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George Soros conspiracy theories explode on Twitter in wake of protests – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on June 7, 2020

Right-wing conspiracy theorists are increasingly claiming that George Soros is funding recent protests and riots across the United States in the aftermath of the George Floyd killing.

According to theAnti-Defamation League, aggressive language towards Soros has exploded on social media this week. Negative tweets about the billionaire Jewish philanthropist rose from 20,000 per day on May 26 to 500,000 per day on May 30.

The posts, according to the ADL, mostly allege (without evidence) that Soros is funding riots across the country, and that he is backing antifa, decentralized anti-fascist activists whom President Donald Trump has blamed for the violence, also without citing evidence.

The ADL says that the Soros theories can serve as a gateway to the antisemitic subculture that blames Jews for the riots.

People posting about Soros include prominent Trump supporters like Twitter punditCandace Owens and actor James Woods.

Soros, a Hungarian-born financier who funds a variety of liberal causes in the United States and globally, is a favorite bogeyman of the right andconspiracy theorists in particular. Recent Soros conspiracies have alleged that he is driving the spread of Covid-19 in order to profit from a future vaccine and that he pays left-wing protesters.

Trump tweeted in 2018 that Soros paid protesters opposed to Brett Kavanaughs Supreme Court confirmation. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban also put up abillboard campaignin 2017 opposing Soros that was criticized as anti-Semitic.

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George Soros conspiracy theories explode on Twitter in wake of protests - The Jewish News of Northern California

U.S. Marines order removal of controversial symbol from their installations – MyStateline.com

Posted By on June 7, 2020

Posted: Jun 6, 2020 / 04:04 PM CDT / Updated: Jun 6, 2020 / 06:10 PM CDT

ARLINGTON COUNTY, Va. (KNWA/KFTA) The United States Marine Corps. ordered the removal of public displays of the Confederate battle flag, according to the military branchswebsite.

Depictions of the Confederate battle flag are unauthorized in public and work spaces aboard an installation, said the opening line of a Marinesposton Twitter.

The post dictated removal of the flag via bumper stickers, clothing, posters, mugs and flags.

Today, the Marine Corps released guidance on the removal of public displays of the Confederate battle flag.

The Anti-Defamation League (ADL), a non-governmental anti-hate group,includesthe Confederate flag among its General Hate Symbols.

While a number of non-extremists still use the flag as a symbol of Southern heritage or pride, there is growing recognition, especially outside the South, that the symbol is offensive to many Americans, the ADLs description said.

Moving forward, Marine commanders have the authority and responsibility to take reasonable, necessary and lawful measures to maintain law and order, and to protect installation personnel and property, in reference to Confederate flag removal, according to the Marine Corps.

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U.S. Marines order removal of controversial symbol from their installations - MyStateline.com

Coronavirus Claims Some of World War IIs Last Witnesses – The New York Times

Posted By on June 7, 2020

In Europe, the virus has taken some of the last witnesses of its grim history.

For years, Gildo Negri visited schools to share his stories about blowing up bridges and cutting electrical wires to sabotage Nazis and fascists during World War II. In January, the 89-year-old made another visit, leaving his nursing home outside Milan to help students plant trees in honor of Italians deported to concentration camps.

But at the end of February, as Europes first outbreak of the coronavirus spread through Mr. Negris nursing home, it fatally infected him, too.

The virus, which is so lethal to the old, has hastened the departure of these last witnesses and forced the cancellation of anniversary commemorations that offered a last chance to tell their stories to large audiences. It has also created an opportunity for rising political forces who seek to recast the history of the last century in order to play a greater role in remaking the present one.

Throughout Europe, radical right-wing parties with histories of Holocaust denial, Mussolini infatuation and fascist motifs, have gained traction in recent years, moving from the fringes and into parliaments and even governing coalitions.

The Alternative for Germany is looking to capitalize on the economic frustration the coronavirus crisis has triggered. In France, the hard-right National Rally had the countrys strongest showing in the last European Parliament elections. And in Italy, the birthplace of fascism, the descendants of post-fascist parties have grown popular as the stigma around Mussolini and strongman politics has faded.

KEY DATA OF THE DAY

The United States reported 21,614 new infections on Thursday, and while that number is below its April peak, the daily average has been rising slightly in recent days as the continued improvement in Northeast is offset by new outbreaks in the South and parts of the West.

The uptick appears to represent a combination of increased testing, the coronavirus taking hold in more regions and outbreaks in localized hot spots. It comes during a convergence of two developments that health officials are watching warily: states and cities pressing ahead with plans to allow more businesses to reopen, and masses of people gathering around the country in large-scale protests against police brutality and racism.

More states have seen an increase in new virus cases over the past two weeks than have seen a decline, according to a New York Times database: 18 have seen a rise in new cases over that period, 17 have seen the count of new cases stay largely the same, and 15 have seen decreases.

Nationwide the number of deaths recorded each day has fallen to less half of what it was at the peak, but the daily toll still averaged 938 a day over the past week. All told there have been 108,813 known deaths in the United States, more than any other nation in the world.

There are continuing signs that the geography of the outbreak is shifting.

The hardest hit state in the nation, New York, reported 42 new virus deaths on Friday, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said on Friday, the states lowest figure since March. Some localities elsewhere have reported greater death tolls in recent days: Los Angeles County reported 44 deaths on Thursday, and Cook County, Ill., which includes Chicago, reported 66.

The death toll in Arizona passed 1,000 this week. Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix, has been reporting a steady increase in new virus cases, which the public health department said showed increased spread in the community. There have been at least 22,818 cases in the state.

Texas, one of the earliest states to move forward with reopening, reported 1,784 new cases on Thursday, one of its highest tallies yet. Dallas County reported 285 new cases on Thursday, a new high. There have been at least 71,330 cases of the virus in Texas, and at least 1,793 deaths.

Trump tells governor of Maine: You better get the state open.

Speaking to the employees of a production facility that manufactures swabs for Covid-19 test, President Trump continued a war of words with the states Democratic governor, Janet Mills.

You have a governor that wont let you open up, Mr. Trump said Friday during a speech at Puritan Medical Products. I might as well say it while Im up here: You better get the state open, Governor.

Ms. Mills had told the president earlier in the week that his planned trip to the medical swab factory north of Bangor may cause security problems. Mr. Trump responded by dismissing her caution and saying he was even more determined to go.

During his speech, Mr. Trump suggested Maine was missing out on crucial tourism dollars

This is your time, this is your big month, this is your Christmas, Mr. Trump said. How can you be closed?

Earlier in the day, Mr. Trump had applied similar pressure to all of the nations governors in a speech in the Rose Garden, telling Americans to do social distancing, and you wear masks if you want. He equated the pandemic to a hurricane that goes away, and within two hours, everyone is rebuilding and fixing and cleaning and cutting their grass.

The president was not subtle in his desire to move on from lingering questions about the pandemic. Even you, Mr. Trump said to reporters assembled there, I notice youre starting to get much closer together, looks much better, not all the way there yet but youll be there soon. The White House Correspondents Association said later that White House officials violated federal social distancing guidelines by moving chairs in the Rose Garden closer together before the event.

The health of the press corps should not be put in jeopardy because the White House wants reporters to be a prop for a news conference where the president refused to answer any questions, said Jonathan Karl of ABC News, the president of the White House Correspondents Association.

China warns against travel to Australia, citing fears of racial violence.

China has warned its citizens against traveling to Australia because of what it describes as rampant racial discrimination and violence in the country in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak.

The move was mostly symbolic, given that most foreign nationals are barred from traveling to Australia and that tourism has plummeted across the world because of the pandemic. It follows a series of economic punishments by China against Australia, after Australian officials led a call for an independent investigation into the spread of the coronavirus, which first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

In its announcement on Friday, the Chinese Ministry of Culture and Tourism said that racial discrimination and violence against Chinese and Asians in Australia has increased significantly.

Attacks against people of Asian descent have risen sharply across the world during the pandemic as xenophobia spreads. Asian Australians say they have endured harsh verbal harassment as well as physical attacks, including being spit on and coughed upon.

Relations between Australia and China have worsened significantly in recent weeks, as Australian officials have pushed China to allow an investigation into the virus. In response, China suspended some Australian beef imports and raised tariffs on Australian barley. China has denied that its decisions were politically motivated.

The travel warning on Friday stirred patriotic feelings in China, with many people criticizing racism in Australia.

Dont go, dont go, a Chinese internet user wrote on Weibo, a popular social media site. The motherland is the safest place.

While the early response of the French government could be faulted for some sluggishness and a shortage of masks, and more than 29,000 people died, the country has fared better than many in the pandemic, especially when compared with the United States, Italy, Spain and especially Britain.

On Friday the head of the governments scientific council, the immunologist Jean-Franois Delfraissy, declared Frances epidemic under control in an interview on French radio. Many experts credit the governments tightly enforced lockdown, mobilization of technology like high-speed trains to save patients, and closely followed counsel from scientists.

Just dont tell that to the French, who resent President Emmanuel Macron more than ever.

As they celebrated their provisional release from lockdown this week with the much-anticipated partial reopening of cafes and restaurants, the coronavirus has only reinforced the paradox of the presidents uneasy relationship with his own citizens.

On average, over half of Europes citizens outside of France even in countries with far worse records view their governments virus response favorably. In France, 66 percent have an unfavorable view, according to a recent Figaro poll.

In some ways, Mr. Macron is his own worst enemy, with a style that can come off as imperious. His speeches during the crisis were lengthy and literary, both trademarks. He reproached the French for lacking a sense of responsibilities, then later praised them for their discipline.

Asked recently on French television about his unpopularity, Mr. Macron stiffened and looked impatient.

Look, I dont sit around feeling sorry for myself, he said. Im looking ahead.

In New York City, concerns are growing that mainly peaceful protests are exposing many people to the possibility of infection, as many police officers and protesters, who are often in close quarters, were not wearing face coverings. Mayor Bill de Blasio emphasized on Friday that officers are supposed to be wearing face coverings.

It has not been happening consistently, Mr. de Blasio said on WNYC radio, adding that he was frustrated and had asked his police commissioner multiple times to address the laxness. It has to be fixed.

The mayor reiterated that the city was set to start reopening on Monday, with nonessential retailers open for curbside pickup, construction at more than 30,000 sites allowed to restart, and manufacturing resuming. Here are some other important developments around the country.

In New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed an executive order late Friday afternoon allowing necessary in-person special education instruction to resume but it was not immediately clear how individual school districts would choose to implement such an order. The order also did not include specifics on where this in-person instruction would take place or what safety protocols would be implemented to protect students, teachers and parents.

In California, several new economic sectors will be allowed to reopen beginning June 12 including restaurants, gyms, museums and day camps. The states public health department released detailed guidance for reopening emphasizing maintaining social distancing, face coverings and limiting patrons. Music, film and television production and professional sports without live audiences would also be allowed to resume pending safety protocols agreed upon by labor unions, management and county health officials.

Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota signed an executive order Friday easing restrictions on bars and restaurants, gyms, entertainment venues and salons beginning Wednesday. As a condition for reopening, businesses must maintain social distancing between patrons and limit occupancy. Workers and customers will also be required to wear masks whenever possible.

Coronavirus cases at two correctional facilities and an ICE detention center in Otero County, New Mexico swelled to 583, according to the states department of health. Otero County has become a growing hot spot in recent days, according to a New York Times database, and cases in the state have continued to rise amid efforts to reopen.

In Michigan hair and nail salons will be allowed to reopen in June 15, under an executive order issued Friday by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

In Louisiana, where Tropical Storm Cristobal is expected to make landfall on Sunday, the governor has declared a state of emergency and warned that the pandemic will complicate efforts for people seeking shelter. Along with the typical preparations residents would make ahead of a major storm, he has urged them to also prepare a supply of face coverings, hand sanitizer and disinfectant wipes.

Airlines say passengers must wear masks. But the rules arent enforced.

As airlines try to convince Americans to fly again, they have touted their policies for keeping passengers safe, including the requirement that everyone onboard a plane wear a mask.

But travelers on recent flights said the rules are not being enforced. And flight attendants said they have been told not to confront passengers who opt to not follow them.

Airlines have said follow the guidelines, but dont enforce them, dont tackle people to the ground and dont turn flights around if they dont listen, said Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants union. That gets around to the public then its, I dont have to do this. There are no consequences if I dont do this. That, too, can lead to conflict, not just with the flight attendants, but with other passengers, who get angry and all of a sudden we have to break up a fight.

On social media and in emails to The Times, travelers described facing scenarios of having to choose between confronting fellow passengers about wearing masks and possibly encountering hostility, or sitting on a flight for hours potentially being exposed to the coronavirus.

After one doctors Twitter post about the lack of social distancing on a United Airlines flight went viral, another United traveler said shed had to ask a gate agent to put on a mask before getting on a full flight to Chicago from New Jersey.

If youre traveling right now, be prepared to advocate for yourself, she wrote, adding that, United did not follow their own social distancing guidelines, and many travelers were not wearing masks.

Public health experts in the United States reacted to Mr. Trumps announcement with alarm.

We helped create the W.H.O., Dr. Thomas Frieden, the former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told The New York Times.

Turning our back on the W.H.O. makes us and the world less safe, Dr. Friedan said.

Experts argued that global cooperation would be crucial to containing the virus, as it did six years ago during the Ebola outbreak that was raging through West Africa.

At the time, President Barack Obama sent 3,000 American troops to the region to help with the response on the ground. And Samantha Power, former ambassador to the U.N., convened the U.N. Security Council for its first ever meeting over a public health crisis and helped pass a resolution declaring the outbreak a threat to international peace and security a step that led to an infusion of funds and resources for the response effort.

Like so many 21st-century challenges, Ebola was not a zero-sum fight in which some countries could win by pursuing their interests in a vacuum, Ms. Power wrote in her book The Education of an Idealist.

The Timess Alisha Haridasani Gupta spoke to Ms. Power about what the W.H.O. would look like without the United States.

The federal government undercounted the number of virus deaths in U.S. nursing homes.

In data published for the first time on Thursday, the federal government counted 32,465 deaths of residents and workers in nursing homes, but the tally is missing thousands of deaths that occurred in facilities for the elderly and excludes some of the most notorious episodes.

The Times has been tracking outbreaks in all types of long-term care centers for the elderly, based on data provided by states, counties and nursing home operators. As of Thursday, at least 46,000 workers and residents have died of the virus.

For example, the federal account of the Life Care nursing center in Kirkland, Wash., which in late February became the first U.S. nursing home to report a major outbreak, listed one suspected infection and zero virus deaths. Health officials in Washington State have tied at least 45 deaths to that facility, dating back to February.

Though nursing homes were allowed to report infections dating back to January, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services only required data on cases from May onward, after the virus had already peaked in the United States.

Seema Verma, the administrator of the C.M.S., said her agency was not able to require nursing homes to report infections and deaths from prior months, but that many nursing home operators had chosen to do so.

We are prohibited to do retroactive rule-making, and so we couldnt require them to do so, but we feel pretty comfortable that thats what theyve done, Ms. Verma said.

Some unemployed people in New York City are waiting hours to reach a single A.T.M.

The line started small about two months ago with a handful of people who had recently been laid off. But now, nearly three months into the economic crisis, it stretches 50 or 60 people long throughout the day and down almost an entire Manhattan block.

They are all waiting to access the same thing: the lone A.T.M. inside the only New York City branch for KeyBank, a regional Ohio bank in charge of distributing unemployment benefits to out-of-work New Yorkers.

The state provides benefits through direct deposit or on KeyBank debit cards. KeyBank has higher one-time withdrawal limits than other banks and doesnt charge a fee, making it a better option for many unemployed.

Its terrible, said Mandy Zaxanz, who spent 45 minutes traveling from her Brooklyn home to the A.T.M. It took her more than two-and-a-half hours to reach the machine.

Ms. Zaxanz, who lost her job at a Manhattan hotel in March, said she needed money to pay rent and buy food.

KeyBank officials said they would step up efforts, including stationing employees outside the branch to let people know that they can withdraw money at other banks. But state officials criticized the bank for not doing more sooner.

As Ms. Zaxanz waited, she prayed the A.T.M. would not run out of money, as it had when she tried to use it last week. It also ran out on Wednesday afternoon, which led to furious people punching nearby windows.

So far this year, more than 2.5 million unemployment claims have been filed in the state. About 500,000 people in the state receive their benefits on a KeyBank card.

Mexico is starting to bustle again, as restrictions ease in virus-free communities, the mining, construction and auto industries, and thousands of select businesses.

But many Mexicans, including medical experts, fear even the countrys gradual reopening is coming too early, and will lead to more illness and death under a pandemic that has not been brought under control in Mexico and is surging across Latin America.

Dr. Francisco Moreno, who heads the Covid unit of ABC Medical Center, one of Mexico Citys top private hospitals, said that despite doubling capacity, patients were having to be turned away.

The governments message may lead many people to think the worst is over, he said, but we are at the peak of the epidemic.

President Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador has struggled to balance a pandemic response with the economic needs of a country in which over half of the population lives hand-to-mouth.

Early on, he played down the severity of the viruss threat, allowing soccer tournaments, concerts and preparations for the busy spring tourist season to continue.

But the relaxation of restrictions comes at a moment when the disease appears to be peaking. On Wednesday, Mexico reported 1,092 deaths, its highest daily toll to date, though the Lpez Obrador administration said the increase was caused by an administrative delay in reporting deaths. By Friday morning, the total number of dead in the country was 12,545. More developments from around the world:

Britain became the second nation to suffer more than 40,000 deaths from the coronavirus on Friday, according to British public health authorities. The country has confirmed at least 283,300 cases of coronavirus and is surpassed only by the United States in both cases and deaths.

The head of Frances governments scientific council declared Frances epidemic under control. Many experts credit the governments tightly enforced lockdown, mobilization of technology like high-speed trains to save patients, and closely followed counsel from scientists.

South Korea reported 39 new cases in and around Seoul, where a recent wave of infections had been traced to nightclubs and an e-commerce warehouse.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison of Australia warned people against attending protests this weekend organized in sympathy with American protests against racism and police brutality, saying that a large gathering could sabotage the countrys efforts to control the outbreak. Lets find a better way, and another way, to express these sentiments rather than putting your health at risk, the health of others at risk, he said.

In Indonesia, mosques opened for midday prayer in the capital, Jakarta, for the first time in more than two months, with social-distancing protocols, temperature checks, face masks and plenty of hand sanitizer.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey revoked a much-debated weekend lockdown, citing social and economic consequences. The countrys Interior Ministry had said residents would be confined to their homes during the weekend, but Mr. Erdogan said complaints from citizens had made him re-evaluate.

Las Vegas reopens with a new ethos: Think dirty thoughts but keep your hands clean.

Roulette wheels spun. One-armed bandits coughed out payouts. Customers erupted in cheers at hot blackjack tables. But at Las Vegass famed casinos, which reopened for business on Thursday after a 78-day shutdown, it was anything but business as usual.

Showgirls in the gambling capital of the world strutted their stuff wearing face masks. Hotel guests had their temperatures taken at check-in. Plexiglass partitions separated dealers from players, and dice were doused in sanitizer between throws.

A huge neon sign on the Aria Resort and Casino summed up Sin Citys new ethos: Think dirty thoughts but keep your hands clean.

Updated June 5, 2020

The unemployment rate fell to 13.3 percent in May, the Labor Department said on June 5, an unexpected improvement in the nations job market as hiring rebounded faster than economists expected. Economists had forecast the unemployment rate to increase to as much as 20 percent, after it hit 14.7 percent in April, which was the highest since the government began keeping official statistics after World War II. But the unemployment rate dipped instead, with employers adding 2.5 million jobs, after more than 20 million jobs were lost in April.

Mass protests against police brutality that have brought thousands of people onto the streets in cities across America are raising the specter of new coronavirus outbreaks, prompting political leaders, physicians and public health experts to warn that the crowds could cause a surge in cases. While many political leaders affirmed the right of protesters to express themselves, they urged the demonstrators to wear face masks and maintain social distancing, both to protect themselves and to prevent further community spread of the virus. Some infectious disease experts were reassured by the fact that the protests were held outdoors, saying the open air settings could mitigate the risk of transmission.

Exercise researchers and physicians have some blunt advice for those of us aiming to return to regular exercise now: Start slowly and then rev up your workouts, also slowly. American adults tended to be about 12 percent less active after the stay-at-home mandates began in March than they were in January. But there are steps you can take to ease your way back into regular exercise safely. First, start at no more than 50 percent of the exercise you were doing before Covid, says Dr. Monica Rho, the chief of musculoskeletal medicine at the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab in Chicago. Thread in some preparatory squats, too, she advises. When you havent been exercising, you lose muscle mass. Expect some muscle twinges after these preliminary, post-lockdown sessions, especially a day or two later. But sudden or increasing pain during exercise is a clarion call to stop and return home.

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Coronavirus Claims Some of World War IIs Last Witnesses - The New York Times

Coronavirus Depletes the Keepers of Europes Memory – The New York Times

Posted By on June 7, 2020

ROME For years, Gildo Negri visited schools to share his stories about blowing up bridges and cutting electrical wires to sabotage Nazis and fascists during World War II. In January, the 89-year-old made another visit, leaving his nursing home outside Milan to help students plant trees in honor of Italians deported to concentration camps.

But at the end of February, as Europes first outbreak of the coronavirus spread through Mr. Negris nursing home, it infected him, too.

Shut inside, he grew despondent about missing the usual parades and public speeches on Italys Liberation Day, grander this year to mark the 75th anniversary. But the virus canceled the April 25 commemorations. Mr. Negri died that night.

The memory is vanishing, and the coronavirus is accelerating this process, said Rita Magnani, who worked with Mr. Negri, at the local chapter of the National Association of Italian Partisans. We are losing the people who can tell us in first person what happened. And its a shame, because when we lose the historical memory we lose ourselves.

Time and its ravages have already cut down the lives and blurred the memories of a generation that saw close up the ideologies and crimes that turned Europe into a killing field.

The virus, which is so lethal to the old, has hastened the departure of these last witnesses and forced the cancellation of anniversary commemorations that offered a final chance to tell their stories to large audiences. It has also created an opportunity for rising political forces who seek to recast the history of the last century in order to play a greater role in remaking the present one.

Throughout Europe, radical right-wing parties with histories of Holocaust denial, Mussolini infatuation and fascist motifs have gained traction in recent years, moving from the fringes and into parliaments and even governing coalitions.

The Alternative for Germany is looking to capitalize on the economic frustration the coronavirus crisis has triggered. In France, the hard-right National Rally had the countrys strongest showing in the last European Parliament elections. And in Italy, the birthplace of fascism, the descendants of post-fascist parties have grown popular as the stigma around Mussolini and strongman politics has faded.

Italy is especially vulnerable to the loss of memory. It has endured a severe epidemic and has the oldest population in Europe. It is also a politically polarized place where areas of consensus in other countries are constantly relitigated, with recollections of Nazi and fascist atrocities countered with retorts of summary executions by Communist partisans.

In the three-quarters of a century following Italys defeat and de facto civil war with Mussolinis short-lived Nazi puppet state in the north, the people who lived through the war and fascism have offered a living testimony that shined through the muddle. That generation was to get a final close-up and megaphone on the 75th anniversary of the wars end, in Italy and throughout Europe.

To mark the 75th anniversary of the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp, Germany had spent more than a year booking flights and hotels and organizing wheelchairs and oxygen tanks for 72 survivors and 20 American soldiers who liberated the camps. For five days starting on April 29, they were to meet one another and tell their stories. The pandemic made that impossible.

Instead, only four officials took part in the event.

Many survivors had been living for the day, said Gabriele Hammermann, who runs the Dachau concentration camp memorial, and was one of the four participants. In these times of change in which fewer and fewer survivors are able to come to the memorial site, it was of particular importance that the baton of remembrance be handed to the next generations.

On May 8, Victory in Europe day, the BBC broadcast parts of Winston Churchills speech 75 years before (We may allow ourselves a brief period of rejoicing), and Prime Minister Boris Johnson lamented the lack of parades but said that fighting the virus demands the same spirit of national endeavor as the war effort did.

In France, Genevive Darrieussecq, the secretary of state to the Minister of the Armed Forces, said regional ceremonies were canceled especially as former fighters and flag bearers are particularly exposed.

Some veterans groups have said they understood that memorials for the past needed to take a back seat to immediate health risks. Others found the absence devastating.

In Russia, which lost tens of millions of soldiers during a war that forged its national identity, President Vladimir V. Putin had planned a major military parade for May 9, to be attended by President Emmanuel Macron of France and possibly other world leaders in Moscow. Instead he made phone calls of solidarity and rescheduled the event for June 24. We will do this, he said.

In the meantime, as the virus upsets all of modern life, it is also severing connections to the past.

In Spain, Jos Mara Galante, 71, suffered during the regime of the dictator Francisco Franco and spent recent years trying to bring his torturer, Antonio Gonzlez Pacheco, a police officer known as Billy the Kid, to justice. But in March, Mr. Galante died of the virus. Weeks later, the virus also killed Mr. Gonzlez Pacheco, 73.

Its a huge loss for all those who believed that Spain should not silence its past, said Mr. Galantes longtime partner, Justa Montero.

When the virus killed Henry Kichka, a 94-year-old Belgian writer and Auschwitz survivor, on April 25, the Belgian politician Charles Picqu wrote that a great witness of Shoah left us and that it was now up to the young generations to continue his battle against hate.

In Italy, its more than just the memory of the fascist era that risks being shut away, as the country debates what to do with its vulnerable elders.

For months, officials have debated what policy to adopt for the countrys older at-risk population, including those who rebuilt the country after the war, fueled its boom and endured the domestic terrorism of the 1970s itself an echo of the civil war. In a gerontocracy like Italy, proposals to encourage the elderly to stay inside would mean shutting away much of the political, academic, industrial and business elite.

At the beginning of March, the leading health official in Lombardy asked people over 65 to stay home, a suggestion echoed by the national government in a decree.

Grandfathers published open letters to their grandchildren, urging them not to stash away the protagonists of the 1940s as useless burdens. A former president of the countrys highest court noted that the Constitution assures freedom of movement to all citizens. (I know 80- year-olds who are in great shape, he wrote.)

Who can make a society without models taken from the past? said Lia Levi, 88, an Italian writer, who is Jewish and suffered under Italys racial laws as a child. She said that many of the partisans who fought the fascists never wrote a word or became political, but simply lived their lives and told their children and grandchildren what they saw.

I can tell you when I was kicked out of school, and that I couldnt understand why, that humanizes historical facts, she said, adding, We see each other.

Unlike Germany, which has forced itself to look unflinchingly at its crimes, Italy has often looked away.

Updated June 5, 2020

The unemployment rate fell to 13.3 percent in May, the Labor Department said on June 5, an unexpected improvement in the nations job market as hiring rebounded faster than economists expected. Economists had forecast the unemployment rate to increase to as much as 20 percent, after it hit 14.7 percent in April, which was the highest since the government began keeping official statistics after World War II. But the unemployment rate dipped instead, with employers adding 2.5 million jobs, after more than 20 million jobs were lost in April.

Mass protests against police brutality that have brought thousands of people onto the streets in cities across America are raising the specter of new coronavirus outbreaks, prompting political leaders, physicians and public health experts to warn that the crowds could cause a surge in cases. While many political leaders affirmed the right of protesters to express themselves, they urged the demonstrators to wear face masks and maintain social distancing, both to protect themselves and to prevent further community spread of the virus. Some infectious disease experts were reassured by the fact that the protests were held outdoors, saying the open air settings could mitigate the risk of transmission.

Exercise researchers and physicians have some blunt advice for those of us aiming to return to regular exercise now: Start slowly and then rev up your workouts, also slowly. American adults tended to be about 12 percent less active after the stay-at-home mandates began in March than they were in January. But there are steps you can take to ease your way back into regular exercise safely. First, start at no more than 50 percent of the exercise you were doing before Covid, says Dr. Monica Rho, the chief of musculoskeletal medicine at the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab in Chicago. Thread in some preparatory squats, too, she advises. When you havent been exercising, you lose muscle mass. Expect some muscle twinges after these preliminary, post-lockdown sessions, especially a day or two later. But sudden or increasing pain during exercise is a clarion call to stop and return home.

States are reopening bit by bit. This means that more public spaces are available for use and more and more businesses are being allowed to open again. The federal government is largely leaving the decision up to states, and some state leaders are leaving the decision up to local authorities. Even if you arent being told to stay at home, its still a good idea to limit trips outside and your interaction with other people.

Touching contaminated objects and then infecting ourselves with the germs is not typically how the virus spreads. But it can happen. A number of studies of flu, rhinovirus, coronavirus and other microbes have shown that respiratory illnesses, including the new coronavirus, can spread by touching contaminated surfaces, particularly in places like day care centers, offices and hospitals. But a long chain of events has to happen for the disease to spread that way. The best way to protect yourself from coronavirus whether its surface transmission or close human contact is still social distancing, washing your hands, not touching your face and wearing masks.

Common symptoms include fever, a dry cough, fatigue and difficulty breathing or shortness of breath. Some of these symptoms overlap with those of the flu, making detection difficult, but runny noses and stuffy sinuses are less common. The C.D.C. has also added chills, muscle pain, sore throat, headache and a new loss of the sense of taste or smell as symptoms to look out for. Most people fall ill five to seven days after exposure, but symptoms may appear in as few as two days or as many as 14 days.

If air travel is unavoidable, there are some steps you can take to protect yourself. Most important: Wash your hands often, and stop touching your face. If possible, choose a window seat. A study from Emory University found that during flu season, the safest place to sit on a plane is by a window, as people sitting in window seats had less contact with potentially sick people. Disinfect hard surfaces. When you get to your seat and your hands are clean, use disinfecting wipes to clean the hard surfaces at your seat like the head and arm rest, the seatbelt buckle, the remote, screen, seat back pocket and the tray table. If the seat is hard and nonporous or leather or pleather, you can wipe that down, too. (Using wipes on upholstered seats could lead to a wet seat and spreading of germs rather than killing them.)

The C.D.C. has recommended that all Americans wear cloth masks if they go out in public. This is a shift in federal guidance reflecting new concerns that the coronavirus is being spread by infected people who have no symptoms. Until now, the C.D.C., like the W.H.O., has advised that ordinary people dont need to wear masks unless they are sick and coughing. Part of the reason was to preserve medical-grade masks for health care workers who desperately need them at a time when they are in continuously short supply. Masks dont replace hand washing and social distancing.

If youve been exposed to the coronavirus or think you have, and have a fever or symptoms like a cough or difficulty breathing, call a doctor. They should give you advice on whether you should be tested, how to get tested, and how to seek medical treatment without potentially infecting or exposing others.

Post-fascist parties sprouted after the war, and their direct political descendants are still vibrant, and growing. Nationalism is back in vogue, with leaders purposely echoing Mussolini, whom many here openly admire.

In May, Giorgia Meloni, a rising star on the Italian right and the leader of the increasingly popular Brothers of Italy, the descendant of Italys post-fascist parties, paid tribute to a right-wing politician who once avidly supported Mussolinis racial laws.

The deaths from the virus of those who fought fascism have gotten less attention.

Piera Pattani worked clandestinely as a trusted confidante and liaison for local resistance leaders around Milan during the war. She helped allies escape from fascist Italian guards and watched the German SS take her comrades away.

Into her 90s, she remained healthy and lucid and willing to tell her stories in classrooms. She ended up in a nursing home. But in March she was infected with the virus. She died alone in the hospital at 93.

The virus did what fascism couldnt, said Primo Minelli, 72, the president of Legnano partisan association and her friend. It has brought a lot of people away who could have stayed longer.

That mattered especially now, he said, because of a political climate that he found threatening. Firsthand testimony is valued over indirect testimony, he said. There is already an attempt underway to remove the history of resistance. That effort will be sped up when the witnesses are gone.

The families of other partisans said they themselves only felt the full weight of that history now that the people who lived it had died.

You know how it is, when someones well, it seems like a fable, what they say about the past, said Teresa Baroni, 86, who lost her husband, Savino, to the virus in March. And then they are gone and it doesnt seem like a fable anymore.

She said her husband, 94, hardly ever talked about his time escaping fascists and fighting with the Mazzini brigade in San Leo, on Italys eastern coast. He turned down invitations to speak in classrooms, embarrassed about his bad Italian, and spent his life farming with his wife.

When he tested positive for the virus and ambulance workers prepared to take him to the hospital in March, his wife kept him at home, saying she had slept next to him for 66 years and wouldnt stop now. He died beside her days later, she said, taking his stories with him.

Memory goes away when those directly involved go away, and we are all old, said William Marconi, a partisan who fought Nazis in Tirano in northern Italy. And this virus is killing the old.

Mr. Marconi, 95, still lives in Tirano, where he said his inability to walk has kept him at home and away from the threat of a virus that killed one of his former comrades, Gino Ricetti, on April 26.

Mr. Marconi had written about his experiences, but had grown less than sanguine about the prospect of younger generations learning the lessons of the past.

Im not convinced memory serves, he said. Even those who know history, they do it again and again and again.

Reporting was contributed by Emma Bubola from Milan, Raphael Minder from Madrid, Christopher Schuetze from Berlin, and Monika Pronczuk from Brussels.

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Coronavirus Depletes the Keepers of Europes Memory - The New York Times

Congress’ Grassroots Effort to Make ‘Never Again’ Resound in Classrooms Across America – Algemeiner

Posted By on June 7, 2020

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. Photo: Phil Kalina/Flickr.

JNS.org Amid the rise in antisemitism in the United States and abroad, President Donald Trump signed the Never Again Education Act last month as part of Jewish American Heritage Month, one month after the 75th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany.

The story behind the passage of this landmark legislation is one that transcended the usual partisan politics of Washington, DC, bringing together Jewish and Christian groups, and liberal and conservative lawmakers in a rare display of bipartisanship to have a measurable impact on awareness and understanding of the ramifications of the Holocaust.

Unfortunately, we have an seen a significant spike in antisemitic attacks and vandalism over the past few years, and these undeniably disturbing events spurred action, said Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), who introduced the bill in the House and has waged a multi-decade effort to pass such legislation.

Citing an Anti-Defamation League report released recently that showed that 2019 consisted of the highest number of antisemitic incidents in four decades, she said that both sides of the aisle saw how urgent this is, and this bill was bipartisan from the start.

June 7, 2020 1:05 pm

The new law seeks toexpand the US Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM)s education programming to teachers nationwide, requiring the museum to develop and disseminate resources to improve awareness and understanding of the Holocaust and its lessons. There will be $2 million allocated annually for this year and each of the next four years to the Holocaust Education Assistance Program Fund, administered by the USHMMs governing body, the US Holocaust Memorial Council. Private donations to the fund will also be permitted.

Maloney, the 13-term lawmaker who represents New Yorks 12th Congressional district, noted her experience as a former educator played a role in pushing for the bill whereby education is a key tool in fighting all forms of hate and bigotry, and by reaching children in the classroom, we can make sure they learn understanding and acceptance rather than discrimination.

Antisemitism must not only be punished but also prevented, she said. By giving educators the tools they need to teach about the Holocaust and the dangers of antisemitism and hate, I believe we can stop antisemitism before it starts, said Maloney.

The bill had the support of more than 50 national organizations and more than 250 local partners, according to Maloney, who credited the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), Hadassah, and the Jewish Federations of North America as instrumental in getting the legislation passed.

Hadassah CEO and executive director Janice Weinman told JNS that she attended the New York Congressional Breakfast hosted by the New York Jewish Community Relations Council in early 2018.

I heard Congresswoman Maloney speak about her nearly 20-year fight to strengthen Holocaust education, and I knew this was the prescription America needed to guarantee the promise of Never Again, said Weinman. And I knew it was right for Hadassah to lead the effort because we are a Zionist organization with a large national membership that believes in the power of information and education to change the world.

Hadassah director of government relations Karen Barall said that Hadassah appealed to the organizations 300,000 members and other Jewish groups.

We started to invite representatives from other large organizations to meetings Hadassah was arranging on Capitol Hill, and our first targets were the 55 co-sponsors from the previous Congress, she said. Support was built inch by inch, one office at a time, and was supplemented by a grassroots effort.

Before and after meetings, Hadassah chapters from the representatives district would organize to contact their offices expressing their support for the bill, she said.

Ultimately, the bill had 302 co-sponsors in the Democratic-led House 205 Democrats and 97 Republicans.

While garnering support in the House, Hadassah recruited Senator Jacky Rosen (D-NV), who was very responsive to our request from the start and, meeting with Republican senators, got a receptive audience in Senator Kevin Cramer (R-ND).

Rosen and Cramer were joined by Sens. Marco Rubio (R-FL) and Richard Blumenthal (D-CN).

Rosen told JNS that the Senate vote happened after significantly increasing the number of co-sponsors of the bipartisan Senate bill and laying the groundwork for the House bill to clear committee and receive a vote from the full Senate.

The Senate version was slightly different from the US House of Representatives one, which the Senate ultimately passed, in that the former had the US Department of Education and not the USHMM oversee the expansion of Holocaust education in the United States.

As to Rosen being the leading sponsor of the bill, she pointed to her time when she was president of Congregation Ner Tamid in Nevada, where she heard the stories of so many Holocaust survivors, stories of resilience in the face of certain death, stories of loss as so many were taken from us.

After first being elected to Congress in 2017, first as a Congresswoman from Nevadas 3rd Congressional District, I asked myself, what can I do as a legislator to fulfill the promise of the words Never Again and ensure that they mean Never Again for anyone? I truly believe that education is the most powerful tool we have in the fight against hate and bigotry.

Other groups that lobbied for the bill an effort that included being in contact with Congressional offices included Christians United for Israel (CUFI), the American Jewish Congress (AJCongress), the Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC), the Jewish Federations of North America (JFNA), and the Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC).

JFNA worked closely with Jewish communal agencies to connect with Holocaust survivors and encourage them to sign on to a letter in support of the bill. This grassroots effort collected more than 1,800 signatures from survivors in 38 states 350 community groups from every single state helped galvanize political support, JFNA spokesperson Rebecca Dinar told JNS.

In Chicago, where theres a large community of Holocaust survivors, Yonit Hoffman, director of Holocaust Community Services at CJE SeniorLife a Federation-funded agency that serves 1,700 survivors on a regular basis led the effort to garner 452 signatures on the letter.

The RJCs legislative affairs committee wrote to every Republican in Congress urging them to co-sponsor the bill, the organizations spokesperson, Neil Strauss, said.

Once the House passed its version of the bill, we began visiting Republican Senate offices, usually joined by colleagues from Hadassah and other groups supporting the bill, but we were forced to shift to most advocacy via email due to the coronavirus pandemic making in-person meetings impossible, said Strauss.

The RJC put such an emphasis on the importance of the bill that the organization even withdrew its support for the four House Republicans who voted against it. Reps. Jodey Arrington (R-TX), Thomas Massie (R-KY), Tom Rice (R-SC), and Ralph Norman (R-SC) cited conservative dogma on spending and the need to have small-sized government.

The Anti-Defamation League, in addition to its lobbying efforts, had an action alert on its website in order to allow people to better engage with members of Congress about the matter, ADL CEO and national director Jonathan Greenblatt told JNS. Meanwhile, AJCongress has always supported legislation promoting Holocaust education, Akri Cipa, a policy analyst at the organization, said.

Cipa cited a Pew Research study in January that only strengthened his organizations conviction over the need for the Never Again Education Act.

The study showed that less than half of Americans, some 45%, know that six million Jews perished in the Holocaust, while 29% werent sure or had no answer. (Simultaneously, 69% of respondents correctly said that the Holocaust was between the years 1930 and 1950, while 63% of respondents correctly defined the Nazi-created ghettos as parts of town where Jews were forced to live.)

Sandra Parker, chairwoman of CUFIs political arm, CUFI Action Fund, said that her organization threw its support behind the legislation following Trump signing an Executive Order in December combating antisemitism by applying Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act to Jewish Americans, especially on college campuses, where antisemitic and anti-Israel activity has run amok.

This bill got on our radar during the current Congress, and we immediately decided to back it, she said. Combating antisemitism has always been a priority for our organization, but given the dramatic rise in antisemitism across the country, as well as the horrifically violent acts weve witnessed in recent years, I think it stands to reason that we are seeing an increased emphasis on policies aimed at contending with this issue, including the Never Again Education Act.

In addition to meetings with members of Congress, CUFI leaders authored opinion pieces in leading outlets.

Rosen said that the bills passage through Congress could not have happened without the tremendous support from so many groups across faith and party lines. We were blessed to have a broad coalition of outside groups advocating for the bill from the moment it was introduced. Some of these groups have been advocating for decades to ensure more robust Holocaust education.

Overall, dozens of groups lent their support to this effort, he said, with my office working directly with a core coalition of half a dozen organizations to move this bill to the Senate floor. Without their crucial support, we would not have been able to garner 80 bipartisan Senate co-sponsors and get this bill across the finish line.

That rare combined effort from those organizations highlighted that fighting antisemitism and furthering the message of Never Again arent for only liberal or conservative groups.

The joint effort reinforces the importance of the legislation, and it signals that despite differences of opinions and the multitude of voices and perspectives, the Jewish community at large is united on fundamentalissues, said Cipa.

With CUFI, Parker said, as Hagee has noted previously, antisemitism is not just a Jewish problem, its everyones problem. As a Christian Zionist organization and the worlds largest pro-Israel organization, weve worked hard to forge trusting relationships throughout the Jewish community. We share the same concerns about Israels safety and security, rising antisemitism, and Holocaust denial not just in America but everywhere.

Strauss remarked, Combating antisemitism is a cause that can unite groups that disagree on other matters, and we believe there is great potential for additional efforts going forward.

Such efforts, according to some of the aforementioned groups that spoke to JNS, range from state legislatures mandating Holocaust education (currently, 18 states either encourage or require teaching about the Holocaust) to fighting the movement calling for boycotting Israel, to Congress upgrading the position of US special envoy for monitoring and combating antisemitism to an ambassador-level role. The House passed legislation last year to do that, while the Senate Foreign Relations Committee passed the upper chambers version last week, sending it to the full Senate for a final vote.

Ultimately, said Hadassah President Rhoda Smolow, we hope the legislation will have a measurable impact on awareness and understanding of the Holocaust, particularly among students and to certain extent their family members. We have to do a better job of preserving the memory of the Holocaust. There is no better way to do so than through education and no better equipped institution than the US Holocaust Memorial Museum to meet this challenge.

But we also hope that this will help to deaden the appeal of hate groups and communities that traffic in antisemitism, she added. The Holocaust offers us all universal lessons on the importance of tolerance, and what happens when we do not stand up when tolerance is threatened.

Greenblatt said, Its our hope that the American people recognize how important it is to ensure that our future generations are taught the lessons and horrors of the Holocaust, because greater understanding of the Shoah is not only important for fighting antisemitism, it is also important for fighting hate against all marginalized communities. In this time of stark and ever-widening political divide, for both sides of the aisle to come and work together to pass this piece of legislation, it goes to show that our nations leaders recognize the pertinence of Holocaust education.

Jackson Richman is the Washington Correspondent for Jewish News Syndicate.

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Congress' Grassroots Effort to Make 'Never Again' Resound in Classrooms Across America - Algemeiner

AP FACT CHECK: Trump’s alternate reality in time of anguish – Minneapolis Star Tribune

Posted By on June 7, 2020

WASHINGTON "Vicious dogs." "Ominous weapons." Injured police. Gagging protesters. Shattered storefronts. Armed personnel at centers of power and landmarks. Anguish and arson.

Taking the measure of these days in the nation's capital, President Donald Trump exclaimed: "Washington, D.C., was the safest place on earth last night!"

Such alternate realities pervaded the world described by Trump and his team over the past week.

The White House, tweeting as an American institution, not Trump's personal account or campaign, posted social media disinformation to make people think leftists were stockpiling rocks to commit terrorist attacks in the United States.

Trump and aides denied that authorities in Washington used tear gas against protesters, who fled from chemical clouds that looked like tear gas, stung eyes like it and met the dictionary definition of it.

On a week of unrest so remarkable it overshadowed the pandemic and its still-mounting death toll, Trump boasted baselessly about diagnostic testing for the virus and problematically about black economic progress. When "Mad Dog Mattis" snapped at him, Trump falsely claimed to have fired him as defense secretary and to have given him that nickname.

A look back:

CONSPIRACY THEORY

WHITE HOUSE: "Antifa and professional anarchists are invading our communities, staging bricks and weapons to instigate violence. These are acts of domestic terror." tweet Wednesday, with a video showing collections of bricks and stones as if stockpiled for attacks.

THE FACTS: The tweet's evidence of malfeasance was bogus.

The video contained multiple clips showing brick or stone for construction projects and the like, not for a nefarious plot. One clip captured rocks encased in wire frames. Those are actually a protective barrier outside Chabad of Sherman Oaks, a synagogue on Ventura Boulevard in Los Angeles, to stop vehicles from ramming the building.

"They've been there for about a year," Rabbi Mendel Lipskier of the synagogue told The Associated Press. "THESE ARE SECURITY BARRIERS," the synagogue said in a statement reassuring neighbors and friends.

On Monday, posts had circulated on social media with photos of that gabion wall, falsely describing the stones as being left on Ventura Boulevard "for the next round of Antifa riots" and saying such "drop offs" were being repeated around the country.

That conspiracy theory fed into the White House tweet two days later as Trump and others brushed aside the peaceful nature of most of the protesting, highlighted the violence and portrayed the unrest as overwhelmingly the work of radicals. The White House later deleted the tweet and video without explanation.

___

CAPITAL CHAOS

TRUMP: "They didn't use tear gas." Fox News Radio on Wednesday, referring to the previous night's demonstrations outside the White House.

KAYLEIGH McENANY, White House press secretary: "No tear gas was used. ... no one was tear-gassed. Let me make that clear." briefing Wednesday.

THE FACTS: People were tear-gassed.

Authorities acknowledged using pepper compound fired in plastic balls. Scientific sources, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, list dispersed pepper as a tear gas. Officers also fired projectiles containing chemicals that likewise meet the common and scientific definitions of tear gas.

People scattered in the stinging fog, coughing and gagging, some with eyes red and streaming.

"Tear gas is anything that makes you cry," said Dr. Lynn Goldman, dean of the George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health, speaking of chemicals used in crowd dispersal. "Pepper spray is a tear gas. But there are all kinds of other ones, too."

Dr. Sven-Eric Jordt, who researches tear gas agents and chemical exposure injuries at the Duke University School of Medicine, said newer compounds, categorized as OC agents, might or might not fit a traditional scientific definition of tear gas but are as potent and have the same effects. CS and CN are classic categories of tear gasses.

WUSA9, a CBS affiliate in Washington, reported that its journalists found spent OC and CS canisters on the street immediately after authorities cleared the protest; one canister was still warm.

___

TRUMP: "Washington, D.C., was the safest place on earth last night!" tweet and Facebook post Tuesday.

THE FACTS: Obviously untrue.

The crackdown on peaceful as well as violent protesters, the injuries to police who were attacked, the fortifications around the White House, the phalanx lining the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, and the threat of looting and vandalism in neighborhoods well away from the militarized scene all spoke to the dangers of the night.

More than half a dozen federal agencies joined in the effort to bring order. Among them, the U.S. Park Police said Tuesday that 51 of its members were injured over the previous four days of demonstrations.

During that time, Trump had warned that anyone getting past White House security would face "the most vicious dogs, and the most ominous weapons." At one point early in the confrontations, Secret Service agents spirited Trump to a White House bunker.

On Monday night and other nights, Washington was not the safest place on Earth. The White House may have been the safest place in Washington.

___

BLACK UNEMPLOYMENT

TRUMP, on the economy before the pandemic: "We had the best numbers for African Americans on employment and unemployment in history ... best everything." Fox News interview Wednesday

THE FACTS: True on unemployment. Not true by a long shot on "everything" in the economy.

Black unemployment reached a record low during the Trump administration, 5.4% in August, as the longest economic expansion in history pressed ahead.

Most of the progress came when Barack Obama was president: Black unemployment dropped from a recession high of 16.8% in March 2010 to 7.8% in January 2017. Improvement continued under Trump until the pandemic. Black unemployment reached 16.8% in May, compared with 13.3% for the overall population.

Not all economic measures improved for African Americans under Trump before the pandemic. A black household earned median income of $41,361 in 2018, the latest data available. That's below a 2000 peak of $43,380, according to the Census Bureau.

More broadly, there were multiple signs before the pandemic that the racial wealth gap had been worsening.

___

MAD DOG

TRUMP: "Probably the only thing Barack Obama & I have in common is that we both had the honor of firing Jim Mattis, the world's most overrated General." tweet Wednesday.

THE FACTS: No, what Trump and Obama have in common is that Mattis resigned under them. They did not fire him.

As Obama's head of Central Command and Trump's defense secretary, Mattis disagreed with elements of administration policy. This past week he also voiced anger over what he regards as Trump's divisive, immature leadership.

The retired four-star Marine general announced in December 2018 that he would step down in as defense secretary in two months."General Jim Mattis will be retiring, with distinction," Trump tweeted then, praising his tenure. Then Trump flipped his tone, cut short Mattis' remaining time and started claiming that he'd fired him.

___

TRUMP: "His nickname was 'Chaos', which I didn't like, & changed to 'Mad Dog.'" tweet Wednesday.

THE FACTS: No, he didn't change Mattis' nickname to Mad Dog. Mattis had been called that for more than a decade before joining the Trump administration.

He was also known by his military call sign Chaos when he was a Marine colonel. Mattis joked that it stood for "Colonel Has An Outstanding Solution."

___

VIRUS TESTING

TRUMP: "We have incredible testing now. So we've done a great job." interview Wednesday on Fox's "Brian Kilmeade Show."

TRUMP, on coordination with states: "We jointly developed testing projections and goals for each state for the month of May, altogether totaling 12.9 million tests. Think of that: 12.9 million tests." news briefing on May 11.

THE FACTS: U.S. testing has been far from "incredible." It was a failure in the crucial early weeks, U.S. officials acknowledged, meaning missed opportunity to limit the spread of the virus before infection and death surged.

Brett Giroir, the lead federal official on testing, said Thursday that the U.S. conducted about 12 million tests in May, falling 900,000 short of the administration's target for the month.

Trump has repeatedly overstated the availability of U.S. testing, falsely declaring in March, in the midst of dire shortages, "Anybody who wants a test, can get a test."

Now, the availability of tests varies widely. Some governors and local officials say they have more tests available than people who want them. Others say they can't meet the demand. That's the case at the Department of Veterans Affairs, for example.

___

Lajka reported from New York. Associated Press writers Matthew Perrone, Ashraf Khalil, Lolita Baldor and Robert Burns contributed to this report.

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AP FACT CHECK: Trump's alternate reality in time of anguish - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Religious leaders split over reopening places of worship in England – The Guardian

Posted By on June 7, 2020

Christian leaders have welcomed the governments announcement that places of worship in England will be allowed to reopen for individual prayer from 15 June, but Muslim and Jewish leaders said the move was not appropriate for the way they practise their faith.

The decision, confirmed on Sunday by the communities secretary, Robert Jenrick, followed growing pressure on the government, particularly from the Catholic church. Most mosques, synagogues and temples, however, are likely to remain shut until communal prayer is permitted.

Communal services are included in third phase of the governments recovery plan for England, to be implemented on 4 July at the earliest.

Only individual private prayer inside a place of worship will be permitted from next Monday. The government said communally led prayer, worship or devotion such as services, evensong, informal prayer meetings, mass, jummah or kirtan will not be possible at this stage.

Cardinal Vincent Nichols, the archbishop of Westminster and the most senior Catholic in England and Wales, who had pressed for a phased reopening, said the governments announcement was a great blessing.

This first step enables us to learn and prepare for those that will take us to a fuller use of our churches, for the celebration of Mass and other sacraments, he said.

The Church of England, which has come under pressure from some of its clergy to argue more forcefully for places of worship to reopen, also welcomed the move.

This is the start of the journey for church buildings to open up safely in line with government advice, said the bishop of London, Sarah Mullally.

Throughout this crisis churches have been serving their communities in a range of practical ways but this announcement recognises that the buildings themselves are important sacred spaces for people.

The C of E has already circulated advice to churches on reopening, which acknowledged that not all may be ready to do so at the same time.

Father Marcus Walker, the rector of St Bartholomews the Great in the City of London, who has campaigned on social media for churches to reopen, said: After an exile of four months, people can return to their churches to pray for the friends and family who have died, and find their own peace and comfort in these oases of calm. Now we wait for the time when we can return safely to church together for worship.

The secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, Harun Khan, said the governments guidance lacked clarity for Muslim communities.

Mosques are provisioned primarily for congregational worship, so there is currently significant uncertainty and concern from mosque leaders on how the new regulations can actually be implemented, he said.

The chair of the Mosques and Imams National Advisory Board (MINAB), Qari Asim, said the move caused significant challenges for the Muslim community because although mosques can reopen, collective worship is not allowed. The fundamental difference between mosques and some other places of worship is that mosques are first and foremost used for congregational prayers, he said.

Opening the mosques could lead communities to expect the resumption of collective worship, he said. MINABs advice to mosques was to only open to the public when it is safe to do so and legally permissible to hold congregational prayers.

The senior rabbi to Reform Judaism, Laura Janner-Klausner, said most synagogues would not reopen for private prayer on 15 June. Jews prioritise communal prayer rather than individual prayer, and we prioritise the sanctity of life. Individual prayer doesnt have the same theological status, and neither do buildings.

The governments policy relates primarily to churches and not to synagogues, gurdawas, temples and mosques. What matters to us is being together, and until we can do that safely, our synagogues will remain shut.

Jonathan Romain, the rabbi of Maidenhead synagogue and author of The Jews of England, said: Jewish prayer tends to be communal prayer, so while this will be a very pleasing development for Christians who also emphasise individual prayer it will not make a big difference to synagogue life until full services are resumed.

My own synagogue, like many others, is reluctantly planning on taking the unprecedented step of cancelling our new year/day of Atonement services in September, and holding them through live-streaming or zoom instead the very first time in Jewish history this will have been done, as we do not think it will be possible to hold gatherings of several hundred people in a way that is compatible with social distancing and other safety measures.

Under guidance to be issued this week, the government will say shared spaces must undergo regular thorough cleaning, hand-sanitiser must be available and the use of shared or communal religious texts or prayer mats should be discouraged. Faith leaders should also carry out risk assessments.

Baptisms, weddings, meetings and classes are not permitted. Funerals are allowed to take place under existing regulations which require numbers to be limited and mourners to be physically distanced. Faith leaders are allowed to record services inside places of worship.

Jenrick said: People of all faiths have shown enormous patience and forbearance, unable to mark Easter, Passover, Ramadan or Vaisakhi with friends and family in the traditional way. As we control the virus, we are now able to move forwards with a limited, but important return to houses of worship.

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Religious leaders split over reopening places of worship in England - The Guardian

Letter: Events of 2020 call for a new vision forward – Palm Beach Daily News

Posted By on June 7, 2020

I was reflecting back on my High Holiday sermon that I delivered at Palm Beach Synagogue this past September. I spoke about the upcoming year of 2020, how we must have a 2020 vision of hope and optimism. From the pulpit, I preached about how 2020 will surely bring us renewed clarity.

Little did I know, that 2020 would be perhaps the most tragic, confusing and tumultuous year of my lifetime. The year of a pandemic followed by pandemonia. The COVID-19 pandemic claimed hundreds of thousands of lives worldwide, shut down our country and devastated our economy. All of our realities and norms were suddenly shattered. All of our plans and expectations were utterly halted.

And then, when we were finally seeing some signs of light and recovery, when we were at the cusp of reopening our country, a police officer put his knee on a mans throat, choking him to death and choking our nation into sadness, anger and unrest.

What happens when everything shatters? When our expectations fracture and our society splinters? When our dreams dissolve and our hearts break?

What happens when our 2020 hindsight completely contradicts our 2020 vision? How do we ever move on?

We dont. We cant move on. We have to move forward.

I remember seeing a TED talk from a woman named Nora McInerny. She said something that forever changed my perspective on tragedy and grief. We dont move on from tragedy. We move forward with it.

The Jewish nation just celebrated Shavuot, the festival of the giving of the Ten Commandments. Descending the mountain 40 days after receiving the two tablets, Moses sees the Jewish people worshiping the golden calf. He takes the tablets and throws them to the ground, shattering a dream and fragmenting a people. Everything seemed lost. The world seemed broken. The loving marriage between heaven and earth seemed about ready to divorce.

Then came the holiest moment in Jewish history. The people decided they will reforge, rebuild and reunite as one people and follow His commandments.

On Yom Kippur we received the second set of tablets. Ever since, Yom Kippur is our annual reminder that we can be better, we can learn from our past and grow from it.

In his song Anthem, Leonard Cohen sings, There is a crack in everything. That's how the light gets in.

My 2020 vision was for a year devoid of cracks. My 2020 hindsight shows me that there are many, many cracks in life, in society, in the world.

Which inspires my new 2020 vision: to ensure that all of the cracks exist for one reason and one reason only: to let the light in.

Rabbi Moshe Scheiner

Palm Beach Synagogue

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Letter: Events of 2020 call for a new vision forward - Palm Beach Daily News

A Virtual Panel on Queer Spirituality Will Include Insights from Rabbi Egers New Book – WEHOville

Posted By on June 7, 2020

Rabbi Denise Eger will share readings and insights from her new book, Mishkan Gaavah: Where Pride Dwells, A Celebration of LGBTQ Jewish Life and Ritual, at an interfaith virtual panel on Queer Spirituality on June 11.

The panel discussion will take place at 5 p.m. PDT and is hosted by the Central Conference of American Rabbis (CCAR) and the Human Rights Campaign (HRC). Pride Inside Where Pride Dwells: An Interfaith Discussion and Celebration of LGBTQ Spirituality will be a conversation among Jewish, Muslim, and Christian faith leaders and LGBTQ activists. It will focus on inclusion, compassion, challenges, and the lived spiritual experience of the LGBTQ and non-binary communities, including how these experiences have changed amid the ongoing pandemic.

Rabbi Eger is the founding rabbi of Congregation Kol Ami, West Hollywoods Reform synagogue, and served as the first openly LGBTQ president of the CCAR.

The event is part of the global online celebration of Pride month replacing the traditional in-person marches and events this year. It will feature introductory remarks from CCAR Chief Executive Rabbi Hara Person and HRC President Alphonso David.

Mishkan Gaavah: Where Pride Dwells, is a collection of LGBTQ prayers, poems, liturgy, and rituals meant to be a spiritual resource and a celebratory affirmation of Jewish diversity. Giving voice to the private and public sectors of the queer Jewish experience, the book is also a commemoration of the 50th anniversary of both the Stonewall Riots and the first Pride march, reflecting the longtime advocacy of the Reform Movement for full LGBTQ inclusion.

Mishkan Gaavah is a visionary guide to LGBTQ inclusion within the Jewish community, said Rabbi Person. The Reform rabbinate has a long history of support for LGBTQ equalitydue in part to Rabbi Egers extraordinary leadership and LGBTQ advocacy in the Jewish and secular world. It is my hope that this book finds a sacred place in Jewish homes, synagogues, and in the hands and hearts of everyone in the LGBTQ community and in the Jewish community, and it is an honor to join Rabbi Eger, the Human Rights Campaign, and our allies in the Muslim and Christian world to come together for an uplifting interfaith evening celebrating the spirituality and faith of the LGBTQ community.

As LGBTQ people celebrate Pride while physically distancing due to COVID-19 we must continue to explore and expand the ways we can come together to uplift our community, including through faith, said Alphonso David. Justice and equality for all members of our community is our goal and we must continue to find common ground between LGBTQ people and people of faith who share that goal. This event with the Central Conference of American Rabbis moves us all closer to our shared goals of justice and equality and mutual understanding. I look forward to celebrating Pride with people of all faiths throughout this Pride season.

In addition to Eger, Person and David, other speakers will be:

For more details about the Zoom video conference and to RSVP, click here.

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A Virtual Panel on Queer Spirituality Will Include Insights from Rabbi Egers New Book - WEHOville

A rabbi and scribe: Meet the new director of the Italian Jewish Museum – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on June 7, 2020

Amedeo Spagnoletto, a rabbi and a sofer a Jewish ritual scribe has been appointed as the new director of the National Museum of Italian Judaism and the Shoah (MEIS), the museum announced on Thursday.Located in the city of Ferrara in Northern Italy, celebrated in the renowned novel The Garden of the Finzi-Continis by local Jewish writer Giorgio Bassani, the museum has been partially operating for a few years, but several of its buildings are still under construction.Spagnoletto was selected by MEIS board from a pool of 17 applicants from Italy and abroad, becoming one of the handful rabbis to lead a museum in the world.When I was told I had been selected I was very surprised. I was not sure how my background would play, he told The Jerusalem Post. However Italy boasts a long and great tradition of rabbis active in other fields as well. In past as well as present times, we have had rabbis who were also physicians, teachers, academics, engineers and so on I think that the museums choice goes in the direction of debunking a clich about what a rabbi does, which is very good, considering that fighting clichs and prejudices is one of the MEIS missions.Born and raised in Rome, Spagnoletto, 52, received his ordination from the Italian capitals Rabbinical School and studied to become a sofer at the Tzemach Tzedek Institute in Jerusalem. He also studied at the School of Library Science of the Vatican Library. In the past he served for several years as the chief rabbi of Florence.As a sofer, the rabbi has collaborated with Jewish institutions in Italy and abroad to identify, restore and conserve ancient Jewish manuscripts. It was during one of his frequent checks on such materials in possession of Italian Jewish communities that Spagnoletto ran into one of the most extraordinary Jewish artifacts that have been uncovered in modern times, kept for centuries in the small synagogue of the town of Biella: a Torah scroll, perfectly intact, that carbon dating assessed was manufactured around the year 1250, making it one of the oldest in the world still fit for ritual use.Indeed Spagnoletto highlighted that one of his goals as MEIS director is going to be showcasing the treasures of those Italian Jewish communities that because of their limited numbers and resources would not be otherwise able to share their heritage to the public and whose troves are full of secret jewels.It is still too early for me to formulate specific projects for my tenure. My first priority will be to study and understand the incredible work that my predecessor Simonetta Della Seta carried out in the past four years, he pointed out.However, I definitely see my upcoming activity at the MEIS as rooted in my experiences and background, made of collaborations with many Jewish museums and with Italian Jewish institutions and communities. I would be happy for the museum to become a place where those who do not have the strength to promote their Jewish heritage, not only in terms of objects and artifacts, but also pride and identity, find the opportunity to do so, benefitting the Italian society at large and all Italian Jewish communities, from the smallest to the largest, he added.Jews have continuously lived in the Italian peninsula for about 2,000 years, making it one of the most ancient communities in the Diaspora. Today Italy is home to about 25,000 Jews, mostly in Rome and Milan. Several Jewish communities run their own museums, but the MEIS was established with a law passed by the Italian Parliament and it is funded by the authorities.Spagnoletto emphasized that if many ritual objects and books have been looted, lost or damaged over the centuries, among the ancient artifacts still in possession of Italian communities and synagogues are a vast amount of Torah scrolls (There are synagogues where there are many more Torah scrolls than worshipers, he said).As all cultural institutions in the country, the museum has been closed for the coronavirus emergency. The inauguration of a new exhibition devoted to Jewish life in Italy covering the period between the establishment of the ghettos and emancipation, which was scheduled in April, has been postponed to the beginning of 2021, while a temporary exhibition on the Jewish history and life in the city of Ferrara has been offered online.We are already working on creating a protocol to allow schools to visit us safely starting from the beginning of the next school year, Spagnoletto said, highlighting that they are also working with the Jewish community of Ferrara to create a program that would include also the tour of the citys synagogues. The relationship with the community is very strong.

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A rabbi and scribe: Meet the new director of the Italian Jewish Museum - The Jerusalem Post


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