Monday, November 30, 2020

Digital COVID-19 ‘passport’ may take flight for airline travelers: report



By Kathianne Boniello

November 28, 2020 | 11:42pm

Get ready to carry two passports while flying in the age of COVID-19: one from your homeland, and one showing you’ve been vaccinated against the coronavirus.

An airline industry group is working on a universal digital document that would show a passenger’s virus test results and whether they’ve been inoculated, according to The Hill.

The “digital health pass” is in the last stages of development, the International Air Transport Association said, with the goal of verifying information seamlessly among airlines, testing labs, governments and travelers.

“Testing is the first key to enable international travel without quarantine measures,” association CEO Alexandre de Juniac said in a statement.

“The second key is the global information infrastructure needed to securely manage, share and verify test data matched with traveler identities in compliance with border control requirements,” he said.


Tourists wait at the coronavirus sanitary control at Punta Cana International Airport.AFP via Getty Images


The COVID-19 passport would direct travelers to verified testing centers and labs at their departure points that would match the rules and standards for wherever they are going, with the hope of avoiding restrictions on arrival, according to the report.

So far, one airline has publicly said it is considering making the coronavirus vaccine mandatory for travel: Australia’s Qantas, according to the Daily Mail.

“We are looking at changing our terms and conditions to say for international travelers that we will ask people to have a vaccination before they can get on the aircraft,” Qantas CEO Alan Joyce said.




Pope Francis Criticizes Anti-Lockdown Protesters In New Book

 

by Tyler Durden

Fri, 11/27/2020 - 16:30


While coronavirus lockdowns triggered widespread social unrest and resulted in the worst socio-economic implosion the world has ever seen - Pope Francis is set to reveal his thoughts on what transpired this year in a new book expected to be released next month, according to AP News.

In "Let Us Dream: The Path to A Better Future," ghostwritten by biographer Austen Ivereigh, Francis champions anti-racism protesters while demonizing anti-lockdown demonstrators. He said those around the world who demonstrated against lockdown restrictions reacted "as if measures that governments must impose for the good of their people constitute some political assault on autonomy or personal freedom!"

"You'll never find such people protesting the death of George Floyd, or joining a demonstration because there are shantytowns where children lack water or education," Francis wrote in the new 150-page book. "They turned into a cultural battle what was in truth an effort to ensure the protection of life."



Francis touched on Floyd's police killing that ignited social unrest across almost every US metro area for months. Francis said: "Abuse is a gross violation of human dignity that we cannot allow and which we must continue to struggle against."

However, Francis condemned anti-racism protesters' attempt to erase history by dismantling statues of Confederate leaders. He said there are better ways to create dialogue.

"Amputating history can make us lose our memory, which is one of the few remedies we have against repeating the mistakes of the past," he wrote.

Francis criticized populist leaders who've created buzz among supporters at massive rallies and scapegoats others for their countries' problems. He compared the populist movement of today to the ones from the 1930s.

"Today, listening to some of the populist leaders we now have, I am reminded of the 1930s, when some democracies collapsed into dictatorships seemingly overnight," he wrote. "We see it happening again now in rallies where populist leaders excite and harangue crowds, channeling their resentments and hatreds against imagined enemies to distract from the real problems."

He also said the virus pandemic had become an opportunity for the world to reset. Not too long ago, Archibishop Carlo Maria Vigano warned about a global reset intended to undermine "God and humanity".

Earlier this month, Francis' latest Encyclical "Fratelli Tutti" ("Brothers All") was published and seemed more of a political document than a spiritual guide to the catholic faith. He spoke for a more globalist political system and denounced the global capitalist free market economy.

In the most recent monthly prayer intention, he called all the good Catholics of the world to "pray that the progress of robotics and artificial intelligence may always serve humankind."




Sunday, November 29, 2020

Christian World News - Healing a Divided Nation - November 27, 2020

Boy Scouts Facing Nearly 90,000 Sexual Abuse Claims In “Unpre...

Dr. Fauci, Andrew Cuomo, AOC nominated for Time’s ‘Person of the Year’


By Bernadette Hogan and Carl Campanile
November 27, 2020 | 3:55pm


Anthony Fauci, Andrew Cuomo, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Getty Images; Kevin P. Coughlin / Office of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo; Getty Images

.
Dr. Anthony Fauci and the essential workers who have labored throughout the coronavirus pandemic are tied neck-and-neck as key nominees for Time Magazine’s “Person of the Year” award, a list on which New York’s Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have also landed.

The annual poll opened on Wednesday and pulls from reader vote submissions, as individuals are required to vote “yes” or “no” when asked whether or not a specific nominee should be chosen as the overall award winner.

Readers may cast votes of “yes” or “no” to all 80 of the magazine’s nominated candidates.
Final results will be revealed in early December, with Time’s editors selecting an overall winner by Dec. 10.

Fauci, the U.S.’s top epidemiologist who became a national fixture over the last year during the COVID-19 pandemic response, as well as essential employees doctors, nurses, delivery workers, public transit and grocery store employees are leading the publication’s list — as of Wednesday both are tied, after individually receiving a yes by 81 percent of respondents, and no by 19 percent of voters.

Thirty five percent of readers gave Cuomo a thumbs up for the award compared to 65 percent who voted no.

The third-term Democratic governor celebrated winning the 2020 International Emmys’ “Founders Award” last week as well as being a New York Times bestseller with his latest novel, “American Crisis.”

But he’s slightly trailing liberal darling, Bronx Democratic Socialist AOC — who has thus far secured 38 percent yes votes in her favor.
The Democratic presidential ticket scored big with president-elect Joe Biden clinching 64 percent of the yes votes compared to 36 percent in opposition, and his running mate Kamala Harris performed even better — by a 68 percent to 32 percent yes-no margin.

Polling for their Republican counterparts followed far behind, President Donald Trump has a mere 8 percent of the yes vote cast in his favor compared to 92 percent of individuals who votes no, and Vice President Mike Pence’s popularity is even lower, as just 3 percent responded in the affirmative.

Following nearly half a year of civil unrest sparked by the death of George Floyd in May, then summertime, anti-cop protests across cities globally — the Black Lives Matter movement scored big, hitting 61 percent in the yes category compared to 39 percent of those who said no.

Britain’s wayward royal power-couple Meghan Markle and Prince Harry made the cut, too, with Markle leading her husband at 26 percent of the yes vote compared to his 20 percent.
Individuals representing Big Tech barely scooped 10 percent of the yes vote, in total, with Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey sporting 8 percent, and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg at 3 percent. Just 6 percent said Amazon’s Jeff Bezos should be crowned winner.

Meanwhile, Zoom’s CEO Eric Yuan has 10 percent of the yes vote — the interactive, video technology has become a staple for companies unable to work in traditional offices and conduct face to face meetings with employees and clients alike during the pandemic, as well as individuals seeking to connect with loved ones and friends in a socially distanced manner from afar.

Other nominees include artists Cardi B, Taylor Swift, Billie Eilish and one-time presidential candidate, rapper Kanye West.
Georgia politico Stacey Abrams, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr’s names similarly got a nod, as well as American NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace, the NBA’s Lebron James and Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes.
The 2019 award went to Swedish climate change activist, teenager Greta Thunberg.

‘Transhood’ shows mom forcing her son to declare himself a girl..


HBO documentary ‘Transhood’ shows mom forcing her son to declare himself a girl at religious ceremony


As Matt Walsh pointed out, the 'poor child appears to have no interest in being paraded around like his mother’s show pony'

Tue Nov 24, 2020 - 12:13 pm EST


Screen grab from HBO's 2020 documentary 'Transhood'HBO / video screen grab



By Jonathon Van Maren

FOLLOW JONATHON

November 24, 2020 (LifeSiteNews) – Back in 2018, I covered the emergence of bizarre new pastoral guidance released by the Anglican House of Bishops in the United Kingdom laying out a new ecclesiastical service called the “Affirmation of Baptismal Faith.” In that service, clergy members lay hands on transgender people, address them by their “new name,” and often use water and oil (although the bishops note that this is not, strictly speaking, a baptism.) “For a trans person to be addressed liturgically by the minister for the first time by their chosen name may be a powerful moment in the service,” the guidance reads. The service enables people to “renew the commitments made in baptism and in a public setting and provides space for those who have undergone a major transition to Jesus Christ.”

In short, this service constitutes formal approval of transgenderism and gender ideology, with a religious ceremony to give it a whiff of ecclesiastical solidity. But at least this blasphemous “service,” which cannibalizes various rituals in an attempt to appear sane, was cobbled together for adults.

As it turns out, “transgender baptisms” are catching on. Earlier this week, Matt Walsh of the Daily Wire posted a clip from the HBO documentary Transhood depicting a child being inducted into transgenderism via a religious ceremony conducted by a woman. The church, apparently, is the unitarian universalist church (which sounds like something someone invented to make fun of them), and the parishioners—or whatever they’re called—are called on to “proclaim their identify publicly as lesbian, gray, bisexual, transgender, queer, or questioning, intersex, pansexual, asexual, or any category I’ve left out.”

Matt Walsh describes the scene that follows thusly:

A mother then pulls her young son (four years old, it turns out) onto the stage to announce that he’s really a girl. But the poor child appears to have no interest in being paraded around like his mother’s show pony. He hands the microphone back. “I don’t want to do it,” he protests. The mother takes it upon herself to come out on her son’s behalf, informing the audience that her boy, Phoenix, “would like you to know that she’s a girl and she prefers she and her pronouns.”

Completing the apparently familiar ritual, the pastor hands the child a pink flower as the congregation repeats its creepy affirmation in unison: “May you be well, safe, and whole. We honor you exactly as you are.” Of course, that’s the exact opposite of what they are really doing.

The entire documentary, it turns out, showcases “trans kids” being led on the journey to transition by often all-too-enthusiastic parents. These children are embarking on a journey of first social and then medical transition that will transform not only their childhood and their teen years, which will become a miserable haze of hormone blockers, cross-dressing, and a confusing combination of breasts, beards, and stunted genitals, but their entire lives. Abigail Shrier described the long-term impact on children in her essential book Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters (which she discussed with me on our podcast.) What we are doing to children is nothing short of criminal.

Adam Ford’s response to the video was one of outrage: “What is that boy, 8? 9? Do you for one second believe that he "decided to be a girl" on his own? Literally a zero percent chance. His mother, who is clearly the head of his family, brainwashed him into believing he is a girl. She pulled him up on stage after coaching him on exactly what he was expected to say. When he couldn't do it, she did it for him. Now why would she do all of that? Only one reason: For herself. She gets all the woke points. She gets to proclaim how progressive she is, to have raised a trans child. She gets to redeem those sweet, sweet intersectionality and oppression points on behalf of her family. She pimps out her own child and reaps the rewards.”

That is precisely it. Those who question this vile new religion—replete with genital mutilation, a staple of a particularly fundamentalist branch of Islam—are accused of wanting trans kids to kill themselves or of being “transphobic.” The West’s religious quislings, presiding over a ridiculous collection of post-Christian woke-cults, work overtime to quell the doubts that inevitably arise by attempting to give all of this a whiff of the sacred. And, as is so often the case, the children suffer the consequences.

I wonder if these false “shepherds” have ever read Luke 17:2: “It were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he cast into the sea, than that he should offend one of these little ones.”




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Supreme Court backs religious groups in New York

Saturday, November 28, 2020

One Humanity-Pastor Bill Hughes

Founder World Economic Forum Klaus Schwab Is A Jesuit

Revelation—Chapter 13 Pt 8 God’s Love Letter— Giving Life; For What Pur...

End-time prophecy revealed: rise of Catholicism, fleeing the cities & th...

Who is Klaus Schwab?


Klaus Martin Schwab (German pronunciation: [klaʊs ˈmaʁtiːn ʃvaːp]; born 30 March 1938) is a German engineer and economist best known as the founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum.[1] His wife and first collaborator,[2][3] Hilde, co-founded the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship with him.

Klaus Schwab


Klaus Schwab at the World Economic Forum in Davos in January 2008.


Born 30 March 1938 (age 82)

Ravensburg, Germany

Education

ETH Zürich (PhD)
University of Fribourg (PhD)
Harvard University (MPA)
Occupation Founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum

Spouse(s)
Hilde Schwab
​(m. 1971)​
Children 2

Life

Education

Schwab holds a doctorate in Economics from the University of Fribourg[4], a doctorate in Engineering from the ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology)[5] and a Master of Public Administration from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University[6]. Before pursuing his doctorates, he graduated as an engineer from the ETH Zurich, and as an economist from the University of Fribourg.[citation needed].

Additionally, he has been the recipient of 17 honorary doctorates[7], including from the London School of Economics[8], the National University of Singapore[9], KAIST[10], and over a dozen other universities, from Kaunas to Haifa to Bangkok.[11][12][13]. He is also an honorary professor of the University of Geneva, the Ben-Gurion University of Israel[14] and the China Foreign Affairs University.[15]

He obtained his "Abitur" or high school diploma from the Humanistisches Gymnasium in Ravensburg, Germany.[citation needed]

Professional life

Schwab was professor of business policy at the University of Geneva from 1972 to 2003, and since then, has been an Honorary Professor there.[16] Since 1979, he has published the Global Competitiveness Report, an annual report assessing the potential for increasing productivity and economic growth of countries around the world, written by a team of economists.[17] The report is based on a methodology developed by Schwab, measuring competitiveness not only in terms of productivity but also based on sustainability criteria.[18]

He has authored and co-authored several books, including The Fourth Industrial Revolution (2016)[19], Shaping the Fourth Industrial Revolution (2018, with Nicholas Davis)[20], COVID-19: The Great Reset (2020, with Thierry Malleret), [21] and Stakeholder Capitalism (to appear in 2021, with Peter Vanham)[22].

Foundations

In 1971, Schwab founded the European Management Forum,[23] which in 1987 became the World Economic Forum, as a not-for-profit foundation committed to improving the state of the world. He founded the WEF in 1971, the same year in which he published Moderne Unternehmensführung im Maschinenbau[24] (Modern Enterprise Management in Mechanical Engineering). In that book, he argued that the management of a modern enterprise must serve not only shareholders but all stakeholders (die Interessenten), to achieve long-term growth and prosperity. Schwab has championed the multistakeholder concept since the WEF’s inception. In 2015, the WEF was formally recognised by the Swiss Government as an "international body"[25]. Under Schwab's management, the WEF has been keen to promote its image as a driver for reconciliation efforts in different parts of the world, acting as a catalyst of numerous collaborations and international initiatives.

In 1998, Schwab and his wife founded the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship, another NGO based in Geneva, Switzerland.

In 2004, Schwab created a new foundation using the US$1 million prize money from the Dan David Prize he received that year from Israel. The Forum of Young Global Leaders[26] aims to create a dynamic global community of exceptional people (under 40) with the vision, courage and influence to drive positive change in the world.

In 2011, he founded the Global Shapers Community, a global network of local communities, or "hubs", of young people aged 20 to 30 who are exceptional in their potential, achievements and drive to make a contribute to their communities. As of 9 June 2020, there are 421 Hubs with 9,731 Shapers.[27]

Other activities

From 1993-1995, Schwab was a member of the UN High-Level Advisory Board on Sustainable Development.[28] From 1996-1998, he was Vice-Chairman of the UN Committee for Development Planning.[29] He also exercised a number of other functions, such as being a member of the Peres Centre for Peace[30] and a member of the board of the Lucerne Festival.[31] During the earlier years of his career, he was on a number of company boards, such as The Swatch Group, The Daily Mail Group, and Vontobel Holding. He is a former member of the steering committee of the Bilderberg Group.[32]

He was knighted by Queen Elisabeth (Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George, 2006), received the Knight Commanders Cross of Germany (2012) and the Grand Cordon of the Rising Sun of Japan (2013)[33]. He is a Knight of the Légion d'Honneur of France (1997), received the Candlelight Award from then U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan (New York, 2001)[34] and received the China Reform Friendship Medal (2018).[35]


Source: Wikipedia


Wednesday, November 25, 2020

What to expect from John Kerry as climate envoy

Alejandro Mayorkas Vows to Advance U.S. as 'Country of Welcome' as DHS S...

 

...................................

Alejandro Mayorkas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Alejandro Mayorkas



United States Secretary of Homeland Security

Nominee
Assuming office
TBD
President Joe Biden (elect)
Succeeding Kirstjen Nielsen (de jure)
Chad Wolf (de facto)
6th United States Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security
In office
December 23, 2013 – October 28, 2016
President Barack Obama
Preceded by Jane Holl Lute
Succeeded by Elaine Duke
Director of United States Citizenship and Immigration Services
In office
August 12, 2009 – December 23, 2013
President Barack Obama
Preceded by Jonathan Scharfen (acting)
Succeeded by Lori Scialabba (acting)
United States Attorney for the Central District of California
In office
December 21, 1998[1] – April 20, 2001
President Bill Clinton
George W. Bush
Preceded by Nora Margaret Manella[2]
Succeeded by Debra Wong Yang[3]
Personal details
Born November 24, 1959 (age 61)
Havana, Cuba
Political party Democratic
Education University of California, Berkeley (BA)
Loyola Law School, Los Angeles (JD)


Alejandro Nicholas Mayorkas (born November 24, 1959) is an American lawyer and former government official. Born in Cuba, he grew up in Los Angeles and graduated from the University of California, Berkeley and Loyola Law School. During the Clinton administration, Mayorkas served as U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California. During the Obama administration, he served in the Department of Homeland Security, first as Director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (2009–13) and then as Deputy Secretary (2013–14). In 2016, he became a partner at Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr, a Washington, D.C. law firm. On November 23, 2020, President-elect Joe Biden announced that he has nominated Mayorkas to serve as Secretary of Homeland Security in his Cabinet.


Contents
1Early life and education
2Career
2.1Assistant United States Attorney
2.2United States Attorney
2.3Private law practice
2.4Director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
2.5Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security
2.6Return to private practice, 2017–2020
2.7Secretary of Homeland Security designate
3Personal life
4References
5Sources
6External links

Early life and education

Alejandro Nicholas Mayorkas,[4] nicknamed Ali Mayorkas,[5][6] was born in Havana, Cuba, on November 24, 1959.[7] His parents arrived with him and his sister to the United States in 1960 as refugees, following the Cuban Revolution. He lived in Miami, Florida, before his family moved to Los Angeles, California, where he was raised for the remainder of his youth.[8] Mayorkas grew up in Beverly Hills and attended Beverly Hills High School.[9]

His father was a Cuban Jew of Sephardic background and his mother a Romanian Jew whose family escaped the Holocaust and fled to Cuba in the 1940s[10][11][12] where his father owned and operated a steel wool factory.[8]

Mayorkas earned his Bachelor of Arts degree with distinction from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1981. He received his Juris Doctor from Loyola Law School in 1985.[13]



Biden's Director Of National Intelligence Nominee Avril Haines Delivers ...

......................

Avril Haines
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Avril Haines



Director of National Intelligence

Nominee
Assuming office
TBD
President Joe Biden (elect)
Succeeding John Ratcliffe
Deputy National Security Advisor
In office
January 11, 2015 – January 20, 2017
President Barack Obama
Preceded by Tony Blinken
Succeeded by K. T. McFarland
4th Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency
In office
August 9, 2013 – January 10, 2015
President Barack Obama
Preceded by Michael Morell
Succeeded by David S. Cohen
Personal details
Born
Avril Danica Haines
August 29, 1969 (age 51)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) David Davighi
Education University of Chicago (BA)
Georgetown University (JD)


Avril Danica Haines (born August 29, 1969) is an American lawyer and former government official who served as the White House Deputy National Security Advisor in Barack Obama's administration.[1] She previously served as Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, the first woman to hold this position.[2] Prior to her appointment to the CIA, she served as Deputy Counsel to the President for National Security Affairs in the Office of White House Counsel.

She replaced Tony Blinken as White House Deputy National Security Advisor, a position she held until the end of the Obama administration.[3]

On November 23, 2020, President-elect Joe Biden announced his nomination of Haines to serve as Director of National Intelligence in the Biden cabinet, which would make her the first woman to hold this position.[4][5]


Contents

Early life and education

Haines was born in the New York City borough of Manhattan on August 29, 1969, to Adrian Rappin (née Adrienne Rappaport) and Thomas Haines.[6][7] Her mother was a painter. Adrian developed chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and contracted avian tuberculosis, leading to her death when Haines was 15 years old.[6] Her father is a biochemist and professor emeritus at City College, who helped found the CUNY School of Medicine, where he served as the chair of the biochemistry department.[8]

After graduating from Hunter College High School, Haines traveled to Japan for a year and enrolled in Kodokan, an elite judo institute in Tokyo.[6] In 1988, Haines enrolled in the University of Chicago where she studied theoretical physics. While attending the University of Chicago, Haines worked repairing car engines at a mechanic shop in Hyde Park.[6] In 1991 Haines took up flying lessons in New Jersey, where she met her future husband, David Davighi. She later graduated with her Bachelor of Arts in physics in 1992.[9]

In 1992, Haines moved to Baltimore, Maryland, and enrolled as a doctoral student at Johns Hopkins University. However, later that year, Haines dropped out and with her future husband purchased at an auction a bar in Fell's Point, Baltimore, which had been seized in a drug raid;[6] they turned the location into an independent bookstore and café.[10] She named the store Adrian's Book Cafe, after her late mother; Adrian's realistic oil paintings filled the store.[10] The bookstore won City Paper's "Best Independent Bookstore" in 1997 and was known for having an unusual collection of literary offerings, local writers, erotica reading nights, and small press publications.[11] Adrian's hosted a number of literary readings, including erotica readings, which became a media focus when she was appointed by President Obama to be the Deputy Director of the CIA.[12][13] She served as the president of the Fell's Point Business Association until 1998.[14]

In 1998, she enrolled at the Georgetown University Law Center, receiving her Juris Doctor in 2001.[15]


Source

FULL PARDON: President Trump Pardons Michael Flynn | NewsNOW From FOX

New Robot Makes Soldiers Obsolete (Corridor Digital)

Biden's Special Presidential Envoy For Climate John Kerry Delivers Remar...

Pope Francis takes aim at anti-mask protestors: ‘They are incapable of moving outside of their own little world’

Published: Nov. 25, 2020 at 1:55 a.m. ET
By

Quentin Fottrell


In new book, the pontiff asks, ‘What matters more — to take care of people or keep the financial system going?’


Pope Francis arriving for a prayer service last month at the Basilica of Santa Maria in Aracoeli in Rome. AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES


ROME — Pope Francis does not mince words.

In his new book, “Let Us Dream: The Path to a Better Future,” to be released Dec. 1, the head of the 1.3 billion–member Roman Catholic Church lambastes those who protest the health measures aimed at reducing the spread of COVID-19: “Some groups protested, refusing to keep their distance, marching against travel restrictions — as if measures that governments must impose for the good of their people constitute some kind of political assault on autonomy or personal freedom,” he writes.

He goes further, and contrasts those who dig in against health measures with anti-mask protests. “You’ll never find such people protesting the death of George Floyd, or joining a demonstration because there are shanty towns where children lack water or education, or because there are whole families who have lost their income,” he adds. “On such matters, they would never protest; they are incapable of moving outside of their own little world of interests.”

The pontiff is pictured on the cover, with a sky-blue background and a dove, but inside he vents his frustration at how some have handled the pandemic. Indeed, the publisher says he offers “a scathing critique of the systems and ideologies that conspired to produce the current crisis, from a global economy obsessed with profit and heedless of the people and environment it harms, to politicians who foment their people’s fear and use it to increase their own power at their people’s expense.”

One month into national restrictions that closed cinemas, pools and gyms, and require restaurants and bars to close at 6 p.m., people took to the streets to show their ire over the impact on their businesses. There have been demonstrations in the northern cities of Turin, Genoa and Milan and smaller cities like Florence, Palermo on the island of Sicily, and in Naples. In one incident of many such incidents, a Gucci luxury-goods store was looted in Turin.

In the book, Pope Francis, 83, also took aim at COVID-19 deniers, and the politicians that encourage them. “Some media have used this crisis to persuade people that foreigners are to blame, that coronavirus is little more than a little bout of flu, that everything will soon return to what it was before, and that restrictions necessary for people’s protections amount to an unjust demand of an interfering state. There are politicians who peddle these narratives for their own gain.”


This story is part of a MarketWatch series, ‘Dispatches from a Pandemic’


A nun prays in St. Peter's Square during Pope Francis's Sunday Angelus prayer earlier this month. AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES


Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte, meanwhile, saw how the 10-week lockdown earlier this year took a toll on people. Italians hoped that the worst was over. He took a mixed approached the second time around. He introduced a three-tier system: red zone for the strictest lockdown, an orange zone with high risks and a moderate-risk yellow zone. Conte and his COVID-19 team appear to have decided against a green zone, in case it gave the impression that people could throw caution to the wind.

People in red zones may not leave their homes unless it’s for an emergency, or they need to do essential shopping or leave for health reasons. In orange zones, bars, restaurants, gelato shops and bakeries must close; people cannot leave their municipality, except for health or emergency reasons. The yellow zones have freedom of movement within those zones, but in Rome all galleries and museums are closed. There is also a national curfew from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m.

The country is a color-coded patchwork of restrictions. Red zones include Tuscany in central Italy and Campania in the southwest, as well as Lombardy, Piedmont and Valle D’Aosta in the north, and the province of Bolzano and Calabria located on the “toe” of southern Italy. Emilia-Romagna, Friuli, Marche, Abruzzo, Basilicata, Liguria, Puglia, Sicily and Umbria are in orange zones. Lazio, where Rome and the Vatican are located, plus Molise, Sardinia and Veneto, are in the yellow zones.

Walter Ricciardi, the government’s COVID-19 consultant, said the government will rule if another national lockdown is necessary. In Campania, which includes Naples, hospitals risk becoming overwhelmed by the number of coronavirus patients, health authorities have warned. “The situation in Campania is out of control,” Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio told La Stampa. He called for people to restrict their movements to prevent community transmission. “People are dying,” he said.

As people across the U.S. still debate mask mandates, the perils of not wearing this protection and how such directives may impinge on individual liberty, Italy this month introduced a national mask mandate, and extended a national state of emergency to January. People in Italy must wear a mask outdoors or risk a fine of 1,000 euros ($1,163). Those who sit outside at restaurants are not required to wear masks while eating and drinking. Otherwise, in Rome, it’s rare to see anyone without one.

Also see:If you insist on talking about politics this Thanksgiving, follow these 5 rules of engagement


The Vatican, usually thronged with tourists, lies empty during the coronavirus pandemic. QUENTIN FOTTRELL


Vatican City, the small independent enclave in the center of Rome, also imposed a mask mandate, although a maskless Pope Francis, before the most recent measures, was criticized for holding an indoor general audience on Oct. 7, and for shaking hands with followers. In parts of southern Italy, where people are perhaps regarded as being less amenable to directives from the government, mask wearing appears to be at least slightly less rigorously enforced and adhered to.

Like many other economies around the world, Italy’s has been plunged into a recession due to the impact of pandemic restrictions. Europe faces the prospect of more lockdowns as the number of COVID-19 infections increases. Italian gross domestic product fell by 12.8% in the second quarter compared with the previous quarter, the national statistics agency reported in August, and the country is expected to lose 16 billion euros ($18.8 billion) in consumer spending this year.

Italy had confirmed 1,455,022 cases of COVID-19 as of Wednesday. That does not, for the most part, include those who are asymptomatic. Italy is ranked sixth in the world for COVID-related deaths (50,324). The U.S. is still No. 1 in both the number of cases (12.6 million) and fatalities (259,925). In terms of deaths, the U.S. is followed by Brazil, India, Mexico, the U.K. and Italy, according to Johns Hopkins University. Worldwide, the virus has infected 59.8 million and killed 1.4 million people.

In the U.S., President Donald Trump is going ahead with a Thanksgiving celebration at the White House on Thursday, despite warnings about community transmission from health experts, as the world waits for a vaccine or vaccines to come to market. Trump has repeatedly warned that efforts to stem the rapid spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, or SARS-CoV-2, risk long-term damage to the economy.

That is where Trump and Pope Francis appear to differ. In his book, the pope said leaders who push ahead with opening their economies and businesses, despite surging coronavirus cases, have “mortgaged their people.” He said that leaders should not have to make a choice between their citizen’s health and the economy. The pontiff presents readers with a choice: “What matters more — to take care of people or keep the financial system going?”

Also see:COVID-19 spread when 5 million people left Wuhan for Chinese New Year, yet 50 million Americans will still travel for Thanksgiving


The Dispatches correspondent, in Rome. QUENTIN FOTTRELL


Source


Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Pope meets with NBA players’ union delegation at the Vatican




Pope Francis meets with a delegation from the National Basketball Players Association during a private audience at the Vatican Nov. 23, 2020. The group included Marco Belinelli of the San Antonio Spurs; Sterling Brown of the Milwaukee Bucks; Jonathan Isaac of the Orlando Magic; Kyle Korver of the Milwaukee Bucks; and Anthony Tolliver, a free agent who most recently played for the Memphis Grizzlies. (Credit: CNS photo/Vatican Media.)


Junno Arocho Esteves



ROME — A delegation representing the National Basketball Players Association, a union representing professional athletes from the NBA, met with Pope Francis and spoke with him about their work in promoting social justice.

The players association said the group meeting the pope Nov. 23 included: Marco Belinelli, a shooting guard for the San Antonio Spurs; Sterling Brown and Kyle Korver, shooting guards for the Milwaukee Bucks; Jonathan Isaac, power forward for the Orlando Magic; and Anthony Tolliver, a 13-year power forward who is currently a free agent.

The NBPA said the meeting “provided an opportunity for the players to discuss their individual and collective efforts addressing social and economic injustice and inequality occurring in their communities.”

NBA players have been vocal on social justice issues throughout the year, especially after the shocking death of George Floyd by police officers in May sparked massive protests across the United States.

Before resuming the basketball season following its suspension due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the union and the NBA reached a deal to display social justice messages on their jerseys.

Michele Roberts, executive director of the NBPA, said in a statement Nov. 23 that the meeting with the pope “validates the power of our players’ voices.”

“That one of the most influential leaders in the world sought to have a conversation with them demonstrates the influence of their platforms,” said Roberts, who also was at the meeting. “I remain inspired by our players’ continued commitment to serve and support our community.”

According to ESPN, union officials said an “intermediary” for the pope reached out to the NBPA and informed them of Pope Francis’ interest in their efforts to bring attention to social justice issues and economic inequality.

Korver said in a statement that the association was “extremely honored to have had this opportunity to come to the Vatican and share our experiences with Pope Francis” and that the pope’s “openness and eagerness to discuss these issues was inspiring and a reminder that our work has had a global impact and must continue moving forward.”

“Today’s meeting was an incredible experience,” Tolliver said. “With the pope’s support and blessing, we are excited to head into this next season reinvigorated to keep pushing for change and bringing our communities together.”




Monday, November 23, 2020

DENIRO: 'We're tired of these lockdown restrictions'

👉The Great Reset of 2021 Explained !!

Joe Biden on Thanksgiving Gatherings...


Joe Biden on Thanksgiving Gatherings: 5 People, 10 Maximum 'Socially Distanced, Wearing Masks'



HANNAH BLEAU 16 Nov 2020


Former Vice President Joe Biden suggested that Americans limit their gatherings on Thanksgiving and adhere to coronavirus protocols in their private residences, citing experts who, according to the former vice president, recommend gatherings of “five people, maximum ten people” who are “socially distanced, wearing masks.”

Biden, whom the media have declared president-elect, detailed his view on holiday gatherings during a Monday press conference in Wilmington, Delaware, urging Americans to adhere to the advice of “health experts.”

“What is your message to people who are considering, for example, getting together with their families and others for Thanksgiving? Would you urge people to reconsider their plans?” a reporter asked.

“Here’s what I would do. Let me tell you what health experts have said to me,” Biden began.

“They strongly urge that, if, in fact, we’re going to have Thanksgiving with anyone, that we limit it to maximum, maximum, they suggest five people, maximum 10 people, socially distanced, wearing masks, and people who have quarantined,” he explained.

Biden said he has been discussing how his own family will handle Thanksgiving this year and told reporters that they have successfully “narrowed down which family members” will attend, adding, “and that they were tested, recently tested within 24 hours.”

He then urged the American people to “think about this” before gathering for Thanksgiving.

“I would strongly urge for the sake — not just your sake, for the sake of your children, your mother, your father, your sisters, your brothers, whoever you get together at Thanksgiving — think about this,” he said, stressing that Americans should limit their holiday gatherings to ten people.

“There should be no group more than ten people in one room at one time. I mean, inside the home. That’s what they’re telling me. They’re telling me, making sure that that’s the case,” he said before emphasizing his belief in the importance of masks.

“Save lives. Look, I just want to make sure that we’re able to be together next Thanksgiving. Next Christmas. I mean it is an international crisis. It’s an international health crisis,” he said, adding that the world is “at war” with the Chinese coronavirus.

“There’s nothing macho about not wearing a mask,” the former vice president added.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently released a list of suggestions ahead of the holiday, recommending Americans to limit Thanksgiving gatherings or hold them virtually or outdoors. The CDC also recommended guests to bring their own food and wear a mask.

Some Democrat leaders have embraced the recommendations. Last week, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced his intention to limit gatherings in private residences to ten people, while Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot urged Chicagoans to cancel their traditional Thanksgiving plans altogether.


Source


Covid: crossroads between the old normal and the new solidarity

"Immunity, Infectious Disease, & Vaccinations"

Sunday, November 22, 2020

NWO and the United States: Vatican's Jesuits assassinated President Kennedy

Anthony Fauci should explain '$3.7 million to the Wuhan laboratory'



President Donald Trump listens as Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, speaks about the coronavirus in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House, Wednesday, April 22, 2020, in Washington. (AP ... more >


By Cheryl K. Chumley - The Washington Times - Monday, April 27, 2020


ANALYSIS/OPINION:

President Donald Trump’s legal counsel, Rudy Giuliani, in a recent chat on “The Cats Roundtable” on New York AM 970 radio, suggested a good U.S. attorney general move about now would be to investigate key members of the past Barack Obama administration on the Wuhan, China, laboratory, to see what they knew and when they knew it.

And then he mentioned Dr. Anthony Fauci specifically.

And then he accused the prior Team Obama of sending $3.7 million to the lab in 2014 — at a time when that same Team Obama had banned the funding of any lab that was involved in virus experimentation.

And then he named Fauci as the guy who gave the money to the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

This — after Fox News reported more than a week ago that federal authorities have “high confidence” in the fact that COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, originated at Wuhan.

Ouch. Politically speaking, the perception of one of this administration’s loudest voices on the coronavirus front — the one calling for shutdowns and shut-ins and contact tracing-slash-government-tracking of American citizens — well, it doesn’t look good to have him tied financially to Wuhan.

Giuliani, as RedState noted, said this: “Back in 2014, the Obama administration prohibited the U.S. from giving money to any laboratory, including in the U.S., that was fooling around with these viruses. Prohibited. Despite that, Dr. Fauci gave $3.7 million to the Wuhan laboratory. And then even after the State Department issued reports about how unsafe that laboratory was, and how suspicious they were in the way they were developing a virus that could be transmitted to humans, we never pulled that money.”

Giuliani said if he were attorney general, he’d open an investigation.

He also said he didn’t “want to make any accusations,” but that “something” was “going on” — that “there was more knowledge about what was going on in China with our scientific people then they disclosed to us when this first came out.”

Think about it, he said.

“I mean,” Giuliani said, “if this laboratory turns out to be the place where the virus came from — we paid for it. We paid for the damn virus that’s killing us.”

Fauci has been the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases since 1984, and while his agency did send $3.7 million in grant to EcoHealth Alliance to study “the risk of future coronavirus (C0V) emergence from wildlife using in-depth field investigations across the human wildlife interface in China,” not all the money went to Wuhan, the Washington Examiner reported.

It’s also not clear that Fauci was the actual guy who made the funding decision.

Still. Still, Fauci was the guy in charge of the agency.

Meanwhile, the larger question is why American taxpayers would be funding the Wuhan lab at all.

“If I were U.S. attorney, I’d open an investigation into the Wuhan laboratory,” Giuliani said. “And I’d want to know what did we know? How much did we know about how bad the practices were there? Who knew about it? And who sent them money anyway? And that person would sure as heck be in front of a grand jury trying to explain to me — what are you, asleep?”

Good questions, all.

Fauci, for his part, has plenty of opportunity, should he choose, to speak out and address the matter. In fact, he’s got the eyes of the nation upon him, not to mention the ears of the president.

One of these White House press conferences, he ought to take a quick time-out from telling Americans to stay home, stay quarantined and stay away from work, and talk about the small matter of the $3.7 million funding from his agency to the Wuhan lab. Millions of near-house arrested Americans deserve to know.


Why Are States Imposing Virus Curfews?


State and city leaders are trying to slow the spread of the coronavirus without full lockdowns. But whether curfews will help remains unclear.


A pedestrian walks through Portland, Ore., on the first day of a 14-day period of restrictions aimed at curtailing the spread of coronavirus.Credit...Mason Trinca for The New York Times




By Kwame Opam and Concepción de León
Nov. 21, 2020


Cities, states and counties from Massachusetts to Colorado have imposed curfews on residents and businesses to try to curb the spread of the coronavirus, as caseloads reach new highs around the country.

The curfews, enacted by Republican and Democratic leaders, now affect residents in two of the country’s biggest states. In California on Thursday, Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered “a limited stay-at-home order” in dozens of counties, barring “nonessential work and gatherings” from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. And in New York this month, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo ordered bars, restaurants and gyms to close by 10 p.m.

Some cities, like Newark, have taken a more targeted approach, setting a curfew for residents in ZIP codes with soaring case numbers, and leaders in Europe have made similar moves, like a 10 p.m. curfew for pubs and restaurants in England.

But the patchwork response, with rules sometimes varying from town to town, also has some residents asking: What effect could a curfew have on a virus that seems to be everywhere, spreading day and night?

What’s the point of a curfew?

Nicholas Gradisar, the mayor of Pueblo, Colo., said his city’s curfew aimed to decrease mobility among those with the highest infection rate in the state, ages 20 to 50, who are also most likely to be out late at night. The city had a severe spike in cases after Labor Day and imposed a curfew the night before Halloween to try to prevent a similar increase. It was recently extended to Nov. 27.

“The rules for when bars are open are supposed to be that you can come down with your group and you don’t interact with others,” Mr. Gradisar said. But people are less likely to do this after a few hours of drinking, he added. “That’s how this virus spreads.”

Governors have given similar reasons for asking residents to stay home at night except for essential needs like groceries, framing curfew measures as a compromise between a full lockdown and keeping businesses open.



The city of Miami Beach, Fla. In Florida’s most populous county, Miami-Dade, the authorities set a curfew from midnight to 6 a.m.Credit...Saul Martinez for The New York Times


Dan Tierney, the press secretary for Gov. Mike DeWine of Ohio, where a 21-day curfew from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. was instituted starting Thursday, said the governor had considered closing bars, restaurants and fitness centers altogether. But the economic impact would have been too damaging, Mr. Tierney said.

Instead, he said, the hope is that the curfew, combined with the statewide mask mandate and social distancing, will encourage people to reduce their contact with others.

“We think we can make a dent in these numbers by doing what we’re doing,” he said.

Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts said at a news conference this month that the state’s stay-at-home advisory was meant to “reduce the number of opportunities and activities where people gather in groups and get them home with only members of their household.”

CORONAVIRUS BRIEFING: An informed guide to the global outbreak, with the latest developments and expert advice.Sign Up

In California, counties with severe outbreaks will have a curfew beginning Saturday. Dr. Mark Ghaly, the secretary of California health and human services, said the state’s order was meant to “target activities that are particularly high risk,” like eating and drinking inside restaurants.

“We’ve seen in the past that Covid goes from zero to 60 miles per hour very quickly,” he said at a news conference on Thursday.
What can go wrong?

While the authorities hope curfews reduce transmission, their enforcement abilities are limited. Some bar patrons, for instance, may gather in homes after a few hours of drinking — and at-home gatherings of any kind would be difficult to prevent.

“These are best guidelines, so we’re not expecting police to go knocking on people’s doors or anything Orwellian like that,” said Mr. Tierney, the Ohio press secretary. “We’re hopeful that Ohioans will do what they need to do.”

And though the curfews are meant to be more economically palatable than full lockdowns, some businesses that depend on late customers expect to take a hit.

“It’s going to have an immediate effect on our revenue,” said Jeff Castleberry, owner of Caz’s Pub in Tulsa, Okla., where the governor recently set a curfew. Mr. Castleberry said that the bar installed a filtration system and has taken fewer customers as a safety precaution, but that losing late business will cut deep.

“We’ve been trying to operate in the right, and operating that way has cost us about 25 percent of our revenue,” he said. With the curfew, he anticipated, “we’re going to lose half of that 75 percent.”
Do the curfews work?

Mr. Gradisar, the mayor of Pueblo, said there wasn’t enough data yet to show whether the curfew has helped. He said that cellphone usage data, analyzed by the Colorado Department of Health, has demonstrated decreased mobility between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m.

“You say, ‘Don’t have private parties,’ ‘Don’t have Halloween parties,’ but that’s nearly impossible to enforce,” he said. “At least we’re breaking up the parties a little earlier.”

But like cities around the country, Pueblo has had a significant increase in cases. Given this spike, Mr. Gradisar said he and other local officials were “desperate to try anything at this point.”

Health experts said it was not clear how effective curfews could be. Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University, said that while curfews might have a “modest impact,” they should be “considered as part of a whole series of interventions” that need to be sustained.

“There are no quick fixes here,” he said.

Dr. Helen Boucher, an infectious disease specialist at Tufts Medical Center, said that, because mask mandates, curfews and rules against gathering indoors are being put in effect together, it will be difficult to determine which made the biggest difference.

“If we see benefits in a month, was it one of them or was it all of them?” she said. “It’s hard to ascertain. This is not a controlled trial. This is real life.”

Dr. Gregg Gonsalves, an assistant professor of epidemiology at the Yale School of Public Health, called curfews a “crude, inelegant instrument” being used to address a problem without a simple answer.


The police in Newark speaking to restaurant employees about the city’s curfew and dining regulations earlier this month.Credit...Seth Wenig/Associated Press


“In many places, it’s small gatherings at home,” he said of transmission, describing a scenario with “four of us having dinner, and none of us assumes we have Covid.”

Dr. Gonsalves said the curfew measures, combined with other measures, were “a logical approach,” borne out by practical experience in the United States and across the world. “We’re doing what seems to reduce contacts.”

But he said that leaders’ efforts were suboptimal if understandable, given their compromised position. People are weary of isolation, and the cost of giving up social ties this holiday season is high. Workers at bars, restaurants, gyms and other businesses need economic support, but Congress has signaled that another stimulus package is unlikely before year’s end.

“It’s really like putting a Band-Aid on a machete wound,” Dr. Gonsalves said. “It’s not about Republican or Democratic governors. They’re all in the same boat. They’re not getting support. Faced with the onslaught, mayors and governors would love to do more. But they can’t do more.”
The Coronavirus Pandemic

Kwame Opam is a senior editor of digital storytelling. @kwameopam

Concepción de León is a staff writer covering news and culture for the Books section. 

A version of this article appears in print on Nov. 22, 2020, Section A, Page 10 of the New York edition with the headline: To Avoid Locking Down, States Impose Curfews. But Do They Work?.


Walter Veith & Martin Smith - Reflection on the Election - What's Up Pro...

Saturday, November 21, 2020

John Kerry: Biden presidency opens door to globalist 'Great Reset'


'We're at the dawn of extremely exciting time'


By WND Staff
Published November 20, 2020 at 7:52pm



John Kerry delivers the keynote address at the LBJ Presidential Library’s Vietnam War Summit on April 27, 2016. (Wikimedia Commons)


A Joe Biden presidency would help propel the World Economic Forum's globalist "Great Reset" plan to use the coronavirus pandemic to transform the world's economy, according to former Secretary of State John Kerry and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

"The notion of a reset is more important than ever before," Kerry said in a World Economic Forum panel. "I personally believe ... we're at the dawn of an extremely exciting time."

Kerry said Biden is ready to rejoin the Paris Climate Accord, which would help drive the "Great Reset," Breitbart News reported

Breitbart editor James Delingpole describes the "Great Reset" as a plan in which unelected global bureaucrats abolish money, private property and democracy to creat a "New World Order."

Kerry said rejoining the Paris agreement, which critics say would kill more than 1 million American jobs, is "not enough."

"I know Joe Biden believes this. It's not enough just to rejoin [the agreement] for the United States. It's not enough for us to do just the minimum of what it requires," Kerry said.

"The Biden administration will focus on every sector of the American economy," he said. "There will be a 2035 goal to achieve net neutrality with respect to power and production."

In June, Klaus Schwab, founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum, presented the plan, writing that the COVID-19 lockdowns "may be gradually easing, but anxiety about the world's social and economic prospects is only intensifying." He warned a "sharp economic downturn has already begun, and we could be facing the worst depression since the 1930s."
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"To achieve a better outcome, the world must act jointly and swiftly to revamp all aspects of our societies and economies, from education to social contracts and working conditions," Klaus said.

"Every country, from the United States to China, must participate, and every industry, from oil and gas to tech, must be transformed. In short, we need a 'Great Reset' of capitalism."

The United States, however, has acheived the "V-shaped recovery" in Gross Domestic Product promised by President Trump, with a record 33.1% GDP increase in the third quarter, at an annualized rate, after a 32.8% dive in the second.

Von der Leyen said the European Commission looks forward to the U.S. rejoining the Paris agreement, calling Biden a "friend in the White House."

She anticipates working with Washington to write "a new rulebook for the digital economy and the digital society."

"So, covering everything from data to infrastructure, but also talking about security and democracy, technology to fair taxation — all of these are topics are on the table with digital change," she said. "So ladies and gentlemen, the need for global cooperation and this acceleration of change will both be drivers of the Great Reset. And I see this as an unprecedented opportunity."

Von der Leyen said the most pressing issue is COVID-19, followed by climate change and technology.

Breitbart noted Biden already has adopted the "Build Back Better" slogan that the World Economic Forum uses for the "Great Reset."


Eric Bolling’s monologue: the shift in the media world

Trump beams into virtual G20 summit as world leaders discuss COVID-19


By Mary Kay Linge

November 21, 2020 | 11:54am


World leaders, including President Trump, participate in a virtual G20 meeting hosted by Saudi Arabia today.Fayez Nureldine/AFP via Getty Images


President Trump took part in the first of two virtual meetings with world leaders Saturday as part of a coronavirus-throttled G20 summit — in what could be the last international gathering of his presidency.

Trump was set to beam in to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, from the White House Situation Room for a meeting chaired by King Salman and attended by the leaders of 19 leading world economies. The international response to coronavirus was expected to be at the top of the agenda.

The lavish gathering that had been set for the Saudi capital was sharply curtailed in September due to the ongoing pandemic, which canceled the elaborate greeting ceremonies and fancy dinners that have become the norm for the annual days-long summit.

But organizers did not abandon the traditional “family photo” of the gathered heads of state.

Instead, they replicated the annual photo shoot by fashioning a collection of full-length pictures of the leaders into a composite image — with a grinning Trump in the first row — and projected the portrait on a wall in Riyadh Friday night.


Biden marks Transgender Day of Remembrance


BY JULIA MANCHESTER - 11/20/20 09:36 AM EST




President-elect Joe Biden marked Transgender Day of Remembrance on Friday, promising to fight for the trans community as it faces growing violence.

"On Transgender Day of Remembrance, we honor their lives — and recommit to the work that remains to ensure that every transgender and gender-nonconforming person in America has the opportunity to live authentically, earn a living wage, and be treated with dignity and respect in their communities and workplaces," Biden said in a statement.

At least 37 transgender and gender-nonconforming individuals have been killed in the U.S. this year. The Human Rights Campaign, an LGBTQ advocacy organization, announced in October that 2020 marked the deadliest year for the community since it began recording the fatalities in 2013.

Biden called the unprecedented levels of violence an "epidemic of violence and discrimination."

"Transgender rights are human rights," Biden said. "To transgender and gender-nonconforming people across America and around the world: from the moment I am sworn in as president of the United States, know that my administration will see you, listen to you, and fight for not only your safety but also the dignity and justice you have been denied."

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Biden has a history of publicly supporting the trans community. Delaware state Sen.-elect Sarah McBride (D), the first openly transgender state senator to be elected in U.S. history, spoke about the support she's received from the Biden family over the years in an interview with The Hill last month.

“He is uniquely able to help people find that light again and find that hope again. He’s done it for me, and I know he’ll do it for this country," McBride said.

McBride is among eight transgender, nonbinary and gender-nonconforming candidates elected to state legislatures across the country in 2020.