Friday, May 29, 2020

Cách chống với Gấu

Cách chống với Gấu


Cách chống với Gấu

Posted: 28 May 2020 10:43 AM PDT

Thực ra gấu sẽ không tấn công bạn khi bạn giả chết,mà nó sẽ nhai bạn ngấu nghiến ngon lành và khi đó bạn sẽ chết thật =)) Mình từng đọc 1 bài viết,gấu là loài ăn tạp,tay rất khỏe,1 tát có thể vả chết...

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Thursday, May 28, 2020

BREAKING News: Restrained man pleads with police in fatal incident in Minnesota

BREAKING News: Restrained man pleads with police in fatal incident in Minnesota


BREAKING News: Restrained man pleads with police in fatal incident in Minnesota

Posted: 27 May 2020 06:25 PM PDT

Raw video: Man pleads with Minneapolis police that he can't breathe while an officer presses his knee into the back of his neck. The man was taken to a hospital but died a short time...

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Mediaite’s Tommy Christopher says CNN host ridiculed for 'stupid questions' to Biden

Posted: 27 May 2020 05:49 PM PDT

Mediaite's Tommy Christopher is an outspoken liberal who even notes his political leanings and hatred of President Trump in his Twitter bio – but Christopher didn't approve of Bash's interview,...

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Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Twitter slapped a warning label on one of Trump’s tweets referring to mail-in ballots for the first time Tuesday

Twitter slapped a warning label on one of Trump’s tweets referring to mail-in ballots for the first time Tuesday


Twitter slapped a warning label on one of Trump’s tweets referring to mail-in ballots for the first time Tuesday

Posted: 27 May 2020 08:14 AM PDT

The president, within minutes on Tuesday, accused Twitter of "interfering in the 2020 Presidential Election based on fact-checking by Fake News CNN and the Amazon Washington Post," while adding that...

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Meghan McCain rips Memorial Day weekend partiers, says they're on 'Girls Gone Wild' During COVID-19 Crisis

Posted: 26 May 2020 07:59 PM PDT

Meghan McCain had strong words Tuesday for people who gathered on beaches and at pool parties over Memorial Day weekend despite the coronavirus pandemic. "I was very upset over the weekend over this...

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Saturday, May 23, 2020

Sen. Tim Scott: Joe Biden made the “most condescending and arrogant comments toward the black community he has ever heard.”

Sen. Tim Scott: Joe Biden made the “most condescending and arrogant comments toward the black community he has ever heard.”


Sen. Tim Scott: Joe Biden made the “most condescending and arrogant comments toward the black community he has ever heard.”

Posted: 22 May 2020 09:56 PM PDT

Republican Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina said he's offended by Joe Biden's "arrogant, ridiculous" comment to a black radio host that if he's struggling to decide whether to support Biden...

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Schumer compares Mitch McConnell to Herbert Hoover, calls Obamagate a 'discredited conspiracy theory', Spar Over NY Post Cover

Posted: 22 May 2020 02:23 PM PDT

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer criticized his Republican colleagues on Thursday, claiming they were wrong to focus on Obamagate, which he called a discredited conspiracy theory, during...

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Friday, May 22, 2020

[Trang Ánh Nam] New comment on Schumer compares Mitch McConnell to Herbert Hoover....

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Vote-by-mail provisions in the 2020 elections

As the 2020 election heats up, Trump has been slamming vote-by-mail provisions that have been recommended by health officials. Wednesday, Trump threatened to hold up federal funds for two election battleground states that are trying to make it easier and safer to vote during the coronavirus pandemic. He later backed away from that threat but stuck with his unsupported claim that widespread voting by mail promotes "a lot of illegality."

"For the president to try to stop voting by mail is outrageous. this is not democrat or republican and in fact the experts don't know who voting by mail helps, which party. But all Americans should know one thing, we have a right to vote, its a sacred right, the president ought not stand in the way."

Schumer mentioned that the HEROES Act contains funding for every American to receive a mail-in ballot.

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Posted by Erin Burnett to Trang Ánh Nam at May 22, 2020 at 2:31 PM

[Trang Ánh Nam] New comment on Schumer compares Mitch McConnell to Herbert Hoover....

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Tensions on the Hill amid GOP push to investigate

Tensions have flared on Capitol Hill over Senate Republicans' push to investigate Obama administration officials and the origins of the Russia investigation. The probes, Democrats say, are designed to dig up dirt against former Vice President's son Hunter Biden, who has worked in Ukraine. Schumer has said Republicans are chasing a "wild conspiracy theory."

On Wednesday, the Senate Homeland Security Committee voted 8-6 to subpoena Blue Star Strategies, a lobbying firm that was a consultant to Burisma, a gas company in Ukraine that paid Hunter Biden to serve as a board member.


There is no evidence of wrongdoing by the Bidens, and Hunter Biden has denied using his influence with his father to aid Burisma. But Republicans coming to President Donald Trump's defense during and after last year's impeachment trial have encouraged investigations of Hunter Biden's activities, questioning whether his highly paid job created a conflict of interest for Joe Biden as the former vice president worked on Ukraine policy in the Obama administration.

Trump has been clear about his intentions to use Hunter Biden's work in his reelection bid, saying in March that it will be a "major issue" in the campaign. "I will bring that up all the time," he said then.

Touching on President Trump's frequent tweets on "Obamagate," his key phrase to refer to allegations that the Obama administration used government resources to spy on the 2016 Trump campaign, co-host Meghan McCain asked Schumer if he could say with "100% certainty" that this did not happen.

"I didn't say it, 17 intelligence agencies, these are non-partisan, people who have risked their lives for us, CIA, NSA, they said it. This came from Russians who wanted to divert attention from what they did, and for the President and Senate to spend time of this during the Covid crisis is just absolutely absurd," Schumer said.

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Posted by Erin Burnett to Trang Ánh Nam at May 22, 2020 at 2:30 PM

[Trang Ánh Nam] New comment on Schumer compares Mitch McConnell to Herbert Hoover....

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Inspector general firings

In the wide-ranging interview, Schumer also reacted to Trump's firing of State Department Inspector General Steve Linick late Friday. Trump has said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo asked him to fire Linick. Linick had been conducting at least two oversight investigations into Pompeo's activities, including the administration's use of emergency powers to sell weapons to Saudi Arabia despite congressional opposition, and whether Pompeo was inappropriately using staff to run personal errands, according to a congressional aide.

"Unfortunately it seems to be what the President does. When he hears the truth, instead of listening to it and adapting to it, he fires people," Schumer said. Schumer called for a full investigation into the charges against Pompeo.

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Posted by Erin Burnett to Trang Ánh Nam at May 22, 2020 at 2:30 PM

[Trang Ánh Nam] New comment on Schumer compares Mitch McConnell to Herbert Hoover....

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COVID-19 impact on communities of color

Schumer also weighed in on the terrible toll the coronavirus is taking on communities of color. In New York, African Americans are twice as likely to die of the virus.

"The reason is very simple. Communities of color, minority communities and poor communities don't have adequate health care and haven't for a very long time," Schumer told The View's Whoopi Goldberg.

Schumer advocated for more testing, particularly within minority communities.

"Let me say one thing about testing. This has been one of the greatest failures of this administration, and I hope they learn from it," Schumer said.

Schumer said he has asked the Trump administration to provide detailed data on minority-owned business's access to emergency lending funds. In the first round of Paycheck Protection Program, many of the smallest businesses and minority-owned businesses had a difficult time receiving approval for loans.

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Posted by Erin Burnett to Trang Ánh Nam at May 22, 2020 at 2:29 PM

[Trang Ánh Nam] New comment on Schumer compares Mitch McConnell to Herbert Hoover....

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Schumer criticizes McConnell's response to the coronavirus crisis

Schumer compared McConnell to President Herbert Hoover, who has been historically criticized for his slow response to the beginning of the Great Depression.

Schumer made a prediction that pressure from the American people who need more aid will force McConnell to the negotiating table.

"One of the big pieces is help your local governments. What does that mean? It's policemen, it's firefighters, it's bus drivers. It's health care workers. ... These people are all going to be fired and lose their jobs through no fault of their own," Schumer told The View's Joy Behar.

The criticism echoed comments Schumer made earlier in the week.

"Here, it's business as usual. Leader McConnell has spent three weeks of the Senate's time largely on nominations, only one of whom is directly related to COVID-19. Not one bill on the floor of the Senate having to do with COVID-19 in the entire month of May. The leader has put none on the floor," Schumer said in a speech Wednesday.

House Democrats, led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, have drafted another emergency aid package called The HEROES Act. The bill is more than 1800 pages and includes another round of $1200 stimulus payments, aid for state and local governments, hazard pay for workers on the frontlines, and extension of unemployment benefits.

McConnell has shut down the suggestion of passing another large emergency aid bill through the Senate, saying lawmakers should wait and see how effective the CARES Act and the subsequent replenishment of the PPP program are before spending more money and further increasing the federal debt.

In the meantime, the House will vote next week on a smaller bill to extend the 8-week loan period for the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which provides forgivable loans to small businesses who use the money for payroll, rent, and other qualifying expenses.

A group of bipartisan senators is scrambling today to possibly secure agreement on that matter, offering a glimpse of possible bicameral cooperation. The push is being led by Sen. Marco Rubio (R.-Fla.).

"We are hearing of course now from a lot of small businesses who got PPP loans but are saying to us, that they can't spend all the money on payroll — 75 percent of the money on payroll — within 8 weeks," Rubio said in an online video message. "They need 12 weeks or 16 weeks because they are just starting to reopen now because there are different rules in different places."

Thursday morning, Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sent a letter to President Trump, asking the administration to fly flags at half staff when the death toll in the U.S. reaches 100,000.

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Posted by Erin Burnett to Trang Ánh Nam at May 22, 2020 at 2:28 PM

[Trang Ánh Nam] New comment on Schumer compares Mitch McConnell to Herbert Hoover....

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Chuck Schumer: It's 'reckless' for Trump to say publicly he takes hydroxychloroquine

In an appearance on ABC's "The View," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D.-NY, called President Trump "reckless" for announcing he is taking the drug hydroxychloroquine to prevent a coronavirus infection.

"If there were people watching, in particularly, people who might like him and listen to him and they have the illness and instead of going to the doctor and getting the proper care, they took hydroxychloroquine, that could hurt their recovery, and even worse, the FDA, our federal agency has said hydroxychloroquine, particularly in older people can cause heart arrhythmia, strokes and other things likes that," Schumer told The View's Sunny Hostin in a wide-ranging interview that touched on tensions on Capitol Hill, the disparate impact of COVID-19 on communities of color and mail-in-voting, among other topics.

The FDA last month specifically warned against taking hydroxychloroquine "outside of a hospital setting or a clinical trial due to risk of heart rhythm problems."

President Trump said he asked the White House doctor if he could take the unproven treatment despite having no symptoms, adding he's been taking a pill a day for about a week and a half.

"I'm still fine," he said, referring to possible dangerous side effects.

As the search for a treatment and vaccine goes on, all 50 states across America have taken steps to re-open, but Schumer warned against moving too fast.

"I understand the anguish of people who want to get back. I understand people who are out of work and want to get to work," Schumer said. "But people have to understand that if we move too quickly, this could come back. Dr. Fauci himself said it. This could come back with a vengeance and be even worse than it was the first time around. So you have to have a balance."

In recent days, Schumer has frequently taken to the Senate floor to criticize Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell for not taking up more emergency coronavirus aid legislation.

"He's in an alternative universe, unfortunately," Schumer said of McConnell on Thursday. "When you look at the TV stations and the news and you see miles of people lined up in cars to go to food pantries and the news media interviews them and they say, I've never had to do this before, but I need to feed my family."

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Posted by Erin Burnett to Trang Ánh Nam at May 22, 2020 at 2:27 PM

Thursday, May 21, 2020

The View co-host Joy Behar prompting Meghan McCain to bring up Kavanaugh saga

The View co-host Joy Behar prompting Meghan McCain to bring up Kavanaugh saga


The View co-host Joy Behar prompting Meghan McCain to bring up Kavanaugh saga

Posted: 20 May 2020 11:59 PM PDT

Joy Behar panned the idea that the media should "believe all women" who allege sexual misconduct and denied applying a different standard to Supreme Court Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh. "To me,...

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Mika Brzezinski responds to new tweets from the president on Wednesday, May 20.

Posted: 20 May 2020 11:34 PM PDT

President Trump apparently struck a nerve Wednesday with a Twitter message that referred to MSNBC "Morning Joe" host Joe Scarborough. Scarborough's co-host and wife Mika Brzezinski fired back, both...

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Meghan McCain swipes Seth Meyers for 'sucking up' to Gov. Whitmer, warns conservative women not to appear on his show

Posted: 20 May 2020 11:20 PM PDT

"The View" co-host Meghan McCain knocked "Late Night" host Seth Meyers over a friendly interview he had with Democratic Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. During the virtual sit-down on Monday, Meyers...

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Wednesday, May 6, 2020

[ANT] New comment on Meghan McCain react to Pres. Trump specifying that....

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Higher taxes, less spending

Still, it's a mystery when and if the bond market will eventually balk at high US debt and demand much higher interest rates.

"The breaking point is like an invisible dog fence," said MacGuineas, the president of CRFB. "You don't know where it is, but if you actually hit it, it'll be a huge problem."

To avoid hitting it, politicians will eventually have to make difficult decisions to get the United States back towards a sustainable fiscal path -- most likely less spending and higher taxes -- both of which would translate to slower economic growth.

"If we live beyond our means today," JPMorgan's Kelly said, "we will have to live within our means in the future."

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Posted by Erin Burnett to ANT at May 6, 2020 at 7:42 PM

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Rate hikes could set off a crisis

But that equation would change, of course, if rates rose sharply. Given the sheer magnitude of the debt, even a tiny increase in interest is costly. Interest payments were the fastest-growing expense for the federal government even before the crisis.

One risk is that a surprisingly strong rebound in the US economy forces the Fed to rapidly reverse course.

"If the economy comes back too hot, then you could have inflation, higher interest rates -- and that could lead to a fiscal crisis," said JPMorgan's Kelly.

That's exactly why some believe the Fed will be forced to keep rates at rock-bottom levels. "It will be that much harder this time to wean the economy off ultra-low rates because the debt is that much greater," said Invesco's Hooper.

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Posted by Erin Burnett to ANT at May 6, 2020 at 7:41 PM

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Markets don't seem to mind, at least not yet

The good news is that Uncle Sam is having no trouble, at least so far, with financing the deficit. The 10-year Treasury rate is near all-time low at just 0.7%. That signals investors don't fear the US debt situation is even near a breaking point.

Markets aren't freaking out about US debt for a few reasons.

First, this spending is temporary and emergency in nature.

Second, the US dollar remains the preeminent international reserve currency and US Treasury market is the deepest and largest in the world. Those are huge advantages that keep demand strong for US debt.

Third, it's extremely cheap to borrow right now. The Fed slashed interest rates to near-zero --and economists think they may stay there into 2022.

"It doesn't blow us up -- because interest rates are so low," said David Kelly, chief global strategist at JPMorgan Funds.

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Posted by Erin Burnett to ANT at May 6, 2020 at 7:41 PM

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Powell: 'Not the time' to worry about debt

Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, recently expressed regret about America's failure to get its debt situation under control years ago.

"It tells you the importance of getting your fiscal house in order," Powell said during a press conference last week. "Ideally, you would go into an unexpected shock like this with a much stronger fiscal posture."

Yet Powell urged politicians not to worry about that now. "This is not the time to let that concern, which is a very serious concern, get in the way of us winning this battle," he said.

Worries about debt forced the United States to rein in spending shortly after the Great Recession a decade ago. Economists say that premature withdrawal of stimulus hobbled the economy.

"The anemic recovery was a direct result of not enough fiscal stimulus," said Kristina Hooper, chief global market strategist at Invesco.

The national debt has been on an unsustainable path for decades, in large part because of high entitlement spending on Social Security and Medicare.

Before the pandemic, Moody's forecast US debt would hit 100% of GDP in 2030. Now, it expects debt to stand at 128% of GDP by then.

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Posted by Erin Burnett to ANT at May 6, 2020 at 7:40 PM

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'Absolute necessity'

But for now, the focus is on keeping American businesses and households afloat. In March, Congress passed a $2.3 trillion stimulus package, the largest in US history. Half a trillion dollars of forgivable loans have been handed out to small businesses. Direct payments were made to low- and middle-income families.

The Congressional Budget Office expects the federal budget deficit will hit $3.7 trillion this year, up from an eye-popping $1 trillion in 2019.

And more stimulus is likely coming, perhaps another $2 trillion later this year, to help out states and local governments battered by the crisis.

All of this will add yet more debt to the pile. But there's no other viable option to stave off further crisis.

"The fiscal stimulus and resulting explosion of the deficit is an absolute necessity to combat the devastating impact from the economic shutdown and to avoid a second depression," said Steven Oh, global head of credit and fixed income at PineBridge, an investment firm that manages $101 billion.

Spiking deficits are also the result of a dramatic loss of tax revenue caused by the shutdown of businesses and 30 million Americans out of jobs.

The federal deficit is expected to hit 18.4% of GDP in 2020 and decline only gradually over the next decade, according to Moody's Investors Service.

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Posted by Erin Burnett to ANT at May 6, 2020 at 7:39 PM

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The US is becoming the king of debt. It's a necessary risk

President Donald Trump is living up to his self-given nickname "King of Debt." On his watch, the United States has borrowed aggressively -- during the good times, and now the bad times.

Instead of whittling down the federal deficit when the economy was strong, Trump directed the federal government pile on even more debt to pay for massive tax cuts and spending surges.

That meant that the United States entered this crisis in rough financial shape. Debt-to-GDP stood at nearly 80% even before the coronavirus pandemic struck -- a rate more than twice as high as the historical average and double the level before the Great Recession.

Now, the national debt is exploding because Washington is being forced to rescue the US economy from its greatest shock ever. The Treasury Department said this week it will borrow $3 trillion this quarter alone. That's nearly six times the previous record, which was set in 2008.

Still, while the national debt is scary -- it now stands at nearly $25 trillion -- now is not the time to cut back on the borrowing.

Economists agree that the United States must continue to rack up debt to prevent a full-blown depression. Otherwise, there won't be much of an economy left to repay the debt once the health crisis is over.

Even deficit watchdogs are urging Uncle Sam to keep borrowing.

"We made a huge mistake being so in debt when the economy was strong," Maya MacGuineas, president of the bipartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, told CNN Business. "But just because we were reckless and foolish going into the crisis, [that] doesn't mean we shouldn't borrow during it."

Of course, there will be long-term consequences for the mountain of debt Washington is racking up. Eventually it will mean higher interest rates, hotter inflation and likely higher taxes.



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Posted by Erin Burnett to ANT at May 6, 2020 at 7:38 PM

Sunday, May 3, 2020

[The Global Outbreak] New comment on Simeon Courtie Says Coronavirus Vaccine Could Be R....

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In the short term, Nabarro says a vast program of testing and contact tracing would need to be implemented to allow life to function alongside Covid-19 -- one which dwarfs any such program ever established to fight an outbreak, and which remains some time away in major countries like the US and the UK.
"Absolutely critical is going to be having a public health system in place that includes contact tracing, diagnosis in the workplace, monitoring for syndromic surveillance, early communication on whether we have to re-implement social distancing," adds Hotez. "It's doable, but it's complicated and we really haven't done it before."

Those systems could allow for some social interactions to return. "If there's minimal transmission, it may indeed be possible to open things up for sporting events" and other large gatherings, says Hotez -- but such a move would not be permanent and would continually be assessed by governments and public health bodies.
That means the the Premier League, NFL and other mass events could go ahead with their schedules as long as athletes are getting regularly tested, and welcome in fans for weeks at a time -- perhaps separated within the stands -- before quickly shutting stadiums if the threat rises.
"Bars and pubs are probably last on the list as well, because they are overcrowded," suggests Neal. "They could reopen as restaurants, with social distancing." Some European countries have signaled they will start allowing restaurants to serve customers at vastly reduced capacity.
Restrictions are most likely to come back over the winter, with Hotez suggesting that Covid-19 peaks could occur every winter until a vaccine is introduced.
And lockdowns, many of which are in the process of gradually being lifted, could return at any moment. "From time to time there will be outbreaks, movement will be restricted -- and that may apply to parts of a country, or it may even apply to a whole country," Nabarro says.

The more time passes, the more imposing becomes the hotly debated prospect of herd immunity -- reached when the majority of a given population, around 70% to 90%, becomes immune to an infectious disease. "That does to some extent limit spread," Offit says -- "although population immunity caused by natural infection is not the best way to provide population immunity. The best way is with a vaccine."
Measles is the "perfect example," says Offit -- before vaccines became widespread, "every year 2 to 3 million people would get measles, and that would be true here too." In other words, the amount of death and suffering from Covid-19 would be vast even if a large portion of the population is not susceptible.
All of these predictions are tempered by a general belief that a vaccine will, eventually, be developed. "I do think there'll be vaccine -- there's plenty of money, there's plenty of interest and the target is clear," Offit says.
But if previous outbreaks have proven anything, it's that hunts for vaccines are unpredictable. "I don't think any vaccine has been developed quickly," Offit cautions. "I'd be really amazed if we had something in 18 months."

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Posted by Erin Burnett to The Global Outbreak at 3 May 2020 at 08:12

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What life without a vaccine looks like

If a vaccine can't be produced, life will not remain as it is now. It just might not go back to normal quickly.
"The lockdown is not sustainable economically, and possibly not politically," says Neal. "So we need other things to control it."
That means that, as countries start to creep out of their paralyses, experts would push governments to implement an awkward new way of living and interacting to buy the world time in the months, years or decades until Covid-19 can be eliminated by a vaccine.
"It is absolutely essential to work on being Covid-ready," Nabarro says. He calls for a new "social contract" in which citizens in every country, while starting to go about their normal lives, take personal responsibility to self-isolate if they show symptoms or come into contact with a potential Covid-19 case.

It means the culture of shrugging off a cough or light cold symptoms and trudging into work should be over. Experts also predict a permanent change in attitudes towards remote working, with working from home, at least on some days, becoming a standard way of life for white collar employees. Companies would be expected to shift their rotas so that offices are never full unnecessarily.
"It (must) become a way of behaving that we all ascribe to personal responsibility ... treating those who are isolated as heroes rather than pariahs," says Nabarro. "A collective pact for survival and well-being in the face of the threat of the virus.
"It's going to be difficult to do in poorer nations," he adds, so finding ways to support developing countries will become "particularly politically tricky, but also very important." He cites tightly packed refugee and migrant settlements as areas of especially high concern.


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Posted by Erin Burnett to The Global Outbreak at 3 May 2020 at 08:12

[The Global Outbreak] New comment on Simeon Courtie Says Coronavirus Vaccine Could Be R....

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Plan B

If the same fate befalls a Covid-19 vaccine, the virus could remain with us for many years. But the medical response to HIV/AIDS still provides a framework for living with a disease we can't stamp out.
"In HIV, we've been able to make that a chronic disease with antivirals. We've done what we've always hoped to do with cancer," Offit says. "It's not the death sentence it was in the 1980s."
The groundbreaking development of a daily preventative pill -- pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP -- has since led to hundreds of thousands of people at risk of contracting HIV being protected from the disease.
A number of treatments are likewise being tested for Covid-19, as scientists hunt for a Plan B in parallel to the ongoing vaccine trials, but all of those trials are in very early stages. Scientists are looking at experimental anti-Ebola drug remdesivir, while blood plasma treatments are also being explored. Hydroxychloroquine, touted as a potential "game changer" by US President Donald Trump, has so found been found not to work on very sick patients.
"The drugs they've chosen are the best candidates," says Keith Neal, Emeritus Professor in the Epidemiology of Infectious Diseases at the University of Nottingham. The problem, he says, has been the "piecemeal approach" to testing them.

"We have to do randomized controlled trials. It's ridiculous that only recently have we managed to get that off the ground," Neal, who reviews such tests for inclusion in medical journals, tells CNN. "The papers that I'm getting to look at -- I'm just rejecting them on the grounds that they're not properly done."
Now those fuller trials are off the ground, and if one of those drugs works for Covid-19 the signs should emerge "within weeks," says Neal. The first may already have arrived; the US Food and Drug Administration told CNN it is in talks to make remdesivir available to patients after positive signs it could speed up recovery from the coronavirus.
The knock-on effects of a successful treatment would be felt widely; if a drug can decrease a patient's average time spent in ICU even by by a few days, it would free up hospital capacity and could therefore greatly increase the willingness of governments to open up society.
But how effective a treatment is would depend on which one works -- remdesivir is not in high supply internationally and scaling up its production would cause problems.
And crucially, any treatment won't prevent infections occurring in society -- meaning the coronavirus would be easier to manage and the pandemic would subside, but the disease could be with us many years into the future.

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Posted by Erin Burnett to The Global Outbreak at 3 May 2020 at 08:10

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When vaccines don't work

In 1984, the US Secretary of Health and Human Services Margaret Heckler announced at a press conference in Washington, DC, that scientists had successfully identified the virus that later became known as HIV -- and predicted that a preventative vaccine would be ready for testing in two years.
Nearly four decades and 32 million deaths later, the world is still waiting for an HIV vaccine.
Instead of a breakthrough, Heckler's claim was followed by the loss of much of a generation of gay men and the painful shunning of their community in Western countries. For many years, a positive diagnosis was not only a death sentence; it ensured a person would spend their final months abandoned by their communities, while doctors debated in medical journals whether HIV patients were even worth saving.

The search didn't end in the 1980s. In 1997, President Bill Clinton challenged the US to come up with a vaccine within a decade. Fourteen years ago, scientists said we were still about 10 years away.
The difficulties in finding a vaccine began with the very nature of HIV/AIDS itself. "Influenza is able to change itself from one year to the next so the natural infection or immunization the previous year doesn't infect you the following year. HIV does that during a single infection," explains Paul Offit, a pediatrician and infectious disease specialist who co-invented the rotavirus vaccine.
"It continues to mutate in you, so it's like you're infected with a thousand different HIV strands," Offit tells CNN. "(And) while it is mutating, it's also crippling your immune system."
HIV poses very unique difficulties and Covid-19 does not possess its level of elusiveness, making experts generally more optimistic about finding a vaccine.

But there have been other diseases that have confounded both scientists and the human body. An effective vaccine for dengue fever, which infects as many as 400,000 people a year according to the WHO, has eluded doctors for decades. In 2017, a large-scale effort to find one was suspended after it was found to worsen the symptoms of the disease.
Similarly, it's been very difficult to develop vaccines for the common rhinoviruses and adenoviruses -- which, like coronaviruses, can cause cold symptoms. There's just one vaccine to prevent two strains of adenovirus, and it's not commercially available.
"You have high hopes, and then your hopes are dashed," says Nabarro, describing the slow and painful process of developing a vaccine. "We're dealing with biological systems, we're not dealing with mechanical systems. It really depends so much on how the body reacts."
Human trials are already underway at Oxford University in England for a coronavirus vaccine made from a chimpanzee virus, and in the US for a different vaccine, produced by Moderna.
However, it is the testing process -- not the development -- that holds up and often scuppers the production of vaccines, adds Hotez, who worked on a vaccine to protect against SARS. "The hard part is showing you can prove that it works and it's safe."

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Posted by Erin Burnett to The Global Outbreak at 3 May 2020 at 08:09

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Phim cũng tạm ổn.

+Ưu: về kịch bản thì khá tốt, dù là nhiều chi tiết góp nhặt từ các bộ phim bom tấn khác nhưng vẫn có nét thú vị riêng. Kỹ xảo của mấy anh Nga ngố thì đỉnh rồi

-Nhược: các tình tiết trong phim vs các cảnh hành động đều khá là chậm và nhạt như mọi phim scifi của Nga khác. Cái chi tiết nhảm nhất phim là đoạn đầu khi nhân vật Pilot ôm bom tự sát để câu giờ xong 3 đứa còn lại vừa đi bộ vừa nói trong khi con thần chết đang từ từ tái tạo lại. Chưa kể về sau toàn cầm bom r đáp chứ chả cần ôm bom cảm tử làm gì

Cơ bản là phim cũng khá hơn mấy bộ scifi Nga trc đó về mặt nội dung lẫn kỹ xảo. Kể ra nếu kịch bản này mà vào tay Christopher Nolan thì khéo lại có siêu phẩm như Inception

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Posted by Erin Burnett to ANT at May 3, 2020 at 2:58 AM

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Linh Hoang mình đồng ý với bạn, chính cái cấu trúc mơ trong mơ của inception cũng là trên cơ sở nghiên cứu khoa học về trải nghiệm các giai đoạn tầng giấc ngủ của con người, chứ chẳng phải là đến thời phim này - do đạo diễn tưởng tượng ra mà mn mới biết tới. Nếu mà cứ khăng khăng phim này copy của inception, chi bằng mình cũng kêu inception có copy lại mấy phim anime nổi tiếng trước đó của nhật cũng làm về giấc mơ vậy?! (nhất là mấy chi tiết hoạt cảnh uốn lượn, con người lơ lửng). Nói chung không nên đánh giá cả công trình nghệ thuật 6.6 của họ bằng cách phán nó sao chép này nọ một cách chủ quan vậy được. Hai phim đều có giá trị, riêng incep thì quá là đặc sắc và là tượng đài rồi

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Posted by Erin Burnett to ANT at May 3, 2020 at 2:57 AM

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Phim này mình xem thấy hay, kỹ xảo phải nó là ngang tầm Hollywood, Nhìn như Avatar vậy. Các kiến trúc phức tạp và đẹp mắt hơn Inception nhưng dĩ nhiên là ko hồi hộp hấp dẫn và xoắn não bằng Inception. Nếu cái này để vào tay các anh Hollywood thì thành bom tấn luôn. Nhiều bạn so sánh rồi kêu ăn cắp ý tưởng của Inception là hoàn toàn vô lý. Nội dung khác hẳn nhau. Chủ đề giấc mơ thì nó cũng có những concept chung như vậy thôi. Thế ko lẽ các phim Giết người hàng loạt và bắt cóc con tin, ngôi nhà ma ám đều ăn cắp ý tưởng của nhau hết à? Thực sự ấn tượng ko ngờ trình độ kỹ xảo của Nga lại làm đc đến mức này! Nội dung đúng là nên đẩy lên chút có cho có cao trào, Triết lý của vai phản diện đúng là mới lạ và tầm vóc tuy nhiên lại để chết hơi lãng nhách. Nếu đoạn cuối để Nhân vật chính và vai phản diện đấu với nhau bằng những trí lực siêu phàm của mình 1 lúc, rồi lúc gần thua nhân vật chính nhớ ra 1 điểm yếu chết người của phản diện và tấn công hoặc lừa hắn thì sẽ thuyết phục hơn là để sống sót nhờ may mắn. Nói chung là 1 bộ phim đáng xem. Họ đã mất công làm ra 1 bộ phim như vậy thì nên trân trọng chứ ko nên vào buông 1 lời chê bai mà ko nói lên đc quan điểm của mình rằng nó hay dở ở đâu!

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Posted by Erin Burnett to ANT at May 3, 2020 at 2:57 AM

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Đánh giá tạm thế này nhé:

- Điểm trừ lớn nhất: Diễn viên diễn chưa sâu, chưa đạt khiến cảm xúc và tâm lí không bộc lộ đúng, có lúc ko hiểu họ làm gì, hoặc khiến hành động trở nên stupid ( Ngu ngốc ) hoặc trông họ cứ như là diễn cho có đúng kiểu dân tập sự.

- Tình tiết, nội dung chưa được đầu tư chu đáo và hợp lí khiến mặc dù phim khá dài nhưng chỗ thừa, chỗ không có giải thích hoặc có cảnh quay diễn biến trước đó và hơi thiếu logic cũng như sắp xếp các diễn biến thiếu hợp lí.

- Kĩ sảo chỉ ở mức tương đối, mặc dù việc tận dụng đồ họa máy tính là có nhưng chỉ đạt như phim Mỹ 10 năm về trước. Nâng cao hơn 1 chút thì cảnh quay chưa có nhiều góc độ, kỹ thuật cao, không có điểm nhấn như cắt cảnh nhanh, zoom action, slow motion,...
Tóm lại là vẫn đáng để xem nhưng không thỏa mãn, nếu đòi hỏi cao như phim Mỹ thì nên từ bỏ.

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Posted by Erin Burnett to ANT at May 3, 2020 at 2:55 AM

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Có ai biết bộ phim gì mà có cái trường học bị ma búp bê ám. Mới đầu zo thì có một thanh niên giống như luyện tập sức mạnh hay gì đó mặc đồ học Sinh của trường này chắc là học sinh:v đấm một phát xuống nền gạch ở sân trường đến nỗi nó nức luôn hay sao ko nhớ rõ rồi có khúc bắt đầu điều tra trong trường do có ma búp bê, có ông bảo vệ ông đang kiểm tra thì thấy tiền dưới đất ông lụm mà ổng càng lụm thì càng nhiều hay tiền nó bay bay ổng dí Theo hay sao á không nhớ khúc này... Xong ông gặp con ma luôn quen không biết ma búp bê hay ma gì.....
Rồi phim nay mình nhớ còn có khúc một nhóm học sinh đi trên xe bus trường để cắm trại trong rừng thì bị gì đó lúc đi ngang qua rừng... Tự dưng có bà lão bà nói trong đó có ông gì đó là quỷ hay ông kẹ gì á kể được một lúc chắc để hù đám học sinh nay thì trong rừng tự dưng có cái bánh xe lăn ra :v nghệ hơi vô lý kkk xong bọn học sinh sợ quá chạy toán loạn hay sao á ko nhớ
Ae nào biết thì giúp minh với tại mình tìm phim này cũng lâu òi nhớ có thanh niên nào bắt ma trong đây tên là Đạt Đạt

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Posted by Erin Burnett to ANT at May 3, 2020 at 2:53 AM

Friday, May 1, 2020

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