Trump official: Unclear if RNC can be safely held in Florida:
A top Trump administration health official says it is not clear whether it will be safe to hold the Republican National Convention (RNC) in Jacksonville next month as Florida sees record numbers of coronavirus cases.
The comments on Sunday came a month after Republican officials moved the event from North Carolina over a dispute over health precautions.
Stephen Hahn, the Food and Drug Administration commissioner, also refused to confirm President Donald Trump's claim that 99 percent of coronavirus cases were harmless and called the situation a "serious problem".
With record numbers of people testing positive for the virus in Jacksonville and across Florida, Hahn was asked if it would be safe to hold the typically large RNC gathering in just seven weeks.
On Saturday, Florida reported a new record of nearly 11,500 new coronavirus cases, amid a surge in cases in western and southern states. To date, nearly 130,000 people have died in the US amid 2.83 million cases.
"I think it's too early to tell," Hahn said on CNN's State of the Union programme. "We will have to see how this unfolds in Florida and elsewhere around the country."
The Republican Party in June announced it was moving most of the convention activities to Jacksonville from Charlotte after a battle over coronavirus safety concerns with North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, a Democrat.
[...] Trump has been known to thrive on large crowds at his campaign rallies and has not embraced masks or social distancing measures at events since the country began reopening from the coronavirus shutdown.
The president has also repeatedly sought to minimise the jump in confirmed cases and claimed without evidence in a July Fourth speech that 99 percent of cases in the United States were "totally harmless".
(Score: 2) by aristarchus on Thursday July 09 2020, @01:48AM (2 children)
See, this is the thing: all this knowledge is right out there [medievalists.net] on the Internets, and a rural location is no longer an excuse for ignorance. Educate yourself. And perhaps read Foucault's Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison (French: Surveiller et punir : Naissance de la prison) [wikipedia.org]. Starts out with,
, so the lapse in drawing and quartering is much more recent than you seem to think. And in the Americas, more a technique of staking you out naked over a fire ant hill, with some honey applied to strategic parts. Again, DO NOT BREAK quarantine.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 09 2020, @01:57AM (1 child)
Plague Doctor's Masks? [pinterest.ch] Even a Steampunk thing, so the masks go way back, as well.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 09 2020, @02:50PM
Of course, plague doctor's masks only worked on accident.
They were designed to hold flowers and perfumes near the nose to keep the miasma (bad smells that were understood to "cause" disease) away, the fact that they kept germs out was largely an accident, though I suppose they iterated on ideas until they found one that worked best.
That said, the idea that bad smells cause disease isn't as stupid as you might first imagine. It is a hack that our brains have used for millions of years, you see, places with germs tend to smell a certain way, we can smell, but not sense germs directly, so we used those smells as a proxy for the germs. Those became "bad" smells, the kind you instinctively avoid. Those that did avoid them, got sick less, and proliferated more. Thus, the link to disease and bad smells was forged before mastery of fire, speech, even opposable thumbs.