George Soros gave Ivanka's husband's business a $250 million credit line in 2015 per WSJ. Soros is also an investor in Jared's business.

Saturday, April 25, 2020

Nassau County, NY, population 1.4 million, has more Covid-19 deaths than entire state of California, population 40 million. US is closed for one metropolitan area, won’t have 330 million tests for years. The goal isn’t to eliminate all risk, it’s to live reasonably with it-NY Times, Bret Stephens

4/24/20, America Shouldn’t Have to Play by New York Rules," NY Times, Bret Stephens, opinion 

“A national lockdown is bad medicine and worse politics.”… 

It is stunning to contemplate the extent to which the country’s Covid-19 crisis is a New York crisis — by which I mean the city itself along with its wider metropolitan area…. 

As of Friday [4/24], there have been more Covid-19 fatalities on Long Island’s Nassau County (population 1.4 million) than in all of California (population 40 million). There have been more fatalities in Westchester County (989) than in Texas (611). The number of Covid deaths per 100,000 residents in New York City (132) is more than 16 times what is in America’s next largest city, Los Angeles (8). If New York City proper were a state, it would have suffered more fatalities than 41 other states combined….[One third of the nation’s 10,217 virus related nursing home deaths occurred in nursing homes located in NY State]. 

It isn’t hard to guess why. New York has, by far, the highest population density in the U.S. among cities of 100,000 or more. Commuters crowd trains, office workers crowd elevators, diners crowd restaurants…. 

No wonder so much of America has dwindling sympathy with the idea of prolonging lockdown conditions much further....Hospital systems haven’t come close to being overwhelmed; Americans have adapted to new etiquettes of social distancing. 

Many of the worst Covid outbreaks outside New York (such as at Chicago’s Cook County Jail or the Smithfield Foods processing plant in Sioux Falls, S.D.) have specific causes that can be addressed without population-wide lockdowns. 

Yet Americans are being told they must still play by New York ruleswith all the hardships they entail despite having neither New York’s living conditions nor New York’s health outcomes. This is bad medicine, misguided public policy, and horrible politics. 

On Friday, I spoke with Tomislav Mihaljevic, C.E.O. of the widely admired Cleveland Clinic, and an advocate of the need to use “tailored and discriminating solutions” that also recognize regional differences. At the moment, he says, We’re using the methodology from the 14th century to combat the biggest pandemic of the 21st century.” It can’t go on. 

Dr. Mihaljevic acknowledges the necessity of the lockdowns to contain the virus, along with the urgent need for ramped-up testing and ongoing monitoring. But, he adds, “we cannot hold our breath forever.” The U.S. will not soon be able to test 330 million people. Effective therapies or vaccines may be long in coming [if ever, there’s no guarantee.]. Covid-19 will be a disease we have to learn to live with.” 

That means accepting that the immediate goal of public policy cannot be to eliminate the risk of Covid-19. It is to mitigate, manage and frame expectations for it while not losing sight of other priorities. In Ohio Dr. Mihaljevic says that Covid patients take up just 2 percent of hospital capacity, and the curve of new infections has been flat for more than two weeks. Yet there has been a dramatic decline in people seeking care for heart attacks, strokes, or new cancers, presumably out of fear of going to hospital. 

“The public conversation needs to be about the value of human life in its totality,Dr. Mihaljevic says. That includes fewer restrictions on activity for people at the low end of the risk spectrum, while taking additional care of those on the high end.

Right now, there’s a lot of commentary coming from talking heads (many of them in New York) about the danger of lifting lockdowns in places like Tennessee. Perhaps the commentary needs to move in the opposite direction. Tennesseeans are within their rights to return to a semblance of normal life while demanding longer restrictions on New Yorkers.    

I write this from New York, so it’s an argument against my personal interest. But I don’t see why people living in a Nashville suburb should not be allowed to return to their jobs because people like me choose to live, travel and work in urban sardine cans.

Gina Raimondo, the Rhode Island governor, was on to something when, a few weeks ago, she wanted to quarantine drivers arriving from New York. The rest of America needs to get back to life.”…



 



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I'm the daughter of a World War II Air Force pilot and outdoorsman who settled in New Jersey.