This headline and others like it are grossly inaccurate & irresponsible.
Our officers are not "paramilitary." They are civilian law enforcement doing their job — enforcing federal law.https://t.co/BFbKVw9O12
— Acting Secretary Chad Wolf (@DHS_Wolf) July 23, 2020
Blog
Feds Out of Portland
Maybe no one would have noticed if Trump had sent in some FBI guys just to help guard the federal courthouse in Portland, but Trump lives by the motto “Be ominously obnoxious or go home.” So he sends in unidentified agents from customs, the border patrol, and other such agencies to scoop demonstrators off the streets. Now he’s threatening to do the same thing in other cities, including Chicago. State and local officials in Oregon and around the country are concerned.
Trump may like the optics in this election season. To many of us, however, it looks bloody fascistic. Let local communities work this stuff out. The last thing they need is an escalation of trouble compliments of an invading federal force.
Reason’s Coverage of Portland
They’ve got some great stuff:
- Trump Deploys Lawlessness Against Lawlessness
- Dispatch From Portland: A Distinct Lack of Crowbars and Cops
- Feds Send Outside Agitators To Escalate Conflict in Portland
- ACLU Sues Federal Agents Deployed in Portland
- Department of Homeland Security Reportedly Sending 150 Agents to Chicago in Expansion of Federal Crackdown
- Sending Secret Police To Do Protester Snatch-n-Grabs Is Bad, Mmmkay?
If That Ain’t The Most Soviet Thing…
Guys, check out this screed against a payroll tax cut at CNN.com.
Their awesome points:
- Trump wants it.
- Some Republicans and Democrats don’t want it.
- Some people say it won’t “boost” the economy now.
- It won’t help people who don’t have jobs.
- There’s still a virus, and payroll tax cuts can’t change that fact, so there!
- Some people say direct welfare payments are always preferable to tax cuts.
- And of course: how are we going to afford all those direct welfare payments if we cut tax revenue?
I tell ya what.
Potent SARS-CoV-2 Antibodies Isolated From Patients With Severe Symptoms Show Promise
The main stream media devoted considerable ink to try and dispel the notion that herd immunity to the SARS-CoV-2 virus was not likely due to the nature of the immune response to the virus. They claim (mainly citing evidence from non-peer reviewed studies), that the immune response was short-lived and that as little as 10-15% of the population may be immune. However, research published in Nature paints a different picture of how our bodies immune system responds to the virus and how different levels of exposure and disease severity may illicit an immune response that produces potent antibodies against the virus.
As the SARS-CoV-2 vaccine race continues, and effective COVID-19 treatments remain scarce, many researchers are looking to find antibodies that would be an effective way to treat patients infected with SARS-CoV-2, especially early in the course of infection, and to prevent infection, particularly in the elderly. They could also be used to protect those in high-risk situations, such as healthcare workers in COVID-19 wards.
These antibodies can either be designed and engineered, based on similar infections such as SARS and MERS. Or, they can be isolated from people who survived a SARS-CoV-2 infection.
A team from Columbia University Irving Medical Center noted that they have isolated antibodies from several COVID-19 patients that are, to date, among the most potent in neutralizing the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
Their work is published today in Nature in a paper titled, “Potent neutralizing antibodies directed to multiple epitopes on SARS-CoV-2 spike.”
The team reported the isolation of 61 SARS-CoV-2-neutralizing monoclonal antibodies from five infected patients hospitalized with severe disease. Among these are 19 antibodies that potently neutralized the authentic SARS-CoV-2 in vitro, nine of which exhibited exquisite potency, with 50% virus-inhibitory concentrations of 0.7 to 9 ng/mL.
“We now have a collection of antibodies that’s more potent and diverse compared to other antibodies that have been found so far, and they are ready to be developed into treatments,” said David Ho, MD, scientific director of the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center and professor of medicine at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, who directed the work.
The researchers have confirmed that their purified, strongly neutralizing antibodies provide significant protection from SARS-CoV-2 infection in hamsters, and they are planning further studies in other animals and people.
More at Genetic And Engineering News
On The Ballot
Looks like the Counsel On Foreign Relations won’t be endorsing Trump this year.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is visiting the United Kingdom and Denmark this week amid a strain in the transatlantic alliance. President Donald Trump has criticized the low levels of defense spending among fellow NATO members since his 2016 campaign, and his administration has clashed with European allies over issues ranging from trade to the coronavirus pandemic response to relations with China.
The transatlantic alliance has been a pillar of U.S. foreign policy for decades. How should Washington approach the next phase of its partnership with Europe?
Mira Rapp-Hooper explains why the U.S.-led alliance system worked so well in the past—and why the United States needs the support of its allies now more than ever.
Scott R. Anderson and Christopher C. Fonzone propose that Congress check the president’s ability to unilaterally withdraw from international agreements.
Karen Donfried and Wolfgang Ischinger contend that the coronavirus crisis could be an opportunity to repair U.S.-European relations.
Julianne Smith and Torrey Taussig consider Europe’s role amid the intensifying U.S.-Chinese rivalry. Finally,
Philip H. Gordon and Jeremy Shapiro argue that there’s no return to the old transatlantic alliance—but the next U.S. president could craft a new one in its place.
Donald Trump on Ghislaine Maxwell: ‘I Wish Her Well’
“I just wish her well, frankly. I’ve met her numerous times over the years… I just wish her well, whatever it is.”
Anyone else? Anyone else wish Ghislaine Maxwell “well“?
I don’t. I think that if only bad things happen to her from now on that would be just fine.
Here are some pictures of some of the times Trump and Maxwell were seen together in public.







Move Along, Nothing To See Here
The main suspect in the shooting of the husband and son of Judge Salas, overseeing the Epstein-Deutsche Bank case, previously worked for a firm tied to US and Israeli intelligence as well as ties to Deutsche Bank.https://t.co/9RxQN5RU0o
— Whitney Webb (@_whitneywebb) July 21, 2020









