Axios reports that @GOPLeader Kevin McCarthy says he’ll withhold evidence to protect coup plotters who tried to overthrow the government.
2/ Remember that McCarthy likely is one of few with direct knowledge that Trump intentionally barred the US military from stopping the insurrection with the specific goal of helping the insurrectionists ransack the capital. McCarthy's got the evidence. Refusing to testify.
So to give you a sense of how it’s going. My son’s NYC public high school had 30% attendance today.
2/ a bit more context here. there are obviously lots of different issues in terms of health for students, for teachers, staff. but one point that gets less attn in the public conversation is that for most of the schools in nyc right now most of what they’re doing is doing …
3/ COVID test, organizing and administering isolations, sending kids home with COVID. Meanwhile large numbers of teachers and staff are out with COVID, many students are out with COVID and many families are keeping their kids home to avoid getting COVID. it’s important …
A deep conventional wisdom has it that lib Twitter is a hotbed of demands for school closures. the reality is almost diametrically opposite. The country’s most esteemed and influential liberal/cosmopolitan publications have been dominated by the voices of highly …
2/ educated, affluent and mostly white people demanding schools never close even for brief periods almost always in the name of minority and/or marginalized students. Meanwhile in the pre-vaccine period, it was precisely these communities which were most resistant to going …
3/ back to in person education. The staunchest voices against school closures of any sort have been people with PhDs working from home. Just speaking for myself I think it made sense to go back to in person once the country was broadly vaxed which it was by last …
Hard to say anything abt masks w/o getting attacked from all directions. That's fine. Many of us have strong feelings and we've all been through enough to be entitled to them. But this is the thing abt high filtration masks. To a significant extent they allow people to go solo.
2/ In the early days of the pandemic civilians only had inferior masks. So it was critical that everyone be wearing them since you needed to dampen aerosols on the exhale and the inhale. Ideally that's still the case. But the reality is that we're in a world where ...
3/ lots of people aren't masking or are wearing inferior masks or aren't wearing them right. High filtration masks allow you to take your safety largely into your own hands. It's certainly not 100% protection. But you have it within your power to get a mask that provides ...
This is right and important. At this stage we need to leave a spectrum of precaution to individual choice and personal health risk. But to do that we need to have clear info abt how people can protect themselves. What works and what doesn't according to the latest knowledge.
2/ We're not going to be mandating high filtration masks, for better or worse. But we shld give people the information that cloth masks provide meager protection and if you want to protect yourself you should be wearing a high filtration mask.
3/ I'm reasonably bright and have been covering this for two years and I have had a hard time making sense of which masks work and how well. So I put together this primer on which masks work best, how to choose one and how to know if it's working. talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/covid-n…
Been working on a post abt what we've learned abt what does and doesn't work w with the CDC as a pandemic response org. But these points are critical too. The key shortcoming of epi/pub health Twitter is not grappling w the difference between what you'd want to do ...
2/ in the abstract and what you can do within the political and societal realities you have to operate in. They're really, really different. This can sound defensive. And it is in some ways the role of outside critics and experts to highlight the delta between what ...
3/ being done and how it could be done better. So it's not all one way or another. My own take is that COVID has illustrated ways in which the CDC is designed for normal times and struggles in this context, not because the people are idiots but because of structure and design.
This excellent piece focuses on the 'reimagining and expansion' of Obamacare and its every-growing popularity. What is important to remember though is that no big program is a one and done affair. They always getting expanded or at least optimized ... nytimes.com/2021/12/22/ups…
2/ based on how they function in real life. This isn't a shortcoming of the original program any more that the first version of the iPhone or a Model-T was a failure of engineering. But since passage in 2010 Republicans adopted a plan a willful sabotage even after ...
3/ it became clear the law would never be repealed. Not expanding Obamacare is at least reasonably in line with Republican policy goals of allowing as few people to get coverage as possible. But it went well beyond that. With every other program through history ...