiny class sizes, and impossible logistics to facilitate more social isolation.

What is the science driving these demands more than during any flu season? Who knows, but it’s likely the same science driving the other list of demands in its publication, which include: Medicare for all, a wealth tax, defunding the police, and financial aid for illegal aliens.

Truth be told, they are not wrong. There is just as much science behind closing schools until the police are abolished as there is behind closing them until the virus is eradicated. Which is why the only way to get the truth about a medical or scientific question is to study the literature published before the issue became political. (For more from the author of “American Academy of Pediatrics Backtracks on Science About Opening Schools Amid Teachers Union Revolt” please click HERE)

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Steve Bannon Claims Scientists From Wuhan Virus Lab Have ‘Defected’ to the West

Steve Bannon claims scientists in the Wuhan lab eyed as a potential source for COVID-19 have “defected” and are working with US intelligence agencies.

President Trump’s former chief strategist, a virulent China opponent, told the Daily Mail — while providing no evidence — that researchers from the Wuhan Institute of Virology are cooperating with the West to build a case that the bug spread from a lab leak.

“They are not talking to the media yet, but there are people out of the Wuhan lab and other labs that have come to the West and are turning over evidence of the culpability of the Chinese Communist Party,” Bannon told the tabloid. “I think people are going to be shocked.”

Bannon, giving the interview from a yacht off America’s East Coast, said the defectors were also speaking with agencies in Europe and the UK.

“People around these labs have been leaving China and Hong Kong since mid-February,” he went on. “[US intelligence] along with MI5 and MI6 are trying to build a very thorough legal case, which may take a long time. It’s not like James Bond.” (Read more from “Steve Bannon Claims Scientists From Wuhan Virus Lab Have ‘Defected’ to the West” HERE)

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This State Shatters Record for Largest Single-Day Virus Cases

Florida set a new national record for the largest daily increase in coronavirus cases in the United States on Sunday, while infections continue to spike around the world.

The state added at least 15,299 positive COVID-19 cases, for a total of 269,811, and recorded 45 more deaths, according to state Department of Health statistics. . .

Florida has had a record-breaking week leading to the all-time surge in cases. The state reported 514 fatalities last week, averaging 73 deaths per day. Three weeks ago, the daily average was 30 deaths.

The total number of deaths in Florida climbed to at least 4,242 on Sunday, according to the state.

Florida has nearly doubled its testing over the last month to almost 50,000 per day. The percentage of people testing positive has also risen, with the daily average over the past week exceeding 19 percent. A month ago, fewer than 5 percent of tests came up positive on a daily average. (Read more from “This State Shatters Record for Largest Single-Day Virus Cases” HERE)

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WATCH: Phoenix Mayor Peddles Misinformation About Hospital Morgue Space to Pick Partisan Fight

Phoenix Democratic Mayor Kate Gallego charged Friday that one major health care provider in her city has been forced to order refrigerated trucks because its hospitals have exhausted their morgue capacity.

“Our county public health agency just announced that they are going to be getting refrigerated trucks because the Abrazo health care system has run out of morgue beds,” Gallego said on MSNBC. “It is very scary out here. I wish we had given mayors the authority to act earlier.”

Abrazo Health, however, later released a statement contradicting the mayor’s claims, clarifying that “hospitals currently have adequate morgue space,” and that its order for refrigerated trucks came in response to the state requesting providers to implement their emergency plans which includes proactively preparing with backup resources.

(Read more from “Phoenix Mayor Peddles Misinformation About Hospital Morgue Space to Pick Partisan Fight” HERE)

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Dr. Fauci Admits There Are Important Reasons to Open Schools

Dr. Anthony Fauci, who directs the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in a radio interview that going back to school during the coronavirus pandemic may be a good idea for children.

“If you keep children out of school, the unintended negative ripple-effect consequences can be profound with regard to what the parents do,” Fauci said Wednesday during a SiriusXM program hosted by Dr. Marc Siegel, a physician and associate professor of medicine at the NYU Langone Medical Center.

“Stay off from work to be able to take care of their children, what about child care?” Fauci asked. “What about children who rely on schools for their lunch? Maybe the most important nutritional meal that they’ll get.”

Fauci, a member of the White House coronavirus task force, said that not allowing children to go back to school has significant ramifications.

“Within the context of doing whatever you can to safeguard the health and welfare of the children, we should try to get the schools open,” he said.

Siegel, also a Fox News Channel medical contributor, said on “Tucker Carlson Tonight” that it was good to hear Fauci speak positively about reopening schools this fall.

“I was so glad to see Dr. Fauci finally taking that position,” Siegel told Carlson. “When you consider the position that we need to take is ‘We are opening the schools,’ how do we go about doing it, what guidelines can help us? Not the guidelines getting in the way of it.”

Siegel said clarified guidelines expected next week from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention “may be more personal” and “maybe they will actually work.”

New COVID-19 cases in America reached record highs by climbing to about 50,000 a day, USA Today reported Monday.

About 3 million Americans have contracted the virus and more than 130,000 have died, data from Johns Hopkins University shows. (For more from the author of “Dr. Fauci Admits There Are Important Reasons to Open Schools” please click HERE)

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‘Message of Truth’: Chinese Virologist Accuses Beijing of Coronavirus Cover-Up, Flees Hong Kong (VIDEO)

Hong Kong scientist Dr. Li-Meng Yan was stepping into uncharted territory.

Hours before she boarded an April 28 Cathay Pacific flight to the United States, the respected doctor who specialized in virology and immunology at the Hong Kong School of Public Health had plotted her escape, packing her bag and sneaking past the censors and video cameras on campus. . .

Yan told Fox News in an exclusive interview that she believes the Chinese government knew about the novel coronavirus well before it claimed it did. She says her supervisors, renowned as some of the top experts in the field, also ignored research she was doing at the onset of the pandemic that she believes could have saved lives. . .

Yan’s story weaves an extraordinary claim about cover-ups at the highest levels of government and seemingly exposes the obsessive compulsion of President Xi Jinping and his Communist Party to control the coronavirus narrative: what China knew, when it knew it and what edited information it peddled to the rest of the world. . .

“The reason I came to the U.S. is because I deliver the message of the truth of COVID,” she told Fox News from an undisclosed location. (Read more from “‘Message of Truth’: Chinese Virologist Accuses Beijing of Coronavirus Cover-Up, Flees Hong Kong” HERE)

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Texas Border Counties Hospitalization Rate Is 5 Times the National Average

America is unique in its experience of coronavirus in that it appears it will have to undergo both its own epidemiological curve and Mexico’s, because the two countries are evidently more closely tied together than even individual U.S. states are to each other.

I have written a three-part series showing how the most serious cases that began to surface in the country in late May/early June – after we had already experienced our peak – came from Mexico. You can read the series here, here, and here. Now there is more shocking evidence of this phenomenon.

The data from border counties is astounding

The three Rio Grande Valley counties – Starr, Hidalgo, and Cameron – have 1,139 hospitalizations currently listed as COVID-19 patients. In total, as of yesterday, they had 4,070 active cases when combining the county dashboard data of the three counties. That is a 29% hospitalization-to-case ratio. As of June 27, that rate for the country was 5.8% (14.7K hospitalizations out of roughly 253,000 active cases).

Hidalgo County recorded just 23 virus deaths from the beginning of March through June 23, but 80 deaths in the two weeks since then. The three border counties are 4.4 percent of Texas’ population but account for 12 percent of the hospitalizations. We don’t know at this point how many more from the border were transferred to the larger cities up north, as we saw with the border-crossers in California who were sent to the larger city hospitals.

That is simply an astounding number and reveals once again that the Mexican side of the border is likely the biggest culprit driving the growth of the most serious cases, which we are not really seeing in most other parts of the country. It’s not natural that counties sitting at the border would mysteriously get hit with a strain of the virus causing so much more hospitalization than anywhere else. What this clearly demonstrates is a case drain flowing from across the border, where the most seriously ill patients are crossing over for care.

We are finding this dynamic across the border. Imperial County is one of California’s least densely populated counties, yet at 40.1 hospitalizations per 100,000 residents, it had the highest rate of coronavirus hospitalizations in the state. That is more than twice the rate of Los Angeles County, which is the largest county in the country and is 57 times more populous and 69 times more densely populated than Imperial County.

The rate of increase in positive tests has also grown five times quicker in Hidalgo County, the main border county in southeast Texas, than in Harris County (Houston). The same dynamic is playing out on California’s border with Mexico, where the border areas of San Diego County have the most cases per capita[.]

The Tijuana-California border as well as the Hidalgo County, Texas-Mexico border have the most cross-border travel from citizens on both sides. It doesn’t take Sherlock Holmes to figure out why these parts of America, which never had much of a problem in March and April, got hit around the same time Mexico began to surge:

The same story across the border … except for New Mexico

Arizona border towns also have a cross-travel culture with Mexico. Thus, we see zip codes in Yuma that had more cases than in Phoenix. The 85350 zip code of Yuma has 2,461 reported cases, more than 30 percent higher than the largest tally in Phoenix’s top zip code (85033), even though the latter is nearly three times more populous.

Also, it’s very likely that Yuma border cases were transferred to the hospitals in Phoenix and might have added to their numbers as well because the small border towns didn’t have capacity to deal with them, just as we saw in California. It would be interesting to find out how many of the border patients got transferred to Texas’s larger cities as well.

The shocking contrast to these three border states is the fourth one – New Mexico. New Mexico has barely experienced any deaths outside the Indian reservation areas and never experienced the hospitalization surge in June. New Mexico is the perfect control group when studying the effects of the border. The demographics are similar to the other three states, as are the weather and latitude. However, the difference is that although three counties in New Mexico touch the Mexican border, there is absolutely no civilization in the Mexican desert across the border. You have to travel much farther east to Juarez before you get to a city. Juarez is a sister city of El Paso, Texas, which is why anyone coming for care would go there, not to New Mexico. Moreover, there are no sister cities across the border for Americans living in New Mexico to work in or shop at and, in doing so, bring in Mexico’s later coronavirus hit.

The contrasting data are jarring. Doña Ana County, New Mexico’s main border county, experienced just 11 deaths. That is 1/10 the number of El Paso deaths (111), even though El Paso County is only three times larger, and 1/7 the number of deaths (71) in Cameron County (Brownsville), which is only two times larger.

Cochise County, Arizona, which is next door to New Mexico, had 20 deaths, but is half the size of Doña Ana County. According to Cochise County’s dashboard, most of that is being driven by the city of Douglas, which is right at the border and is a sister city of Agua Prieta in Mexico. Yuma County, Arizona, has roughly the same population as Doña Ana and has 124 deaths, 11 times greater. That’s because there is a sister city in Mexico and numerous green card holders and dual citizens came for treatment. The New York Times reported in early June, “Border towns in Arizona are experiencing an increase in infections that health officials believe is tied to people coming in from Sonora state.”

It’s the border, not the reopening from the lockdown

More circumstantial evidence that this is related to the border comes from demographic information on the county dashboards. In Cochise County, 72 percent of all cases where the ethnicity of the infected individual is known are Hispanic, even though Hispanics compose just 35.7 percent of the county’s population.

Thus, the enormous dichotomy between New Mexico and the other border states cannot be ignored and clearly demonstrates that border crossings from Mexico – both Mexican residents coming for treatment and Americans traveling back and forth – were responsible for the surge in the three larger border counties.

The notion that the reopening and not the border is the culprit for the spike in the three other border states is absurd. As Axios showed, Arizona experienced one of the most severe slowdowns in social mobility, and its shutdown appears to be much deeper than New Mexico’s. Moreover, California had the strictest and longest lockdown. L.A. still has severe restrictions to this day, yet it reported 65 deaths on Wednesday.

. . .New Mexico actually consistently had the most mobility and was the only state that had a score consistently above the national average.

Hence, it’s all about the border, not the reopening.

Finally, coming back to the Texas border, it’s important to remember that right during the target weeks when we would have expected deaths to rise from the reopening, there was not a single death recorded in Hidalgo County from May 15 to June 15. On the other hand, there were 80 deaths since June 23, coinciding perfectly with the timing of the Mexican coronavirus surge.

The real story is that while these politicians are busy infringing upon liberties of Americans, they forgot to do the one thing that actually helps: stop cross-border travel. In March, Governor Greg Abbott had no problem issuing a mandatory quarantine for those traveling back from California; Connecticut; New York; New Jersey; Washington; Atlanta, Georgia; Chicago, Illinois; Detroit, Michigan; or Miami, Florida. He even set up checkpoints on the roads leading into Texas from Louisiana to screen people and enforce the mandatory quarantine, as if Louisiana were an international border.

Yet, to this day, when it comes to the international border itself, while the hospitals in Mexico are failing to cope with the peak that began in late May, states refuse to issue a mandatory quarantine. Now, Americans are getting blamed.

Second-class citizens, indeed. (For more from the author of “Texas Border Counties Hospitalization Rate Is 5 Times the National Average” please click HERE)

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Men Busted for Selling Bleach as ‘Miracle’ Coronavirus Cure

A Florida family has been hit with federal charges for allegedly peddling a so-called coronavirus miracle cure that is actually a concoction used as an industrial bleach.

Mark Grenon, 62, and three of his sons, are accused of marketing and selling the product named Miracle Mineral Solution through an entity called the Genesis II Church of Health and Healing in Bradenton, according to a criminal complaint.

The toxic solution pushed by the Grenon family, also known as MMS, is typically used to treat textiles, industrial water, pulp and paper, according to the Food and Drug Administration.

The FDA has not approved the solution for any health-related use and has said ingesting it can cause vomiting and dehydration.

The Grenon’s also marketed the bleaching agent as a cure for other serious health conditions, including cancer, autism and AIDS, according to the complaint. (Read more from “Men Busted for Selling Bleach as ‘Miracle’ Coronavirus Cure” HERE)

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City Mandates Masks, Threatens Jail Term for Violators

The city of Englewood, Colo. located just south of Denver, will require all citizens to wear face masks Friday as coronavirus cases are on the rise. Violators will have the right to a trial but could face up to a year in prison or a $2,600 fine.

The emergency order was issued by City Manager J. Shawn Lewis and approved by the city council Monday, detailing that everyone over the age of 6-years old will be required to wear a mask when outside of their homes.

The order directs all members of the public to wear face masks that cover both their nose and mouth while in any retail, commercial, or government offices along with all health care facilities, including veterinary offices.

All people taking public transportation are required to wear face masks. Drivers of public transportation services, like Uber and taxi services are required to wear a face mask unless members of their family are in the vehicle.

Face coverings are not required when in a personal office and individuals are more than six feet apart from one another. (Read more from “City Mandates Masks, Threatens Jail Term for Violators” HERE)

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Doctors Rank Activities Posing Greatest Risks for Contracting Coronavirus; Coronavirus May Technically Be ‘Airborne,’ but That May Not Matter for Preventing Its Spread

By Fox News. With the coronavirus spiking in a number of states, a group of Texas doctors has released a ranked list on how risky certain activities are when it comes to contracting COVID-19.

The Texas Medical Association’s COVID-19 Task Force and Committee on Infectious Diseases ranked 37 activities on a scale of 1-10.

Opening the mail? The lowest risk activity, with a score of 1. Going to a bar? High risk – scoring a 9.

The group’s president, Dr. Diana Fite, has been urging residents to maintain good hand-washing hygiene, avoid going out as often as possible, follow social distancing guidelines and wear face masks in public.

Joining going to a bar as the riskiest activities are attending a large concert, going to a sports stadium and attending a religious service with more than 500 worshipers. (Read more from “Doctors Rank Activities Posing Greatest Risks for Contracting Coronavirus” HERE)

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Coronavirus May Technically Be ‘Airborne,’ but That May Not Matter for Preventing Its Spread

By Live Science. Experts agree that the novel coronavirus behind COVID-19 spreads through direct contact and large droplets that, once sneezed or coughed out, often fall harmlessly to the ground. But a recent letter signed by 239 scientists suggests that the virus may also spread by airborne transmission, lingering in the air for hours within lighter “microdroplets.” The letter challenges the most recent guidelines of the World Health Organization (WHO), urging the institution to recognize airborne transmission as a significant route of COVID-19 infection, and plan accordingly.

“We need to be attentive and mindful of all the important transmission pathways to make progress” with COVID-19, William Nazaroff, contributing author of the letter and professor emeritus of civil and environmental engineering at the University of California Berkeley, told Live Science.

On Tuesday (July 7), WHO said it is reviewing new evidence on whether COVID-19 can spread through airborne transmission, and would provide an update on the topic in the coming days, according to CNBC.

But epidemiologists and infectious disease experts are wary of the limited evidence for airborne transmission, and concerned that recent media reports on this letter will do more harm than good. “It is a shame that they felt the need to publish,” Paul Hunter, a professor at the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom and a member of WHO’s infection prevention committee, told Live Science. What’s more, even if COVID-19 can spread via the airborne route, it’s likely this happens only in limited circumstances and doesn’t require additional precautions in most cases, experts said.

“Given the ample evidence that reducing droplet transmission works [to reduce COVID-19 spread], throwing other things into the mix only confuses people and undermines the World Health Organization at a critical time,” Hunter said. (Read more from “Coronavirus May Technically Be ‘Airborne,’ but That May Not Matter for Preventing Its Spread” HERE)

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