Yeah, that is so hilariously stupid.   It's like the white house has become
a Conspiracy Theory factory.  "So, everyone, rather than scientists and
experts speak about what they rationally know to be true, only totality
unqualified and completely biased politicians are allowed to talk."

Lol.

this is crazy -
https://business.financialpost.com/pmn/business-pmn/u-s-cdc-confirms-one-more-coronavirus-case-among-diamond-princess-evacuees


Have they just decided - who cares about the diamond princess people?  As
long as they don't infect other people they can happily infect themselves.
Or WTF is going on?

On Fri, Feb 28, 2020 at 9:48 AM Jed Rothwell <jedrothw...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Here is frightening news. The Trump administration is politicizing this,
> lying about it, and suppressing the truth the way the Chinese government
> did.
>
> Pence Will Control All Coronavirus Messaging From Health Officials
>
> https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/27/us/politics/us-coronavirus-pence.html
>
>
> Here is a similar story in the WaPost text, from behind the paywall:
>
> Whistleblower: Workers at risk aiding evacuees
> Complainant alleges she was targeted for raising concerns.
> By Lena H. Sun and Yasmeen Abutaleb
> Washington Post
>
> WASHINGTON -Officials at the Department of Health and Human Services sent
> more than a dozen workers to receive the first Ameri­cans evacuated from
> Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak, with­out proper
> training for infec­tion control or appropriate protective gear, according
> to a whistleblower complaint.
>
> The workers did not show symptoms of infection and were not tested for the
> virus, according to lawyers for the whistleblower, who is a senior HHS
> official based in Washington who oversees workers at the Administra­tion
> for Children and Fami­lies, a unit within HHS.
>
> The whistleblower is seek­ing federal protection because she alleges she
> was unfairly and improperly reassigned after raising concerns about the
> safety of these workers to HHS officials, including those within the office
> of Health and Human Services Secre­tary Alex Azar. She was told Feb. 19
> that if she does not accept the new position in 15 days, which is March 5,
> she would be terminated.
>
> The whistleblower has decades of experience in the field, received two HHS
> department awards from Azar last year and has received the highest
> perfor­mance evaluations, her law­yers said.
>
> The complaint was filed Wednesday with the Office of the Special Counsel,
> an independent federal watch­dog agency. The whistleblow­er's lawyers
> provided a copy of a redacted 24-page com­plaint to The Washington Post. A
> spokesman for the Office of the Special Coun­sel said he could not com­ment
> on complaints filed with the office. . . .
>
> The complaint alleges that HHS staff were "improperly deployed" and were
> "not properly trained or equipped to operate in a public health emergency
> situation." The complaint also alleges that the workers were poten­tially
> exposed to corona­virus because appropriate steps were not taken to
> pro­tect them, and staff were not trained in wearing personal protective
> equipment, even though they had face-to-face contact with returning
> pas­sengers. The workers were in contact with passengers in an airplane
> hangar where evac­uees were received and on two other occasions: when they
> helped distribute keys for room assignments and hand out colored ribbons
> for identification purposes. . . .
>
> A second person familiar with the situation said the workers were not
> tested for coronavirus because none of them met the criteria for test­ing,
> which only calls for testing people who had recent travel to China or
> contact with a con­firmed case. The workers also did not exhibit any
> symptoms, the person said. If they had, appropriate protocol would have
> been followed.
>
> The deployments took place Jan. 28 to 31, around the time when the first
> plane­load of evacuees arrived at March, and Feb. 2 to Feb. 7, during the
> time when addi­tional flights were arriving at Travis. The planes each
> car­ried about 200 Americans repatriated from Wuhan.
>
> After their deployments, the workers returned to their normal duties, some
> taking commercial airline flights to return to their offices around the
> country, the lawyers said.
>
>

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